Category: News

  • Boston City Council Opens Discussion On PILOT Payments From Tax-Exempt Institutions

    Boston City Council led a packed hearing on Thursday, August 3, discussing the successes and shortcomings of the city’s Payment in Lieu of Taxes (PILOT) program. The program — in which Boston asks nonprofits with tax-exempt property to make voluntary contributions equal to about 25 percent of their property values — has been criticized by…

  • Activists push to strip slave owner’s name from Faneuil Hall

    On Thursday, August 2, a Boston-based civics organization announced a boycott on Faneuil Hall, pushing to rename the old marketplace because of its ties to slavery. Activists propose the name should instead be Crispus Attucks Hall. The New Democracy Coalition has been pushing for a name change for a year and submitted a petition in…

  • Commonwealth Could Be National Leader in Renewables

    Commonwealth Could Be National Leader in Renewables

    The Massachusetts House and Senate have passed energy bills that dictate the percentage of renewable energy in which the Commonwealth will invest by raising the Renewable Portfolio Standard. That’s the percentage of electricity that utilities have to get from renewable sources. The House wants to raise the RPS to two percent a year, starting in…

  • Career Politician vs. Activist: Congressional hopeful Ayanna Pressley debates incumbent Michael Capuano

    Bay State Rep. Michael Capuano and Boston City Councilor-At-Large Ayanna Pressley sparred over who would best represent the Seventh Congressional District in Congress – notably the most diverse district in the state – during a debate at UMass Boston hosted by WBUR on Aug. 7. Capuano touted his many notable endorsements as evidence of his…

  • Fifty Years After the Fair Housing Act, Discrimination is Still an Issue

    The Fiftieth Anniversary of the Fair Housing Act (FHA) of 1968, celebrated this past April, begs the question: where do we stand as a nation half a century later? The enactment of this law is the legacy of the work of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and many other civil rights activists, and as a…

  • Boston names first black police commissioner, but activists say there’s still a lot of work to do

    William Gross made history on July 23 when he became Boston’s first ever black police commissioner. Mayor Martin J. Walsh announced Gross’s  appointment, which will begin on August 5. Both Walsh and outgoing commissioner William Evans had glowing words for Gross and his 33 year career at the Boston Police Department. “I don’t think the…

  • The Forgotten Crisis: Nobody Thinks It Could Happen to Them

    The Forgotten Crisis: Nobody Thinks It Could Happen to Them

    Sometimes when I talk to groups about homelessness, unless they’re activists, I get a blank stare, like I’m talking to a bunch of empty chairs or an empty room. I get it: homelessness isn’t sexy or trendy like climate change, gun control, LGBTQ rights, or even animal rights for that matter. Those are all important…

  • Ocean Monuments Have No Impact on Commercial Fishing

    Ocean Monuments Have No Impact on Commercial Fishing

    Public data on commercial fishing shows no losses from the creation of protected areas off the New England coast, according to a new analysis. The commercial fishing industry had opposed the creation of the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument, saying that prohibiting commercial fishing in the two areas would cripple the industry. But…

  • Family Planning Is a Human Right

    Family Planning Is a Human Right

    It has been five decades since the international community affirmed the right to family planning but women still remain unable to enjoy this right, which is increasingly under attack around the world. It has been five decades since the international community affirmed the right to family planning but women still remain unable to enjoy this…

  • Raising the Profile on the Largest Environmental Issue of Our Time

    Raising the Profile on the Largest Environmental Issue of Our Time

    IPS correspondent Tharanga Yakupitiyage spoke to Robert Scholes, ecologist and co-chair of Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Service (IPBES) assessment, about land degradation and efforts needed to halt and reverse the catastrophe. Land degradation caused by human activities is occurring at an alarming rate across the world, and the cost will be steep…