Article

STATE AND LOCAL REPORTS SHOW CITY SCHOOLS IN DISMAL SHAPE

5 2 votes
Article Rating

BY DAN VALENTI

PLANET VALENTI NEWS AND COMMENTARY

(FORTRESS OF SOLITUDE MONDAY MARCH 9, 2026) — MOM, the Matriarchy of Massachusetts, loves to evade the truth. This aversion to honesty, has, another other wreckage, shows up in the disaster of failing public school systems, when MOM resorts to euphemism. Failing districts aren’t failing; they’re “turnaround” districts.

You may have missed it, but when the state Department of Education released information on the status of local districts, the Pittsfield School Department shows up as “chronically underperforming.” That’s what hundreds of millions of dollars buys in the failing county seat of The Berkshires.

Add it up: $86,855,061 + $25 million for insurance + $10 million to run a bus company = $122 million. Of course, city side and school side still hide insurance and transportation costs in city-side ledgers.

Technically, the state did not designate the PSD as a “turnaround” district. Maybe so, but things are so bad in city schools that the superintendent did just that, and THE PLANET applauds her. At least she had the spine to do it.

———- ooo ———-

How bad is it? The state cited seven Pittsfield schools at the bottom of the barrel, including both high school and both middle schools. Crosby, Conte, and Morningside comprised the other three. State data (from 2025) shows that on a scale of 0 to 100, with 100 being best, these school scored 5, 6, or 7. In other words, about 95% of other state schools perform better. Think what the ramifications are for the local economy and attracting new business.

Supt. Latifah Phillips reported that in her own surveyor local school, 0% (nada, zilch, not one) of principals, all schools, said their roles were “manageable.” Seen the other way, every principal reports their jobs as “unmanageable.” You can guess the reason why. Pittsfield schools:

  • Have one of the highest suspension rates in the state.
  • Feature an overwhelming number of “behavioral incidents.” In other words, kids run amok with virtually no consequences.
  • The highest rank of “students with disabilities” in the state. This leads to the biggest reason local schools stink. They allocate most of the money to students who won’t or can’t learn. This ignores the good, better, and best students and ensures failure.

———- ooo ———-

Yes, the city schools continue to rob Mary Jane and Joe Kapanski blind, deaf, and dumbstruck. Meanwhile, with enrollment below 5,000 for the first time in city history and shrinking, Mayor Lumpy and complicit school officials will rebuild Crosby and incorporate Conte there. Price tag? Infinity.

Solutions? Yes, THE PLANET has plenty. We’ve listed them many times prior, including school uniforms and enforcement of all policies (on bullying, drugs, dress code, conduct). Probably the two biggest single reforms would be for (1) administrators and teachers to regain control of the classrooms and (2) Begin rewarding success by funding the best students.

Of course, without enough good parents, the task will continue to be hopeless.

And that’s where things stand now.

——————————————————————–

What people say they would like to do if they got power, I think they will actually do it” — Margaret Atwood.

“OPEN THE WINDOW, AUNT MILLIE.”

LOVE TO ALL.

Copyright (c) 2026 By Dan Valenti, PLANET VALENTI and EUROPOLIS MANAGEMENT. All rights reserved. The views and opinions expressed in the comment section or in the text other than those of PLANET VALENTI are not necessarily endorsed by the operators of this website. PLANET VALENTI assumes no responsibility for such views and opinions, and it reserves the right to remove or edit any comment, including but not limited to those that violate the website’s Rules of Conduct and its editorial policies. Those who leave comments own all the responsibilities that are or can be attached to those comments, be they rhetorical, semantic, or legal. Such commentators remain solely responsible for what they post and shall be and remain solely accountable for their words. PLANET VALENTI shall not be held responsible for the consequences that may result from any posted comment or outside opinion or commentary as provided in, but not limited to, Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act and this website’s terms of service. We serve as a marketplace of ideas, without prejudice and available to all. All users of this site — including readers, commentators, contributors, or anyone else — hereby agree to these conditions by virtue of this notice and their use of/participation in this site. When PLANET VALENTI ends with the words “The Usual Disclaimer,” that phrase shall be understood to refer to the full text of this disclaimer.

5 2 votes
Article Rating
51 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Jon Melle
Jon Melle
1 month ago

A $4 million budget deficit in the fiscal year 2027 school spending proposal.

679 students who choice out to neighboring school districts per academic year.

All time low enrollment numbers.

Millions of dollars in cuts in state administered, federal aid funds.

Level 5 middle and high schools with 3 failed elementary schools.

Disabled school children facing bullying by an underclass student body who come from dysfunctional homes.

It is a hopeless life in the PITTS!

A turn around school district my ass. It is a grave yard district.

Markus Aurelius
Markus Aurelius
Reply to  Jon Melle
1 month ago

I don’t agree with you JM often, but I do on your statement about “hopeless life” in Bitchfield Pubic Scohols. Especially with the way the curriculum and discipline, has been hijacked by far-left, communist loons, aka-today’s democRAT party.

You want to make Bitchfield kids stop opting out and wanting to go to Bitchfield scohols, then start with:

*Holding kids accountable, despite race.
*Holding teachers accountable, despite whatever left loon made up “condition”
*Putting cameras in the classroom to assure the above two are adhered to.
*School Uniforms (clean, well kept, (tax credit) can be donated to the poor to cut cost)
*No more liberal indoctrination.
*The 3 R’s are STRICTLY ADHERED TO.
*If not a class appropriate subject, IT WILL NOT BE DISCUSSED and waste class time.
*Teachers and Administrators will not socialize personally or via social media with students. *Failure to this policy will result in termination and no future employment in PSD.
*Alternative school for discipline problems, regardless of race or gender.
*School Resource Officers in all schools.
*Zero tolerance cell phone policy during school hours.
*Fighting, causing major disturbance, results in removal from school and placed in alternative school and/or possible expulsion.

The new Bitchfield Pubic Scohol motto would have to change to,

“We value a child being able to read, write, solve math problems, and critically think. If being a social media influencer, pro athlete, gansta, or music star, is your life goal, you’re probably better off in Excel High School or another fine on-line program like that.”

Queer Dispatchers
Queer Dispatchers
Reply to  Markus Aurelius
1 month ago

Somewhat sensible comments. But you have a Rep here that sent her own kid out of town? Monkey see monkey don’t.

Meanwhile
Meanwhile
Reply to  Queer Dispatchers
1 month ago

Almost all city elite send their kids out of Pittsfield. Even school committee members but certainly teachers and Mercer folk. Would be awesome to see the actual numbers.

But what you really should be focusing on is a shiny new ballpark. Whichever school district your kid goes to he or she will be able to drive by the newer Waconah park emporium renovations, corporate welfare project and see where their future hard earned income will be going if they stay local. They be gonna pay for this for a good part of their lives along with other similar welfare projects.

But the ones schooling out of the district will probably get edjumacated enough not to come back to Pittsfield so good on them. Rule of thumb in Pittsfield is that if you are not politically wired in your lot in life is going to be to support the ones who are.

Mad Trapper
Mad Trapper
Reply to  Jon Melle
1 month ago

Melle, EVERY failing sochol in mASSachusetts, is run by LIBERAL DEMOCRATS.

The people you vote for and endorse.

They instill INDOCTRINATION over EDUCATION.

Prom Date Kyle
Prom Date Kyle
1 month ago

We need merit based pay. The district loses so many good teachers once they are fed up. Jessica Basinet was runner-up for State Teacher of the Year and left a year to a better (non-teaching) position within the education realm. She was at Allendale, which was a chaotic mess, and everyone knew it.

I find it laughable that Sarah Luciani finds Stearns unmanageable. That tiny school alone is not only holding up the city rankings with Williams, but they also eat up a disproportionate chunk of the budget with their 3+ teachers per classroom

Queer Dispatchers
Queer Dispatchers
Reply to  Prom Date Kyle
1 month ago

Stearns should be treated as a private school.

Gimmee Less
Gimmee Less
Reply to  Queer Dispatchers
1 month ago

Yup, you could live right next to it and have to send your kids five miles across town if you do not know the right people.

Merry & Bright
Merry & Bright
1 month ago

So the school bus budget is $10 million. Has it ever occurred to the Mayor, Superintendent and the School Committee to check on the actual usage of the school buses? Suggest all of the listed take the time to watch the buses leaving the schools at the end of the day. They are EMPTY!! Yet, all the roads surrounding Pittsfield schools are impassible because of the lines of parents cars waiting to pick their children up. Has it ever crossed the minds of the Mayor, Superintendent and School Committee to question WHY the children won’t ride the bus? Is it bullying? Do none of the hundreds of parents not have a job? There has to be a reason the buses are not used. Is it the new American phase called “entitlement”? The bottom line is taxpayers are footing this large bill for completely underutilized buses. Do we really need all the buses? The routes need to be analyzed once a year. There must be someone in the overstaffed Mercer building that can perform this audit. Maybe some of the bus drivers that cruise around in empty buses, could be let go and the School Department could work with the BRTA to help them find some bus drivers for the impending lack of public transportation that IS UTILIZED. Time for the Mayor and his committees to put their egos aside and start doing their job.

Queer Dispatchers
Queer Dispatchers
Reply to  danvalenti
1 month ago

Right on. Good comments Dan.

Sir Chaz
Sir Chaz
Reply to  danvalenti
1 month ago

Smaller busses? And scrap the electric concept. Too expensive and they have no benefit.

Mr. Fritz
Mr. Fritz
Reply to  Sir Chaz
1 month ago

Agreed. A school district in Vermont invested in electric buses which ended up dying on the roads – batteries couldn’t last in the cold weather.

Sir Chaz
Sir Chaz
Reply to  Mr. Fritz
1 month ago

And what’s the point anyway? Their costs are ridiculous and they do they same thing, just not as reliably.

Mad Trapper
Mad Trapper
Reply to  Sir Chaz
1 month ago

BRTA has hybrid buses.

Meanwhile
Meanwhile
Reply to  Merry & Bright
1 month ago

There are so few kids on most busses that it would be cheaper to pay for a cab for each kid. Gigantic buses with four kids on em.

But don’t audit anything or look for better practices fer Gods sake.

Joetaxpayer
Joetaxpayer
Reply to  Meanwhile
1 month ago

Agree. The bus situation is nuts. They should be parked in the section of the City where they are picking up the children. Stop, driving them empty across town AM & PM 160 days a year. Only should go to Merrill Rd. for maintenance. City has 14 schools and numerous properties where they could park. Crosby should be closed after this year, regardless of if or when a new school is built. Less than 300 students go to Crosby, and could be absorbed easily. Superintendent is to focused on Race and Equity. She should focus on getting test scores up and Bullying addressed properly, not to mention retaining quality teachers. The should replace her.

ShirleyKnutz
ShirleyKnutz
Reply to  Meanwhile
1 month ago

You guys just came up with a great solution to save money. Smaller buses to bus Elementary school kids and student trips/sport teams. Jr High and up can all get free BRTA passes…think of the savings!! right now BRTA is free!

Ghost of Pearl Bergoff
Ghost of Pearl Bergoff
Reply to  ShirleyKnutz
1 month ago

Make ’em all ride the short bus

Wilson
Wilson
1 month ago

“Price tag? Infinity.” Sums it up perfectly. And at a time when public schools should start to be wound down. AI can teach anything 1-on-1 better than any union slacker, and college prep doesn’t make sense for 95% of kids because all the office jobs will be gone next year.

Super Brett
Super Brett
Reply to  Wilson
1 month ago

Local funding leaders for our schools should take a cue from the Trump administration, people don’t want the war it’s costing us a boatload of money, does nothing for the United States other than pad Wall Street and Corporate billionaires ( oil) at the expense of the taxpayer.

Flop EarsRubeo
Flop EarsRubeo
Reply to  Super Brett
1 month ago

Well we’ll well. New numbers out today. The head count for injured soldiers is now up to 140 ?? Injured dead or already been dead. I never liked it when Rex the oil guy in Trumps first term was Trumps choice for Secretary of State

Mr. Fritz
Mr. Fritz
Reply to  Super Brett
1 month ago

Explain please.
This post makes no sense.

Meanwhile
Meanwhile
Reply to  Mr. Fritz
1 month ago

Let me help you. First of all, ALL media you see on Tv is controlled. You may get tidbits of reality, but it is way late and no longer really news.

Within the first 24 hours lrans missiles rained down on 27 American military installations in the middle east in an attempt to destroy radars and interceptor missile components and was in fact very effective. Story is that Chinese satellite guidance systems contributed enormously to the Iranian missile barrages accuracy. The US naval base in Bahrain, one of the largest in the world was pretty much completely destroyed. Were there no sailors on the largest base?

Very hard for me to believe all the Iranian destruction of American facilities caused only 8 deaths because the White House is admitting they were blind sided by the attacks. Independent media sites on Youtube are saying the American people will be shocked when, if, their government reveals the truth casualty account.

Optimus Prime
Optimus Prime
1 month ago

Bitchfield’s idea of working to solve the shortage of good teachers in its public school system is to have the politicians and school boards try to get teaching standards lowered!

Optimus Prime
Optimus Prime
1 month ago

A big part of the education problem is with the unions and most of the people that fill the positions on the board of education. When people get elected to those seats, they are long in those seats, and they are often ruled over by the unions .This is where you get the woke curriculum. I think if people paid more attention to those candidates for boards of education seats, the problem would be
greatly reduced.

Flop EarsRubeo
Flop EarsRubeo
Reply to  Optimus Prime
1 month ago

Trump doesn’t run the U S Israel does.

Sir Chaz
Sir Chaz
Reply to  Optimus Prime
1 month ago

It’s exactly the unions that have wrecked education and driven the cost beyond all means of affordability. Property taxes are driven by admin salaries and extraordinary health benefits.

Braking Snooze
Braking Snooze
Reply to  Sir Chaz
1 month ago

Yeah. Sorta like Nader with car seat belts. Expensive but safety was the priority. Oh. The Council is about to pass the budget for the failed water sewer about 174,000 or there about.

Shiel Spainstesz
Shiel Spainstesz
Reply to  Sir Chaz
1 month ago

tways to save money and not add to gusget but lower taxes.
70-30 insurance

Eliminate insurance altogether for ten year tenured council
Eliminate twenty percent administrated staff schools
Eliminate state law out of district choice
Cut bus fleet in half
Eliminate back up teachers
All athletes pay for sports equipment and have volunteer coaches
Cut Mercer accounting in half

City side…Go to City Manager. And for those who say it won’t work. Neither does the current form of government. The City seems fine and content just spending what they can rob from the taxpayers. That incredible increase in assessed property was the craziest thing I’ve seen.

Sir Chaz
Sir Chaz
Reply to  Shiel Spainstesz
1 month ago

Council rejects cutting that ridiculous 70/30 insurance deal. May be even higher for school department which is the School Committee’s bailiwick.

May even stabilize tax levy if that overhead were corrected.

Jonathan A. Melle
Jonathan A. Melle
1 month ago

The newest episode of The Twilight Zone:

https://www.iberkshires.com/story/81991/Pittsfield-Schools-Hold-Budget-Hearing.html

If 679 students per academic year did NOT choice out to neighboring public school districts, then Pittsfield’s school budget would have a surplus instead of a $4 million deficit in fiscal year 2027.

Flagg Fromhell
Flagg Fromhell
Reply to  Jonathan A. Melle
1 month ago

I’m hearing a crazy sounding airplane.

Flagg Fromhell
Flagg Fromhell
Reply to  Jonathan A. Melle
1 month ago

We are the worst controlled school system in the United States. We are right in step with California. The motto..You have to fund schools. And it stops there. You fund them and increase every year. That’s what you do. That’s the Philosophy. The end game. Votes for Dems..votes votes votes. That’s all that matters.

Flagg Fromhell
Flagg Fromhell
Reply to  Jonathan A. Melle
1 month ago

Awful snowplowing this year Mr. Valenti. And now of course the pot holes. No excuse. Fill Them! To many to mention. But V Man is correct, at every intersection there’s a problem.

Mad Trapper
Mad Trapper
Reply to  Flagg Fromhell
1 month ago

How about the recently repaved section of Holmes rd!

Right after the paving, they did work on a gas line and tore up the new pavement. Maybe they should have fixed the line first?

I counted over shoddy 20 patches in the 1/2-mile section of road, one of them near the intersection with Pomeroy Ave, is a crater!

Jonathan A. Melle
Jonathan A. Melle
1 month ago

“Mass. city leaders want tax changes, more state aid”
By Niki Griswold, The Boston Globe, March 11, 2026

The city of Amesbury eliminated all foreign language classes at its middle school last year. Chelsea officials are debating whether the city can afford to keep staffing a fourth fire engine they bought less than two years ago. Boston Public Schools leaders are weighing cuts of up to 400 teachers and other staff.

Even as property taxes spike in many cities and towns, local officials across Massachusetts say they’re being forced to consider painful budget decisions — and asking voters to do the same — just so they can meet the rising costs of basic services. Without state intervention, they warn, the cuts will keep coming.

Local leaders are pleading with state lawmakers to make changes to what they say is a broken funding system. Among the asks: increases in local state aid and more flexibility in how they tax residents.

But the state hasits own fiscal constraints,in partdue to federal funding reductions and political pressure to ease Massachusetts’ high cost of living. That’s left municipal leaders’ proposals — and their budgets — facing an uncertain future.

Northampton Mayor Gina-Louise Sciarra said she has already had to cut positions in schools and trim backpublic works services. It’s meant the city is slower to fill potholes and plow streets after snowstorms than residents would like, and has had to add back paraprofessional positions that it previously lost after increasing their numbers during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Sciarra said the school district has also struggled to keep up with rising special education costs and requests for additional staff in recent years. It’s all created tension in the community and in City Hall, where the City Council has not passed a budget the last two years.

“I’ve never seen it like this. I have never seen the frustration, the anger,” said Charlene Nardi, Northampton’s finance director. “We’re pulling all the levers, we’re doing [everything we can] to just plug the gaps, and it’s just never enough.”

The core problem is that the costs to maintain the same level of city services outpace the city’s ability to raise revenue, she said.

“I fear we’ve already passed the breaking point,” Sciarra said. “Something is really structurally wrong.”

In Massachusetts, state law significantly restricts municipalities’ abilities to impose new taxes and how much they can raise existing ones on cars, hotels, and restaurants. Another law, known as Proposition 2½, caps increases to the total amount municipalities collect in property taxes — which funds the majority of most cities and towns’ budgets — by 2.5 percent each year, with some exceptions.

But inflation has often run higher than 2.5 percent in recent years, and federal pandemic dollars have largely all been spent. Several local officials told the Globe that their health insurance costs alone are growing 8 to 12 percent a year.

All those factors together have created the “perfect storm” of historical financial pressures, according to the Massachusetts Municipal Association. Or, in the words of Melrose Mayor Jennifer Grigoraitis: ”It just fundamentally becomes a math problem.”

Municipalities can ask voters to approve a property tax increase beyond the 2.5 percent limit through what’s known as an override. But that can be time-consuming, expensive, and politically tricky.

After Melrose residents voted against an override in 2024, Grigoraitis said the city had to eliminate dozens of school and city jobs, end Sunday hours at the public library, and reduce funding for trash pickup and sidewalk and road repair. But after a year and a half of community meetings and an organized outreach campaign, voters approved a $13.5 million override in 2025, allowing the city to restore some, but not all, of those cuts.

Jill Batchelder, who has two daughters in Melrose Public Schools and supported both override votes, said the city did a much better job last year of explaining how it planned to spend the additional tax dollars.

“That was the problem before: Folks didn’t understand where it would go,” Batchelder said.

But John Todd, a 67-year-old retired Melrose resident, said he voted for the override in 2024 but against the one in 2025, because he was frustrated that the city came back asking residents for more funds rather than more forcefully advocating for more state aid.

“They need to take into account senior citizens, so that people can stay in their homes,” Todd said. “I shouldn’t have to sell my house after 40 years to pay my property tax.”

Those concerns likely also contributed to why Amesbury residents voted against an override last fall, Mayor Kassandra Gove said.

“It was really an affordability issue — people really cannot take on anymore,” Gove said. Now she’s preparing to cut dozens of teaching positions and potentially implement parking and trash fees.

Communities such as Arlington and Malden also have overrides on the ballot this month, and will face “devastating” budget cuts if they don’t pass, officials told the Globe.

Even if Malden voters approve either one of two proposed overrides, one at $5.2 million or another at $8.2 million, “it’ll just put the pain off a little bit,” said Ron Hogan, Malden’s chief strategy officer.

In Chelsea, city manager Fidel Maltez saidoverride votes are “not an option.” The city of roughly 40,000 people has a median family income of $75,000 — compared with $132,000 statewide — and nearly half of residents are immigrants.

”Our residents are struggling to survive, so asking them to add on to their tax bill, even for essential services, is a nonstarter,” Maltez said.

The Massachusetts Municipal Association released a report in December advocating for the state to dramatically increase unrestricted local aid; give local officials the option to raise excise taxes on meals, hotels, or cars; and changing Proposition 2½ , by either raising the limit or tying it to the Consumer Price Index, and allowing voters to approve gradual, multiyear overrides.

Boston Mayor Michelle Wu has been one of the most prominent local officials to call on the state to repeal Prop. 2½. And while all the municipal leaders the Globe spoke to agreed the law is outdated and in need of reform, they also argued the state needs to offer a suite of tools to municipalities.

There’s no “one-size-fits-all [solution], because what’ll work for Brockton is not what’s going to work for Wellesley,” said Troy Clarkson, Brockton’schief financial officer.

But it’s unclear if state lawmakers will pursue any of the policy solutions municipalities are pushing.

Governor Maura Healey has twice pushed a bill that would allow cities and towns to raise excise taxes, but it’s received a chilly reception on Beacon Hill. The first-term Democrat also proposed increasing unrestricted state aid to local governments, though by a far smaller amount than the $351 million MMA called for in its report.

House budget chairman Aaron Michlewitz emphasized that state lawmakers are listening to municipalities’ budget concerns, and have increased aid for schools, special education, and transit projects, including through revenue raised by the state’s tax on its wealthiest residents. But even the increases to school aid have struggled to keep pace with inflation, and the North End Democrat said it’s unlikely lawmakers can address every ask.

“We are in for a difficult budget cycle,” Michlewitz said,noting that Massachusetts voters could also vote this November on a measure to slash the state income tax rate, which state officials say could sap billions of dollars from the state’s coffers. He also said “it would take some serious convincing” to get lawmakers to agree to any changes to Prop. 2½ .

“It has been a consistent checks and balances between the state and the municipalities,” Michlewitz said.

Niki Griswold can be reached at niki.griswold@globe.com. Follow her @nikigriswold.

Jonathan A. Melle
Jonathan A. Melle
Reply to  Jonathan A. Melle
1 month ago

March 11, 2026

Hello blogger Dan Valenti,

Thank you for publishing my post of The Boston Globe’s news story about local government in Massachusetts facing under-funded state aid during their budget proposals on your awesome blog named PlanetValenti.com.

What stood out to me was the following two paragraphs: 

But John Todd, a 67-year-old retired Melrose resident, said he voted for the override in 2024 but against the one in 2025, because he was frustrated that the city came back asking residents for more funds rather than more forcefully advocating for more state aid.

“They need to take into account senior citizens, so that people can stay in their homes,” Todd said. “I shouldn’t have to sell my house after 40 years to pay my property tax.”

The do-nothing (but DISSERVICES) Boston state lawmakers always shorting local government in Massachusetts on state aid may cause people who have owned their own homes for many years to sell them to pay the rising local taxes and fees.

I saw that Governor Maura Healey, to her credit, has proposed measures to increase local revenues, but it is the actually state REPRESENTATIVES who are blocking her measures.

Why are people so afraid of the career politicians in Boston? Do local officials fear their wrath if they ask for more state aid dollars?

Best wishes,

Jonathan A. Melle

Sir CHAZ
Sir CHAZ
Reply to  Jonathan A. Melle
1 month ago

Maybe giving city employees a 10% raise and bonus each year was bad idea?

Why should a taxpayer in Mississippi pay federal taxes to underwrite that sort of generosity?

Last edited 1 month ago by Sir CHAZ
Optimus Prime
Optimus Prime
Reply to  Jonathan A. Melle
1 month ago

Healey happily took in the invaders expecting Biden – Harris to pay for those expenses. She’s dug a hole so deep she’s blocking the Auditor from her mandate to look at government finances. Healey installed her corrupt cronies to help cover her tracks.Spent 3+Billion on illegal immigrants. Little or no audit. Recent 8+Million in SNAP benefits fraud. Probably more but refuses to provide data to the Feds for audit. The solution for all this $$ shortfalls? Tax people even more. No wonder Ma. Is
circling the drain.

Mad Trapper
Mad Trapper
Reply to  Jonathan A. Melle
1 month ago

^^^^^^ All problems caused by Liberal Democrats.

The worst being Maura Healey, who loves CRIMINAL ALIENS, more than taxpaying US Citizen Residents.

Gimmee Less
Gimmee Less
Reply to  Mad Trapper
1 month ago

The city adamantly refuses to do a forensic audit which might highlight large areas where money could be saved.

No way and no how they say. And one has to wonder why. What might be in that Pandoras box that they fear so much?

Jonathan A. Melle
Jonathan A. Melle
1 month ago

Mass. Fiscal See Authoritarian Trend in State Government
By Alan Earls, Editor, Franklin Observer, March 11, 2026

The Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance is raising concerns following recent comments by Andrea Joy Campbell suggesting that ballot questions approved by voters do not automatically become law.

In a social media video attempting to justify her continued lack of enforcement of the legislative audit law, Campbell stated that when voters approved the measure, it “did not automatically become the law.”

“The Attorney General’s new position represents a troubling departure from how voter-approved laws have historically been treated in Massachusetts. When Massachusetts voters approve a ballot question, it becomes law. That has always been the understanding in our state. If opponents believe a law conflicts with the Constitution, they can challenge it in court. But suggesting that a voter-approved law simply does not take effect after the election is a dangerous precedent that undermines the will of the voters,” said Paul Diego Craney, Executive Director of the Massachusetts Fiscal Alliance.

“For a recent example, look at when voters approved the Right to Repair law. It became law and its opponents never claimed it wasn’t a law. They challenged it in court. That’s how the system works. The people pass the law, and if someone believes it is unconstitutional, the courts decide. Constitutional challenges or clarifications are a normal part of how these measures are implemented. What’s not normal is the current situation, where the Attorney General is standing athwart the audit law having its day in court by depriving the person voters sought to empower with the law, the state auditor, of legal representation,” noted Craney.

“By refusing to enforce the audit law and simultaneously refusing to allow the State Auditor the right to legal representation in court, Attorney General Campbell is essentially unilaterally nullifying the will of the voters. This sets a dangerous precedent. It signals to lawmakers and bureaucrats that voter-approved reforms can be ignored or delayed indefinitely when they conflict with political convenience. It undermines the integrity of the initiative process, erodes public trust, and sends a message to Massachusetts residents that even when they vote, it doesn’t matter because Beacon Hill insiders have the final say,” said Craney.

“If this becomes the new standard, every future ballot question, from tax relief to transparency measures, could be subject to the same arbitrary delays, leaving voters powerless and the initiative process meaningless, and our democracy severely eroded,” said Craney.

https://franklinobserver.town.news/g/franklin-town-ma/n/370800/mass-fiscal-see-authoritarian-trend-state-government

Optimus Prime
Optimus Prime
1 month ago

Site issues?

Optimus Prime
Optimus Prime
Reply to  danvalenti
1 month ago

It was my own doing. Thanks for your attention to this matter.