US – Tuesday, February 9
The Senate’s Weak Health Care Bill
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid “got to 60” at 1:08 yesterday morning, clearing a key Republican hurdle and keeping the Senate’s version of a health care reform bill on track for passage before Christmas.
 
Patrick jumps on jobs bandwagon
As Washington leaders work furiously on national job creation legislation, their Beacon Hill counterparts are now doing the same. Tomorrow, Gov. Deval Patrick is expected to detail plans that include offering a $2,500 tax credit for every new job a small business adds — a move that could wind up creating 20,000 positions.
 
DeLeo wants house troops to go retail
Speaker Robert DeLeo has a message for the seven score or so House Democrats who will try to get reelected in the fall: Scram.
 
Will a two-phase plan ever finish?
For years, Somerville and Medford residents have anxiously awaited the Green Line's extension into their transit-deprived neighborhoods. But now it’s a question of how far the MBTA line will actually go.
 
For a really good time, call ahead
As Marvin Gaye so beautifully sang, “Let’s get it on.” Who are we to disagree, especially with so many smoochable spots to enjoy Valentine’s Day? It doesn’t have to cost the earth, either. 
 
[not too shabby]
“[title of show]” is a silly, little show filled with nudge- nudge, wink-wink moments and enough self-congratulations to make a Hollywood award show look like a spiritually-driven mission of mercy. And though there’s been a dearth of musicals that proclaim, “look at us, we’re a musical making fun of musicals,” there’s something fresh and oddly charming about this one.
 
Beanpot on its way back to the Heights
The outdoor game at Fenway Park last month went to Boston University.
 
What’s next for the Bruins?
After 10 agonizing games filled with near-misses, bad breaks and downright sloppy play, the Bruins ended their epic losing streak with a cathartic win on Sunday. Now that the distraction of that brutal run is over, here’s what to look for as the Bruins go forward:

 
T time
What to do and where to go. 
 
Published 21:07, November the 4th, 2009
 
 Gov. Deval Patrick dispatched a crew of workers to inspect the troubled stretch on the Red Line cited in the T report, yesterday. William Mitchell, the T’s acting general manager, called the report “sobering.” Gov. Deval Patrick dispatched a crew of workers to inspect the troubled stretch on the Red Line cited in the T report, yesterday. William Mitchell, the T’s acting general manager, called the report “sobering.”
Photo: NATHAN FRIED-LIPSKI/METRO
 

T in worse shape than we thought

$1.19B

The cumulative deficit the T will face by FY14, if the new sales tax revenue goes away, based on current revenue and expenditure trends, according to the review.

Other findings
  • Maintaining the vehicle fleets at the nation’s oldest public transit system “is a Herculean and expensive task.”
  • A private sector firm faced with the same financial hurdles of the T “would likely fold or seek bankruptcy.”
  • Recommends the T slow its plans for expansion.
 

With the T’s maintenance backlog exceeding $3 billion, The MBTA report released yesterday found 51 of 57 high-priority T safety projects couldn’t be funded in the latest budget.

Gov. Deval Patrick, who had ordered the analysis, stressed the MBTA “is safe for riders,” though David D’Alessandro, the report’s primary author and a former John Hancock chairman, said the T’s infrastructure faces “considerable problems” unless more money is dedicated.

Included in the $543 million worth of critical unfunded projects is an $80 million job to replace concrete slabs beneath the Red Line damaged by water leaks. In some areas, corroded fasteners that hold the track in place are “presenting the possibility of train derailment.” Earlier in the day D’Alessandro told WTKK-FM he wouldn’t ride the Red Line between Alewife and Harvard stations.

The report recommended reprioritizing top safety projects, finding new revenue sources and having the T reexamine its debt issues and consult MassDOT before adding to debt.

Forward funding debacle
In 2000, the Legislature enacted a “Forward Funding” plan for the MBTA, which shifted 20 percent of the revenue from the sales tax to the T rather than the state simply closing its budget gap at year’s end. But the plan also forced the authority to balance its own budget and eventually become “self-sustaining.” Despite a goal of cutting operating costs by 2 percent annually in FY01, those costs instead rose 35 percent by FY06 for various reasons, such as rising price tags for health care and energy — and the T was forced to dip into reserves and restructure and defer debts to balance its budgets.   
 

Upside: No fare hikes

While a cringe-inducing report outlined the financial state of the MBTA, it did not offer specific new revenue sources to fix the problems. Neither did Gov. Deval Patrick yesterday — though he stressed T riders shouldn’t expect fare increases for at least a year or two.

A fare hike proposal had been shelved until the conclusion of this report, but yesterday Patrick conceded the state can’t ask residents to pay more for T rides until other reforms and cost-saving measures take form — the same argument he made Monday about revisiting a gas tax hike.  



 
 
Share
 
 
 
 
MMMpod
The February MMMpod features conversation from Ozzy Osbourne. Michael Emerson from "Lost" tells us about his days enjoying punk rock in Boston. We also dig up an old interview from the late great Howard Zinn. We have a song from Delta Spirit and The Soft Pack, who tell us where they got their name.