Nice dry, fresh start Friday. Full sun with highs in the upper 70s make this a top 10 summer day. There will be a gentle sea breeze along the coast in the afternoon.
I’m still liking the look of most of the weekend. Saturday sees the clo…
Your Hometown Radio
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Nice dry, fresh start Friday. Full sun with highs in the upper 70s make this a top 10 summer day. There will be a gentle sea breeze along the coast in the afternoon.
I’m still liking the look of most of the weekend. Saturday sees the clo…
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Before voting very late Thursday night to pass a housing policy and borrowing bill that many said could turn the tides of the state’s housing market, senators adopted an amendment that would prohibit most home purchase offers that are condi…
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Massachusetts 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline gets $8 million: ‘Lifesaving’
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State prosecutors agreed to a settlement with Uber and Lyft that will require the companies to pay Massachusetts $175 million, increase wages for drivers and offer a range of new benefits, officials announced Thursday.
Attorney General Andrea Joy Campbell’s office said her team struck a deal with the gig economy giants that resolves a 2020 lawsuit her predecessor, now-Gov. Maura Healey, filed alleging that Uber and Lyft violated state labor laws.
The agreement will require Uber to pay the state $148 million and Lyft to pay the state $27 million, most of which will become restitution payments to current and former drivers, Campbell’s office said.
The companies also agreed to begin providing drivers at least $32.50 per hour for the time they spend traveling to pick up passengers and transporting them to their destination, which Campbell’s team said is “the first time that the tens of thousands of Uber and Lyft drivers in Massachusetts will be guaranteed minimum pay.”
As part of the settlement, Uber and Lyft agreed not to campaign for or fund the ballot question they have been seeking for years, which would rewrite state law in their favor by defining drivers as independent contractors.
Uber and Lyft officials confirmed that the company will pull its support from the measure, which earlier on Thursday survived an eligibility challenge before the state’s highest court.
It’s not clear if other companies that have backed the ballot question who were not involved in the attorney general’s lawsuit or settlement — especially DoorDash and Instacart — intend to press forward and put the measure before voters.
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Suffolk University has acquired an 11-story Tremont Street office building for $30 million and plans to convert the property into residences for up to 290 students.
The university bought 101 Tremont St. from an affiliate of Australia’s Macquar…
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The next time you gaze down the tracks of the T looking for your train, the train may gaze back at you.
In an effort to bring some joy to riders, the MBTA installed googly eyes on five of its trains, on the Green Line and the Commuter Rail, a spok…
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