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星期五, 11月 02, 2018

Baker-Polito Administration Announces Over $1 Million in Land Use Planning Assistance Grants

Baker-Polito Administration Announces Over $1 Million in Land Use Planning Assistance Grants

BOSTON – The Baker-Polito Administration today announced $1,030,659 in grants for 31 projects to improve municipal land use planning and development through the second round of grants from the Planning Assistance Grant Program. Through this program, the Energy and Environmental Affairs (EEA) provides municipalities funding to undertake public processes and hire technical expertise to improve their land use practices, diversify housing choices, mitigate and prepare for climate change impacts, and conserve and develop land consistent with the Massachusetts Sustainable Development Principles

“Through smart and sustainable development, we can ensure Massachusetts remains an exceptional place to live and grow a business,” said Governor Charlie Baker. “As an important supplement to our Housing Choice Initiative, these grants help municipalities modify their plans and regulations to build more affordable housing, better protect natural resources, and reduce car travel.”

“The Baker-Polito Administration is committed to working in partnership with communities to provide residents across the Commonwealth good jobs, transit access, housing, and access to open space,” said Lieutenant Governor Karyn Polito. “We are proud to provide municipalities the funding and technical expertise to make smart land use decisions that are right for their communities and unique needs and challenges.”

The Planning Assistance Grant Program is part of an effort to encourage municipalities to implement land use regulations that are consistent with the Baker Administration’s land conservation and development objectives, including reduction of land, energy, and natural resource consumption, provision of sufficient and diverse housing, and mitigation of and preparation for climate change.  The program is also part of the technical assistance offered to communities in support of the Baker-Polito Administration’s Housing Choice Initiative.

“This program encourages communities to reduce their land, natural resource, and energy consumption through smart local development planning,” said EEA Secretary Matthew Beaton. “Helping municipalities improve their land use regulations will allow them to achieve their housing, economic development, climate change resiliency and environmental protection goals.”

The following are grant recipients:

2019 Planning Assistance Grants
Applicant
Municipality
Project
Total Grant Amount
Agawam
Agawam
Accessory Dwelling Unit Ordinance
$7,500
Ashland
Ashland
Rezone Downtown
$25,700
Barnstable
Barnstable
Rezone Downtown Hyannis
$50,000
Berkshire Regional Planning Commission (BRPC)
Adams
Adams Stormwater Management Bylaw
$28,500
Berkshire Regional Planning Commission (BRPC)
North Adams
Comprehensive Re-Write of the Zoning Ordinance
$50,000
Chelsea
Chelsea
Re-zoning for Admiral's Hill Neighborhood
$40,300
Central MA Regional Planning Commission (CMRPC)
Auburn
Design Guidelines
$34,040
Central MA Regional Planning Commission (CMRPC)
Westborough
Parking Study
$33,435
Central MA Regional Planning Commission (CMRPC)
Webster-Dudley
Economic Develpment Strategic Plans
$37,191
Easthampton
Easthampton
Downtown Strategic Plan
$50,000
Foxborough
Foxborough
Community Discussion + Housing Production Plan
$35,030
Franklin Regional Council of Governments
Franklin County
Sustainable Stormwater Management Plan for Franklin County
$40,000
Gloucester
Gloucester
Update Open Space and Recreation Plan
$28,790
Goshen
Goshen
Goshen Town Center Connectivity Plan
$10,000
Hull
Hull
Update Open Space and Recreation Plan
$26,680
Lynn
Lynn
Creation of Overlay Districts to Support Open Space and Economic Development
$50,000
Marblehead
Marblehead
Production of a  Housing Production Plan
$20,619
Martha's Vineyard Commission
Martha's Vineyard
Site Plans for Elderly Housing that address Nitrogen
$15,000
Metropolitan Area Planning Council (MAPC)
Arlington, Natick and City of Melrose
Net Zero Energy Planning
$150,000
Merrimack Valley Planning Commission (MVPC)
Amesbury, Andover, Boxford, Georgetown, Groveland, Haverhill, Lawrence, Merrimac, Methuen, Newbury, Newburyport, North Andover, Rowley, Salisbury and West Newbury
Regional Housing Initiative
$50,000
Northern Middlesex Council of Governments (NMCOG)
Billerica, Chelmsford, Dracut, Pepperell, Tyngsborough and Westford
Accessory Dwelling Unit zoning for all six communities
$30,000
Northern Middlesex Council of Governments (NMCOG)
Billerica, Chelmsford, Dracut, Pepperell, Tyngsborough and Westford
Solar Zoning for all six communities
$30,000
Northern Middlesex Council of Governments (NMCOG)
Tyngsborough
Tree Retention Bylaw
$5,000
Peabody
Peabody
North River Corridor Chapter 40R Study
$22,500
Pioneer Valley Planning Commission (PVPC)
Springfield
Green Infrastructure (GI)/ Low Impact Development (LID) Policy
$9,128.75
Pioneer Valley Planning Commission (PVPC) & Town of Southampton
Southampton
Promoting a Low Impact Development Approach and New Stormwater Design Standards through Updates to Local Land Use Code
$10,900
Scituate
Scituate
Development of the Scituate Harbor Sustainability and Resiliency Master Plan and zoning amendments
$37,500
South Hadley
South Hadley
Preparation of a Master Plan for the Route 33-Route 202 corridor
$33,500
Walpole
Walpole
Produce Open Space and Recreation Plan
$28,400
Wareham
Wareham
Compact Development Plan for Littleton Drive Site
$32,500
Westminster
Westminster
Low Impact Development regulations to implement LID Bylaw
$8,445

 “My hometown of Ashland is in the process of an exciting, transformative downtown revitalization project, and this grant will help the town to implement its vision,” said Senate President Karen E. Spilka (D-Ashland). “As part of a multi-town collaboration, my community of Natick will also benefit as it implements its Net Zero Energy Planning efforts.  I am grateful for the partnership of Secretary Beaton and the Baker-Polito administration in recognizing the importance of developing sustainable communities.”

“Sound planning produces cost -effective, well-reasoned actions that take into account major factors such as climate resilience,” said Senate Minority Leader Bruce Tarr (R-Gloucester). “Yet planning takes money, and these grants will provide the investment it takes for our communities to get the job done.”

“I am very pleased that the Town of Wareham will be receiving this $32,500 Land Use Planning Grant for compact development planning,” said Senate President Pro Tempore Marc R. Pacheco (D-Taunton). “Efficient, integrated land use benefits the built and natural environment in our local communities.  These resources announced today will help give Wareham insight into the various factors at play and ultimately ensure sustainable growth for the future.  I’d like to thank and congratulate everyone who participated in the grant process.”

“Wareham's grant for $32,500 will go a long way toward exploring more housing options at this site for our senior citizens, something our town really needs,” said State Representative Susan Williams Gifford (R-Wareham). “These grants provide much needed financial resources so municipalities can make the best possible decisions based on their needs.”

“I am excited that Ashland is receiving a grant from the Planning Assistance Grant Program to help renovate its downtown,” said State Representative Jack Patrick Lewis (D-Framingham). “Ashland is a vibrant community in growth, and these funds will help to ensure that its downtown continues to thrive.”

“The Merrimack Valley Planning Commission continues to work toward providing accessible and affordable housing to all residents in the Merrimack Valley, and we are grateful to the Baker-Polito Administration for its support in this mission,” said State Representative Lenny Mirra (R-West Newbury). “This $50,000 grant will allow the MVPC to reduce land, energy, and natural resource consumption while achieving our housing and economic development goals.”

星期四, 11月 01, 2018

AG’S OFFICE AWARDS $1.6 MILLION IN GRANT FUNDING TO HELP RESIDENTS PAY THEIR HEATING BILLS

AG’S OFFICE AWARDS $1.6 MILLION IN GRANT FUNDING TO HELP RESIDENTS PAY THEIR HEATING BILLS
New Grant Program Provides Funding to Seven Organizations including the Greater Lawrence Community Action Council to Assist Households in Paying Monthly Gas Bills

            BOSTON – With winter approaching, Attorney General Maura Healey announced that her office has awarded $1.6 million in grant funding to seven organizations across the state to help Massachusetts consumers pay or lower their monthly heating bills.
            

            Today’s grantee announcement comes in the wake of the Sept. 13 gas explosions in the Merrimack Valley that left thousands of residents and businesses without gas service for heating, hot water and cooking. The Greater Lawrence Community Action Council is one of the seven organization receiving funding from the new grant program and will use the funds to assist residents in recovery.

“We are grateful on behalf of our clients to receive these resources, especially during these difficult times for the Greater Lawrence area,” said Evelyn Friedman, Executive Director of the Greater Lawrence Community Action Council, Inc. “The amount of the resources and their flexibility will allow us to help residents to weatherize their homes, replace old inefficient boilers and hot water heaters and help with fuel. All things sorely needed at this moment.”

            AG Healey’s new Natural Gas Fuel Assistance Grant Program has provided the funding to seven Massachusetts organizations that currently assist households in paying for their natural gas service. The program is utilizing funds the AG’s Office secured through a $3 million settlement earlier this year with National Grid. The remaining settlement money will be allocated through the grant program in the 2019-2020 winter season.

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 AG’s Office has awarded funds from the Natural Gas Fuel Assistance Grant Program to the following organizations:

  • Greater Lawrence Community Action Council Inc (GLCAC) (Lawrence, Methuen, Andover, North Andover, Wilmington, Reading and North Reading): GLCAC will provide funding to residents who qualified for the LIHEAP program, but would otherwise not receive financial assistance due to a lack of available money in the federal program, as well as residents who don’t qualify for the program but make less than 80 percent of the state median income. GLCAC will also provide funding to both groups of residents for weatherization efforts in their homes.
  • City of Medford: The City will establish a new heating assistance program for residents with natural gas heating bills and fall between 60 percent and 80 percent of the median income in the state.
  • The Massachusetts Association for Community Action (MASSCAP) (statewide): MASSCAP will provide multiple organizations with additional funds to help natural gas customers participating in LIHEAP, as well as those who don’t qualify for the federal program but make less than 80 percent of the state median income.
  • The Southeast Asian Coalition of Central Massachusetts (Greater Worcester County, Central Massachusetts and Western Massachusetts):The organization will hire a full-time multilingual staff member to inform and educate local Asian and Arabic-speaking communities about the fuel assistance agencies in Greater Worcester, Central Massachusetts, and Western Massachusetts and the LIHEAP program to maximize participation rates among underserved populations.
  • Society of Vincent de Paul District of Attleboro (Attleboro, North Attleboro, Seekonk, Rehoboth, Norton and Mansfield): The organization will provide funds to those in their communities who need assistance in paying their natural gas heating bills.
  • Lend A Hand Society (Greater Boston): The organization will enhance their current programming to assist a greater number of families in the Greater Boston area with paying their natural gas heating bills.
  • Springfield Partners for Community Action, Inc. (Hampden County):The organization will use the funds to build on its successful Emergency Fuel Assistance program that offers financial assistance to families struggling to pay their natural gas heating bills but do not qualify for LIHEAP.

VIRIDIAN ENERGY CUSTOMERS BEGIN RECEIVING REFUNDS FROM $5 MILLION SETTLEMENT WITH AG’S OFFICE OVER DECEPTIVE MARKETING AND SALES TACTICS

VIRIDIAN ENERGY CUSTOMERS BEGIN RECEIVING REFUNDS FROM $5 MILLION SETTLEMENT WITH AG’S OFFICE OVER DECEPTIVE MARKETING AND SALES TACTICS
Competitive Electricity Supplier Distributes Initial $1.8 Million to Customers During First Phase of Restitution Program
BOSTON — On the heels of her lawsuit against another competitive electricity supplier, Attorney General Maura Healey announced today that customers of the competitive electricity supplier, Viridian Energy, LLC, (Viridian), are beginning to receive restitution payments as part of a $5 million settlement reached with the AG’s Office over allegations of deceptive marketing and sales tactics that lured residents into costly contracts with high electricity rates.
The payments are part of an assurance of discontinuance the AG’s Office negotiated with Viridian and its affiliates in March 2018. The AG’s Office alleged that Viridian, through door-to-door sales, direct mail, and family-and-friend-based “network marketing,” engaged in various deceptive and unfair sales tactics. The AG’s Office also alleged that consumers who switched to Viridian ultimately paid more for electricity than if they had stayed with their utility.
“Competitive electric suppliers like Viridian Energy use aggressive sales tactics and false promises to cheat customers out of millions of dollars,” AG Healey said. “My office is seeking to ban these companies from signing up new customers and end this abuse of our residents.”
In March 2018, AG Healey issued the results of a report commissioned by her office that called for a ban on competitive electricity suppliers signing up new, individual residential customers in Massachusetts. The report found that Massachusetts residential electric customers who switched to a competitive electric supplier paid a total of $176.8 million more than if they had stayed with their utility company during a two-year period from July 2015 to June 2017. The report also found that during the study period competitive suppliers used aggressive sales tactics and appear to have targeted low-income, elderly, and minority residents.
Under the terms of the Viridian settlement, the company will return a total of $4.6 million to qualifying customers who were allegedly misled into signing costly contracts. The remainder of the $5 million settlement will go toward: offsetting the cost of the office’s investigation of Viridian; creating a new fund for future enforcement cases the office brings against competitive electric suppliers; and the state’s General Fund. Viridian, through an independent trustee appointed to manage the restitution program, began distributing checks to qualifying customers on Oct. 10 and will continue over three remaining phases. During the first phase of the program, approximately 20,000 Massachusetts customers will receive $1.8 million over three months.
Eligible customers who do not receive a payment during the first phase will receive payment in a future phase of the program. Customers qualify for restitution if they signed up for Viridian’s electricity supply services before May 1, 2018 and:
  • Enrolled in a variable-rate contract with Viridian;
  • Were automatically renewed from a Viridian fixed-rate contract to a Viridian variable rate contract;
  • Enrolled in a contract through door-to-door sales company Platinum Advertising; and/or
  • Enrolled in a fixed-rate contract with a three-year term during the period of September 1, 2014 through August 31, 2015. 

Viridian’s variable rate electricity contracts are also subject to a class action settlement reached in Sanborn et al. v. Viridian Energy, Inc. et al. in federal district court in Connecticut.  Customers who qualify for restitution under the AG’s settlement will receive restitution regardless of whether or not they participated in the class action.
To view a sample of the letter mailed out to customers who qualified for restitution click here.
The AG’s Office has returned millions of dollars to Massachusetts customers through its previous actions against competitive energy supplies. In January 2015, Just Energy agreed to pay $4 million in restitution to consumers for deceptive marketing and sales, entering consumers into agreements without their consent, and charging costly termination fees.
Last month, the AG’s Office sued Starion Energy for allegedly falsely promising consumers electricity rate reductions in unsolicited telemarketing calls and pre-recorded robocalls and then charging those consumers tens of millions of dollars more than they would have paid if they stayed with their utility company.
This case is handled by Assistant Attorneys General Elizabeth Anderson, Joseph Dorfler, Alexander Early, and Elizabeth Mahony, and Deputy Division Chief Nathan Forster, Division Chief Rebecca Tepper, and all of AG Healey’s Energy & Telecommunications Division, along with Energy and Environment Bureau Chief Melissa Hoffer.

星期三, 10月 31, 2018

玉山科協講座談從量子科技醫療談到身心靈文化整合

紐英崙玉山科協理事許翠玲(右)與獎者樓宇偉(左)。(周菊子攝)
     (Boston Orange 周菊子貝爾蒙鎮報導)論語有云,子不語怪力亂神。紐英崙玉山科技協會1028日在勒星頓中文學校內的一場量子科技與身心靈文化整合的可能性講座,卻上下古今的舉證,宇宙或許同時並存1218度空間,許多不可思議傳聞,可能真有其事,中西文化整合已是趨勢。
            這場講座的主講人是中華整合醫學與健康促進協會(CIMPHA)生物()能信息醫學專業分會召集人,台灣清華大學畢業,獲有麻省理工學院博士學位的樓宇偉。
            他從谷歌(Google)旗下生命醫學研究所Verily20168月宣佈和GSK藥廠合作,共投資7.1億美元,創辦葛凡尼生物電子公司(Galvani Bioelectronics),研發可穿戴醫療設備開始說起。
他指出,紐約Feinstein醫學研究院院長Kevin J. Tracey2015年出版的電子醫療:用電流刺激取代藥物治療發炎與自體免疫的症狀一書,促使許多醫生思考生物電子醫學,電子針灸,以及頻率醫學的關係。
            他把醫學的演化,分成古老,近代,現代與未來四個階段,指17世紀之前是傳統醫學,近300年是以物理,化學的科學論證為基礎,二次世界大戰以後,醫療治理由化學製劑主導。但邁向未來的醫學,就探討多維時空,量子論,潛意識,人體潛能,情緒能量中心,血液循環共振等。在講究頻率的能量醫學上,走的是道家中醫現代化與生命能量整合的路,在講究意識的信息醫學上,關注的是藏印釋醫學現代化與生命信息的整合。
            他以神,氣,精,也就是信息,能量,物質來闡述人會生病的根源,說明人的價值觀源於基因,家族,信仰,經歷,潛意識,個性,文化等,而情緒低落會導致經絡能量流動不暢,引發器官功能失調,各種疾病就開始冒出頭了。
            他還例舉量子物理學家包立(W. Pauli)關於人的內部心理與外部物質之間關聯的看法,榮格(C. G. Jung)的認為人有集體潛意識,且其中充滿神的形象,羅伯特蘭莎(Robert Lanza)2016年出版的新書,超越生命中心論,認為人的意識和周遭環境可能是合一的,以及蘇立(Surrey)大學物理學家Jim Al-Khalili和基因生物學家Johnjoe McFadden2015年出版的解開生命之謎(Life on the Edge)”,把量子物理帶到了量子生物,指人的頭腦透過神經微館或電離子通導做量子計算,也開始把醫療帶進量子世代。
            台灣就有甫於201710月辭世,在1988年就發明了脈診儀,2002年出版氣的樂章20072010依序出版水的漫舞氣血的旋律等書的王唯工,從中醫走生物能量醫學這條路。
            曾經從事機器人研究的吳清忠,因為自己患病,鑽研中醫後,出版了促進人體自癒機制的三本人體使用手冊,,最近還結合人氣複製和實食經絡,開發健康居家照護體系。
            曾是榮民總醫院,蔣經國治療醫師團隊成員的潘念宗,也在以特定方位面對太陽/導引電磁雜訊於地面,與飲食回歸於五行生剋需求,來藉訊息能量共振,讓人體自癒。
            曾研究手指識字的前台大校長李嗣涔,也發表了順勢療法論文。認為六識是由人的自我意識掃描量子神經網路或自旋所組成的時空結構而形成。台大醫院在20169月核定成立南氏去敏(NAET)諮詢中心。
            樓宇偉還例舉許多宗教事跡與著作,指東西方修心傳承共通有三重點,諸行無常,諸法無我,涅盤寂靜,稱輪迴確有其事,由古人"隔空傳遞,他稱之為下載的最新中文書籍為老子透過呂尚(呂應鍾)寫,20182月出版的老子不為,促使人們重新檢視道德經。201712月出版的真相-耶穌:我的自傳,也是一本下載來的書。
            樓宇偉最後以預言家凱西的中國將會是基督教的搖籃為引,指整合文化趨勢已很清晰。

助台灣青年搭橋有功 僑委會表揚羅德島華協、欖城安良

致送"台灣青年海外搭僑計畫"感謝狀。右起,波士頓僑教中心
主任歐宏偉,黑石谷旅遊協會負責人畢靈頓(Bob Billington),波士頓
經文處處長徐佑典,羅德島華人協會會長吳子平,主席葉超,
羅德島州眾議員。(僑教中心提供)
            (Boston Orange 周菊子整理報導)駐波士頓台北經濟文化辦事處處長徐佑典和波士頓僑教中心主任歐宏偉,1030日走訪羅德島州,送上表揚狀,感謝當地僑團,個人支持僑委會主辦的台灣青年海外搭僑計畫

僑委會在2018年擴大辦理台灣青年海外搭僑計畫,在78月間,共送出將近200名大專院校學生,到美加英法德日菲泰等12個國家的25各城市見習。
波士頓僑教中心主任歐宏偉(左起)和波士頓經文處處長徐佑典,專程到
羅德島州,送上表揚狀給欖城安良工商會兩名會長,陳任卓,黃超炎。
(周菊子攝)
            來到波士頓參訪的搭橋學生,經波士頓僑教中心主任歐宏偉居間聯繫,曾赴羅德島州參訪,由羅德島華人協會主席葉超,會長吳子平,黑石谷旅遊協會負責人畢靈頓(Bob Billington),以及欖城安良工商會會長陳任卓,黃超炎盛情接待。
            1030日,徐佑典和歐宏偉特地前往羅德島州,代表僑委會委員長吳新興,送上表揚狀,感謝前述僑領們對台灣青年的關愛。
波士頓僑教中心主任歐宏偉(前左一)和波士頓經文處處長徐佑典(前右二)
,專程到羅德島州,送上表揚狀給欖城安良工商會兩名會長,陳任卓
(前左二),黃超炎(前右一),並和欖城安良會員合影。(周菊子攝)
            徐佑典等人還在行程中和畢靈頓,葉超,吳子平等人就羅德島龍舟節台灣日活動明年慶祝20週年,已有台灣廠商捐助,預計購置六艘新龍舟事項,進一步洽談細節。