星期五, 4月 27, 2018

哈佛華人生命科學協會訂 5/5辦年會

Harvard Chinese Life Science Annual Symposium 2018
May 5th, 2018
Folkman Auditorium, Enders Building, Boston Children’s Hospital320 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115
Organizing Committee
Harvard Medical School - Chinese Scientists & Scholars Association(HMS-CSSA)
Song Yang, Qiong Ye, Linchang Huang, Wenqing Cai, Wei Li, Bin Li, Xiaoqing Wang, Shuxi Qiao, Hong Yue, Jingyu Peng, Yue Zhang, Xianrui Yang, Miao Liu, Chan Cao, Yiming Zhou, An Xiao, Yang Zhang, Yue Huang, Lijie Xing, Mohui Wei, Shengqing Gu, Tao Wang, Xiaofeng Li, Zhengnian Li, Hui Liu, Jiye Liu, Junlin Guo, Pingping Mao, Su Wang, Shuang Zhou, Jinmiao Chen, Songwei Duan, Yanan Qi
Organizing Committee Advisors
Jianzhu Chen, Professor, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Chuan He, Professor, University of Chicago
Xi He, Professor, Boston Children’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School
Zhigang He, Professor, Boston Children’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School
Frank Hu, Professor, Harvard T.H.Chan School of Public Health 
Xiaole Shirley Liu, Professor, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute / Harvard T.H.Chan School of Public Health 
Hongbo Luo, Associate Professor, Harvard Medical School
William Pu, Professor, Boston Children’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School
Yang Shi, Professor, Boston Children’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School
Jiping Wang, Assistant Professor, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School
Hao Wu, Professor, Boston Children’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School
Yingzi Yang, Professor, Harvard School of Dental Medicine
Junying Yuan, Professor, Harvard Medical School
Yi Zhang, Professor, Boston Children’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School
Jean Zhao, Professor, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School


Invited Speakers

George Daley, MD, PhDHarvard Medical School, Boston Children’s Hospital
Dr. George Q. Daley seeks to translate insights in stem cell biology into improved therapies for genetic and malignant diseases. Important research contributions from his laboratory include the creation of customized stem cells to treat genetic immune deficiency in a mouse model (together with Rudolf Jaenisch), the differentiation of germ cells from embryonic stem cells (cited as a “Top Ten Breakthrough” by Science magazine in 2003), and the generation of disease-specific pluripotent stem cells by direct reprogramming of human fibroblasts (cited in the “Breakthrough of the Year” issue of Science magazine in 2008). As a graduate student working with Nobel Laureate Dr. David Baltimore, Dr. Daley demonstrated that the BCR/ABL oncogene induces chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) in a mouse model, which validated BCR/ABL as a target for drug blockade and encouraged the development of imatinib (GleevecTM; Novartis), a revolutionary magic-bullet chemotherapy that induces remissions in virtually every CML patient. Dr. Daley’s recent studies have clarified mechanisms of Gleevec resistance and informed novel combination chemotherapeutic regimens.
Dr. Daley received his bachelor's degree magna cum laude from Harvard University (1982), a Ph.D. in biology from MIT (1989), and the M.D. from Harvard Medical School, where he was one of twelve individuals in the school’s history to be awarded the degree summa cum laude (1991). He served as Chief Resident in Internal Medicine at the Massachusetts General Hospital (94-95) and is currently a staff physician in Hematology/Oncology at the Children's Hospital and the Dana Farber Cancer Institute, and a member of the Hematology Division of the Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. He has been elected the National Academy of Medicine(NAM), the American Society for Clinical Investigation, the American Association of Physicians, and the American Pediatric Societies, and is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (AAAS) and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
  
Xiang-Dong Fu, PhDDepartment of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, University of California, San Diego
Dr. Fu’s laboratory is interested in molecular and cell biology of RNA metabolism and regulation in higher eukaryotic cells. Current research interests in the Fu lab include the regulation of alternative splicing, functional RNA elements in mammalian genomes, transcription/splicing coupling, nuclear architecture, and cellular reprogramming. Dr. Fu was a major contributor for co-discovery of SR proteins, a family of RNA binding proteins involved in constitutive and alternative pre-mRNA processing. His laboratory was the first to identify a family of kinases specific for SR proteins and demonstrated that these kinases are critical for transducing external and intracellular signals to regulate alternative splicing in the nucleus. Dr. Fu's group elucidated a series of regulatory mechanisms for splice site selection in mammalian cells and developed multiple key technologies for high throughput analysis of gene expression, mRNA isoforms, and genomic interactions. Dr. Fu's current research is focused on integrated regulation of gene expression at transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels. Dr. Fu's contribution to biomedical science has been recognized by selection for the Searle Scholar award (1994) and the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Scholar award (1997) and election to Fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Science (2010).
Dr. Fu is a Professor of Cellular and Molecular Medicine at University of California, San Diego. Dr. Fu received his MS degree in Virology from Wuhan University, China in 1982, PhD degree in Biochemistry from Case Western Reserve University in 1988 (via the CUSBEA program), and postdoctoral training at Harvard from 1988 to 1992. Dr. Fu joined the faculty of University of California, San Diego in 1992 (Assistant Professor, 1992-1998; Associate Professor, 1998 to 2002; and Full Professor, 2002-present).

Rudolf Jaenisch, PhD
Founding Member of Whitehead InstituteDepartment of Biology, MIT
Dr. Jaenisch lab’s expertise is in epigenetics, reprogramming and stem cells. Dr. Jaenisch began his research career as a pioneer making transgenic mice, some of which have produced important advances in understanding cancer, neurological and connective tissue diseases, and developmental abnormalities. These methods have been used to explore basic questions such as the role of DNA modification, genomic imprinting, X chromosome inactivation, nuclear cloning, and, most recently, the nature of stem cells. In addition, using mice as a model and a technique called “altered nuclear transfer,” Dr. Jaenisch has demonstrated that it is possible to procure embryonic stem cells without harming a viable embryo. More recently he has demonstrated that somatic cells can be reprogrammed in vitro to pluripotent ES-like cells and that these cells are suitable to correct both genetic and induced defects in mice by transplantation therapy. Using this technique for turning skin cells into stem cells, the lab has been able to cure mice of sickle cell anemia -- the first direct proof that these easily obtained cells can reverse an inherited disease.
Dr. Jaenisch is a Professor of Biology at MIT and a founding member of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research. He has been granted numerous awards from organizations across the world. He is a pioneer of transgenic science, in which an animal’s genetic makeup is altered. Jaenisch has focused on creating genetically modified mice to study cancer and neurological diseases. Dr. Jaenisch received his doctorate in medicine from the University of Munich in 1967. He became a postdoc at the Max Planck Institute in Munich, studying bacteriophages. He left Germany in 1970 for research positions at Princeton University, Fox Chase Institute for Cancer Research and the Salk Institute. He returned to Germany in 1977 to become the head of the Department of Tumor Virology at the Heinrich Pette Institute at the University of Hamburg. He arrived at MIT in 1984. He participated in the 2005 science conference on human cloning at the United Nations and serves on the science advisory boards of the Genetics Policy Institute and Stemgent.

Xi He, PhDBoston Children’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School
Dr. He’s laboratory seeks to understand the molecular basis of cell-to-cell communication, and how this communication regulates embryonic and neural development in vertebrates. Dr. He is also interested in learning how defective regulation of cell communication causes human cancers and diseases. In particular, Dr. He is investigating signaling mechanisms employed by secreted growth factors of the Wnt family, which play critical roles in establishing the anterior-posterior axis of the embryo and underlie the formation of head versus trunk regions during early embryogenesis. Wnt signaling pathways are also pivotal in the development of human cancers--as several key Wnt signaling components are encoded by human oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes--and in the pathogenesis of many human diseases, such as osteoporosis and degenerative disorders. Dr. He aims to identify molecular components of Wnt signaling pathways and the mechanisms by which Wnt pathways are activated and governed during embryonic development and human tumorigenesis. 
Dr. He received his bachelor’s degree in engineering at Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST), Wuhan, China, and Ph.D. in Dr. Michael G. Rosenfeld’s lab at University of California, San Diego (UCSD). After his postdoctoral training with Dr. Harold Varmus at National Cancer Institute (NCI), Dr. He became an Assistant Professor at Boston Children’s Hospital in 1997. He was promoted to professor in 2007. Dr. He was a Pew Scholar, a Klingenstein Fellow, a W. M. Keck Distinguished Young Scholar and a Leukemia and Lymphoma Society Scholar. Dr. He received the Young Investigator Award from the Society of Chinese Bioscientists in America (SCBA) in 2004, and holds a Chang Jiang Guest Professorship and 1000 Talent Plan (B) Professorship at HUST. Dr. He is an elected Fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Science and an American Cancer Society Research Professor. He has served on numerous review and advisory boards in academia and the biopharmaceutical industry in the USA, Canada, EU, UK and China.

William Pu, MDBoston Children's Hospital, Harvard Medical School
The Pu lab is interested in the regulation of gene expression and cell lineage specification in heart development, disease, and regeneration using various technologies including genetically engineered mice, conditional gene inactivation, genome-wide chromatin occupancy analysis, and RNA expression profiling. The major goals of Dr. Pu's research include: 1. To understand the transcriptional network regulating heart development and disease; 2. To understand cell lineage specification in heart development and regeneration; 3. To understand genetic contributions to congenital heart disease.
Dr. Pu received an MD from Harvard Medical School. He completed his internship, residence, and pediatric cardiology training at Boston Children’s Hospital. Dr. Pu has been an independent PI since 2004 and has an established track record of innovation in cardiovascular biology. Dr. Pu has 19 successful postdoctoral fellow “alumni”. Among those, 12 remain in academic medicine, 11 have faculty appointments, and 8 are PIs of independent research labs in Europe, North America, and China. Dr. Pu is also the contact PI of the Boston Children’s Hospital Department of Cardiology T32 training grant and the Director of Basic and Translational Cardiovascular Research for the Department of Cardiology at Boston Children’s Hospital.

Jean Zhao, PhDDana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School 
Dr. Zhao’s research centers on understanding kinase signaling pathways in cancer. Her laboratory has pioneered a new front for understanding signal transduction by integrating mouse genetics, chemical biology and immunology in the field of translational cancer research. Her productive and insightful work on deciphering the role of PI3-kinase isoforms and the cyclin D1-CDK4/6 pathway in cancer not only addresses important basic science questions, but also has had a significant clinical impact. By providing a mechanistic understanding of the synergies gained for targeting PI3K isoforms and CDK4/6 in combination with immune checkpoint blockade in cancer, her lab has guided the design of current clinical trials of integrating immunotherapy and targeted therapy both here at DFCI and internationally. 
Dr. Jean Zhao is a Professor of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology at Harvard Medical School (HMS) and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute (DFCI). Dr. Zhao has been widely recognized for her innovation and excellence in the field. After obtaining her Ph.D. degree with honors from Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston, Dr. Zhao completed her postdoctoral training in the laboratory of Dr. Thomas M. Roberts at DFCI. Dr. Zhao began her independent research at HMS and DFCI in 2006. Her honors and awards include the Career Development Awards from NIH/NCI, the V Scholar Award, the Starr Foundation Award and, recently, the Outstanding Investigator Award from NIH/NCI. Dr. Zhao serves as a member on multiple scientific boards and committees, including the Executive Committee for Research and the Committee for Women Faculty at DFCI, the Steering Committee of Breast Cancer at DF/Harvard Cancer Center and the Advisory Council of the National Brain Tumor Society.

Wenyi Wei, PhDBeth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School
The major focus of research in Dr. Wei’s laboratory is aimed at understanding how APC and SCF activities contribute towards cell cycle regulation and subsequent tumor formation. More specifically, Dr. Wei is interested in elucidating the underlying mechanisms that define the oscillation of APC and SCF activity in different cell cycle phases. Currently, he is pursuing the underlying mechanisms that timely regulate APC/Cdh1 activity in different cell cycle phases. Additionally, Dr. Wei is also interested in understanding whether other layers of crosstalk between the APC and SCF complex exist. Furthermore, Dr. Wei would like to identify novel downstream targets for both APC and SCF complexes, which will help pinpoint their functions in both cell cycle control and tumor formation. To this end, Dr. Wei has developed biochemical purification approaches that would allow him to identify novel downstream targets for APC/Cdh1 and SCF/Fbw7 complexes. In addition, he is also interested in defining the tumor suppressor function of Cdh1 utilizing conditional Cdh1 knockout mice. To achieve these goals, Dr. Wei’s lab will use multidisciplinary approaches including biochemical and genetic analysis. 
Dr. Wenyi Wei received his B.A. degree from Shandong University in 1993 and then obtained his M.S. training in Chinese Academy of Science from 1993 to 1996. Afterwards Dr. Wei received his Ph.D. training in the Department of Molecular Biology, Cell Biology & Biochemistry (MCB) at Brown University and his postdoctoral training in the laboratory of Dr. William Kaelin, Jr. at DFCI and Harvard Medical School. Dr. Wei became independent from 2006 in Department Pathology at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Department of Pathology at Harvard Medical School. 


Nathanael Gray, PhD
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School
Dr. Nathanael Gray’s research utilizes the tools of synthetic chemistry, protein biochemistry, and cancer biology to discover and validate new strategies for the inhibition of anti-cancer targets. Dr. Gray’s research has had broad impact in the areas of kinase inhibitor design and in circumventing drug resistance. Dr. Gray has established a discovery chemistry group that focuses on developing first-in-class inhibitors for newly emerging biological targets, including resistant alleles of existing targets, as well as inhibitors of well-validated targets, such as Her3 and RAS, that have previously been considered recalcitrant to small molecule drug development. Amongst the additional notable achievements of Dr. Gray’s research laboratory are: development of the first T790M selective EGFR inhibitors, ATP-competitive mTor inhibitor, Torin1, and its use to discover that rapamycin is an incomplete inhibitor of mTOR; development of the first inhibitors of ERK5 (BMK1), CDK7 and CDK12. 
Dr. Gray received his PhD in organic chemistry from the University of California at Berkeley in 1999 after receiving his BS degree with the highest honor award from the same institution in 1995. After completing his PhD, Dr. Gray was recruited to the newly established Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation (GNF) in San Diego, California. In 2006, Dr. Gray returned to academia and accepted a faculty appointment at the Dana Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School in Boston. Dr. Gray’s scientific contributions have been recognized through numerous awards including the Career Award of the National Science Foundation in 2007, the Damon Runyon Foundation Innovator award in 2008, the American Association for Cancer Research for Team Science in 2010 and for Outstanding Achievement in 2011 and the American Chemical Society award for Biological Chemistry in 2011.

Jiahuai Wang, PhDDana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School
Dr. Wang’s lab has been focusing on structures of cell surface receptors that play critical roles in the immune system and nervous system. In collaboration with colleagues within Dana-Farber and Harvard Medical School, the Wang lab has worked out structures of a number of key immune molecules, including T cell receptors, MHC molecules, co-receptors and their interacting complexes. His group has also determined structures of many cell adhesion molecules, such as CD2, CD58, Cadherin, ICAM family members and the complexes with their interacting partners. More recently he begins to turn his interests into neuronal receptors. Most recently in collaboration with a group at EMBL, Hamburg, Dr. Wang has determined the structure of netrin-1 in complex with DCC, uncovering the molecular mechanism of netrin-1 bi-functionality, a long-standing puzzle in the neuroscience field.
Dr. Jiahuai Wang obtained his B.A from the University of Science and Technology of China in 1963 and an equivalent Ph.D. from the Beijing Biophysics Institute, Chinese Academy of Sciences in 1979. He had worked in Biophysics Institute in the period of 1963-1979. During 1979-1982, he was a visiting scholar at University of Wisconsin at Madison and at Harvard University, the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. In 1982-1988 he was back in Beijing Biophysics Institute, promoted to Associate Professor and later Professor. He served as director of Protein Crystallography Department there in 1987-1988. He was appointed as a member of National 863 Committee of Biotechnology of China in 1986-1990. He came to the United States again late in 1988 working at Harvard Medical School, the same department till 1996 before moving to Dana-Farber Cancer Institute as a Principal Investigator. In 2001, he was promoted as an Associate Professor of Pediatrics and Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology at Harvard Medical School.

Xiaoliang Sunney Xie, PhDDepartment of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Harvard University
Dr. Xiaoliang Sunney Xie received a B.S. from Peking University in 1984, and his Ph.D. from the University of California at San Diego in 1990, followed by a short postdoctoral experience at the University of Chicago. In 1992, Xie joined Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, where he later became a Chief Scientist. In 1999, he was appointed Professor of Chemistry at Harvard University. He was the first full professor at Harvard University from the People's Republic of China since China's reform in 1978. He is currently the Mallinckrodt Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology at Harvard, and the Director of Beijing Advanced Innovation Center for Genomics at Peking University.
Xie is among the first to conduct fluorescence studies of single molecules at room temperature in the early 1990s. He has made major contributions to the emergence of the field of single-molecule biophysical chemistry and its application to biology. His team also pioneered the development of coherent Raman scattering microscopy and single cell whole genome sequencing.
His honors include the Albany Prize in Medicine and Biomedical Research, the U. S. Department of Energy E. O. Lawrence Award, the Biophysical Society’s Founders Award, the National Institute of Health Director’s Pioneer Award, the Sackler Prize for Physical Sciences and the American Chemical Society’s Peter Debye Award. Xie is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a member of the National Academy of Sciences. He is also an honorary fellow of the Chinese Chemical Society and has received scholarly awards from China, Germany and Israel. 


2018 Harvard Chinese Life Sciences YONGJIN Distinguished Research Award Awardees

Harvard Chinese Life Sciences YONGJIN Distinguished Research Award is sponsored by Yongjin Group, which is to reward Chinese scientists whose research and discoveries were published or accepted for publication in 2017 & 2018 and well recognized by the scientific community. After tons of applications and some seriously stiff competition, we're super excited to announce that the following twelve researchers are awarded 2018 Harvard Chinese Life Sciences YONGJIN Distinguished Research Award! 
They will be awarded at the Harvard Chinese Life Science Annual Research Symposium on May 5, 2018, the symposium will take place at the Folkman Auditorium, Enders Building, Boston Children’s Hospital, 320 Longwood Ave, Boston, MA 02115.


Diamond Sponsors:


Gold Sponsors:



Registration:

Registration is FREE for students, scholars, and postdocs (with .edu email) ! 
Registration is REQUIRED to attend this event.
Refreshment and lunch will be provided with RSVP ! 
Please register by recognizing the QR code, or click 

Organizer:

哈佛医学院华人专家学者联合会
Website: http://www.hms-cssa.org
微信公众号: hmscssa

LIBERTY MUTUAL TO PAY $50,000 OVER ALLEGATIONS IT IMPROPERLY CANCELLED HOMEOWNERS INSURANCE POLICIES

LIBERTY MUTUAL TO PAY $50,000 OVER ALLEGATIONS IT IMPROPERLY CANCELLED HOMEOWNERS INSURANCE POLICIES
Payment Will Provide Relief to Affected Homeowners

            BOSTON – Liberty Mutual Insurance Group Inc. has agreed to pay $50,000 to resolve allegations that it improperly cancelled approximately 200 homeowners insurance policies, Attorney General Maura Healey announced today.

The assurance of discontinuance, filed today in Suffolk Superior Court, will settle allegations that Liberty Mutual has been cancelling homeowners insurance policies in violation of state law since at least 2012. The $50,000 will be used to provide relief to homeowners who had to purchase more expensive policies as a result of Liberty Mutual’s actions.

            Massachusetts law prohibits insurance companies from cancelling homeowners insurance policies after they have been in effect for 60 days minus a few exceptions, such as failure of the insured to pay their premium or fraud or material misrepresentation in obtaining the policy by the insured. According to the settlement, Liberty Mutual cancelled approximately 200 policies based on the fraud and misrepresentation exception even though it lacked required information to make that determination.

            The AG’s Office previously reached a settlement with the Massachusetts Property Insurance Underwriting Association, or “FAIR Plan,” regarding allegations that it was cancelling hundreds of homeowners insurance policies per year in violation of state law.

This matter was handled by Assistant Attorney General Lydia French of the Attorney General’s Insurance and Financial Services Division.

胡波 "大象席地而坐" 電影放映會 5/1

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MAYOR WALSH INVESTS $2.4 BILLION IN BOSTON NEIGHBORHOODS IN IMAGINE BOSTON CAPITAL PLAN


MAYOR WALSH INVESTS $2.4 BILLION IN BOSTON NEIGHBORHOODS IN
IMAGINE BOSTON CAPITAL PLAN
Guided by Imagine Boston 2030, new community initiatives and projects to bring shared growth to city



BOSTON - Thursday, April 26, 2018 - Mayor Martin J. Walsh today presented his $2.4 billion Imagine Boston Capital Plan (Fiscal Year 2019 - 2023), which makes critical investments in every Boston neighborhood, guided by Boston's citywide plan, Imagine Boston 2030. From a new playground at Harambee Park and to a new library in Upham's Corner, to kitchen upgrades at 25 Boston schools, to new fire engines and fire houses, the City's capital investments aim to enhance all aspects of Boston's neighborhoods and provide more opportunities for Boston's working families.

As Boston approaches the one year mark since Imagine Boston 2030 was released, Mayor Walsh has aligned 84 percent of the investments in the Capital Plan with the City's planning efforts, including:

  • Investing $1 billion over ten years to bring Boston's school buildings into the 21st century;
  • Investing $967 million to implement core initiatives outlined in Go Boston 2030 to create streets that are safer, travel that is more reliable, and transportation choices that will interconnect our neighborhoods;  
  • Carrying out Imagine Boston 2030 open space goals to invest in the City's public parks by leveraging Winthrop Square sale proceeds, City capital dollars and external funds;
  • Preparing for climate change by developing more detailed climate plans for Boston's neighborhoods, as part of Climate Ready Boston;
  • Improving quality of life for residents by enabling affordable housing development through public infrastructure projects;  
  • Demonstrating the City's leadership and commitment to sustainable funding for the arts through the Percent for Art program, which will support the commissioning of public art.

"It's our priority to create growth and opportunity for every Bostonian in every neighborhood," said Mayor Walsh. "Investing in initiatives and projects that bring shared growth, success, and greater equity is critical for our city to reach its full potential. Our budget is focused on making long-term investments that continue to lift up Boston's middle class, as we ensure Boston is a city that works for all its families."

Under the Imagine Boston 2030 plan, the Walsh Administration is investing in the core goals of BuildBPS, Go Boston 2030, Boston Creates, and Climate Ready Boston.

"I'm thrilled to see the critical investments in our parks, libraries, streets, and school buildings in this five-year capital plan," said City Councilor Kim Janey. "With the Dearborn STEM Academy nearing completion, improvements to Franklin Park underway, renovations underway to the Dudley Library, design in progress for the South End Library and its adjacent park, and significant sidewalk updates in the Humboldt Ave area, District 7 sees significant progress under this budget and five-year capital plan and I look forward to continuing the budget hearing process."

Today's capital plan release complements Mayor Walsh's proposed FY19 operating budget, released in early April, which affirms a commitment to progress, opportunity and innovation by investing in Boston's neighborhoods, while building on the City's strong record of proactive fiscal management.

Mayor's Walsh's Imagine Boston Capital Plan makes investments in departments and resources key to boosting Boston's middle class, including:

Education
The capital plan invests heavily in Boston Public Schools, reflecting the Walsh Administration's $1 billion commitment to upgrade Boston's classrooms through BuildBPS, its ten-year school facilities master plan. The largest investment in the Capital Plan, a new building for the Boston Arts Academy, allocates $124.8 million for design and construction in partnership with the Massachusetts School Building Authority. The new school building will support the BAA's dual arts and academic curriculum.

In addition, the budget will invest in kitchen upgrades at 25 schools through Boston's My Way Cafe program, an initiative designed to increase access to healthy, freshly-prepared meals for all BPS students. Upgrades at school kitchens will enable the implementation of a fresh food program that will launch in fall 2018. New kitchens will allow schools to prepare healthy meals on site, building off the successful "hub-and-spoke" model piloted in East Boston last fall.

The City's capital plan will also invest in school infrastructure, as well as equitable, accessible facilities. This includes $7.3 million for new windows at the Horace Mann/Jack Mann School; $1.35 million for new windows at the Henderson Inclusion Lower School; $1.3 million for electrical improvements at four schools; $2.6 million for a new roof at Madison Park Vocational Technical High School;  $4 million to complete accessibility renovations at the Henderson Inclusion Upper School; $840,000 at the Curley K-8 school for rebuilding the school's connecting bridge. $2.8 million will be invested to renovate locker rooms at Brighton High School and $822,000 will be invested at the Sumner School play yard.

Transportation
Since unveiling the City's Go Boston 2030 transportation plan, Mayor Walsh has continued to prioritize strengthening and creating transportation options that are safe, reliable and equitable. The capital plan invests in these large-scale infrastructure improvements, including an $18 million multi-year Massachusetts Avenue bridge project; a $100 million investment to rehabilitate and renew the Northern Avenue Bridge; and a $218 million investment to build a new North Washington Street bridge.

Vision Zero, Boston's commitment to focus the City's resources on proven strategies to eliminate fatal and serious traffic crashes in the City by 2030, is also represented in Boston's capital plan. By increasing certain parking fines in FY19, the City will produce positive results by changing driver behavior and reducing congestion in high traffic areas. Updating parking fines will also allow the City to make $5 million in investments in transportation projects and continue implementing Go Boston 2030's core initiatives. The $5 million will go directly towards building 15 Neighborhood Slow Streets projects, 15 miles of protected bike lanes, and improve 15 of the most challenging intersections in the next four years; improve management of traffic signals to increase safety and reduce congestion; establish the City's Transit Team to better coordinate with the MBTA; continue the multi-year campaign to bring all crosswalks, lane markings, and bike lanes into a state of good repair; and improve access and safety for pedestrians and cyclists visiting our Main Streets business districts.

From Melnea Cass Boulevard to Summer Street, the City is investing millions of dollars in safe, accessible roads and sidewalks. This includes a $4.5 million allocation for the reconstruction of Quincy Street roadway and sidewalks; $3 million for the reconstruction of streets within Madison Park Village; $8 million investment for the completion of infrastructure improvements for Boylston Street and Audubon Circle, including new bicycles and pedestrian paths; and $7.4 million investment in the reconstruction of Summer Street, including improved roadways, sidewalks, street lights, and a cycle track from Fort Point Channel to Boston Wharf Road and planning for future improvements from the BCEC towards South Boston.

In addition, the City of Boston is taking the initiative to improve economic mobility and strengthen Boston's core and emerging industries and small businesses. The FY19 Capital Plan has allocated roadway improvements from Shawmut Avenue to Harrison Avenue including six key Dudley Square intersections. The scope of work includes geometric changes, new traffic signal equipment and timing, bike lanes, and streetscape improvements.  

We will also be investing in roadway improvements to Washington Street from East Berkeley Street to Herald Street, and Traveler Street between Washington Street and Harrison Avenue. Improvements include resurfacing, pavement markings, and new traffic signals.

Transportation improvements means creating a healthier, more accessible Boston -- and that also includes the City's investment in rebuilding the Long Island bridge. Through this capital plan, Boston will invest $90 million in rebuilding the bridge to Long Island. On Long Island, Boston will create a long-term recovery campus which will serve those individuals in and around Boston who need access to recovery services.

Parks and Open Space
Parks and open space are some of Boston's most loved places, and the capital budget continues to invest in preserving and improving open spaces for Boston residents, and generations to come. With this capital plan, the Walsh Administration will invest in the largest-ever capital funding for Boston parks. These investments include $6.3 million to complete the construction on Phase 1 of the Smith Playground in Allston-Brighton; a $4.4 million investment in Cassidy Field; a $4.2 million investment in the South Bay Harbor Trail, which will serve as an important link in the City's Greenway; $3.9 million to improve Noyes Park; the completion of Martin's Park, a universally accessible park near the Children's Museum; a $4.8 million investment to revitalize the pathways around Jamaica Pond; a $5 million investment in the Garvey Playground; and $6.2 million for the continued renovation of Harambee Park. In addition, more parks and playgrounds throughout the City will receive funds to improve their facilities, such as Ramsay Park in the South End and the Edwards Playground in Charlestown.

In addition, this capital budget will invest in long-term planning for Boston's most iconic park -- the Boston Common. The capital plan sets aside $500,000 to develop a master plan to bring the nation's oldest public park to the level of excellence commensurate with its historical importance and use by the City's residents and visitors. The budget also invests $800,000 into Franklin Park, to develop a master plan that will enhance historic Franklin Park as a keystone park in the geographical heart of the City.

Community Centers
The City's Capital Plan for BCYF targets an increase to programming capacity at the City's community centers and supports high-quality facilities. Community centers provide families, children and teens with enriching programs such as after school care, athletics, job and computer training. We are investing in renovations in our community centers to upgrade community centers as well as BCYF pools around the city to ensure a fun and safe environment for all of the community members that seek to utilize the facility. We will complete the nearly $3 million renovation at the BCYF Gallivan Community Center introducing air conditioning to the gymnasium, replacing the roof and gym floor, and upgrading the fire alarm and emergency lighting systems. We will be investing in a $15 million major renovation that will allow the center to receive the repairs and upgrades necessary to offer many additional resources at the BCYF Curley Community Center. An additional $1 million in funds to renovate and upgrade locker rooms and pools including filtration systems, pool liners, and dehumidification and HVAC systems at various BCYF/BPS pool facilities.

Energy and Environment
Building on the success of the first phase of Climate Ready Boston in East Boston and Charlestown, the capital plan will allocate an additional $1.6 million to further resiliency initiatives to protect the city and provide more detailed reviews of additional neighborhoods. This includes an additional $600,000 for climate resilience planning for City neighborhoods and municipal facilities affected by climate change. It also includes $1 million to support the development of a study that will examine the feasibility of constructing a barrier in Boston Harbor in response to expected sea level rise due to climate change.

The Renew Boston Trust was launched during the Walsh Administration and has systematically identified energy efficiency projects in the City's 315 buildings to both lower energy bills and reduce emissions. The City finances the program through general obligation bonds and utilities efficiency incentives, and it will be paid for from reduced energy consumption at City departments. A $12 million Phase 1 is set to begin construction this year, and the FY19-23 Capital Plan will nearly triple the size of the program to $42 million for a future Phase 2.

Housing
This plan reflects an effort to continue the Administration's work to encourage housing production, increase affordable housing options, and reduce displacement. Municipal finance law does not allow the City to use city capital dollars to support private housing, but does allow public infrastructure projects to enhance housing development.

Included in the plan is the Whittier Street roadways projects that will reconstruct roads and sidewalks in the Whittier Street housing development in conjunction with a $30 million HUD grant. This investment will revitalize the development and surrounding neighborhood. The Whittier Choice project will ultimately create a total of 387 mixed-income rental units.

Also in the plan is the Madison Park village project, that will reconstruct streets within the Madison Park Village of Roxbury, bounded by Melnea Cass Boulevard and Tremont Street. The Madison Park project will be comprised of a four-story building with 16 units and a five-story building with 60 units located near the Ruggles MBTA Orange Line station.

Arts and Culture
With this capital plan, Boston will invest in creating new branch libraries, including a $12.6 million investment to build a new addition at the Faneuil Branch Library in Brighton; a $18.3 million investment in the design and construction of a branch library at Adams Street Library; a $18 million investment in the development of a new Upham's Corner Branch Library; and a $12 million investment to support the construction of a new facility for the Fields Corner Branch Library.

This budget also invests in renovating existing library, from a $17.2 million renovation of the Dudley Branch Library in Roxbury, to a $10.2 million investment in renovating the Roslindale Branch Library.

FY19 also marks the second year of the City's Percent for the Arts program, a program that dedicates one percent, or $1.7 million, of the City's annual capital budget for commissioning permanent, public art in municipal spaces.

Public Safety
The Walsh Administration's investments in the recommended budget and capital plan provide a comprehensive and multi-disciplinary approach to violence prevention and public safety that emphasizes opportunities and pathways away from violence. With a growing population and changing neighborhoods, Boston needs reliable public safety facilities that help meet the needs of Boston's residents. The City will complete the design for a new $29.9 million East Boston Police Station this year. Another investment of $48.2 million will ensure that new fire stations at Engine 42 in Egleston Square and Engine 17 on Meetinghouse Hill are designed and equipped to both protect firefighter health and safety and meet the public safety needs of our growing city.

The City and Boston Public Schools will also increase its investment in school security to a total of $5 million, representing a $2 million increase from the previous year. The project includes upgrades to external and internal doors, locks and key cards, intercom, motion detectors and cameras. Additionally, $2 million will be allocated for the Boston Housing Authority (BHA) to begin planning for the installation of additional security cameras at BHA locations.

About Imagine Boston 2030
Mayor Walsh's FY19 continues to invest in preserving and creating a strong middle class, and creating opportunities for all those who live in Boston. The FY19 budget supports Boston's long-term plan, Imagine Boston 2030.

Imagine Boston 2030 is Boston's first citywide plan in 50 years aimed at guiding growth to support Boston's dynamic economy and expand opportunity for all residents. The plan prioritizes inclusionary growth and puts forth a comprehensive vision to boost quality of life, equity and resilience in every neighborhood across the City. Shaped by the input of 15,000 residents who contributed their thoughts to the plan, Imagine Boston 2030 identifies five action areas to guide Boston's growth, enhancement and preservation, and is paired with a set of metrics that will evaluate progress and successes. To learn more visit, imagine.boston.gov.

For more information on the FY19 budget proposal, please visit budget.boston.gov.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren to Host Town Hall in Brockton 4/28

Sen. Elizabeth Warren to Host Town Hall
in Brockton on Saturday, April 28

Boston, MA - On Saturday, April 28, Senator Elizabeth Warren will host a town hall in Brockton, MA. Sen. Warren will take questions from the audience and discuss her work standing up for working families of Massachusetts against powerful corporate interests. This will be Warren's 26th town hall-style event over the past 13 months. We ask the public to please RSVP at our website: http://my.elizabethwarren.com/townhallbrockton.
The event is open to press. Media planning to attend can RSVP to Aeira@elizabethwarren.com.
 
WHAT:    Senator Elizabeth Warren hosts town hall in Brockton, MA
 
WHEN:   Saturday, April 28, 2018
               Event starts: 1:00 p.m.
               Doors open: 12:00 p.m.
 
WHERE: Brockton West Middle School
                271 West St
                Brockton, MA 02301

CAPAC Chair Statement on Termination of TPS for Nepal

CAPAC Chair Statement on Termination of TPS for Nepal

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security announced its decision to terminate Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Nepal. The decision will impact approximately 9,000 Nepalese who were granted TPS status to reside in the United States in the aftermath of a 7.8 magnitude earthquake that devastated Nepal in 2015. Congresswoman Judy Chu (CA-27), Chair of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC), released the following statement:

“The Trump Administration’s decision to terminate TPS for Nepal is not only heartless, but it is a slap in the face to the 9,000 Nepali TPS recipients who are still working to rebuild their country in the aftermath of an earthquake that devastated Nepal in 2015.

“Three years later, over half of Nepal’s water infrastructure still requires repair and over 90 percent of those who were originally displaced by the earthquake are still living in temporary shelters. The failure of the State Department and the Department of Homeland Security to fully analyze the perilous and unstable conditions in Nepal is irresponsible and inhumane.

“Let me be clear – this is a failure of the entire administration and is clearly a way for President Trump to hasten his mass deportation agenda at the expense of innocent lives. In Congress, I will continue to fight for a permanent legislative solution to protect TPS recipients and allow them to remain in the United States.”

BOSTON TO TAKE BACK UNWANTED PRESCRIPTION DRUGS ON SATURDAY, APRIL 28 AS PART OF 'NATIONAL PRESCRIPTION DRUG TAKE BACK DAY'

BOSTON TO TAKE BACK UNWANTED PRESCRIPTION DRUGS ON SATURDAY, APRIL 28 AS PART OF 'NATIONAL PRESCRIPTION DRUG TAKE BACK DAY'
year round for confidential disposal of prescription medicines
BOSTON - Friday, April 27, 2018 - Mayor Martin J. Walsh is encouraging Bostonians to play a role in curbing the misuse and theft of prescription drugs by dropping off their expired, unused, and unwanted medications on Saturday, April 28, 2018, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The kiosk service is free and anonymous, and available at any of the following locations:
* Downtown: 40 New Sudbury St. Boston, MA 02114
* East Boston: 69 Paris St. East Boston, MA 02128
* Roxbury: 2400 Washington St. Roxbury, MA 02119 
* Mattapan: 1165 Blue Hill Ave. Dorchester, MA 02124
* South Boston: 101 West Broadway South Boston, MA 02127
* Dorchester: 40 Gibson St. Dorchester, MA 02122 
* Back Bay: 650 Harrison Ave. Boston, MA 02116 
* Brighton: 301 Washington St. Brighton, MA 02135 
* West Roxbury: 1708 Centre St. West Roxbury, MA 02132
* Jamaica Plain: 3345 Washington St. Jamaica Plain, MA 02130
* Hyde Park: 1249 Hyde Park Ave. Hyde Park, MA 02136
This effort is supported by The Mayor's Office of Recovery Services, the Boston Public Health Commission (BPHC) and the Boston Police Department (BPD) as part of the Drug Enforcement Administration's (DEA) National Prescription Drug Take Back Day.
About the Boston Public Health Commission 
The Boston Public Health Commission, the country's oldest health department, is an independent public agency providing a wide range of health services and programs. It is governed by a seven-member board of health appointed by the Mayor of Boston.
 
Public service and access to quality health care are the cornerstones of our mission - to protect, preserve, and promote the health and well-being of all Boston residents, particularly those who are most vulnerable. The Commission's more than 40 programs are grouped into six bureaus: Child, Adolescent & Family Health; Community Health Initiatives; Homeless Services; Infectious Disease; Recovery Services; and Emergency Medical Services.

劉雲平喜見兩韓會談 稱"好過開戰"

REP LIEU STATEMENT ON HISTORIC MEETING BETWEEN SOUTH AND NORTH KOREA
WASHINGTON – Today, Congressman Ted W. Lieu (D-Los Angeles County) issued the following statement after North Korean leader Kim Jong-un and South Korean President Moon Jae-in met yesterday to work towards denuclearization and an official end to the Korean War. 
“I am pleased that the leaders of South and North Korea had a productive meeting yesterday.  This historic event is the first step in the long journey towards peace on the Peninsula and I applaud efforts to reach an agreement without military escalation.  There will undoubtedly be many challenges that come with ending 65 years of aggression and mistrust.  Diplomacy is not easy – but is it always preferable to war.”