Page 1 Loading... Tips: Click on articles from page |
What's new at The Bay State Banner Local nonprofits graduate from climate programAt a celebration, May 28, a group of nine organizations with focuses spanning from cultural to affordable housing to operating the state’s convention centers gathered to mark the end of a nine-month program developing organizational climate action plans. Page 1 - no comments - 276 views  The pen as a weapon: the enduring legacy of Ngugi wa Thiong’oNgugi wa Thiong’o stands as a towering figure in African literature, a writer whose prolific career has been inextricably linked with the political and cultural struggles of his native Kenya and the broader African continent. Page 2 - no comments - 258 views  Algae clogging up your river?A construction team installs an infiltration trench in Medford in 2019. The Mystic River Watershed Association, last week, received state funding to install 65 of the nature-based infrastructure solutions, which filter phosphorus and other contaminants out of stormwater, in six cities and towns across its watershed over the next two years. Page 3 - no comments - 386 views  Cruel, but not unusual for TrumpThere is only one word for the Trump administration’s latest moves to deport immigrants of color: cruel. For those communities and the entire country, the great misfortune is the heartless actions represent more of the same from officials carrying out the bidding of President Trump. Page 4 - no comments - 323 views  Here’s what $1B in cuts mean for Black kids’ mental healthResearch shows that suicide rates among Black youth have climbed by nearly 37% over the past five years, with Black teens now reporting higher attempt rates than their white and Hispanic peers. At the same time, Black and Native American students are 1. Page 5 - no comments - 385 views  IN THE NEWSKeith Stokes of Newport, Rhode Island, head of Rhode Island’s diversity office, has been named the state’s second historian laureate. Chosen from a field of eight candidates, he will take over the voluntary role of delivering lectures about Rhode Island’s past at special events and formal ceremonies. Page 5 - no comments - 307 views  When demagogues blame the vulnerable, we all loseIn hard times, people look for answers. The decimation of American manufacturing starting in the 1990s with trade agreements like NAFTA led to decades of downward economic mobility for working families. That creates ripe conditions for demagogues to come out of the woodwork offering an easy answer for people’s pain. Page 5 - no comments - 307 views  Environmental issues plague Blue Hill Ave.“Green” is not the word that comes to mind when walking down the Blue Hill Avenue corridor in lower Roxbury. Children play in parks with patchy grass and bathe in pools of rain and groundwater on a flooded street on a hot day in summer. Page 6 - no comments - 332 views  Gov. Healey offers 450 acres of state land for housing developmentThe Healey administration has sought to make it easier to build in-law units, to put in place a transaction fee on $1 million homes to help pay for affordable units and to strengthen first-time homebuyer programs.The latest tack: selling excess state-owned land for new housing. Page 7 - no comments - 429 views  Cupcake Therapy — it’s what the world needs now“I was baking as a hobby. I was actually running a FinTech company that stalled during the pandemic, and I was bored, and so I was baking as a hobby. And friends would ask me to bake for them. And at first, I would say ‘I do FinTech so…,’ but after a while, I just had just too much free time, I guess. Page 15 - no comments - 327 views 
|