The Boston Globe - 02.09.2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

Shirley Leung


With the
memorials on
Boylston
Street to mark
the Boston
Marathon
bombing com-
pleted and
Martin’s Park
open, the
Richard family
tells me it’s time.
Time, they say, to field the last Team
MR8 of runners who raise money for the
Martin Richard Foundation. The family
created the nonprofit in memory of 8-year-
old Martin Richard, who was killed when


pressure-cooker bombs went off near the
Marathon finish line in 2013.
Since then, nearly 1,000 runners have
been part of Team MR8 in Boston, Chicago,
and New York City marathons, generating
about $1 million annually for the founda-
tion dedicated to sportsmanship, inclusion,
kindness, and peace. With registration for
the 2020 Boston Marathon opening on
Sept. 9, the family felt it was the right time
to tell people of their decision.
“This is bittersweet for everyone,” said
Denise Richard, Martin’s mother and presi-
dent of the Martin Richard Foundation’s
board.
For Team MR8 — the name comes from
Martin Richard’s initials and his favorite
sports number — the final year’s fund-rais-
ing effort is being positioned as creating a
“legacy fund” for the foundation. The Rich-

ards are not setting a financial goal.
Although the major fund-raising vehicle
for the foundation will go away after 2020,
Denise stressed that the foundation is not
going anywhere and that “our mission isn’t
changing.”
Still, the change signals a new chapter
for the Dorchester family, which suffered so
much from the 2013 attacks. The Richards
were spectators at the Marathon finish line
when the two bombs detonated six years
ago. Denise lost sight in one eye; daughter
Jane, then 7, lost a leg. The blast cost the
father, Bill Richard, some of his hearing;
Henry, the oldest child, then 11, miracu-
lously suffered no physical harm.
Since the tragedy, the family has been in
the public eye, starting the foundation in
2014 and later becoming a driving force be-
hind the creation of Martin’s Park, a 1-acre

public park and playground overlooking
Fort Point Channel that opened in June.
The shift, as Bill put it, “allows us as a
family to take a step back from Boylston
Street and the emotional toll.”
“It’s a logical conclusion,” he added. “It’s
the right time for us.”
Next year will be a transition year not
only for the foundation but also for the
family. By next fall, Henry will be off to col-
lege, and Jane will be starting high school.
Bill and Denise are proud of Team MR8,
and the couple will very much remain in-
volved in the foundation and in the com-
munity. The foundation has given out more
than $2.3 million to projects and programs
that reflect its mission. Bill said the foun-
dation has about $5 million in its coffers,
and the plan is to focus more on giving
LEUNG,PageD2

A new chapter for the Martin Richard Foundation


From left:
Denise Richard
and daughter
Jane cheered
on 2015 Boston
Marathon
runners;
children
enjoyed the
opening of
Martin’s Park
in June;
sculptures
along Boylston
Street honor
victims of the
2013 bombings.

Business


THE BOSTON GLOBE MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 2019 | BOSTONGLOBE.COM/BUSINESS

D


JESSICA RINALDI/GLOBE STAFF/FILE 2015 JOHN TLUMACKI/GLOBE STAFF PHILIP MARCELO/ASSOCIATED PRESS

By Christopher Rugaber
ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — The United
States and China on Sunday put in
place their latest tariff increases on
each other’s goods, potentially raising
prices Americans pay for some clothes,
shoes, sporting goods, and other items
before the holiday shopping season.
President Trump said US-China
trade talks were still on for September.
‘‘We’ll see what happens,’’ he told re-
porters. ‘‘But we can’t allow China to
rip us off anymore as a country.’’
The 15 percent US taxes apply to
about $112 billion of Chinese imports.
All told, more than two-thirds of the
consumer goods the United States im-
ports from China now face higher tax-
es. The administration had largely
avoided hitting consumer items in its
earlier rounds of tariff increases.
But with prices of many retail
goods now likely to rise, the adminis-
tration’s move threatens the US econo-
my’s main driver: consumer spending.
As businesses pull back on investment
spending and exports slow in the face
of weak global growth, US shoppers
have been a key bright spot.
‘‘We have got a great economy,’’ said
Senator Pat Toomey, Republican of
Pennsylvania. ‘‘But I do think that the
uncertainty caused by the volatile tar-
iff situation and this developing trade
war could jeopardize that strength,
and that growth, and that is, I think,
that’s a legitimate concern,’’ he told
ABC’s ‘‘This Week.’’
As a result of Trump’s higher tariffs,
many US companies have warned they
will be forced to pass on to customers
the higher prices they will pay on Chi-
nese imports. Some businesses,
though, may decide to absorb the high-
er costs.
In China, the authorities began
charging higher duties on American
imports at midday Sunday, said em-
ployees who answered the phone at
customs offices in Beijing and Guang-
zhou.
Tariffs of 10 percent and 5 percent
apply to items ranging from frozen
CHINA,PageD2

Consumers


apt to feel


escalation


of trade war


INSIDE


LABOR

Apps bringing gig economy
to restaurant work.D3.

TALKING POINTS

Rhode Island gets $19 million
for infrastructure work.D3.

By Diana Cai
STAT

I


n the landlocked sub-Saharan country of Malawi, often only
land separates wells for drinking water from sewage in toilet
pits.
Cholera, a highly contagious bacterial disease found in con-
taminated water, becomes a concern when that dividing line
disappears during each year’s rainy season. A natural disaster
like Cyclone Idai, which struck in March and devastated parts
of three countries, makes identifying clean water even more urgent.
When UNICEF and Brazilian cholerascientists arrived to test sam-
ples just days after the cyclone hit, they needed a local partner who
was up to the task.
They found one in Gama Bandawe and his lab at the Malawi Uni-
versity of Science and Technology. Just four months earlier, Bandawe
had unpacked a 20-foot container filled with the testing equipment
he needed from Seeding Labs, a Boston nonprofit organization that
collects lab equipment in high-income countries and redistributes it
at a lower cost to labs in low- and middle-income countries.
“We were able to show them, here are our laboratories, and here’s
the equipment that we have. The next day, samples started arriving,”
said Bandawe, the head of biological sciences at the university. He be-
lieves it was the equipment his lab had — that other labs lacked —
that made his suitable for the project.
“It was magical,” Bandawe recalled when he and his students un-
loaded the shipment from Seeding Labs and outfitted the lab.
The idea for Seeding Labs began when Nina Dudnik, the founder
and former CEO, returned to the United States after conducting re-
search as a Fulbright scholar in a sparsely equipped lab in Côte d’Ivo-
ire. After starting graduate school in 2001, Dudnik and her friends
formed a student group to raise awareness of research being conduct-
ed abroad. They thought about how they could help scientists in
emerging economies conduct their research more effectively.
SEEDINGLABS,PageD2

KAYANA SZYMCZAK FOR STAT

Candido Silva
(top) readied
lab gear last
month for
shipment to
Nigeria. Above,
Gama Bandawe
(rear center)
and colleagues
in their Malawi
laboratory. At
left, Enoch
Achigan-Dako
instructed
students about
“miracle berry”
cultivation.

Delivering


on a promise


Boston-based Seeding Labs


distributes usedlabequipmentto


researchersinlower-income countries

Free download pdf