Schools shift back to fully-remote learning in Boston, while parents and teachers seek innovative solutions. Plus, COVID-19 cases continue to spike in the state, further straining healthcare staffing levels. And for the first time ever, three jurists of color will soon serve on the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts.
These stories and more in our Local News Roundtable.
Guests:
Gin Dumcius), digital editor for the Boston Business Journal.
Seth Daniel), senior reporter with the Independent News Group, which includes the Chelsea Record and Revere Journal.
Sue O’Connell), political commentator for NECN and co-publisher of Bay Windows and South End News.
Later in the show:
Boston is known for its history, but the people most well-known froim that history are largely white and male — think Samuel Adams, Paul Revere and Henry David Thoreau. Some of that has changed during recent decades as Boston's all Black 54th regiment, for example, has helped highlight the area's African American history. Still, most Boston guidebooks will lead you to the Freedom Trail, and past sites where events like the Boston Tea Party occurred. But is there more to know beyond these well-told narratives? Three local co-authors present a new guidebook, one that offers an expanded history to the region. ‘A People’s Guide to Greater Boston,’) features sites associated with oppression and resistance, focusing on the overlooked stories of underrepresented communities.
Guests:
Joseph Nevins) is a professor of geography at Vassar College.
Suren Moodliar) is a coordinator of encuentro5, a movement-building space in downtown Boston, and managing editor of Socialism and Democracy, a journal of strategy.
Eleni Macrakis) is a project manager at Homeowners Rehab Inc. (HRI), a non-profit affordable housing developer in Cambridge, MA.
Show Credits:
Under the Radar with Callie Crossley is a production of GBH, produced by Hannah Uebele and engineered by Dave Goodman.
Our theme music is FISH AND CHIPS by #weare2saxys’, Grace Kelly and Leo P.