Join MEJA’s We <3 Our Public Schools Day!

In honor of Valentine’s Day, MEJA (Massachusetts Education Justice Alliance) is having a We <3 Our Public Schools Day tomorrow.

Here are actions you can take to show your support for public schools on Valentine’s Day!

Share on social media what you love about public schools!

  • Share a photo of you holding a sign saying what you love about your school
  • Post photos with students, friends, teachers, staff, or anyone else in the school who has made a positive impact on you, students and school community!
  • Use the hashtag #welovepublicschools and tag @massedjustice!

Upload your photos and videos to the MEJA Soapboxx!

Check out MEJA’s folder and toolkit for some more ideas and social media prompts!

News Roundup — February 5, 2024

Bhaamati Borkhetaria, “Legislators push to restore felon voting rights,” CommonWealth, January 30, 2024.

“Inmates with voting rights also become another constituent group that gets attention from elected officials, said Rep. Erika Uyterhoeven, a Somerville Democrat and cosponsor of House versions of the measures to restore felon voting rights. “When incarcerated individuals had the right to vote, there were [many] more legislators going in and out of prisons and jails because there are voters there,” she said.”

Sarah Betancourt, “In key election year, prisoners with felonies seek right to vote in Massachusetts,” WGBH, January 29, 2024.

“State Sen. Liz Miranda, a Democrat from Roxbury, says she filed legislation as “a matter of racial justice.”…“The disenfranchisement of these citizens, our people, perpetuates the racial injustices already present in the entire system,” Miranda said. “It’s effectively diluting the political voice of entire communities.”

Joanna Gonsalves, “Letter: State can make a debt-free education possible,” Boston Globe, January 28, 2024.

“Economists have shown that investment in high-quality, debt-free public higher education is one of the best ways to advance individual and community prosperity. With passage of the Fair Share Amendment, Massachusetts has dedicated annual education funding that could be put toward this goal.”

Yvonne Abraham, “Tenants facing eviction need legal representation. Let’s give it to them.,” Boston Globe, January 20, 2024.

“So many parts of this state’s crippling housing crisis seem impossible to solve, meaningfulfixes many years and billions of dollars down the road. Here is something we can do, and right now. It’s right, we know it works, and it will keep thousands of families in their homes.”

Molly Dickens and Lucy Hutner, “What the Child Care Crisis Does to Parents,” New York Times, January 16, 2024.

“We know inadequate child care is an economic issue, costing states, families and businesses billions of dollars every year. We know it’s a gender issue that contributes to a widening pay gap. We know it’s a policy issue, made worse by the absences of a federal pre-K program and a federal paid-leave policy. But here is another critical consideration worth pushing for: Our country’s inadequate child care system is also a health care issue.”

Rebekah Gerwitz, “Letter: Our state’s most vulnerable children will feel the effects,” Boston Globe, January 9, 2024.

“The Lift Our Kids Coalition, of which our organization is a member, has worked for years with families, teachers, lawyers, social workers, service providers, and others on the front lines to pass an increase in subsistence benefits to lift families out of poverty. The Legislature agreed in this year’s state budget to a much-needed and very modest increase, set to go into effect in April. With a stroke of the governor’s pen, the increase is now erased.”

Gabrielle Gurley, “The Fight for $15 Can Take a Bow,” The American Prospect, January 11, 2024.

“Massachusetts has a persistent unaffordability dynamic in play. Child care is more expensive than a state-college education. The state has some of the highest annual child care costs for toddlers at $19,961, representing more than 50 percent of the median single mother’s income, and close to 15 percent for a married couple with children. In-state tuition at University of Massachusetts Amherst is $17,364 for the current academic year.”

What Happened on Joint Rule 10 Day Last Week

Last Wednesday was Joint Rule 10 Day, a deadline in the State House for joint (House-Senate) committees to take action on all the timely-filed bills in their purview. 

For many bills, that’s simply an extension, i.e., a new deadline. But some bills did get out of committee. Here are a few that we were especially happy to see:

  • Common Start Bill (Lightly Redrafted as S.2619), which would establish a framework for delivering increased access to affordable, high-quality early education and child care with greater investment in providers, better pay for workers, and a cap on costs for families
  • Full Spectrum Pregnancy Care Bill (S.646 / H.1137), which would ensure health coverage for prenatal care, childbirth, and postpartum care, without any cost-sharing
  • Overdose Prevention Centers (S.1242 / H.1981), which create a ten-year pilot programs for overdose prevention centers that use harm reduction strategies to address the opioid crisis 
  • Access to Counsel (S.864 / H.1731), which would guarantee legal representation for low-income tenants and owner-occupants in eviction proceedings
  • Healthy Youth Act (S.268 / H.544), which would require school districts that provide sex education to ensure that it is comprehensive, age-appropriate, and LGBTQ-inclusive, with an emphasis on consent
  • Language Access Bill (S.1990 / H.3084), which would build the capacity of key public-facing state agencies to meet the language access needs of an increasingly diverse population by standardizing and enforcing language access protocols and practices
  • Facial Surveillance Regulations (Lightly Redrafted as H.4359), which would implement the recommendations of the commission created by the 2020 police reform bill to create a tight regulatory framework for facial surveillance
  • Gas Moratorium (S.2135), which would pause the approval for any new or expanded gas infrastructure through 2026
  • Sunlight Bill (S.1963), which would promote transparency in state government by removing the Governor’s exemption from public records law and requiring committee votes and legislative testimony (with appropriate redactions) to be public

Most bills received extensions to a later date: in other words, the committee will have a new deadline for action. See a list of new deadlines here.

Some bills we care about, unfortunately, were “sent to study,” a polite way of voting down a bill. Bills that are sent to study do not advance in a given session outside of extremely rare circumstances, but the campaigns can still continue and build for the next legislative session. Among those sent to study were

  • Make Polluters Pay, which require fossil-fuel producers to fund the state’s climate adaptation programs based on past emissions, a proposal that would extend the long-standing “polluter pays” principle for toxic waste cleanups to addressing climate change
  • Prison Moratorium (House bill only), which would enact a five-year pause on new prison and jail construction in order to provide time to develop more effective, community-based approaches to public safety (The Senate bill received an extension.)
  • Same Day Registration
  • Ranked choice voting local option bill
  • All-resident voting local option bill
  • Vote16 local option bill