Friday, February 12, 2021

Statement from Senate President Karen E. Spilka: Senate Special Committee on Reimagining Massachusetts - Post-Pandemic Resiliency

Senate President Karen E. Spilka

 

"Today, I am announcing the creation of the new Senate Special Committee on Reimagining Massachusetts: Post-Pandemic Resiliency.

The COVID-19 pandemic has upended assumptions about the way we live, work, and travel in Massachusetts. It has also laid bare long-standing inequities in various aspects of our economy and communities. As we look to the future as we recover from the pandemic, we have a rare opportunity—and a responsibility—to question the status quo and reimagine the path towards continued vibrancy for the Commonwealth.

Massachusetts has historically been a leader in innovation, and we are well poised to lead in the "new normal." But we must ensure that our efforts are integrated across multiple areas. This committee will serve as a hub to synthesize information and share best practices that have been developed in response to COVID-19, as well as a forum for new ideas as to how to move forward. The committee will also work to actively ensure that historical inequities are addressed.

COVID-19 has impacted every aspect of our lives; this committee acknowledges that and asks how we help direct the change we know lies ahead. While the newly-created COVID-19 committee will be focused on pandemic response and the challenges posed by COVID-19 today, the Reimagining Mass committee will be focused on tomorrow and the next day. We have not experienced anything like this pandemic in a hundred years, and this crisis deserves our attention and our best efforts at mitigating its effects.

The Reimagining Mass committee doesn't look like anything the Senate has done in the past, but that's intentional. We will need collaboration and creativity to reimagine our future. But it does draw on the best practices from the working groups the Senate developed last session—on revenue, transportation, COVID-19 and racial justice. These working groups were cross-functional and called on experts from across the Commonwealth, as well as the experience of the Senate members and their constituents. The efforts of the COVID-19 working group resulted in legislation such as vote-by-mail, telehealth, more flexibility for municipalities to work remotely, expansive outdoor and take out options for restaurants, and other innovations spurred by the pandemic. It is my hope that this committee will catalyze innovation in a similar way.

I look forward to the Senate Special Committee on Reimagining Massachusetts: Post-Pandemic Resiliency acting as a forum for oversight, coordination and ideas as we create a new vision for the Commonwealth's future."

Town of Franklin: Job Opportunities with DPW and Facilities

Job Opportunities

To apply for a vacant position, please submit a resume and cover letter to apply@franklinma.gov.  Please put the job title in the subject line of your email.  

  • Heavy Motor Equipment Operator - Department of Public Works - updated February 2021

If you do not have a resume, you may send a completed Application for Employment instead.

To receive notifications of all job opportunities in the Town of Franklin, subscribe here (https://www.franklinma.gov/subscribe).
 
 


Town of Franklin: Job Opportunities with DPW and Facilities
Town of Franklin: Job Opportunities with DPW and Facilities


FHS gymnastics: Meet Kate, Ryann, and Katie

 
 
 
FHS gymnastastics: Meet Kate, Ryann, and Katie
FHS gymnastics: Meet Kate, Ryann, and Katie


Franklin Public Schools, MA: Kindergarten registration is open

Kindergarten registration is open! Please see the attached flyer for info and links! 
Registration is ongoing but we are asking families to register their child by March 1st if possible to help us prepare for staffing & class sections. 

PDF Flyer for Registration: https://t.co/3IfADqbnPC

Shared from Twitter: https://t.co/HEdrfAblOO



Franklin Public Schools, MA: Kindergarten registration is open
Franklin Public Schools, MA: Kindergarten registration is open

Franklin (MA) Public Schools: No school Friday, vacation week 2/15-2/19

Friendly reminder:
  • Friday (Feb 12) is a Professional Development Day with no school 
  • February 15 thru February 19 is vacation week 
Shared from the Franklin Public Schools web page  https://www.franklinps.net/

No school Friday, vacation week 2/15-2/19
No school Friday, vacation week 2/15-2/19

"Did you realize kids are not getting immunized?"

"While trials are recruiting or already underway for children 12 and older, companies have yet to enroll younger children. It will probably be another year before vaccines are available for them, said Robert Frenck, the principal investigator for the Pfizer coronavirus vaccine trial at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital, who also oversees the AstraZeneca clinical trial there.

At least four companies — Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca, and Janssen — are planning to start trials for younger children this spring, according to Yvonne Maldonado, a professor of pediatrics and epidemiology, and chief of the Division of Pediatric Infectious Diseases at Stanford University School of Medicine. It is “critical to include all populations including infants and young children in safety trials,” she said in an email, adding that doing so “will be important to prevent individual pediatric infection as well as transmission to family members, teachers and other caregivers.”

Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)
 

CommonWealth Magazine: "Constitutional challenge to vote-by-mail likely"

 

"Secretary of the Commonwealth Bill Galvin and voting rights advocates want to allow Massachusetts residents to vote by mail for any reason. But is that constitutional?

The Massachusetts Constitution explicitly says the Legislature can authorize absentee voting for just three reasons: if someone is out of town, physically disabled, or cannot vote on Election Day due to a religious belief.

Lawmakers acknowledged the constraint in 2013, when they considered but did not act on a constitutional amendment to allow absentee voting for any reason.

“There’s been a long-term traditional view that opportunities to vote by mail in Massachusetts are constrained by the Constitution, which specifies particular conditions under which you can do this,” said Evan Horowitz, executive director of the Center for State Policy Analysis at Tufts University."

Continue reading the article online