Also: Why some newly arrived immigrants can't start school on time; cooling off Boston classrooms [Donate ❤️]( [View in Browser]( Â September 5, 2023Â ☀️ Mostly sunny, with a high near 88. Good Morning Boston, Summer ain't over yet. We have three straight days of heat ahead. With the humidity, [the apparent temperature will feel like it's in the mid-to-upper 90s across much of Massachusetts]( according to the National Weather Service. Looking for relief? Head to the coast. Now to the news: - The seasonal [CapeFLYER train]( made its final runs of the year between Boston and Hyannis this weekend. But as the summer tourism season comes to a close, a group of local elected officials are pushing to make passenger train service to Cape Cod a year-round thing. "The CapeFLYER is a tourist train," says state Rep. Dylan Fernandes, who [filed a bill last week]( to bring daily, year-round MBTA commuter rail service to â or at least toward â the Cape. "And we're for it. We're supportive of it," Fernandes told WBUR's Dave Faneuf. "But we want service that focuses on the 300,000 residents that live here."
- Why? Fernandes points to the fact that the Cape's population [appears to have actually grown over the past couple years]( and that half of its residents commute to the mainland side of the canal. [A 2021 study]( found that extending commuter rail service to nearby Buzzards Bay would reduce car travel by 10 million to 16 million miles a year.
- The tracks are already there. But currently, the CapeFLYER only makes a few trips on weekends from Memorial Day to Labor Day. And due to poor track conditions on the Cape, trains are limited to 30 mph once they go over the canal. The $40 roundtrip from South Station to Hyannis takes two and a half hours each way.
- Fernandes' bill proposes a two-step approach:
- First, it would require the T to extend year-round commuter rail service from the Middleborough/Lakeville line to Buzzards Bay within a year of passage. (This, he says, is a "relatively cheap" near-term solution that avoids issues with the Cape tracks, as well as having to coordinate with the U.S. Army Corps to lower the lift railroad bridge across the Cape Cod Canal.) According to the bill, that means at least three trains in the morning and in the evening on weekdays.
- Meanwhile, the bill would require the MBTA to study the feasibility of extending year-round service to Falmouth, Bourne, Barnstable, Yarmouth and Sandwich. That includes the costs and benefits, as well as possible funding sources. - Reality check: This isn't the first time lawmakers have pushed to revive Cape rail. In 2016, a similar pilot proposal was shelved by the MBTA's oversight board, including the state's soon-to-be acting transportation secretary, Monica Tibbits-Nutt. "I think there are better things to use our money on," she [said at the time](. (For now, Fernandes' bill has just two cosponsors.)
- Flashback: A century ago, passenger trains used to go all the way to Provincetown. However, the last time the Cape had daily year-round service was 1959. Read [more about the history here](. - More classrooms in Boston are now better equipped to take on the heat as the new school year begins. WBUR's Carrie Jung [reports that the city has installed thousands of new window air conditioner units]( across dozens of school buildings as part of Mayor Michelle Wu's "Green New Deal for Boston Public Schools."
- Then and now: Last year, only 20 BPS schools had AC units. Since then, officials have installed more than 3,800 AC units across 78 schools, according to a back-to-school memo released last week. Jung reports there's another 19 slated to have AC installed, too.
- Zoom out: NPR [reports]( that a lack of air conditioners remains a problem for an estimated 36,000 public schools nationwide. - Heads up, it's election day in Massachusetts' second largest city. Worcester is holding preliminary elections for its City Council and School Committee races today. There's a total of five competitive races across the city, including two wide-open City Council contests.
- Where do I vote? Worcester residents can [enter their address here]( to find their polling location. Polls are open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m.
- Go deeper: Patch has [more on the candidates here](. The top two vote-getters in each race will advance to the general election.
- Meanwhile in Worcester: The Boston Globe [reports that longtime Worcester Police Chief Steven Sargent abruptly retired last week]( amid a federal investigation into the department's use of force and internal misconduct allegations. P.S.â Three-time U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky will be [at CitySpace this Saturday for "Proverbs of Limbo,â]( a combination poetry night and jazz concert. Proceeds from the event will support the next 25 years of the Favorite Poem Project. [Get your tickets here.]( Nik DeCosta-Klipa
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[As students return to classrooms, some newly arrived immigrants have to waitÂ](
The effort to vaccinate newly arrived immigrant children, enroll them in school and equip schools with translators and transportation plans has proved daunting. Even as the first day of school arrives, it remains a work in progress. The result: Some kids won't start on time. [Read more.](
[As students return to classrooms, some newly arrived immigrants have to waitÂ](
The effort to vaccinate newly arrived immigrant children, enroll them in school and equip schools with translators and transportation plans has proved daunting. Even as the first day of school arrives, it remains a work in progress. The result: Some kids won't start on time. [Read more.](
[First lady Jill Biden has tested positive for COVID-19, again](
The White House says President Biden tested negative, and will continue to be tested ahead of a planned trip to India this week. The first lady will remain in Delaware. [Read more.](
[First lady Jill Biden has tested positive for COVID-19, again](
The White House says President Biden tested negative, and will continue to be tested ahead of a planned trip to India this week. The first lady will remain in Delaware. [Read more.](
[Report by panel reviewing Harvard Medical School's body donor program delayed](
Harvard Medical School says that a review of its body donation program, now mired in an interstate body parts theft scandal, wonât be completed until October. It was originally set to be released by the end of summer. [Read more.](
[Report by panel reviewing Harvard Medical School's body donor program delayed](
Harvard Medical School says that a review of its body donation program, now mired in an interstate body parts theft scandal, wonât be completed until October. It was originally set to be released by the end of summer. [Read more.](
[More small airports are being cut off from the air travel network. This is why](
The pilot shortage and changing economics are to blame for legacy airlines departing regional airports [Read more.](
[More small airports are being cut off from the air travel network. This is why](
The pilot shortage and changing economics are to blame for legacy airlines departing regional airports [Read more.](
[Days before schools open, Brockton faces leadership disruption and deficit turmoil](
The Brockton school committee is scheduled to hold an emergency special meeting Friday afternoon to vote to authorize an independent investigation and appoint an acting superintendent. [Read more.](
[Days before schools open, Brockton faces leadership disruption and deficit turmoil](
The Brockton school committee is scheduled to hold an emergency special meeting Friday afternoon to vote to authorize an independent investigation and appoint an acting superintendent. [Read more.]( Anything Else? - RIP: Steve Harwell, the former lead singer and frontman for the rock band Smash Mouth, [died over the weekend from acute liver failure]( according to the band's manager. He was 56 years old. - Investigators have [seized an ancient Roman bust from the Worcester Art Museum]( as part of an international looting probe. Museum officials say they acquired the life-size bust â believed to depict the daughter of emperor Marcus Aurelius or Septimius Severus â in 1966, but had âlimited informationâ about its history. - Jean Eustache's brief, prolific career as a filmmaker has been more written about than seen. But thatâs about to change, thanks to the new traveling retrospective, âThe Dirty Stories of Jean Eustache.â Film critic Sean Burns [previews the series' arrival this weekend at the Brattle Theatre](. - Get out the vote: Massachusetts is designing a new state seal and motto, and Rich Barlow [argues in his commentary that fellow Bay Staters should take the time to weigh in](. While he prefers a new whale-inspired flag, Barlow says to vote, no matter your preferences. Â What We're Reading 📚 - The day an underwater volcano almost wiped out a nation ([Washington Post]( - Naughty on Nantucket ([Air Mail]( - A look into the REM dreams of the animal kingdom ([Ars Technica]( Â Life Advice
[12 things student loan borrowers should know about the return to repayment](
October's coming, and we're here to help you get ready. [Read more.](
[12 things student loan borrowers should know about the return to repayment](
October's coming, and we're here to help you get ready. [Read more.]( Listen: The Common [talks plant care pro-tips]( with Emerald City Plant Shop. Play: [WBUR's daily mini crossword.]( Can you keep your streak going? Before you go: [You're welcome.]( 😎 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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