Also: A scathing school lawsuit in Everett; another Mass. community bans fur sales [Donate ❤️]( [View in Browser](  March 22, 2023 🌤️ Partly sunny, with a high near 52. Good Morning Boston, Gov. Maura Healey is back on our airwaves this morning. [Tune in]( to Radio Boston at 11 a.m. to hear Tiziana Dearing's live interview with Healey â and send us your questions for the governor through our text club. You can join up by texting BOSTON to [617-766-0382](tel:6177660382). Now to the news: - The Boston City Council will take up a proposal today to nip several quality of life problems in the bud â by nixing nips. Councilor Ricardo Arroyo plans to formally present his proposal to ban the sale of small alcohol bottles up to 100 ml.
- Why? Arroyo cites both environmental and public health reasons. Nip bottles are [too small to be recycled]( and frequently become litter. In less than two months in 2021, residents [picked up 10,000 (!) littered nip bottles]( in Hyde Park, where Arroyo lives.
- The city of Chelsea also saw a massive drop in alcohol-related ambulance calls, as well as public drunkenness, after it passed a nip ban in 2018, [according to CommonWealth Magazine]( (though it's worth noting that the cause of those changes is disputed).
- Arroyo told WBUR's Amy Sokolow that Boston's Licensing Board already makes agreements with individual liquor stores so they won't sell nips. "This is sort of an issue that district councilors have dealt with on a piecemeal basis," he said. "What I'm asking for is for us to make this retroactive and across the board."
- The path ahead: Arroyo's proposal will get assigned to a committee today for a future public hearing and working sessions to iron out the details. But with budget season on the near-horizon, the timeline for a vote is unclear. Until then, many councilors aren't staking out a position on the issue just yet.
- But not all: Councilors Kendra Lara and Liz Breadon have come out in support of the ban. "These types of bans have proven to have a major impact on the health and well-being of residents in other cities," Lara said in an email. (Similar bans already exist in Newton, Falmouth, Wareham and Mashpee.)
- On the other hand: Councilor Erin Murphy, who chairs the body's public health committee, questioned if Arroyo's proposal would address the root causes of alcohol-related issues and expressed concerns about a ban's impact on small, locally owned liquor stores. (The state's package store association has [fought against nip bans.]( Murphy thinks "there are better ways" of addressing concerns â like working with liquor stores on awareness campaigns or putting out more trash barrels â rather than "another layer of government control." - Fur-get about trying to sell fur products in Lexington. The town approved a new bylaw this week banning the sale of fur within its borders. While there currently aren't any stores in Lexington dedicated to fur, the ban means the sale of other items that have fur (from clothing to home decor) will also be prohibited.
- Not just coats: According to the MSPCA, many people may be wearing fur without knowing it. âFur is prevalent in winter clothingâin the lining of coat hoods and as an accent on some wool hats," said Kara Holmquist, the group's advocacy director, adding that Lexington's ban pushes stores to sell "cruelty-free alternatives that donât rely on hurting animals."
- Lexington is the sixth Massachusetts community to pass a fur ban, joining Brookline, Cambridge, Plymouth, Wellesley and Weston. Once approved by Attorney General Andrea Campbell's office, the bylaw wouldn't take effect for at least six months. - National Grid customers can officially bank on a big drop in their electric bill later this spring. The Department of Public Utilities [approved the company's proposed rate reductions]( yesterday.
- WBUR's Miriam Wasser reports the new rates, which take effect May 1, will [result in a 40% decrease in the average National Grid customer's electric bill]( â or about $115 a month. P.S.â The [debut episode of Violation, our new podcast produced with The Marshall Project, is out today](. The first episode of the seven-part series tells the story of a 1986 summer camp murder, in which 16-year-old Jacob Wideman fatally stabbed his roommate, Eric Kane. The crime devastated the two boys' families â and was also a haunting echo from the Widemans' family history. Listen to the series [wherever you get your podcasts]( Nik DeCosta-Klipa
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[Everett school superintendent alleges discrimination and retaliation in federal suit](
Everettâs top school officials allege âblatant and overt acts of discrimination and retaliationâ by Everettâs mayor, Carlo DeMaria, and his allies in city government. DeMaria disputes the charges. [Read more.](
[Everett school superintendent alleges discrimination and retaliation in federal suit](
Everettâs top school officials allege âblatant and overt acts of discrimination and retaliationâ by Everettâs mayor, Carlo DeMaria, and his allies in city government. DeMaria disputes the charges. [Read more.](
[Climate activists in Boston call on big banks divest from fossil fuel companies](
The Boston protest is one of 102 climate demonstrations organized Tuesday all over the U.S. [Read more.](
[Climate activists in Boston call on big banks divest from fossil fuel companies](
The Boston protest is one of 102 climate demonstrations organized Tuesday all over the U.S. [Read more.](
[Over $1.5 million in SNAP benefits reported stolen in Mass. State leaders want added security](
Acting Commissioner Mary Sheehan asked lawmakers Tuesday to support a proposal in Gov. Maura Healey's budget that would allow the Department of Transitional Assistance to offer recipients a new way to protect their accounts. [Read more.](
[Over $1.5 million in SNAP benefits reported stolen in Mass. State leaders want added security](
Acting Commissioner Mary Sheehan asked lawmakers Tuesday to support a proposal in Gov. Maura Healey's budget that would allow the Department of Transitional Assistance to offer recipients a new way to protect their accounts. [Read more.](
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Management at New England Public Media, an NPR and PBS affiliate serving Western Massachusetts, announced they are reducing staff by 20%. The cuts come the same week that NPR is preparing to layoff 10% of its workforce. [Read more.](
[Springfield public media company cuts 20% of its staff](
Management at New England Public Media, an NPR and PBS affiliate serving Western Massachusetts, announced they are reducing staff by 20%. The cuts come the same week that NPR is preparing to layoff 10% of its workforce. [Read more.](
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After the courts in their home country failed to bring them justice, three men who said they or their families were subjected to political persecution got justice in the civil trial against Jean Morose Viliena, a former mayor in Haiti who's been living in Malden. [Read more.](
[Jury rules against ex-Haitian mayor, orders $15M in damages](
After the courts in their home country failed to bring them justice, three men who said they or their families were subjected to political persecution got justice in the civil trial against Jean Morose Viliena, a former mayor in Haiti who's been living in Malden. [Read more.]( Anything Else? - A new international report led by researchers at Boston College says plastics are causing such harm to our health that it's time for global leaders to regulate them. All Things Considered spoke with the top researcher about [what we should do as individuals to limit our use of plastics and what a global plastics treaty could look like](. - Next up in [our 2023 spring arts guide]( Iris Fanger[ lists 10 dance shows coming to Boston this season,]( buzzing everywhere from the Citizens Bank Opera House, to the Shubert Theatre, to even the ICA. Meanwhile, book critic Christian Burno has curated [a list of seven fresh reads]( to hold bibliophiles over until the summer. - Jacques Schwarz-Bart, one of the leading lights of Caribbean jazz, has made Boston his third home. Noah Schaffer [profiles the Guadeloupean saxophonist ahead of a rare local show at Scullers Jazz Club this weekend](. - Twenty years after the Iraq War began, U.S. Navy veteran Andrew Carleen [writes in this Cognoscenti commentary]( that he fears the U.S. is doomed to repeat the mistakes of the past, unless there is some kind of cultural revolution in how average citizens relate to foreign policy.  What We're Reading 📚 - How Uphams Corner held back the tide of gentrification ([The Boston Globe]( - The FBI raided a notable journalist's home. Rolling Stone didn't tell readers why ([NPR]( - Deep Ellum Is Back, Along with Its Beloved Truffle Gorgonzola Fries ([Boston Magazine](  Tell Me Something Good
[Uprooted from Ukraine, promising tennis player finds her footing on the court in N.H.](
For the past nine months, Polina Makarenko has lived with her mother, Nina, in Hampton Falls â a place they never heard of before. After initially struggling in the U.S., Polina has settled into her new life, giving the occasional lesson to local kids while working to regain her own tennis form â and perhaps land a scholarship. [Read more.](
[Uprooted from Ukraine, promising tennis player finds her footing on the court in N.H.](
For the past nine months, Polina Makarenko has lived with her mother, Nina, in Hampton Falls â a place they never heard of before. After initially struggling in the U.S., Polina has settled into her new life, giving the occasional lesson to local kids while working to regain her own tennis form â and perhaps land a scholarship. [Read more.]( Listen: The Common [looks into some of the ways restaurant workers are often exploited and mistreated]( following the arrest of a local pizza store owner for abuse toward his undocumented workers. Play: [WBUR's daily mini crossword.]( Can you keep your streak going? Before you go: Please support [my upcoming ballot initiative](. 😎 Forward to a friend. They can sign up [here](. 📣 Give us your feedback: newsletters@wbur.org 📧 Get more WBUR stories sent to your inbox. [Check out all of our newsletter offerings.]( Support the news Â
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