Also: Everything you need to know about Boston Calling; pack your patience this summer travel season [Donate ❤️]( [View in Browser]( Â May 26, 2023Â ☀️ Sunny, with a high near 66. Good Morning Boston, But seriously... [Celtics in seven]( - Massachusetts lawmakers may need to take action if they want to blunt the effects of [a Supreme Court's decision yesterday]( rolling back the EPA's power to regulate wetlands. WBUR's Paula Moura reports that experts say the ruling leaves nearly half of all U.S. wetlands unprotected from being filled in for development and agriculture.
- What the court did: In a 5-4 majority decision, Justice Samuel Alito ruled that the 51-year-old Clean Water Act only applies to oceans, lakes, rivers, streams and wetlands with a "continuous surface connection to those bodies." That leaves wetlands that are adjacent â but not directly connected above ground â to those water bodies newly unprotected by the CWA. (Critics say the ruling fundamentally misunderstands how water works.)
- The local angle: Brad Campbell, the president of the Boston-based Conservation Law Foundation, told Moura they're still assessing the impact of the decision in Massachusetts. Campbell noted that the state [has its own wetland protections]( "that may fill part of the gap that's now been created." Emily Norton, the head of the Charles River Watershed Association, said many communities also have [local bylaws]( that go further. But both said action from the State House may be needed to fill other newly created gaps. - Why does it matter? "Wetlands are essential to protecting not only clean water but habitat," Campbell said. "They provide flood protection, storm protection, and they really undergird the [tourism and recreation] economy that the health and prosperity of millions of families and businesses depend on."
- Go deeper: Alito's logic was disputed by Justice Brett Kavanaugh and the court's three liberals, who argued the ruling goes against five decades of precedent and will have "significant repercussions for water quality and flood control." NPR has [more coverage here](. - Shipping up: Boston Calling returns today â and ([just like last year]( we have another last-minute lineup change. The Dropkick Murphys will be [filling in for the Yeah Yeah Yeahs today at 5:55 p.m.]( after the indie band dropped out of the festival due to an illness.
- The change also moves The National into the 7:05 p.m. slot, before Foo Fighters take the stage to close out the first night.
- Heading to Boston Calling? Here's [everything you need to know](. (And no, you probably don't have to [get there this early]( - Do you really like lighthouses? Now's your chance to own one. The U.S. government is [giving away six lighthouses this year, including five in New England](. (GPS technology has basically made them obsolete.)
- The catch: You have to be willing to preserve the lighthouse, and make it publicly available for educational, recreational or cultural purposes.
- If there are no willing takers, the lighthouses will be auctioned off to private owners instead. Four are up for auction this year. - The MBTA is reducing its scheduled bus frequencies by about 3% this summer â but the move is less of a service cut than it is "truth and advertising," as one T official put it Thursday. That's because the MBTA is currently dropping about one in every 25-30 bus trips. So they're adjusting to match that reality and even out service.
- It's a flip from the T's spring approach, when officials [scheduled bus service they knew they couldn't deliver]( due a driver shortage.
- T officials say the new approach is better â primarily because it provides more reliable service. The scheduled waits may be longer, but at least canceled buses won't create huge holes that leave riders hanging for disruptively long periods of time.
- What's next: The [new schedule]( takes effect July 2. - MBTA making progress: After [a series of early closures]( the T has successfully lifted all slow zones on the downtown stretch of the Blue Line. General Manager Phil Eng said yesterday that the work effectively chops 10 minutes off overall trip times, ahead of this summer's [two-month Sumner Tunnel closure](.
- Now the focus turns to the Red Line. The T is planning 8:45 p.m. weeknight closures the next two weeks (May 30-June 1 and June 5-9) between JFK/UMass and North Quincy to address a cluster of severe slow zones on the line's Braintree branch.
- The Green Line Extension will also close for two weekends in June so crews can finish some final items on the project's checklist. [Click here]( for more details on the diversions coming next month.
- But first: This weekend, the Green Line's Kenmore station [will be closed and the entire C branch will be replaced by shuttles]( due to track work. P.S.â For the fellow news junkies out there: Mayor Michelle Wu announced a new plan aimed at making Bostonâs streets safer. Do you know the main pillar? Then [take our Boston News Quiz]( and test your knowledge of the local stories we covered this week. Nik DeCosta-Klipa
Editor, Newsletters
[Follow]( Editor's note: WBUR Today will be taking a break on Monday for the Memorial Day holiday. We'll be back in your inboxes Tuesday.  Support the news  The Rundown
[Expect a sunny and sea breezy Memorial Day weekend](
An incredible stretch of weather is unfolding that will extend through and beyond the Memorial Day holiday. [Read more.](
[Expect a sunny and sea breezy Memorial Day weekend](
An incredible stretch of weather is unfolding that will extend through and beyond the Memorial Day holiday. [Read more.](
[Pack your patience: Mass. summer tourism destinations face labor shortage](
From Cape Cod to the Berkshires, tourism destinations in Massachusetts expect a busy summer season. But they continue to struggle to find enough seasonal workers which is impacting many businesses. [Read more.](
[Pack your patience: Mass. summer tourism destinations face labor shortage](
From Cape Cod to the Berkshires, tourism destinations in Massachusetts expect a busy summer season. But they continue to struggle to find enough seasonal workers which is impacting many businesses. [Read more.](
[Tom Hanks urges Harvard grads to defend the truth and resist indifference](
âFor the truth to some is no longer empirical. It's no longer based on data, nor common sense, nor even common decency," said the two-time Academy Award winner during his keynote address. [Read more.](
[Tom Hanks urges Harvard grads to defend the truth and resist indifference](
âFor the truth to some is no longer empirical. It's no longer based on data, nor common sense, nor even common decency," said the two-time Academy Award winner during his keynote address. [Read more.](
[State report details radioactive pollutants in Pilgrim wastewater](
State testing data released this week offers the first detailed snapshot of the radioactive contaminants in wastewater stored at the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Plant in Plymouth. [Read more.](
[State report details radioactive pollutants in Pilgrim wastewater](
State testing data released this week offers the first detailed snapshot of the radioactive contaminants in wastewater stored at the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Plant in Plymouth. [Read more.](
[New Bedford once lit the world with whale oil. Now, it wants to do the same with wind power](
On Wednesday, the vessel UHL Felicity bringing wind turbine tower sections from Portugal reached the Port of New Bedford. [Read more.](
[New Bedford once lit the world with whale oil. Now, it wants to do the same with wind power](
On Wednesday, the vessel UHL Felicity bringing wind turbine tower sections from Portugal reached the Port of New Bedford. [Read more.]( Anything Else? - Amid all the big names headlining Boston Calling, there's a hometown favorite excited to share the stage: Get familiar with [The Q-Tip Bandits and their fusion of indie-pop, rock, funk and soul](. - Somerville Theatre is [leaning into the communal nature of film with a series of movie showings followed by upstairs afterparties](. The first installment features the cult classic "Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me" and a party in the theatre's recently renovated ballroom. - Some of the nation's biggest shows will come to an end within the next week, from "Succession" to "Ted Lasso." Critic-at-large Ed Siegel [writes that the former has a tough task for more reasons than one](. - In tune with Boston Calling's first day, we have two new music-themed Cognoscenti commentaries. Michelle Bowdler [writes that Tina Turner was her beacon of hope]( after a devastating attack that forced her to rebuild her life. Meanwhile, Joanna Weiss [writes in this essay]( that last weekend's Taylor Swift concerts at Gillette Stadium were more than an event for the parents of Swifties: "We heard the soundtrack of our kidsâ childhoods." Â What We're Reading 📚 - Boston police lieutenant facing OUI charge was previously fired, rehired after another incident ([The Boston Globe]( - Stop trying to flush your secrets â and other advice from plumbers ([Washington Post]( - With or Without You: The Oral History of the âAmericansâ Finale ([The Ringer]( Â Tell Me Something Good
[Over 2,500 graduates of UMass Boston leave campus with gifts of wisdom â and cash](
At UMass Bostonâs undergraduate commencement ceremony Thursday, Quincy billionaire Rob Hale announced he would give each UMass Boston graduate $1,000 in cash â though there is one catch. [Read more.](
[Over 2,500 graduates of UMass Boston leave campus with gifts of wisdom â and cash](
At UMass Bostonâs undergraduate commencement ceremony Thursday, Quincy billionaire Rob Hale announced he would give each UMass Boston graduate $1,000 in cash â though there is one catch. [Read more.]( Listen: The Common discusses [what the Boston City Council's newly approved district map means for the political landscape]( of the city. Play: [WBUR's daily mini crossword.]( Can you keep your streak going? Before you go: [Hang. It. In. The. Louvre.]( 😎 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
 Want to change how you receive these emails? Stop getting this newsletter by [updating your preferences.](  I don't want to hear from WBUR anymore. Unsubscribe from all WBUR editorial newsletters [here](.  Interested in learning more about corporate sponsorship? [Click here.]( Copyright © 2023 WBUR-FM, All rights reserved.