The Boston Globe - 19.09.2019

(Ann) #1

abcde


Thursday, September 19, 2019


Withnear-finalresultsfrom
Israel’selection,PrimeMinis-
terBenjaminNetanyahuis
wellshortoftheparliamenta-
rymajorityhehadsought.
A4.


SecretaryofStateMike
Pompeocalledtheattackson
SaudiArabia,blamedonIran,
an“actofwar.’’A4.


PresidentTrumpnamedhos-
tagenegotiatorRobert
O’BrientoreplaceJohnBolton
asnationalsecurityadviser.
A2. GinkgoBioworks,valuedat
$4.8billion,isthearea’stop
venture-capital-backedstart-
up.B7.


SoxstarpitcherDavidPrice,
whohasmadeonestart
sinceAug.4whiledealing
withawristinjury,willbe
shutdownfortherestofthe
season.C1.

Thursday: Tonsofsun.
High65-70,low53-58.
Friday: Moresun,warmer.
High80-85,low63-
Sunrise:6:28.Sunset:6:47.
Comicsandweather,C7-8.
Obituaries,A19.

Justwhatweneeded


VOL. 296, NO. 81
*
Suggested retail price
$3.

Inthenews


By Victoria McGrane
GLOBE STAFF
Representative Joseph P.
Kennedy III, the last member of
the Democratic dynasty serving
in Washington, plans to formal-
ly announce Saturday that he is
launching a primary challenge
to Senator Edward J. Markey,
an audacious political move
that could open fissures within
the Democratic Party and re-
shape the Massachusetts politi-
cal landscape.
Kennedy will make his an-
nouncement at a breakfast with
supporters and local communi-
ty members at East Boston So-
cial Centers, according to two
people close to him. From
there, Kennedy will tour the
state through Monday, high-
lighting issues he plans to cen-
ter his campaign on, including
health care access, mental
health and addiction issues, cli-
mate change, and civil rights,
the people said.
Kennedy informed Markey
of his decision Wednesday, one
of the people added.
“Elections are about choices,
and Ed looks forward to spend-
ing the next 14 months cam-
paigning hard every day to
show the people of the Com-
monwealth why he’s the right
choice,” John Walsh, Markey’s

senior campaign adviser, said
in a statement Wednesday.
Backed by his famous sur-
name and relative youth, Ken-
nedy, 38, will enter the race as
the front-runner, according to
recent polls. But Markey, 73,
has insisted publicly and pri-
vately he will put up a tough
fight to stay in Congress, where
he began serving in 1976.
Kennedy is no insurgent,
but his announcement will be
the starting gun of a genera-
tional showdown in one of the
most closely watched primary
KENNEDY, Page A

By Matt Stout
GLOBE STAFF
Working to fulfill Governor Charlie
Baker’s campaign promise to shorten the
lines at the Registry of Motor Vehicles,
state officials gave the initiative a name
that evoked a life-and-death struggle. And
the “War on Wait Times” did not go un-
watched.
Baker’s inner circle received daily re-
ports on how quickly branches turned
over customers. His top aide repeatedly
prodded the Registry’s leadership on dips
in wait-time performance or gaps in the
data. And one of his deputy chiefs of staff
offered input on details as minute as
where a logo goes on a Registry Web page,
according to hundreds of pages of e-mails
obtained by the Globe.
The intense focus that Baker’s office
put on Registry queues is now inviting its
RMV, Page A

By Meghan E. Irons
GLOBE STAFF
Just before the first school bell
chimed, Jacquelyn Indrisano
grabbed her cellphone and
tapped out an urgent text mes-
sage to one of her students.
“Get up!” she wrote. “Get up!’’
The teenager was on Indrisa-
no’s “hot list” of East Boston High
School students who struggle to
rise in time each morning or skip
classes altogether. As their guid-
ance counselor, she is both school
mother and enforcer to about
260 ninth-graders. She sees stu-
dents’ pain and problems up
close and doles out hugs and ad-
vice — and tough love when nec-
essary.
“I have had students who have
told me, ‘My mom works too
much’ or ‘I don’t want to burden
her,’ ” Indrisano said. “And that is
GUIDANCE COUNSELORS, Page A

Kennedyset


toannounce


Senaterun


MarqueematchupagainstMarkey


couldroil,defineDemocraticParty


‘WhenIwasinhighschool,myguidancecounselordidnotdoanyofthis.’


JACQUELYN INDRISANO, counselor at East Boston High


Givingguidance(andaidinacrisis,


privatecounsel,basicnecessities ...)


Today’sschoolcounselorsareswampedandthestateofferslittlesupport


PHOTOS BY CRAIG F. WALKER/GLOBE STAFF
Guidance counselor Jacquelyn Indrisano embraced a ninth-grader outside her office at East Boston High School.

Indrisano, speaking with a parent about a student’s attendance, is both school
mother and enforcer for about 260 ninth-graders.

JONATHAN WIGGS/GLOBE STAFF
Representative Joseph P.
Kennedy III has rejected the
argument his primary bid
would hurt the party.

JESSICA RINALDI/GLOBE STAFF
City Councilor Michelle Wu and her son, Blaise, 4, picked up Legos in her
City Hall office, where Blaise spent the day because of a mixup in his
placement in the Boston Public Schools.B1.

AsanRMVcrisis HARDLESSONSONPRE-K


grew,Bakeraides


focusedelsewhere


By Matt Stout
GLOBE STAFF
State and city leaders said
Wednesday that they are
weighing stricter regulations
on the sale of electronic ciga-
rettes and flavored tobacco
products, the latest in a series
of efforts that elected officials
have pushed amid an explo-
sion of vaping-related illnesses
nationwide.
Governor Charlie Baker
said he is evaluating what
emergency options the state
has to address the sale of vap-
ing products, and Mayor Mar-
tin J. Walsh proposed regula-
tions in Boston to help curb
youth vaping by limiting
where mint and menthol nico-
tine products can be pur-
chased.

The announcements come
after New York and Michigan
this week outlawed the sale of
flavored e-cigarettes, and Pres-
ident Trump said officials have
plans to ban similar products
at the federal level in the wake
of a nationwide outbreak. So
far, officials have said there are
38 possible cases in Massachu-
setts of a mysterious lung ill-
ness linked to vaping, includ-
ing among teenagers.
VAPING, Page A

Stricter rules on


vaping considered


Walshcallsfor


limitsonflavors


‘Ithinkwehave


momentum.This


wouldbeafirst-


in-the-nationban.’


REP.DANIELLEGREGOIRE
on proposed legislation in
Massachusetts that would
prohibit the sale of all flavored
tobacco products

By Deirdre Fernandes
GLOBE STAFF
More than 60 of MIT’s lead-
ing female faculty members
raised alarms about the uni-
versity’s ties to disgraced fi-
nancier Jeffrey Epstein in a let-
ter Wednesday, and several lat-
er questioned the school’s
commitment to women aca-
demics in a tense meeting with


president L. Rafael Reif.
In the nearly two-hour facul-
ty gathering to discuss Epstein’s
donations to the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology and the
university leadership’s han-
dling of the issue, Reif offered
an emotional apology and ac-
knowledged that the universi-
ty’s culture had led it to accept
money from the convicted sex

offender.
“I understand that I have
let you down and damaged
your trust in me and that our
actions have injured both the
institute’s reputation and the
fabric of our community,” Reif
said according to a statement
released by the university. “I
am deeply sorry.”
MIT, Page A

MIT female faculty confront president


ReifapologizesonEpsteincase,pushesculturechange ‘Iunderstandthat


Ihavelet


youdown


and


damaged


yourtrust


inme.’


L. RAFAEL REIF, MIT leader

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