Monthly Archives: August 2010

Summer Is Fading…

Published August 30, 2010

We're in the dog days of summer. (Shot in May 2010 in Boston by Peter Pelisek/Flickr)

We're in the dog days of summer. (Shot in May 2010 in Boston by Peter Pelisek/Flickr)

Overheard in the waiting room at the dentist:

Summah’s ovah.

It ain’t over till a Bostonian says it’s over. How are you marking the waning days of summer?

Monday Morning: A Bloody Weekend, Genzyme Says 'Non'

Published August 30, 2010

This just in: The Cambridge biotech firm Genzyme has rejected a $18.5 billion offer from the French drug maker Sanofi-Aventis, which made the bid public on Sunday. Genzyme says it’s worth way more than $18.5 billion. (Globe)

A lot of blood was shed in metro Boston this weekend:

  • A man was shot to death on Blue Hill Ave in Dot on Saturday night. (Globe)
  • A man was shot to death in Roxbury on Saturday morning. (BPD)
  • A man was shot to death in Mattapan on Saturday morning. (BPD)
  • Police are seeking a Cambridge man in the death of a man in Medford on Saturday morning. (Globe)

And the summer of weird lobster discoveries continues, this time with an orange-and-black calico lobster off the coast of Maine. (The lobster will be spared.)

Don't Lock Your Pets In A Hot Car

Published August 29, 2010

A Hubbub public service announcement.

Shar Peis in a car (emdot/Flickr)

Happy dogs (emdot/Flickr)

I don’t have to tell you it’s hot. And any second grader who studies the greenhouse effect knows sunlight gets trapped in cars and heats up fast.

At Petco in Brighton today, I saw an SUV in the parking lot with two dogs locked inside. The windows were closed. It was 90 degrees outside, which means it could have been 120 degrees or hotter inside.

Animals in hot cars die.

I told the Petco manager, who said he had called Boston police to report the same issue three weeks ago — but the officers told him to “mind his own business.”

Animal cruelty is punishable with prison time and a fine. There is no specific Mass. law against locking animals in hot cars, however.

Don’t leave pets in your car on a warm day. Take them with you, or leave them safe at home.

Your Boston Weekend: August 27-29

Published August 28, 2010

It's not quite Spain's Tomatina, but Red Fire Farm's Tomato Festival should be a good time. (Flydime/Flickr)

It's not quite Spain's Tomatina, but Red Fire Farm's Tomato Festival should be a good time. (Flydime/Flickr)

The long summer days are slowly shrinking, the corn stalks are growing, and school supplies are making their way into store aisles. Ignore all the signs of fall in favor of some August fun: Spread out a blanket for an outdoor movie, celebrate some juicy red tomatoes, or scarf down hot dogs at record speed — though I’d recommend just watching instead.

Continue reading

Sound Bites, Friday: West Nile Virus, Cocaine Bologna

Published August 27, 2010

Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino with an unidentified woman and chicken on Friday at the city’s first free-range chicken farm, on Long Island in Boston Harbor. (City of Boston)

Menino with unidentified woman, chicken

I swear, there is no shortage of weird news in this town. In reverse order of weirdness:

  • Boston’s first case of West Nile Virus has been reported. The victim will be OK. (Universal Hub)
  • Aijalon Gomes is home from North Korea. (Globe)
  • A man on a scooter died after colliding with a car near BC. Sad. (BPD)
  • Mayor Menino christened the city’s free-range chicken farm. (Mayor’s Office)
  • A prankster fashioned a fake shark fin out of Styrofoam and duct tape, prompting people near Somerset to call 911 and report a shark sighting. (Fall River Herald News via Bostonist)
  • A Holyoke man was arrested for a kilogram of cocaine found hidden in bologna. (AP)

Hubbub prefers links to news organizations and bloggers that break stories. Let me know if someone else had a story first (or better).

Students Bring Big Bucks To Boston

Published August 27, 2010

A $100 bill folded like a T-shirt

I just talked with Jessica Shumaker at the BRA, which tracks the college community’s impact on the city.

We know the annual population boom 1) lowers Boston’s median age dramatically, 2) clogs our streets with U-Haul trucks and 3) lengthens the lines at Starbucks. But what about the economic impact?

Turns out all those young people (and their professors and institutions) make a BIG impact on the city’s economy. The BRA compiled these salient facts:

  • Nearly 155,000 students in total (fall 2006)
  • According to a 2004 analysis, Boston’s colleges and universities support 67,000 direct and indirect jobs in the city (81,060 in the state) and contribute $4.3 billion to the gross city product ($5.45 billion to the gross state product)
  • Students and student visitors spent an estimated $1.5 billion in 2004 and $2 billion in 2009.

Tufts and Harvard have facilities in the City of Boston, which is a boon for the construction business. (Though the biggest project, the Harvard Allston expansion project, remains stalled.)

I’m sure a retail group somewhere is tracking the Back To School boom this week and next — think of all the laptops, futons and shower curtains waiting to be sold.

U-Haul Weekend Is Upon Us

Published August 27, 2010

Correction appended.

Movin' on up (jimmy page's/Flickr)

Movin' on up (jimmy page's/Flickr)

If I had to guess, tomorrow will be the single biggest moving day in America. As many as 300,000 academics are moving in to Greater Boston for the first of September.

There are 34 colleges and universities in Boston, according to the city, and that doesn’t include a couple of famous ones across the river. Here’s a sampling of what folks on Twitter said about the big weekend:

@amylrabinowitz: Dreading it is an understatement.

@Neldar: Leaving the state this weekend to avoid it.

@kehutchinson: I moved on Monday, braving through a student tsunami at BU, going from E. Boston to JP. Thank god that’s over with.

@sanditaK: i’m making the move next Wednesday, using my “one moving day per career” as permitted by my employer :P LOL

@amandakelly4: thank goodness I moved 2 months ago, missing the end of Aug/early Sept moving mayhem.

@KatyAronoff: Doing the Somerville–>Lowell haul tomorrow. Mostly packed and already about half moved so hoping it will be over quickly!

And Suz Carter on Facebook FTW:

Any bets on how long it will take for one such truck to get stuck on storrow drive?

Are you moving in? Across town? Away? What’s your new ‘hood? Are you dreading it? Excited? Share your stories and we’ll feature them on wbur.org throughout the weekend.

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Friday Morning: Bostonian Freed, Menino Peeved

Published August 27, 2010

Top stories in and around the Hub on a pleasant Friday morning:

  1. Boston Man Set Free In North Korea
    A Boston man being held in North Korea since January for crossing into that country illegally was freed yesterday at the behest of former President Jimmy Carter, and is expected to arrive back in Boston today. (Globe)
  2. Mayor Menino Blasts Vornado
    The bottom line for Thomas Menino is that there’s a crater in the center of Boston’s Downtown Crossing shopping district, where Vornado halted construction in 2008 on a $700 million mixed-use high-rise. That Vornado is bidding on the Hancock Tower and also moving forward with plans to construct a Manhattan skyscraper has enraged Menino. (Herald)
  3. Brown’s Campaign Donations Keep Rolling In
    Brown now has more than $6 million in his campaign account, and about two-thirds of his donations are coming from Massachusetts residents. (WBUR)
  4. First Family’s Vacation Winds Down
    The president will go back refreshed from 10 days in a place where almost all the faces he saw were smiling and where the prime concern of almost everyone, even the trailing national media, was whether he was having a good time. (Vineyard Gazette)
  5. A Mini Fenway Will Park In Norton
    Phase one involved the Mini Fenway facade and landmarks, including the Green Monster and the Citgo sign, and two youth baseball fields and four practice fields. (Sun Chronicle)

What stories are you following?

Sound Bites, Thursday: Leaking Pipes, Barf Bags, Time Machine

Published August 26, 2010

(Steve Brown/WBUR)

There’s a leak near the site of that massive water-main break in Weston. (WBUR)

A time machine has appeared on the roof of MIT. (Bostonist)

A flotilla of fishing vessels stormed Boston Harbor to protest commercial fishing restrictions. (Herald)

Police in Attleboro have arrested a man who dumped four garbage bags on the mayor’s desk last month. (Sun Chronicle)

A Mass. Republican candidate for Congress is distributing barf bags with his campaign message. (WCVB)

Salmonella-tainted eggs are still edible! If pasteurized. (Telegram & Gazette)

Passengers: I Have Had It With This (Bothersome) Snake On This (Bothersome) Train

Published August 26, 2010

I’m not making this stuff up, folks. The latest Green Line delay is courtesy of this charmer:

A Boston-area train was temporarily stopped Thursday after riders reported a man aboard had a snake around his neck.

The man had already left when police arrived at the Green Line’s Brookline Village station at about 12:30 p.m. to investigate.

From the T’s policy on pets:

For safety and convenience during rush hours, small domestic animals must be carried in lap-sized containers and out of the way of exits.

Related.