Why Does BU’s President Make More Than Harvard’s?

Published November 15, 2010

Universities pay big bucks to attract and keep top administrators.

A stack of money (Andrew Magill/Flickr)

Robert A. Brown, the Boston University president, made a cool $1 million last year, according to fresh data from the Chronicle of Higher Education. In Massachusetts, that makes Brown the highest-paid in higher ed.

Harvard University president Drew Faust earned a measly $822,000 in 2008-09. (Those numbers are total compensation, which includes benefits and housing allowances.)

When I first heard the numbers this morning, I asked, “Wait, the president of BU makes more than the president of Harvard?” It’s Harvard University, after all — why doesn’t Faust make, like, $2 million?

Because Harvard has more prestige. That’s how WBUR’s Curt Nickisch explained it after overhearing me in the newsroom. Prestige is currency.

“Taking nothing away from Boston University, Harvard is the oldest, more prestigious university in the United States,” he says.

In other words, Harvard doesn’t have to work as hard to attract top talent, because anyone who’s anyone would want to put that job on a resume.

Consider the president of the United States, Curt says. As of the George W. Bush administration, the leader of the free world makes $400,000, about half that of the Harvard president. But the benefits and the prestige of the U.S. presidency are invaluable, and I doubt anyone is pursuing the job for the money.

As a consultant and public speaker, “Bush makes more money now,” Curt reminded me. “But he misses being pampered.”

Woman Struck By Orange Line Train Dies

Published November 15, 2010

A 41-year-old woman died Monday after she was struck by an Orange Line train and dragged under a car, the MBTA said.

“The train’s motorperson was aware that an individual had made contact with the train,” said T spokesman Joe Pesaturo. The woman was found under the third car of a southbound train at Malden Center station.

Train service is back up and running. Police are investigating.

Boston May Jump On Four Loko Ban-Wagon

Published November 15, 2010

Four Loko alcoholic energy drinks (Elaine Thompson/AP)

Four Loko alcoholic energy drinks (Elaine Thompson/AP)

Universal Hub reports the Boston City Council may be going Loko:

City councilors John Connolly and Mark Ciommo — whose Allston/Brighton district is loaded with the sort of people who might drink the stuff — want to convene a session to consider “any appropriate action” the city could take against Four Loko.

Four Loko is the carbonated energy drink with as much alcohol as a bottle of wine and as much caffeine as a six-pack of Diet Coke. Each can carries seven warning labels.

What’s known as “blackout in a can” is popular with the college set. On Halloween, a Northeastern student was hospitalized after drinking Four Loko and vodka (c’mon, really?) at an MIT party.

New York state has banned the drink, and other states may follow suit. (My question is: Can Boston ban the sale of a beverage that is legal? I am not a lawyer.)

The company behind Four Loko, Phusion Projects of Chicago, says alcohol-caffeine drinks are safe and not novel. The company has written an open letter to state and federal regulators asking for fair treatment amid the media hype.

The FDA has yet to weigh in.

Update: The state plans to file new regulations Friday that would effectively ban Four Loko in Massachusetts, WBZ reports.

Umpteenth Cape Wind Decision Is Delayed

Published November 15, 2010

The Mass. Department of Public Utilities says it is not ready to issue a decision on whether National Grid can buy power from Cape Wind.

There is no deadline for the decision, but National Grid had asked the state for a decision by Nov. 15 to be eligible for federal tax breaks.

The Cape Wind project won final federal approval in March after a decade-long battle. The project calls for 130 wind turbines in Nantucket Sound.

Cape Wind’s many opponents (including Ted Kennedy Jr.)  want to kill the National Grid deal, because they say it would result in higher utility rates for all of us.

Back in July, the Globe’s longtime Cape Wind reporter Beth Daley explained:

In May, National Grid revealed its agreement to buy half the power generated by Cape Wind at a starting price of 20.7 cents per kilowatt-hour in 2013, when the wind farm is expected to begin operating. That price would rise by 3.5 percent annually over the life of the 15-year contract, and is much more than the rates National Grid customers now pay for electricity.

Gov. Deval Patrick was the only gubernatorial candidate to support Cape Wind. He pushed aggressively for the project and appointed the DPU commissioners now deciding the National Grid deal.

DPU Director Tim Shevlin tells WBUR the decision will come “sometime soon.”

Workplace Fatalities Hit 7-Year Low In Mass.

Published November 15, 2010

The State House News Service reports workplace deaths are down in Massachusetts:

There were 59 fatal work injuries during 2009 in Massachusetts, down from 68 in 2008 and the fourth fewest workplace deaths in Massachusetts since the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics began tracking in 1992. In 1998, Massachusetts recorded 44 workplace deaths, its modern low.

These numbers are in line with a nationwide drop.

Construction falls are the No. 1 cause of death on the job in Massachusetts. In October, reporter Lisa Chedekel of the NECIR found Mass. contractors negotiated substantially reduced fines — as low as $1,500 — for workplace fatalities.

Fishing Boat Capsizes In Boston Harbor, 1 Dead

Published November 15, 2010

[googlemap url=”http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=111324176206929025911.0004951a1bf97c9b728bd&ll=42.379344,-70.928421&spn=0.350999,0.552063&z=11″ align=”right” width=”300″ height=”250″ title=”Little Brewster Island”]

One man died and another was rescued Monday morning after a lobster boat capsized in Boston Harbor.

The Coast Guard received a call at 1:20 a.m. that the vessel Jacquelyn Ann was overdue with two men on board. The boat had left the Wessaguesset Yacht Club in Weymouth at noon on Sunday to retrieve lobster traps near Hull Gut.

One man was rescued on Little Brewster Island, north of Hull; the other was found unresponsive and later died. The rescued man told crews the vessel boat capsized about 2 p.m. Sunday.

Cold water temperatures could have contributed to the death. The cold contributes to fatigue that could lead to drowning.

The Patriot-Ledger and the Globe are also following.

An earlier report said both men died.

If You’re Seeking Justice, Don’t Look Online

Published November 15, 2010

…At least for another 48 hours two hours.

The Globe reports:

A key Supreme Judicial Court website is shut down this morning, apparently because someone forgot to renew the domain name.

The site is currently gone, replaced with ads for legal things and the following notice: “massreports.com expired on 11/08/2010 and is pending renewal or deletion.”

Remember this? The George W. Bush Presidential Library let its domain name expire — and then had to buy it back from squatters for $35,000.

Update: The SJC says the site should be back up within two hours. It’s back.

Monday Morning: Feds Shift Immigration Tactics, Cops Miss Body

Published November 15, 2010

Good morning! Hope you enjoyed the beautiful weather this weekend. Here’s what’s news on what looks to be another mild Monday morning in Boston:

Immigration enforcement is turning to New England companies. It’s a shift in strategy under the Obama administration to target companies that hire undocumented workers. (Globe)

Boston police missed a murder victim’s body for two days. Commissioner Ed Davis said the killing was likely related to another across the street in Dot. (Dorchester Reporter)

BU President Robert Brown made more than $1 million last year. He is the highest paid college leader in Massachusetts. (Chronicle of Higher Education)

Home sales fell a fourth straight month. Single-family home sales fell 29.5 percent while sales of condominiums plunged by a whopping 36.8 percent last month.” (Herald)

There was another armed robbery at Harvard — the second in three days. Police say the suspect tried to rob three freshmen and then fired a gun at a cop. (Globe)

Patriots won big, 39-26, over the Steelers. “We haven’t been this happy in a long time,” QB Tom Brady said. (NESN)

Lesson In Crowdsourcing: Angry Hingham Woman ID’d

Published November 12, 2010

Justice never rests on the Internet.

This woman calls a mail carrier the "N" word and other unpleasantries.

This woman calls a mail carrier the "N" word and other unpleasantries.

In this video making the worldwide rounds (Part 1 and Part 2), an exasperated woman goes postal on a mail carrier, calling him the “N” word and worse when he refuses to take back a letter she signed for. (The carrier says he was later fired, but it’s not clear why.)

It turns out this happened in our backyard — or so say a band of anonymous justice seekers on the Internet. Within hours of the video turning up on YouTube, websites claim to have unearthed nearly every detail of the woman’s identity, including her home address in Hingham.

I guess the Internet has moved on from the Cooks Source scandal, which is so last week. (In that case, hundreds of people compiled a Google spreadsheet that documents apparent widespread plagiarism at the western Mass. cooking magazine.)

Commenters have put the heat on the Hingham woman by publishing her home address and phone number. Gawker has a play-by-play of the concerted effort to track her down, which demonstrates the intensity and speed of a truth-seeking crowd.

But not all questions are answered. Who is the mail carrier who recorded the video? Why was he fired? What might have provoked this woman’s rage?

Update: The Globe identifies the woman as Erika Winchester and the mail carrier as Hugson Jean, 48, of Roslindale. Jean was fired but not as a result of this incident, according to his former employer, the U.S. Postal Service.

MFA Unveils Americas Expansion With Flair

Published November 12, 2010

Hello from inside the new glass-and-granite courtyard at the entrance to the MFA’s Art of the Americas wing — where a who’s who of the art world showed up for the unveiling.

Most memorable? “The Passage of the Delaware,” a positively massive oil painting of Gen. George Washington’s famous passage. John Singer Sargent’s priceless and iconic “Daughters of Edward Darley Boit.” The exquisite miniature ship models.

Boston Globe art critic Sebastian Smee shared his top 10 must-sees on Radio Boston today. (Full list of Smee’s must-sees at Boston.com.)

The expansion opens to museum members Nov. 12 and the general public Nov. 20.