HAPPENING TODAY:
10:00 | Catholic Charities South hosts Brockton Mayor Robert Sullivan, Eastern Bank Executive Chair Bob Rivers, and Greater Boston Food Bank (GBFB) Chief Operating Officer Cheryl Schondek as they volunteer and unpack one of the Brockton Hunger Relief Fund’s first food deliveries. | 169 Court Street, Brockton
11:00 | Gov. Maura Healey joins GBH News’ “Boston Public Radio” for the "Ask the Governor" segment. | GBH.org/news
….Candidates seeking an open Senate seat face a 5 p.m. deadline to submit nomination papers to local registrars of voters or election commissioners. The vacancy in the 1st Middlesex Senate District was caused by the death of Sen. Edward Kennedy of Lowell. The primary is Feb. 3, 2026, and the state election is a month later, on March 3….
EDITOR’S NOTE: Gin here to say this is my last edition of MASSterList of 2025. I hope you’ve enjoyed reading this newsletter as much as I’ve enjoyed writing it. Please keep the tips, tidbits and trivia coming. I’ll be back on Friday, Jan. 2. Until then, I leave you with a story written in the spirit of holiday cheer and about two chairs.
Students of State House history, and others of a certain vintage, will recall or trade the stories of yesteryear’s fights between governors, House speakers and Senate presidents.
A budget battle in 1999 featured House Speaker Tom Finneran and Senate President Tom Birmingham taking to the State House balcony, looking out onto Beacon Street, to talk through a deal. The scene exemplified the top-down nature of the Legislature under the golden dome, but it also demonstrated that relationships matter.
If those at the wheel can’t get along – whether through longstanding grudges or an errant remark that leads to a new tiff – that has policy implications.
That goes for committee chairs, too. And at least when it comes to the transportation sector, the chairs of a key committee, Sen. Brendan Crighton and Rep. James Arciero, have a strong relationship stretching back to the early 2000s when they were both aides on Beacon Hill.
“We’ve known each other, my goodness, since he worked for Senator McGee, who’s right here,” Arciero said at the MASSterList/State House News Service transportation forum earlier this month. He was referring to Tom McGee, who now chairs the MBTA board and sat in the front row. Arciero worked for the Senate chair of Ways and Means at the time, Steven Panagiotakos.
Now he and Crighton are both chairs in a “complicated space,” as Arciero put it. It’s a space with no shortage of opinions, either: Crighton joked that his wife wonders why it takes him more than two hours to come back from grocery shopping at Market Basket as he gets buttonholed by constituents.
Crighton (D-Lynn) has served as transportation chair for longer, nearly four years to Arciero’s seven months. “We don’t get really caught up in the bigger political maneuvering,” Arciero (D-Westford) added. “I think we’re pretty down to earth, guys, and also we have a young family, so there’s a lot in common with that as well, and we always talk about the flexibility and school pickups.”
“I think you’ll see with both of us, we just want to get things done,” Crighton said.
Both agree that regulation of micromobility vehicles – electric bikes and scooters – should be a top priority for next year. “I’ve seen more young people without helmets driving things that are 30 to 35 miles an hour. My daughter and I always get clipped on a rail trail,” Arciero said. “So I’ve seen this exponential sort of increase of these micromobility vehicles since 2021 and we need to get our arms around that and improve things on the safety measures and to regulate the speed.”
They’ve both been on a road show of sorts. At a recent Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce forum, Crighton drew at least one headline by opening the door to congestion pricing, a controversial policy that is seeing success in New York.
“For some reason, you’re villainized as soon as you even say that it should be on the table, which I think when you’re looking at transformative policies, like transportation revenue and how we fund it, it’d be irresponsible for us to take anything off the table,” Crighton said when the topic came up again at the MASSterList/SHNS forum. “We’re serious actors. We should be able to have serious conversations and to weigh pros and cons, debate, study, have a pilot, all these simple things. That’s how you create good policy.”
FROM BEACON HILL
OFFSHORE WIND PAUSE: The Trump administration paused leases for large-scale offshore wind projects under construction off the coast of the U.S., a group of five projects that includes the Vineyard Wind 1 project off the coast of Nantucket. The federal government cited security risks and concerns about radar interference in its reasoning. — State House News Service | Boston Globe
TAKING A CRACK AT HOUSING: A former Biden administration appointee has returned to Massachusetts to lead a quasi-public agency and attempt to help address the state’s affordable housing shortage. — State House News Service
NEWS NEXT DOOR
MASS DEPORTATIONS IN 2025: A look at New England’s immigration enforcement infrastructure amidst the increase in immigrant deportations since the beginning of 2025. — WBUR
HOLYOKE COUNCILOR PLEADS NOT GUILTY: A Holyoke city councilor accused of driving drunk onto a sidewalk pleaded not guilty at his arraignment Monday, and is expected to appear next in court in January. — MassLive
‘WAR’ ON HARVARD: The Globe takes a look at the relationship between the Trump administration and Harvard University, and a string of events that evolved between the two over the course of 2025. — Boston Globe
HOLIDAY SEASON TRAVEL RECORD: AAA Northeast is predicting that more than 122 million Americans will travel at least 50 miles from home between Dec. 20 and the new year, representing a 2% increase over 2024 figures. — GBH
IMMIGRATION ORDINANCE: The Framingham City Council is expected to vote in January on an ordinance that would bar city law enforcement from detaining an individual on the basis of a civil immigration detainer or ICE warrant. — MetroWest Daily News
BOSTON SHOPLIFTING: Boston City Councilor Ed Flynn wants more resources dedicated to addressing shoplifting in Boston, he wrote in a Monday letter to Police Commissioner Michael Cox. — Boston Herald
MORE HEADLINES
Worcester pastor, husband of former councilor facing $900K in lawsuits
Proposed sale of Eastern Nazarene College campus in Quincy ‘will not be finalized,’ officials say
K. Scott Kelley is no longer Adams police chief, the Select Board chairman says
MBTA announces January service changes for Orange, Blue, Red lines, commuter rail
