Monthly Archives: December 2010

Health Premiums Triple For Brigham & Women’s Part-Timers

Published December 8, 2010

CommonHealth reports part-timers at Brigham & Women’s Hospital face triple-digit increases in health care premiums next year:

With health insurance costs spiraling ever upward, we’re all feeling premium pain. But what’s happening with roughly 2,000 part-timers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital right now flies off the charts. Some part-time workers will see their health insurance premium payments rise by 300, 400, even 500% for the coming calendar year, and a total of 700% above current rates in 2012. Just for reference, when premium hikes hit double digits, politicians tend to throw fits. These workers are facing triple digits.

WBUR’s Carey Goldberg interviewed a young college grad who enjoyed free health benefits after working a year at the hospital. Starting in January, she’ll pay a premium of $47 per week.

“The percentage increases that are being given to these part-time workers are really quite extraordinary,” said Nancy Turnbull, associate dean of the Harvard School of Public Health. “Part-time workers tend to be lower-paid,” she said, “so this is very regressive.”

The woman interviewed does not qualify for state-subsidized health care, and she tells Carey she might be better off working for the Gap.

Weds Morning: Shapiro Forfeits Millions, O’Brien Speaks

Published December 8, 2010

I’ll be donning my face mask for the first time this season… in preparation for a bitter bike ride into work. Here’s what’s news on a cold Wednesday morning in Boston:

Boston philanthropist Carl Shapiro is giving back $625 million in Madoff money. Shapiro says he will be able to maintain his commitments to nonprofits that depend on the family’s support. (Globe)

Commissioner John O’Brien says the Probation Department report was incomplete. “He gave an investigator as many as 100 job-related thank-you notes from a broad array of elected officials and judges … but they are never mentioned in an explosive hiring scandal report.” (Herald)

Rep. Michael Capuano (D-Somerville) is criticizing President Obama’s tax-cut compromise. “It certainly seems as though the president just called the Republicans in and said, ‘What is it that you want?’ ” Capuano said. (WBUR)

Five months after he took over a failing South End school, the principal is resigning. Steve Zrike was supposed to “turn around” Blackstone Elementary School, but he has taken another job in Chicago. (South End News)

Justice Roderick Ireland could be confirmed as SJC chief justice today. Many members of the governor’s council say they will support the governor’s nomination. (WBUR)

Did I miss any big news?

Bloomberg: Shapiro, Other Madoff Investors Will Forfeit $625M

Published December 7, 2010

Bloomberg News reports:

Carl Shapiro, one of the first clients of convicted con man Bernard Madoff, and a group of related investors agreed to forfeit $625 million to the government.

Shapiro, who held an account with Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities LLC beginning in 1961 and controlled accounts for family members and others, reached a forfeiture agreement with the U.S. Attorney’s office in Manhattan today, according to a complaint filed by the government seeking to gain control of the funds.

The suit claims the Shapiro money, held in accounts at JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A., is traceable to funds invested by victims of Madoff’s fraudulent investment advisory business.

In 2009, Madoff pleaded guilty to running the largest Ponzi scheme in history.

Counting The Unaccounted For

Published December 7, 2010

WBUR’s Benjamin Swasey was one of 350 volunteers who participated in a “homeless census” last night in Boston. He shares his reflections here. –AP

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We walked from City Hall down Washington Street — past the big hole in Downtown Crossing — to look for folks in “nooks and crannies.”

That’s how Bill Cotter, our team leader for the 31st annual Boston Homeless Census, put it last night as we went out to count the unaccounted for in Chinatown and the South Cove neighborhood.

It was my first census. And it was a damn cold night. But as the more than 350 of us broke into dozens of teams to sweep the city, someone told me that if it’s frigid, there aren’t as many homeless people out — on the really chilly nights, a great many manage to find, or are brought to, shelter.

[pullquote]It’s hard to approach a stranger and ask, “Do you have a place to stay tonight?”[/pullquote]

It’s an unusual and somewhat disturbing feeling to look for a person on the street. You understand you can offer a place to stay and an accurate count helps officials design and allocate appropriate services, but there’s an aura of a scavenger hunt to it. It’s weird to search for something you hope you won’t find.

And for a while we found nothing. We broke into smaller groups and zigzagged streets. My trio looked in veiled doorways and dingy alleyways. For us the nooks and crannies were uninhabited.

But then, as if hiding in plain sight, we nearly walked by a person nestled in the hedges, right off the sidewalk of a wide-open street. We were told to mark observations, such as approximate age and services needed, and to make inquiries, such as their names, veteran status and last permanent housing. But we also didn’t want to disturb those sleeping, and this person was completely covered with a dirty white comforter, his or her belongings leaning against a wall. We let the person lie and marked “One.”

Making a tally of the homeless population seemed to me to be an inexact endeavor. My trio saw an Asian man, smoking a cigarette with a carabiner hanging off a belt loop, looking through dumpsters near Marginal Road. He didn’t “seem” homeless, and it’s hard to approach a stranger and ask, “Do you have a place to stay tonight?”

Another asked a woman in my group, “What are you, my mother?” when she probed his living situation as he searched through bags. Another was just walking the street, shorts over his pants. He said he had enough layers on for the cold night.

That was our count for our zone (three), which I thought was pretty good. Of course it was only a handful of streets, and the census also includes shelters, mental health, substance abuse and domestic violence programs and temporary housing. Last year’s census found 3,800 homeless families total.

But Boston has reason to be proud. As the Globe reported, the city has one of the lowest rates of unsheltered homeless among major cities. The city said 3.4 percent of its homeless population was on the street during last year’s census. The 2009 national average was nearly 42 percent.

For some reason, though, I felt there were more we missed. Maybe they slipped indoors just before we poked our hat-covered heads around dark corners and slipped back outside when we boarded our subway trains home.

Tuesday Morning: Pats Eviscerate Jets

Published December 7, 2010

What’s news on another 30-degree Tuesday morning in Boston:

The Patriots destroyed rival Jets 45-3 at Foxboro last night. “The Jets didn’t defend Tom Brady last night. They genuflected in front of him.” (Herald)

Shaughnessy: Another golden season is in the making. “What a beating.” (Globe)

Politicians are promising swift overhaul of the Probation Department. A court review found widespread patronage and other hiring irregularities at the department. (WBUR)

Mayor Menino is home from the hospital — again. “Being there has been a total frustration for me,” Menino said. “I’m not a guy who likes to sit in a hospital bed.” (Herald)

2nd Shot At 1st For Pats On Monday Night

Published December 6, 2010

New York Jets' David Harris (52) stonewalls the Pats' BenJarvus Green-Ellis (42) at New Meadowlands Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., Sunday, Sept. 19, 2010. (AP)

The New York Jets' David Harris (52) stonewalls the Pats' BenJarvus Green-Ellis (42) at New Meadowlands Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., Sunday, Sept. 19, 2010. (AP)

With 53 seconds left in the first half, the Patriots looked like AFC champions.

Up 14-7 on the Jets, the Pats were in control and serving notice that New York hype couldn’t overcome New England history.

Of course, it was Week 2, the Jets owned the second half en route to a 28-14 victory, and the Jets proved the preseason buzz around New York was for real.

Tonight, the Pats look to rewind history and win a divisional game as big as any in recent memory.

Both teams sit at 9-2 on the season and are revving their engines for the playoffs. Thanks to that Week 2 collapse, the Jets are currently sitting in first place in the AFC East.

The winner of the Pats-Jets rematch will assume first place in the AFC. Should that team win out, they will be in line for a No. 1 seed, home-field advantage throughout the playoffs, and a first round bye.

If you’re a Pats fan, you’ll watch with glee as Tom Brady targets rookie tight ends Aaron Hernandez and Rob Gronkowski early and often. If you’re a Jets fan, you’ll delight in watching the Jets running back tandem of LaDanian Tomlinson and Shonn Greene shred the Pats’ D.

Either way, football fans can’t miss this game.

Kickoff is at 8:30 p.m. What’s your prediction for Monday night?

How Well Do You Know Boston? 8 Trivia Questions

Published December 6, 2010

How well do you know Boston? Try your hand at these trivia questions, compiled in honor of Erin McLean, the Danvers native and BU sophomore who recently won the college championship on “Jeopardy!” McLean is our guest today on Radio Boston.

These challenges are written Jeopardy-style:

  1. This Boston building first became well-known when most of its windows fell out shortly after construction in the 1970s.
  2. This judge oversaw the desegregation of Boston schools in the 1970s.
  3. Linguists use this term to describe “R droppers” — people who say “pahk your cah.”
  4. Alexander Graham Bell was a professor at this university before securing his patent for the telephone.
  5. MIT fraternity brothers invented this non-standard unit of length as a way to measure the Massachusetts Avenue bridge.
  6. In 1770, this American statesman represented British soldiers tried for the Boston Massacre.
  7. On Sept. 20, 1960, journeyman Carroll Hardy became the only player to pinch hit for this baseball slugger.
  8. This famous children’s author was born in Springfield in 1904.

Think you know the answers, er, questions? Respond in the comments. I’ll update this post tomorrow with the solutions.

Big thanks to WBUR’s Dave Shaw and Jessica Alpert for helping draft the puzzles.

It’s Official: Adrian Gonzalez Is A Red Sock

Published December 6, 2010

Adrian Gonzalez said his lifelong dream was to play for the San Diego Padres, his hometown team. His second dream, he said, was to play for the Red Sox. “You always root for a National League team and an American League team,” he said, wearing his new Boston jersey.

The Red Sox formally announced the acquisition at a Fenway Park press conference. Sox General Manager Theo Epstein said there is no long-term deal in place but the contract extension is being worked out.

In five seasons with San Diego, Gonzalez has 161 homers and 501 RBIs. Including parts of two seasons with Texas, he has 168 homers and 525 RBIs. Epstein has been after Gonzalez for awhile; he made a run at Gonzalez before the 2009 trading deadline and again last season, he said.

Boston gets Gonzalez in exchange for three prospects, minor league right-hander Casey Kelly, first baseman Anthony Rizzo, outfielder Reymond Fuentes and a player to be named later.

“I think he’s going to be a monster in Fenway Park,” said Padres general manager Jed Hoyer.

Epstein, too, predicts Gonzalez will quickly take aim at the Green Monster in left field. “We think he is going to wear the wall out,” he said.

Gonzalez had surgery to clean up the labrum in his non-throwing right shoulder on Oct. 20, but he said Monday he’s ahead of schedule and expects to be ready for Opening Day.

Gonzalez said he always admired Boston legend Ted Williams, also from San Diego and also a leftie. Another thing San Diego players and Boston players have in common: “I’m … ready to beat the Yanks,” he said.

What do you think? Does the AGon acquisition warm your baseball heart on this coldest day of the season?

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The Associated Press contributed reporting. Don’t miss Jeremy Bernfeld’s great write-up from the weekend. Jeremy is covering the story today for Radio Boston.

Monday Morning: Pats Vs. Jets, AGon (Whew)

Published December 6, 2010

What’s news on a cold Monday morning with snow flurries in the forecast:

Tonight, it’s Bill vs. Rex at Foxboro. “You know what they say about opposites attracting, well as coaching styles go, they’re Felix and Oscar.” (Herald)

SI.com: The Sox finally completed a trade for San Diego’s Adrian Gonzalez, after it almost fell apart. The deal is believed to be worth $167 million over eight years. (SI.com)

The secretary of state wants the courts to sign off on all foreclosures. Bill Galvin will introduce legislation next month. (Globe)

Caseloads at the state’s juvenile courts have fallen sharply, perhaps as a result of a shift in strategy. “Research indicates that traveling in a van with shackles really does turn the kids on a negative trajectory.” (Globe)

A red tail hawk has been stuck at a South Boston MBTA station for a week. The Animal Rescue League is still trying to free the hawk from netting. (WCVB)