Take a deep dive into the stories that shape Massachusetts with CommonWealth In Depth.

In these thoroughly researched long-reads, CommonWealth Beacon peels back the layers behind the big headlines and spotlights unseen stories around the state by digging into complex legal challenges, thorny policy fights, and compelling personal narratives.

‘Water doesn’t know property lines’: Where Massachusetts’s climate and housing crises meet

Demand for the sandy, tony shores of the Cape and Islands is conflicting with the need to literally shore up the coastline

“The state rules have to catch up with the reality of climate change,” said Matthew Fee, a Nantucket select board member. “A town road can’t be abandoned if someone’s [living] on it, but what happens when the road goes into the ocean?”

Mass. education secretary’s votes reflect growing Democratic hostility toward charter schools  

Gov. Maura Healey’s top education aide, Patrick Tutwiler, opposed every charter expansion proposal brought to state board

Growing Democratic opposition to charter schools was cast in sharp relief at February’s state education board meeting, where Gov. Maura Healey’s education secretary, Patrick Tutwiler, voted against all five proposals for expansion of charter schools.

‘It’s not going to be pretty’

New Bedford’s immigrant community, the lifeblood of the city’s fish processing sector, anxiously waits to see what comes of Trump’s mass deportation promises

Immigrant advocates have good reason to think New Bedford may figure prominently on a list of places that will be targeted under an aggressive deportation campaign by the new Trump administration.

Post-Bruen decision, everyone has to be a gun-law historian

Massachusetts lawmakers and lawyers still grapple with paradigm-shifting ruling

The decision has opened almost all aspects of the state’s gun safety law regime to challenge and sent lawyers scrambling for history books. As recent Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court decisions have shown, if a policy is not tied to a founding-era law or practice – a so-called historical analogue – it likely will not survive…

Lessons to learn from Oregon on psychedelics ballot measure

Question creates regulatory framework for series of therapeutic centers

A group called Mass. for Mental Health Options has gathered the necessary signatures to put a question on the November ballot that would make it possible for Massachusetts residents to do the same. However, the measure in Massachusetts is much more expansive than the one that legalized psilocybin therapy in Oregon in 2020.

Seeking a right to medical aid in dying 

A patient watches as lawmakers again ponder controversial end-of-life legislation

Margaret Miley is frustrated, in pain, and dying. But Massachusetts has thus far resisted the movement, now law in nearly a dozen other states, to allow patients near their end of their life to obtain medication that would hasten their death. 

“Who benefits from this?” she asks.

In wake of pandemic, Mass. achievement gap has widened

Lower-income students lagging badly in making up learning loss

As schools try to recover the learning loss students experienced in recent years, a study by researchers at Harvard and Stanford universities shows that the achievement gap separating poor and non-poor students in Massachusetts has widened more since the pandemic than in any of 15 states they studied.

The bomb-tossing bean counter

Diana DiZoglio ‘wants to catalog the Legislature’s sins’

Not even halfway through her first term as auditor, Diana DiZoglio has essentially returned to the campaign trail. She is lobbying voters, and emptying her own campaign coffers, to support an initiative she wants to put before voters this November.

The last of Somerville’s old guard

How a one-time conduit to power got snared in an FBI wiretap

Corruption cases, and attempted prosecutions, were once regular headlines in Somerville. The recent bribery conviction of a one-time local power broker, with echoes of another era, came and went without much fanfare.

Is tutoring the answer to pandemic learning loss? 

There’s compelling evidence that it can boost student achievement, but it’s challenging to implement it well at scale

Tutoring has a stronger base of solid positive evidence than almost any other school intervention, but joins lots of other innovations in education that seem to offer great promise but have been stubbornly difficult to implement at the kind of scale that would really drive population-wide improvements.

Yes, building more housing does lower rents, study says

Researchers says ‘supply skeptics’ have it wrong

Does increasing the supply of housing, even if it’s mainly higher-cost, market-priced units, temper the runup in costs that has so many residents straining to make ends meet? The idea follows the basic economic principle of supply and demand – when more of something is made available, its price falls. But there are plenty of…

‘Re-wilding’ Massachusetts cranberry bogs

Towns lean in to restoring natural wetlands

As Massachusetts’ famous cranberry industry consolidates and some of the cranberry bogs fade out of use, famers, governments, and conservationists are increasingly eager to start “re-wilding” them to natural rivers and wetlands.

At 90, Michael Dukakis still looks ahead

The state’s longest-serving governor remains an eternal optimist

Michael Dukakis remade the Massachusetts Democratic Party, suffered a bitter loss after winning his party’s nomination for president, then spent three decades teaching college students and preaching the virtues of public service, something he has modeled for more than six decades.

Why did MassDOT hang T employees out to dry?

MBTA spokesman was told to ignore Globe’s questions

A Boston Globe story on employees working long-distance at the MBTA had 4 corrections. The employees who were incorrectly targeted and the reporter who lost her job were victims of a state bureaucracy that failed to stand up for its workers.

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