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星期五, 9月 14, 2018

MASSACHUSETTS LEAD IN DRINKING WATER PROGRAM RECOGNIZED BY EPA FOR ENVIRONMENTAL ACHIEVEMENTS

The Children’s Health Award Recognizes a Multi-Agency Partnership to Encourage Lead and Copper Testing in Public Schools

BOSTON – The Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) and the Massachusetts Clean Water Trust’s Lead in Drinking Water Assistance Program received the Children’s Health Award from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The award recognizes the programs efforts to encourage more public schools and day care centers to test for lead and copper in their school drinking water.

“We are honored to receive this award from the EPA recognizing the hard work done to ensure safe drinking water for our students,” said Treasurer Goldberg, chair of the Massachusetts Clean Water Trust. “I am proud to work collaboratively to provide our schools and day care centers the funds they need to test water in their buildings.”

“It is an honor to receive this environmental merit award on behalf of the Baker-Polito Administration from EPA recognizing the important work that has been accomplished to protect the health of thousands of students and school staff,” said MassDEP Commissioner Martin Suuberg. “This program has been a success thanks to the collaborative efforts of our partners at the Clean Water Trust, the Massachusetts Water Resources Authority, the University of Massachusetts Amherst, the Departments of Elementary and Secondary Education and Early Education and Care, and the Department of Public Health.”

The program is designed to encourage more schools to perform lead and copper testing with the help of experts at MassDEP. Under current federal laws, testing in schools is voluntary and this program is designed to help schools implement effective testing programs and take water samples and to educate them about how to address elevated levels.

The testing program was funded last year with $2.75 million made available by the Baker-Polito Administration and Treasurer Goldberg through the Massachusetts Clean Water Trust.

Since the launch of the program, more than 150 communities received technical assistance and more than 800 school buildings had plans to map out all fixtures to be tested. In addition, nearly 56,000 water samples were collected from about 32,000 faucets, fountains and other fixtures in schools.


The EPA's Environmental Merit Awards Program has honored teachers, citizen activists, business leaders, scientists, public officials and others who have made outstanding contributions on behalf of the region's public health and natural environment. The Massachusetts Lead in Drinking Water Team were among 28 recipients across New England honored for their work to protect New England's environment.

MAYOR WALSH ANNOUNCES 2019 MAYOR'S YOUTH COUNCIL MEMBERS

MAYOR WALSH ANNOUNCES 2019 MAYOR'S YOUTH COUNCIL MEMBERS


BOSTON - Friday, September 14, 2018 - Mayor Martin J. Walsh today announced the members of the 2019 Mayor's Youth Council, a group of 85 high school-aged youth committed to improving their communities and empowering other young people in the City. The Mayor's Youth Council (MYC) advises Mayor Walsh and members of his administration on policy and programming and were selected following an extensive application and interview process.

"I'm pleased to welcome our newest members of the Youth Council," said Mayor Walsh. "Boston's young people have a unique voice and perspective in our City and I look forward to gaining the feedback and advice of our youngest advisors."
Members of the MYC come from all across Boston and attend a variety of public, parochial, private and alternative schools. The MYC is a year-round commitment, and members devote eight to 13 hours a month to meetings, impact and service projects and engagement. The number of youth representing each neighborhood is based upon census data that indicates where young people live in Boston.

"Youth have the potential to be powerful agents of change," said Chief of Health and Human Services, Marty Martinez. "Through the Mayor's Youth Council, our young people will amplify the voice of Boston's youth and catalyze positive change throughout the community."

MYC representatives form issue-centric subcommittees based on input from youth and Mayor Walsh's cabinet structure. The current committees include: Arts & Culture, Education & Youth Lead the Change, Civic Engagement, Workforce & Economic Development, and Public Health & Safety. Twelve directors and deputy directors were voted in by their peers to lead the Council's committees.
"I feel very privileged to serve on the council because it gives me the opportunity to share my ideas and opinions on how to improve Boston," said Donna Gee, 16, of the South End. "I'm also meeting new people, and working on projects and developing a plan to involve the community."

In the past year, members of the MYC have worked on a variety of issues related to public safety, participatory budgeting, and civic engagement. The MYC provided feedback to the MBTA on their 5-year transportation plan and to the City's Go Boston 2030 transportation plan; guided the community input process for how the City of Boston spends $1 million of the City budget through "Youth Lead the Change"participatory budgeting; and led many discussions around current issues and events.

"I'm really excited to be serving again," said Matthew Wang, 17, of Dorchester. "I didn't know what to expect last year but I learned that we have a power that I didn't know we had. I'm excited to work on issues important to me like exploring pushing back school start times and creating more after school programs for schools."

科技部政次許有進率北中南三科學園區訪波士頓招商

左起,華府經文處科技組組長曾東澤、科技部產學司副司長涂君怡、
新竹科學園區局長王永壯、科技部次長許有進、波士頓經文處處長
徐佑典、南部科學園區管理局局長林威呈、中部科學園區副局長
施文芳。(周菊子攝)
(Boston Orange 周菊子波士頓報導)台灣科技部次長許有進率北中南三個科學園區首長訪美招商,13日抵達波士頓,在凱悅酒店向近百人闡述台灣願景,希望吸引海外優秀創意與軟體設計,結合台灣享譽世界的生產,製造能力,把台灣的科技業與國力帶上新高峰。
台灣自從設立科技部,原任台大學術副校長的陳良基出任部長以來,科技部頻仍出訪取經,為招聘人才,橋接技術,建立合作關係,在短短二年間,前前後後訪問波士頓已不下三次。
科技部政務次長許有進(中)和,左起,科技部產學司副司長涂君怡,
竹科局長王永壯,南科局長林威呈,中科副局長施文芳會末回答提問。
(周菊子攝)
自己曾兩度成功創業,也是半導體專家的科技部政務次長許有進,這次率團訪美,邀集台灣三大科學園區首長同行,讓海外廠商有機會近距離和新竹的王永壯,南部的林威呈,中部的副局長施文芳直接交流,更精準說明各園區重心,加強「台灣科學園區招商及行銷說明會」的效率。
其中一名隨團出訪者透露,到台灣創辦科技公司的人會發現,做研發或製造產品所需要的上下游廠商,全在2小時車程內可以找齊,此外,台灣人才豐富,可培養度極高這些優勢,全世界沒有哪幾個國家可以比得上。
這場說明會,除了介紹台灣北中南三個科學園區的特色與發展方向之外,還特地安排了三段見證講談。
科技部政務次長許有進(中)和兩名創業家Origin Wireless主席李政鋒(右),
上騰生技顧問蔡秀娟(左)。(周菊子攝)
上智生技創投旗下上騰生技顧問的國際事務資深顧問蔡秀娟,暢談從美國角度看台灣創新的發展與機會。她指出台灣在全世界百大科技群聚點中,台北排名第40,台南及高雄排名第87,台灣的科技實力絕對比很多人想像的要好很多。
Origin Wireless主席暨營運長李政峰則是闡述智慧無線電波的應用,將改變整個社會,家庭的生活模式,以及台灣吸引該公司到竹科設分支機構的原因。
麻州國際貿易及發展辦公室主任馬克蘇利文(Mark Sullivan)也應邀出席,從他曾在台灣工作,負責架設電訊塔台的經驗,談到麻州與台灣的相似之處,以及麻州在創新上全美排名第一,雙方有很多進一步合作機會。
麻州國際貿易及投資辦公室主任蘇利文(Mark F. Sullivan)。(周菊子攝)
李政鋒(中)和他的創業投資人,EGI創投合夥人黃筑鈞(右),許恒源(左)。
(周菊子攝)
許有進在波士頓舉行的記者會中指出,台灣從1976年開始創辦科學園區,帶動科技發展,也使台灣成為全球的半導體龍頭,近年擴大,分別在中部,南部也設立了科學園區,分別以精準機械,生物醫療為重點發展方向。2017年的科技產值達2046兆台幣,比2016年增長了3%2018年和2017年的前六個月相比,成長更高,約為8.5%,其中半導體,精密機械,生物醫療等三個領域的成長幅度,都在10%以上,可見科技業又重新爆發能量。科技部此行率團出訪,旨在向海外各界介紹台灣科技實力與發展方向,希望吸引海外創意與優秀的軟體設計到台灣,結合台灣的生產,製造優勢,把整個行業帶上新高峰。人工智慧應用,創新創意發展,都是重點。
科技部指出,在台灣歷史中,這還是第一次由科技部率三個科學園區往訪國外招商,希望為海內外合作播下種子。該部預定明年一月組團訪日本。


新英格蘭台灣商會會長歐陽露(右一)和前會長王本仁(左一),
為籌備中的會議邀請,右起,EGI創投合夥人黃筑鈞,許恒源,
玉山科協前會長李政欣等人做評審。(周菊子攝)

波克萊台灣商會會長楊羅東(右二)與理事們,右起,
徐小玲,陳玉瑛,郭競儒,劉秀春出席支持科技部
招商活動。(周菊子攝)











星期四, 9月 13, 2018

Art and Innovation: Disrupting the Status Quo 9/14 – 10/14


Art and Innovation: Disrupting the Status Quo
September 14 – October 14, 2018

Malden, Massachusetts - September 13, 2018  -   The Gallery in Malden located at 480 Main Street, is pleased to announce the opening of the exhibition “Art and Innovation” on Friday, September 14, 2018 at 6:30pm. The show features artwork from nine artists working with diverse mediums brought together by a call for art that disrupts the status quo.

By process, subject matter, and ideas, the works on display represent the compelling edge many artists drive toward – to challenge what has been done before and to help viewers to expand thinking about life and art.
Participating artists are Deborah Ann Corleto, Cathy Granese, Bob Greene, Siena Hancock, Sand T Kalloch, Lindsy Elizabeth Marshall, Betsy Rodman, Fay Shaw, and Allison Tanenhaus.
The show will be available for viewing through October 14, 2018 at The Gallery in Malden, 480 Main Street during gallery hours: Tuesdays-Sundays 11am to 7pm.  For more information about this exhibition and The Gallery, please visit thegalleryinc.com or email info@thegalleryinc.com

MAYOR WALSH PURSUES LITIGATION AGAINST THE PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY

MAYOR WALSH PURSUES LITIGATION AGAINST THE PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRY
City seeks to recover damages to bolster recovery efforts in Boston and address the growing opioid epidemic

BOSTON - Thursday, September 13, 2018 - Mayor Martin J. Walsh today announced the City of Boston has filed a complaint in Suffolk Superior Court against 13 opioid manufacturers, four distributors, and one local doctor that have contributed to the local opioid epidemic through misleading marketing and reckless dissemination of opioids that has led to the deaths of more than 723 Boston residents since 2013. As part of the litigation, the City is seeking to recover both past and future damages and injunctive relief associated with addressing the opioid epidemic in Boston. 

"Boston has reached a breaking point in the fight against the opioid epidemic," said Mayor Walsh. "We have a public health crisis on our hands that has steadily gotten worse in recent years and even though we have been increasing access to critical treatments and supports, we can't fight this alone. It's time to hold accountable the companies that created and fostered this crisis and pursue remedies to stop its harmful marketing tactics." 
The litigation focuses on several pharmaceutical companies that irresponsibly saturated the market with opioids, knowingly putting consumers at risk for addiction. The defendants manufacture, market, and sell prescription opioid pain medications, including the brand-name drugs OxyContin and Percocet, and generic drugs such as oxycodone.
In addition, the suit alleges opioid drugs have been marketed in a misleading, deceptive and dangerous way, which helped give rise to the opioid epidemic in the City of Boston and throughout the country. Between 2010 and 2016, an average of 457 mg of oxycodone were dispersed per Boston resident, which is double the state average and nearly three times over the national average. 

"My first experience with opioids came with an emergency room prescription for a minor injury when I was 14," said Jared Owen, an individual in long-term recovery who now works for the Massachusetts Organization for Addiction Recovery (MOAR). "I fell in love with the way they made me feel. I remember stealing OxyContin that my dad had been prescribed when I was in high school, and getting it from some dealers when I was in graduate school at MIT. They were expensive, so like many other people, I turned to heroin."

The City asserts that the increased dissemination of opioids correlates directly to skyrocketing addiction, overdose and death; black markets for diverted prescriptions opioids; and an accompanying rise in heroin and fentanyl abuse by individuals who could no longer legally acquire or afford prescription opioids. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) identified addiction to prescription pain medication as the strongest risk factor for heroin addiction.
"The opioid epidemic has inflicted unprecedented suffering on the people of Boston," said Michael Botticelli, executive director of the Grayken Center for Addiction Medicine. "Boston Medical Center sees its impact on a daily basis in the people brought to our emergency room, inpatient beds, and those seeking treatment services. The Grayken Center is proud to support the Mayor in his efforts to bring this suffering to an end and to show our support for his actions today to hold opioid manufacturers responsible for their role in creating this epidemic."
"At The Dimock Center, our number one priority is patient care, especially as we face the ongoing unprecedented opioid epidemic," said Dr. Myechia Minter-Jordan, President and CEO of The Dimock Center. "The opioid epidemic touches everyone, regardless of race, socioeconomic status and geographic locations. And we have all been touched by it personally and/or via family and friends. Dimock's integrated services model and continuum of care remains committed to breaking down barriers to provide the help that is needed. In response to this immediate need, we have increased our capacity to include 40 beds thus reaching 4,000 patients annually, welcoming men and women from our neighborhood and across the Commonwealth to begin their road to recovery."

"I am happy to stand with Mayor Walsh and support his efforts to seek damages associated with the opioid epidemic here in Boston," said City Councilor Frank Baker. "The crisis we are in today is due in large part to deceptive practices within the pharmaceutical industry. Despite our best efforts to combat this crisis, it continues to get worse. It is my hope we can use the funding from this litigation to help build a real recovery campus on Long Island."  
The City is seeking relief to recover approximately $64 million spent to combat the opioid epidemic, plus the necessary funds to abate the crisis, in addition to future damages the City will incur as the epidemic progresses. Almost all City departments have been impacted, including the Boston Fire Department, Boston Police Department, Boston Public Health Commission, Boston Emergency Medical Services, Boston Public Library, Boston Parks and Recreation Department, Inspectional Services Department, Property Management, and Boston Public Schools. 
Having been in recovery for over 20 years, Mayor Walsh understands firsthand how easily addiction can take hold and how difficult it can be to recover. In his first term, Mayor Walsh made expanding access to recovery services in Boston a priority by creating the Office of Recovery Services to study substance use in Boston and lead the city's strategy around substance use disorders, addiction and recovery. This is the first and only municipal recovery office in the nation.
In addition, Mayor Walsh mandated the life-saving medication naloxone (Narcan) be carried in every public safety vehicle in the city in his first two weeks in office and launched a new 24/7 hotline through 311 to help people struggling with addiction access all levels of recovery services.
Continuing these efforts into his second term, Mayor Walsh announced in his inaugural speech that his Administration will rebuild the Long Island Bridge and invest in a comprehensive, long-term recovery facility on Long Island. These new services will offer a continuum of care, from harm reduction, to detox, to residential treatment, to transitional housing and ongoing peer support, and equip people with the opportunity to rebuild a life.
The City retained Motley Rice in June 2018 to represent the City of Boston in litigation against the pharmaceutical industry for their role in the opioid crisis, following a Request for Information to inform the City's approach for developing a potential legal strategy. Motley Rice is one of the nation's largest and most successful plaintiffs' firms and is playing a leading role in helping state and local governments across the country address the opioid crisis by investigating and litigating against pharmaceutical companies and seeking to hold them accountable for misconduct that helped give rise to the opioid crisis. 

AG’S OFFICE ANNOUNCES NEW GRANT PROGRAM TO HELP CONSUMERS PAY THEIR HEATING BILLS

AG’S OFFICE ANNOUNCES NEW GRANT PROGRAM TO HELP CONSUMERS PAY THEIR HEATING BILLS
$3 Million Grant Program to Provide Additional Funding to State Agencies, Municipalities, And Nonprofits That Assist Households in Paying Monthly Gas Bills

            BOSTON – Attorney General Maura Healey today announced a new $3 million grant program to help Massachusetts consumers pay or lower their monthly natural gas heating bills.
                                                                                                         
            “Every year, tens of thousands of Massachusetts families struggle to pay their heating bills,” said AG Healey. “My goal with this new program is to make sure our residents have the financial assistance they need to stay warm during the cold winter months.”

            The Natural Gas Fuel Assistance Grant Program will provide additional funding to programs that assist Massachusetts households in paying for their natural gas service. The grant program is open to programs run through state agencies, municipalities, charitable organizations, and nonprofit organizations. Eligible programs may include those that are providing direct assistance to consumers by subsidizing their natural gas heating bills or are providing indirect assistance by helping residents implement energy-efficiency measures designed to lower their natural gas heating bills.  

"Utility companies terminate gas service to large numbers of low income households each year because those customers cannot afford to pay their bills,” said Charlie Harak, a managing attorney at the National Consumer Law Center.  “The Attorney General's program will help thousands of households to stay current on their bills and avoid termination." 

The AG’s Office is especially interested in proposals for programs that will provide funding to families who otherwise would not be receiving fuel assistance, or who are not receiving sufficient help in paying their monthly heating bills. 

            The grant program will utilize funds the AG’s Office secured through asettlement with National Grid for improperly charging its customers reconnection service fees.

As the ratepayer advocate for Massachusetts, AG Healey works to ensure that consumers do not pay more than they should for their natural gas. In July 2017, AG Healey joined a coalition of 35 attorneys general and state consumer advocate agencies in urging Congress to preserve and expand funding for the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP) and the Weatherization Assistance Program (WAP), federally funded low-income energy assistance programs.

The two-year grant program will start on Nov. 1, 2018 and will end on Oct. 31, 2020. Interested applicants can visit the AG’s website,www.mass.gov/ago/grants for more information and for application instructions. Questions about the grant program can be submitted by email toAGOGrants@state.ma.us. Applications must be received by 5 p.m. on Sept. 21, 2018.

AG HEALEY AND LOCAL STUDENTS WIN FEDERAL COURT RULING AGAINST EDUCATION SECRETARY DEVOS FOR AXING STUDENT LOAN PROTECTIONS

AG HEALEY AND LOCAL STUDENTS WIN FEDERAL COURT RULING AGAINST EDUCATION SECRETARY DEVOS FOR AXING STUDENT LOAN PROTECTIONSJudge Rules that U.S. Department of Education’s Delay of the Borrower Defense Rule Violated Federal Law
            BOSTON – Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey and two Boston-area students won a victory in federal court against Education Secretary Betsy DeVos after challenging the U.S. Department of Education’s plan to scrap federal protections for students cheated by predatory, for-profit schools. The opinion called Secretary DeVos’ actions “unlawful,” “arbitrary and capricious” and “procedurally invalid,” and ordered an immediate hearing in Washington, D.C to determine remedies.
            The decision, filed yesterday in the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., is the result of a multistate lawsuit led by AG Healey and joined by 18 other state attorneys general, and a related case brought by Public Citizen and the Project on Predatory Student Lending on behalf of two students who attended the now-bankrupt New England Institute of Art, a for-profit school in Brookline, Massachusetts. AG Healey and the students alleged that the U.S. Department of Education violated federal law by abruptly rescinding its Borrower Defense Rule which was designed to hold abusive higher education institutions accountable for cheating students and taxpayers out of billions of dollars in federal loans.
“For years, we’ve fought for needed protections for student borrowers in Massachusetts,” AG Healey said. “This decision is a victory for every family defrauded by a predatory for-profit school and a total rejection of Donald Trump and Betsy DeVos’ agenda to cheat students and taxpayers. It’s time for this rule to go into effect and give thousands of students the relief they’ve been waiting for.”
“This is a major victory for students and for anyone who cares about having a government that operates under the rule of law, instead of as a pawn of the for-profit college industry,” said Project on Predatory Student Lending Director Toby Merrill. “Because of the willingness of two students to stand up to the Department of Education’s unfair and unjust policies, hundreds of thousands of students will be protected. We are proud to represent them, and deeply grateful to Attorney General Maura Healey and Attorneys General across the country who have chosen to stand with students and against this predatory industry time and time again.”
Judge Randolph Moss of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia has scheduled a status conference for Friday, Sept. 14 at 10:30 a.m. to address remedies. The AG’s Office will be asking the court to order the Department to implement the Borrower Defense Rule immediately and in full. 
The Borrower Defense Rule was finalized by the Obama administration in November 2016 after nearly two years of negotiations, following the collapse of Corinthian Colleges, a national for-profit chain. The rule was set to go into effect on July 1, 2017.
In May 2017, Secretary DeVos announced that the Department was reevaluating the Borrower Defense Rule and later announced its intent to delay large portions of the Borrower Defense Rule without soliciting, receiving, or responding to any comment from any stakeholder or member of the public, and without engaging in a public deliberative process. The Department simultaneously announced its intent to issue a new regulation to replace the Borrower Defense Rule.
Without the protections of the Borrower Defense Rule, many students defrauded by for-profit schools are unable to seek a remedy in court. The Borrower Defense Rule also prohibits schools from enforcing mandatory arbitration agreements and class action waivers, which are commonly used by for-profit schools to thwart legal actions by students who have been harmed by schools’ abusive conduct.
AG Healey’s Office has been at the forefront of efforts to secure relief for defrauded students. Last month, the AG’s Office urged the Department to rescind its proposed regulations that provided no realistic prospect for borrowers to discharge their loans. In December 2017, AG Healey sued Secretary DeVos for failing to provide federal loan discharges for students victimized by Corinthian Colleges and subjecting them to wage garnishment and tax refund interception. InJune 2017, AG Healey demanded that the Department stop delaying loan discharges for students victimized by predatory for-profit schools, including claims that have already been approved. In October 2017, AG Healey sued to protect the Gainful Employment Rule, a federal regulation designed to protect students and taxpayers from predatory for-profit schools.

Addressing fraud and abuse in student lending has been a top priority for AG Healey since taking office, whether taking predatory schools to court, changing the practices of student loan servicers, going after unlawful student loan “debt relief” companies, or helping student borrowers find more affordable repayment solutions through her first-in-the-nation Student Loan Assistance Unit.

Massachusetts borrowers who are looking for student loan help or information should visit the AG’s Student Loan Assistance page or call the Student Loan Assistance Unit Hotline at 1-888-830-6277.

馮偉傑初選大勝 羅德島州長席位在望

馮偉傑贏得初選後接受媒體訪問。(周菊子攝)
(Boston Orange 整理報導)羅德島州的912日初選,不到9點,結果就已揭曉,共和黨籍的馮偉傑(Allan Fung)和民主黨籍的現任州長雷萌朵(Gina Raimondo)將再次對陣。
416個投票站有415個開票完畢後,他們兩人各自的得票數與得票率分別為,共和黨籍的馮偉傑得18,544票,56.4%,民主黨籍的雷萌朵得66,784票,57.1%
馮偉傑贏得共和黨提名後致詞。(周菊子攝)
他們兩人的主要對手,共和黨的羅州眾議員兼少數黨黨鞭Patricia Morgan,和民主黨的羅州前州務卿Matt Brown,依序各得13,192票,40.1%39,225票,33.6%
116日的大選,除了他們兩人外,角逐州長席位的還有從共和黨轉為無黨派的Joe Trillo
由於初選是兩黨各自推選代表參選者,得票數與得票率只意味著他們在各自所屬黨派贏得的支持度,116日的大選,將是另一場完全不同的戰爭。
馮偉傑與妻子芭芭拉和岳母合影。(周菊子攝)
四年前,雷萌朵贏得州長席位時,共得到131,899票,得票率40.7%,馮偉傑得到117,428票,得票率36.2%。這一年還有一名中庸黨(Moderate),二名無黨派人士參選州長,分散了本來可能投給馮偉傑的票源。
選舉結果揭曉後,各大報章都很關注這選舉。紐約時報,華盛頓郵報等全國性報紙,都做了報導。
羅德島州菲律賓移民後代也支持馮偉傑。(周菊子攝)
羅德島州的普域敦斯報(Providence Journal)在開頭第一段就點出馮偉傑是華人移民之子,已連任四屆克蘭斯頓市市長。
馮偉傑在勝選致詞時說,還有7星期,就可以把全面性的大規模改革帶到史密斯丘(Smith Hill)去,翻轉無能到可怕地步,對不起耆英及最容易受傷害的兒童的雷萌朵政府。
他說,該適可而止了( “Enough is enough″)”,我們可以做得比雷萌朵更好。
            馮偉傑在競選時承諾將廢除雷萌朵針對個別公司的稅率優惠項目,把羅德島州的銷售稅從7%降到5%,對非法進入美國的移民,以及庇護城市(sanctuary cities)”政策採取較強的態度。
           華盛頓郵報稱雷萌朵靠著她的創造工作機會,改善經濟,修補支離破碎的學校系統及道路等政績,以及提出大專院校免學費政策,贏得了民主黨提名。
Matt Brown在競選時,試圖以雷萌朵的籌款成績之豐,來描繪她和企業利益太靠近。在人口僅一百多萬的羅德島州,雷萌朵競選連任籌得的經費總數,卻已逾760萬元。
Matt Brwon也說,醫療保險,住宅,教育,兒童護理都花費太多,如果他當選州長,他會打造不同類型,對每個人都好,而不只是對少數人有利的經濟。

紐英崙婦女新運會慶創會78週年

紐英崙婦女新運會舞蹈班成員合影。(周菊子攝)

紐英崙婦女新運會理事,幹部們和駐波士頓台北經濟文化辦事處處長徐佑典,杜麗雲(中)夫婦合影。(周菊子攝)
已高齡90的李伍綺蓮(左)是紐英崙婦女新運會的
中流砥柱。(周菊子攝)
            (Boston Orange 周菊子波士頓報導)紐英崙婦女新運會98日慶祝創會78週年,在帝苑大酒樓與三,四百名嘉賓同歡。
大會由林黎輝,阮奕雲擔任司儀,主席李盧蓮馨致歡迎詞,主席張青梅致答謝詞,成員包括歷屆會長的紐英崙婦女新運會舞蹈團,由李伍碧香率隊表演排舞娛賓。
駐波士頓台北經濟文化辦事處處長徐佑典,波士頓第二區市議員愛德華費林(Ed Flynn)都應邀出席,先後致詞,送表揚狀。
鄧秋華(中)等紐英崙婦女新運會的資深理事長期支持婦女會的活動。
(周菊子攝)
紐英崙婦女新運會在波士頓是個歷史悠久,意義深遠的機構,1940年由時為蔣委員長夫人,也是衛斯理學院校友的蔣宋美齡所發起創辦,起初的主要目地是協助籌款,濟助建國經費,後來專注於服務社區,早年辦英語班,近年辦健康講座,組團到中華一養院等機構探訪老人家。
紐英崙婦女新運會的會址,歷經時代變遷,也從泰勒街搬到必珠街桃園餅家樓上,再搬到紐英崙中華公所地下室。

歷任紐英崙婦女新運會會長,包括現已高齡逾90的李伍綺蓮,以及梅伍銀寬,李慧芳,李曹慶萍,李廖認寬,湯鳳鳴,呂錦芳,鄧秋華等人,至今依然積極餐與會務,服務社區。(圖片已於9月10日發表)



紐英崙婦女新運會兩名新任會長張青梅(左),李盧蓮馨(右)。(周菊子攝)

波士頓經文處處長徐佑典致詞,引用聖經篇章。(周菊子攝)
波士頓市議員愛德華費林頒發表揚狀給紐英崙婦女新運會。左起,
阮奕雲,會長張青梅,會長李盧蓮馨,林黎輝。(周菊子攝)
李盧蓮馨(右四)獻花給李伍碧香(左三),代表婦女會謝謝她教大家
跳舞。(周菊子攝)