Category: Uncategorized

Everything you need to know about Newton MA.

  • Meet Amy Mah Sangiolo: Newton Candidate for Mayor

    Meet Amy Mah Sangiolo: Newton Candidate for Mayor

    I was part of a Zoom Meet and Greet and clipped Amy Mah Sangiolo by topic.

     

    Newton Public School Reopening

    Did you know that Newton Public High Schools have slipped by 20 spots in the rankings since Ruthanne Fuller became mayor? We are no longer in the Top 20 ranking.

    Newton School District: #58 out of 403 school districts in Massachusetts (Top 20%)

    U.S. News and World Report rank Newton South High School #34 and Newton North High School #37 out of all high schools in Massachusetts.

    Even if your kids attend private school, the desirability of Newton Public Schools affects property value. With the median home price in Newton at $1.4 million, prospective buyers can choose a less expensive city with better schools.

    West Newton Square Traffic

    Affordable Housing in Newton

    Newton Gun Store

    Webster Woods: Boston College Lawsuit against City of Newton

    Elimination of LGBTQIA Position in City of Newton

    Amy Mah Sangiolo 20+ Years of Serving Newton

    On Uniting Newton

    Why I Support Amy Mah Sangiolo for Newton Mayor

    My response to Ruthanne Fuller about diversifying the Newton Police Force.

     

    To donate to Amy Mah Sangiolo for Newton Mayor,

    please go here.

  • Nominate Nonantum Boxing Club for Newton’s Best Business of the Year

    Nominate Nonantum Boxing Club for Newton’s Best Business of the Year

    Newton Patch asks Which Newton Business Is Best Of The Year? Nominate Your Favorite!

    Please nominate Nonantum Boxing Club here.

    Nominate Nonantum Boxing Club for Newton's Best Business of the Year

    Here’s my nomination:

    I have boxed at Nonantum Boxing Club for nearly nine years and it is a wonderful place that supports the community, especially those in need. From a boxing perspective, Marc Gargaro, one of the co-owners of Nonantum Boxing Club, is an excellent boxing coach. He has sent more than two dozen fighters to national boxing competitions including Olympic qualifying events. He is also a coach for the U.S. Men’s and Women’s Boxing Team that will compete in the 2021 Tokyo Olympics. As a 55-year-old mom, I have a group of other mom friends that have trained with Marc for years. We get the same training and attention from Marc that his fighters do.

    On a different side, training future professional athletes is much different in the boxing world than in other sports. Marc trains his team FOR FREE, dedicating hours of his time to team and individual training. He also has a nonprofit in which he offers free boxing fitness and training classes to kids FOR FREE.

    But free boxing training is not the only nonprofit work that he does. Nonantum Boxing Club does service work year-round, including hosting a large boxing tournament on behalf of Newton’s Boys and Girls Club. I have seen numerous events that the gym does on behalf of community members in need such as fundraiser workouts to support someone’s medical bills or piles of donations on behalf of a charity that supports women who are escaping relationships in which they are physically abused.

    What is most special about Nonantum Boxing Club is the people and the atmosphere that they create. The co-owners are both cousins who grew up in large Italian families right here in Nonantum. They have created a community that also feels like a family where everyone is included. the boxing gym may look intimidating but nothing could be further from the truth.

  • Jake Auchincloss and his White Male Privilege

    Jake Auchincloss and his White Male Privilege

    From Boston. com

    Jake Auchincloss, a Newton city councilor and a former Marine, was repeatedly the subject of both veiled and direct criticism from his peers during the virtually held debate — most notably toward the end of the event, when fellow 4th District candidate Ihssane Leckey suggested he should drop out after violating a pledge against taking campaign contributions from the fossil fuel industry (which every candidate in the race had signed).

    Cavell, who most recently worked as a lawyer in Attorney General Maura Healey’s office, also took issue with Auchincloss for urging Newton school officials in 2016 to not punish students who flew a Confederate flag outside Newton North High School. At the time, Auchincloss said officials were right to denounce the act but cited legal concerns about free speech and drew a comparison between the Confederate flag and a Black Lives Matter banner or LGBT flag.

    Auchincloss has since apologized for the comparison, telling Politico last month that his privilege as a white male “allowed me to see this as a free speech issue.” During the debate Sunday, he reiterated that “the Confederate flag has no place near our school or near our children.” However, Cavell continued to rip Auchincloss for comparing the symbol of slavery to Black Lives Matter and LGBT flags.

    Jake Auchincloss and his White Male Privilege

    Image from The Boston Globe: Clockwise, from top left: Becky Grossman, Jake Auchincloss, Alan Khazei, Dave Cavell, Ihssane Leckey, Christopher Zannetos, Natalia Linos, Ben Sigel, and Jesse Mermell. –Pat Greenhouse / The Boston Globe

    As a Black student from Newton, I won’t vote for Jake Auchincloss

    –> It doesn’t seem like Jake is planning on returning his fossil fuel donation despite signing a pledge against taking campaign contributions from the fossil fuel industry.

    SCOOP: Auchincloss to be removed from fossil fuel pledge after failing to return or donate funds

    By Jessy Han and Adam Bass for Daily Dose of Bass & Han

    From Jessy Han @hjessy_:
    SCOOP w/@AdamBassWCCS
    : Jake Auchincloss is being removed from the @NoFossilMoney pledge tomorrow, organizer Collin Rees says. Auchincloss failed to refund a donation from the exec VP of a Waltham fossil fuel company. The donation was first flagged by @CallaWalsh. #ma04 #mapoli

    The group gives candidates seven days after notification to return a donation or make an equivalent donation to a climate justice organization. The campaign did neither.

    Adam Bass @AdamBassWCCS
    Fireworks in #MA04: Jake Auchincloss addressed being dropped by @NoFossilMoney, saying it has “no credibility” & suggested Ihssane Leckey’s self-funding was “largely derived” from energy trading. Leckey says she “never took a dime of dark money.” Leckey: “Jake, you should drop.”

    FINAL QUESTION AND ITS AUCHINCLOSS. He was removed by the fossil fuel pledge. Why did he not return the pledge? AUCHINCLOSS: this pledge has lost credibility and attacks LECKEY. LECKEY INTERRUPTS “JUST STOP LYING JAKE.” Holy Shit.

     

    Kylie R. Walters @k_r_walters

    Auchincloss also failed to support a modest reduction in the NPD budget about 2 weeks ago.

     

    Super PAC funded by Auchincloss’s parents officially rides into 4th District, spends $180K on ads backing him

    Ben Miller @benwritesthings
    Voters in my home district have a choice between @JakeAuch, who defended high school students flying the confederate flag and is running a Republican-lite campaign using daddy’s money, or @ihssaneleckey, “Donald Trump’s worst nightmare.” #MA04
    Sean Wash Your Damn Hands Roche @seanroche
    I’ve got no objection to parental support. Comes in all forms. But, the pro-Jake Super PAC includes million-dollar Trump supporter — Bob Kraft — as a supporter. Do the math.
    Jessy Han @hjessy_
    NEWS: Experienced Leadership Matters PAC, funded in part by @JakeAuch‘s parents and the Kraft family, paid the DC-based ad firm Hamburger Gibson Creative and the NJ media buying agency Media Fortitude $177,873.60 yesterday in support of Auchincloss‘s candidacy. #MA04 #mapoli
    Stephanie Murray @stephanie_murr
    Hmm this is interesting – super PAC called “Experienced Leadership Matters” raised $89k this Q, lists address in Foxboro & raised $35k from parents of #MA04‘s Jake Auchincloss – Hugh Auchincloss & Laurie Glimcher – plus others like Bob & Jonathan Kraft docquery.fec.gov/cgi-bin/forms/

    Related:

    As a Black student from Newton, I won’t vote for Jake Auchincloss

    By Bennett Walkes

    From Wicked Local Newton:

    While growing up Black in Newton, I’ve dealt with all sorts of racial profiling and slurs. However, no individual has made me feel more unwelcomed, unvalued and unsafe in my hometown than Jake Auchincloss — now a candidate for Congress.

    In September 2016, a group of students drove through Newton North waving a Confederate flag outside of the window. Coinciding with President Donald Trump’s bigoted and racist campaign, it was particularly unsettling to see this hate in my hometown. This hateful act targeted students of color like myself already facing discomfort in predominantly white spaces of learning. Later that year, only 35% of Black students in Newton high schools reported feeling connected to the school in comparison to 65% of white students.

    As a city councilor, Auchincloss responded by filing a resolution stating that punishing students for displaying the Confederate flag is in conflict to Newton’s values of free speech. However, regulation of certain types of speech is allowed within Newton Public Schools. Meanwhile, this resolution stood well outside the jurisdiction of the city council, making it questionable why Auchincloss chose to insert himself in such an issue.

    Rather than promote our schools’ values of equality, respect, safety and kindness, Auchincloss asserted his understanding — as a white man — that displaying a Confederate flag on school property is not a “substantial disruption” to the education of students of color. As someone who has been targeted by acts of hate speech including Confederate flags, I can attest that a school where students can commit such acts with no repercussions is not one conducive for learning. Auchincloss’ grandstanding on the importance of free speech over the feelings of safety for students of color is not only insulting but demeaning. His rush to defend students responsible for hate speech rather than understand the experiences and support the needs of students of color makes me question where racial justice would lie among his priorities as a member of Congress.

     

    There is also this:

    EMILY’s List sends out mailer criticizing two Dems on abortion in primary for open #MA04: Jake Auchincloss & Alan Khazei.

    EMILY's List sends out mailer criticizing two Dems on abortion

     

     

    @jessemermell
    ·
    FACT CHECK: In 2017, @JakeAuch opposed a $15 min wage, spouting debunked GOP talking points.
    I’ve stood w/@RaiseUpMA & @PeopleforCSJ my entire career fighting for a higher minimum wage. #mapoli #ma04 #MA04Debate progressivenewton.files.wordpress.com/2017/08/2017-c
    Dave Cavell @DavidFCavell
    ·
    For weeks now, the Ed Board has been writing in support of Black Lives Matter and bold police reform. Their choice to endorse Jake, who has a history of insensitive, racist comments, completely contradicts that work. 2/
    Just 3 years ago, Jake compared the Confederate flag to a BLM flag and Pride flag. Last month, a Black student in Newton wrote that “no individual” has made him feel more “unsafe” than Jake Auchincloss. That alone should be disqualifying. 3/

    For this racist behavior to be dismissed as “tone-deaf” is exactly the type of apologist rhetoric that has hindered progress in this country for so long. People of color have consistently been told that they should just get over comments like his. 4/

    This endorsement is the product of a failed system that has gone unconfronted, even at home. Systemic racism looks like a white man with privilege making racist comments, never truly apologizing, and receiving an endorsement from one of the foremost publications in our country.6/

    mohammed missouri @hammodimissouri ·
    In their endorsement of former Republican Jake Auchincloss, the Globe Editorial board quoted a common Islamophobic trope that portrays Muslims as violent and is used to justify bombing Muslim countries.

    This trope is invented by right wing war hawks

    @GlobeOpinion

    @DannyM33612501

     

    Why would these morons from @BostonGlobe @GlobeMcGrory endorse a political HACK Jake Auchincloss @JakeAuch is it because his parents buy influence with their Superpac? No wonder we end up with morons in congress!

     

    From Josh Miller-Lewis (@jmillerlewis)

    lol looks like Jake Auchincloss is already rattled by @ihssaneleckey’s surge. Guess we’re heading toward a two person race between a former Republican and a bold progressive.

    Jake Auchincloss is already rattled by @ihssaneleckey ’s surge.

  • Where are the POC in the Newton Police Force?

    Where are the POC in the Newton Police Force?

    I participated in my first rally today at the Line Up for Black Lives in Newton. I’m particularly focused on systemic racism and I’ve always wondered why there are no visible people of color in the Newton police force. Are the POC in the police force all … admin? Are there no POC actual police officers? What are the salary differences?

    It was a silent protest and perhaps I shouldn’t have been screaming, but here we are:

    But I also ran into Mayor Ruthanne Fuller on the streets among the people protesting and asked her the same question. Her initial answer was that the problem is that there is a very small percentage of minorities in Newton and that the hiring rules are such that residents are first in line to be hired for the police force. That’s the problem that she identified.

    Mayor Ruthanne Fuller at Newton George Floyd Protest

    I said that I thought the Asian population in Newton was 11%. She said that it is, in fact, much higher at 17 to 18%. Latinx population is 5% and African American population is low at 2%. If you add it all up (which I did on the street using my fingers), it adds up to 25%.

    Whoa! That was an easy problem to solve. The percentage of minorities is actually not small if you include other ethnicities beyond African American. But I think it’s important to have African American representation, so the next question is WHY is the African American population so low? Is it due to racism that prevents blacks from renting or purchasing homes, particularly on the lower end of the market?

    Are there any programs specifically designed to increase the African American population in the new residential buildings currently under construction or planned? Back in the day, Newton used to be where affluent African Americans moved. I am hoping actual historians will help me out, but I heard that the area in Auburndale near the Mass Pike was home to African American artisans. There is a church in that area that bought up homes in that area during the Great Depression and helped house its constituents.

    The next issue that Mayor Fuller noted is that minorities are not applying for police jobs. My background is in contingent staffing, so I relayed that recruiting is something that is active, not passive. If you want a particular type of candidate, you must get out there and hustle. The candidates that you seek are not coming to you.

    She then asked me to write to her, meet with her, and share my knowledge. Let’s go on this journey together.

    Here we go:

    Make an analysis of the current police department staff:

    • Name
    • Age
    • Pronouns
    • Number of years in the police force
    • Number of years in the Newton police force
    • Starting salary
    • Current salary
    • Salary last year including overtime
    • Starting position
    • Current position
    • Ethnicity
    • High school
    • Current address
    • Has ever lived in Newton? Yes/No

    From this analysis, you can ascertain what the career trajectory has been for the POC in the Newton police force? Have they thrived? Are they mostly admin? Are admin jobs dead-end low paying jobs?

    Next, you can identify the POC staff who have thrived. Ask them to join the hiring team to help recruit more POC. You want them front and center at career fairs at Newton North and Newton South High Schools. You want them to talk about career opportunities for people that look like them at the Newton Police force. You want the job postings to funnel through the high schools, targeting high school counselors, teachers who run clubs centered around POC such as, but not limited to:  The Asian Culture Club, Black Leadership Advisory Club, Hispanics and Latinx United (HLU), K-Pop Club, South Asian Student Association, and Transitioning Together (as a career opportunity after the first-to-college students graduate).

    It’s not rocket science people! My analogy is “how do you build a national champions sports team when the team has never made the NCAA playoffs?” I want the Newton police force to be best in class. To be “national champions” of diversity. It’s easy to be mediocre. We can expect more from Newton’s finest.

     

    Please help me amplify by emailing:

    Mayor Fuller at rfuller@newtonma.gov

    Newton Police Chief at chiefsoffice@newtonma.gov

     

    p.s. Thank you to Ellen Myers for this:

    “The Village“ was a thriving neighborhood in Newton where Black Americans, mostly descendants of slaves, lived. Its remnants can be found on Curve Street where Myrtle Baptist Church is. I believe that is the church you are referring to – it’s in West Newton/Auburndale. There is a deeply disturbing history surrounding the building of the Mass Pike and the decision to have it pass through Newton, that basically wiped out “The Village,” taking over the resident’s homes by eminent domain. We had a program about it at the library several years ago at which members of “The Village” community spoke, including Pastor Howard Haywood – may he rest in peace. Here’s an article with more info: https://newton.wickedlocal.com/news/20170228/african-american-community-of-newton-has-long-legacy

     

    From The Harvard Gazette:

    There’s been progress, Harvard sociologist Orlando Patterson says, but the nation needs to reject white supremacist ideology, bigotry in policing, and segregation.

    Why America can’t escape its racist roots

    “But sociologists have argued that while some whites may have liberal views, a lot of them are not prepared to make the concessions that are important for the improvement of black lives. For example, one of the reasons why people have been crowded in ghettos is the fact that housing is so expensive in the suburbs, and one reason for that is that bylaws restrict the building of multi-occupancy housing. These bylaws have been very effective in keeping out moderate-income housing from the suburbs, and that has kept out working people, among whom blacks are disproportionate, from moving there and having access to good schools. Sociologists have claimed that while we do have genuine improvement in racial attitudes, what we don’t have is the willingness for white liberals to put their money where their mouth is.”

     

    My takeaway:

    So it sounds like when the Mass Pike was built, whoever decided the path deliberately wanted to wipe out the thriving African American enclave here in Newton. This is a textbook example of structural racism. This is an example of white supremacy. This is our Black Wall Street.

     

    Only white people can dismantle white supremacy. You are either trying to tear it down or trying to hold it up. If you are not actively trying to dismantle white supremacy, you have chosen your side.

     

    p.s. From Dawn Davis Yoga:

    We can’t sit by and not take action, not take a stand against systemic racism and inequalities in economic opportunity and access to health care. I believe in the benefits of yoga and meditation, but they are not substitutes for compassionate action. I have some links below for ideas you may find useful if you’re not quite sure where to put your energy.

    A FEW WAYS TO HELP:
    **Consider donating to joincampaignzero.org (their main mission is to end police violence through police reform programs)
    **Consider supporting Black-Owned Bookstores, such as Million Year Picnic in Cambridge (617)492-6763-curbside pick up and Frugal Bookstore in Boston (617) 541-1722 -on line
    **Consider supporting political candidates that represent a point of view that is consistent with moving our country forward

    5 ways Everyday Citizens Can Start Holding Police Departments Accountable

    From Good

    1. Understand the policies and laws that govern police conduct.

    2. You are entitled to public records that can show whether rules are being followed. Get them.

    3. Identify the power players and engage them.

    4. Presenting findings in a fair and persuasive manner is a powerful way to spur reform.

    5. Follow up relentlessly until change is made.

     

    Related Posts:

    Newton Police Stop Black Newton Parent at Gunpoint Minutes Away from His Home

    Tim Duncan is the former Deputy Athletic Director at Northeastern University. He is currently the Athletic Director at the University of New Orleans.

    Speaking Thursday on Greater Boston, Duncan told Braude that he had experienced something similar twice before in his life, both during traffic stops.

     

    Ethnicity Make Up in Newton 2010

  • Newton During the Time of the Spanish Flu

    Newton During the Time of the Spanish Flu

    This is from my old neighbor who has done a lot of research tracking his ancestors. He shares a historical perspective of the last pandemic on the residents of Newton — the Spanish Flu.

    ——-

    I was curious about the impact of the last pandemic on the residents of Newton. I decided utilize my experience gained from researching cemeteries to learn the hardships that people faced from the 1830s to the 1930s.  The attached data was taken from the Newton Records of Deaths located on Familysearch.org

    The information, highlighted in red, primarily notes multiple deaths in a family. The other items concern causes of death that I found interesting. The cause of death as “probably” is not uncommon, as I discovered during my other projects.
    Six of the people that died resided in Wellesley. Also one each at Weston and Pittsburgh.
    You can see that many people died at home. I don’t know the reasons for that. One guess is that Physicians often treated their patients at home. Perhaps the cost of treatment at a hospital versus the home was a consideration.
    There is a site, Findagrave.com, owned by Ancestry.com. There are over 180 million memorials posted there. I have created over 28,000 memorials.
    I shall add the names attached.
    The following is an example of a high school friend who was included in a project that I did memorializing the almost 2,000 Veterans buried at the Belmont Cemetery. I am still in touch with his sisters.
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/56891120/edward-gilbert-lee
  • New Art Center Needs Our Help

    New Art Center Needs Our Help

    New Art Center needs our help. If you are able to, please consider making a donation or buying a gift certificate. New Art Center is also offering online classes in response to COVID-19.

    New Art at Home!

    In the wake of the ever-changing state of the COVID-19 epidemic, we appreciate the support and care we have received from our community. In response, until we are able to resume in-person classes, we are offering “New Art at Home” to students enrolled in our Spring 2020 classes! We are offering the following formats of remote learning and community building during this time.

    We are offering 25+ live classes on our online platform, and we plan to add new content and classes each week.

    New Art Center is now offering its spring 2020 classes online! Register now for a variety of classes including: Beginning DrawingThursday, April 2 to Thursday, June 11 from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., and Drawn to Paint: Thursday, April 2 to Thursday, May 14 from 6:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. 

    These remote learning classes are filling quickly, so register today here.

    Also, enjoy New Art Center’s Online Gallery “New Art @ Home” right here. More info at newartcenter.org.

    If you have any questions, do not hesitate to contact us at marte@newartcenter.org. We can’t wait to see what artwork you make! Would you like to provide feedback? Email us at marte@newartcenter.org.

     

    Here’s how to purchase a gift certificate to New Art Center:

    https://secure.givelively.org/donate/new-art-center-in-newton-inc/new-art-center-needs-your-help

    https://newartcenter.org/product/gift-certificate-50/

    https://newartcenter.org/product/100-gift-certificate/

    https://newartcenter.org/product/200-gift-certificate/

     

    Donate to New Art Center.

     

    But even with our online enrollments and the astounding generosity donors have shown us in the past two weeks, the drop in our earned revenue is alarming and deeply impactful to our long-term viability. We have officially canceled 40 classes, and we have delayed another 27 until May. We are also canceling our April School Vacation program for K- 12.

    For every $1 that has been donated since 3/16/20, we have returned approximately $1.25 to students who have withdrawn from classes.

    If you can, please continue to support the New Art Center so we can resume normal operations easily with our existing staff and faculty, quickly and safely at the end of this crisis.

  • Dawn Davis Yoga Goes Online! Live Streaming Classes!

    Dawn Davis Yoga Goes Online! Live Streaming Classes!

    Dawn Davis Yoga is now offering Saturday online yoga class at 9:30 for $10. Friends and relatives anywhere in the U.S. can access her classes online.

    Live Streaming Classes with Dawn

    Tuesdays 9:30-10:30
    Wednesdays 9:30-10:30
    Fridays 9:30-10:30
    Saturdays 9:30-10:30

    Register through www.dawndavis.com

    If you have a class card, you may use that (it would be at the regular price), or you can purchase a $10 pass for the Saturday class. Classes Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday will all be at 9:30 as well. You may use your existing class card for the weekday classes.

    If the global health crisis has had financial implications for you and you are interested in a reduced or free class, please send her a confidential email, no questions asked.

    As always, my videos are completely free of charge and you can access the full library of my recorded offerings on my youtube channel: Dawn Davis Yoga.

    10% of all proceeds from live-streaming classes go to support the vital work of The Second Step in Newton, MA.

    p.s. Free FIVE MINUTES TO FREEDOMMeditation Medic with Dawn

  • Letter from MDs in our Boston community: please share

    Letter from MDs in our Boston community: please share

    From BostonDoctors Corona Virus

    Letter from MDs in our Boston community: please share

    coronavirus, covid-19

    “As there is so much confusion, misinformation, and denial on social media about the coronavirus we hope to explain, in plain language, why the experts see this as such an emergency. Many people are reading the claim online that this virus is a lot like the viruses that cause colds, and that if you get it, it will probably just seem like a bad cold and you are very unlikely to die. Depending on who you are, this may be true, but there is more to this story that is key to our outcome as a community.

    This is a coronavirus that is new to the human population. Although it is related to the viruses that cause colds and acts a lot like them in many ways, nobody has ever been exposed to this before, which means nobody has any immunity to it.

    The virus is now moving explosively through the human population, spreading through respiratory secretions and 10 times more contagious that the flu or cold. Although many people will recover, about 20% will wind up with a serious pneumonia that will require hospitalization. Some will be so ill from the pneumonia that they will die. We estimate this may be 2-3%, but it is higher in Italy’s experience, partially because the healthcare system was overwhelmed so rapidly. In those over age 70, the death rate is 8-20%. So if a child catches it on a playdate, they can easily transmit it to their grandmother as easily as touching the same doorknob or countertop.

    Scientists measure the spread of an epidemic by a number called R0, or “R naught.” That number is calculated this way: for every person who develops the illness, how many other people do they give it to before they are cured (or dead) and no longer infectious? The R0 for coronavirus appears to be a number close to 3 – an extremely frightening number for such a deadly disease.

    Suppose you catch the virus. You will give it to 3 other people, and they will each give it to three others, and so forth. Here is how the math works, where you, the “index case,” are the first line:

    1
    3
    9
    27
    81
    243
    729
    2,187
    6,561
    19,683
    59,046
    177,147
    531,441
    1,594,323
    4,782,969
    14,348,907

    So, in just 15 steps of transmission, the virus has gone from just one index case to 14.3 million other people. Those 15 steps might take only a few weeks. With school out and lots of playdates, maybe less. The first person may be young and healthy Brookline child, but many of those 14 million people will be old and sick, and they will likely die because they got a virus that started in one person’s throat.

    R0 is not fixed – it can be lowered by control measures. If we can get the number below 1, the epidemic will die out. This is the point of the quarantines and social distancing, but we are not doing it fast enough.

    In the US, we have to slow down the virus. American hospitals, Boston hospitals, have limited resources. We have a fixed number of ventilators and an impending calamity on our hands. Our Italian critical care colleagues have shared with us that they simply do not have enough resources (ventilators, physicians and nurse, critical care beds), and are forced to choose who lives and dies based on old tenets of wartime triage. Older patients do not even get a ventilator and die of their pneumonia. These are decisions nobody should have to face, and we are only 11 days behind Italy’s fate. Their hospitals are quite advanced, and we are no better in Boston. As doctors, we are desperately trying to prepare for the onslaught of patients in the coming weeks. It is already beginning. This is an opportunity for you as the district leadership the time to be aggressive and help us fight this by “Flattening the Curve”.

    We implore you, as a group of Boston’s doctors preparing to fight this, to help us. Please send a new email to ALL the Brookline school district families. Social distancing is painful. We know that kids have cabin fever, they are pleading to see their friends, they may have birthday parties coming up or special events they have been looking forward to. All of us need to work and childcare is a big worry. But we need to overcome these issues and boredom for the coming weeks so that we can survive this with as few deaths as possible. What does that mean?

    1) No playdates, not even 1:1.
    2) No small gatherings, no meetings between a couple families, even for birthday parties.
    3) Avoid trampoline parks, climbing gyms, restaurants, movie theaters, anything in an enclosed area. Many of these places are advertising increased cleaning and hygiene. This is not sufficient! Do not go.
    4) Cancel planned vacations for the next month. Avoid airline travel that is not an emergency. Many airlines and rental agencies are offering penalty free cancellations.
    5) Stay at home as much as possible. Work from home if you possibly can. You may have to go buy groceries and medicine, of course, but make the trips quick and purposeful.
    6) Wash your hands thoroughly after you have been in public places, for a full 20 seconds, soaping up thoroughly and being sure to get between the fingers.
    7) Please avoid disseminating social media claims that the situation is not serious or is being exaggerated. This is a national crisis and conveying misinformation to your friends and family may put their lives in danger.

    Thank you for taking the time to read this and stay safe and healthy in the coming weeks.”

    Respectfully,

    Erika Rangel, MD, Director of Surgical Critical Care, Brigham and Women’s Faulkner Hospital
    Shawn Rangel, MD, Pediatric Surgery, Children’s Hospital Boston
    Asaf Bitton, MD, Executive Director Ariadne Labs and Internal Medicine, BWH
    Daniel O’connor, MD, Pediatrics, Longwood Pediatrics and Children’s Hospital Boston
    Beth O’connor, MD, Pediatrics, Roslindale Pediatrics
    Vandana Madhavan, MD, Clinical Director of Pediatric Infectious Disease, MGH
    Parag Amin, MD, Pediatrics, Centre Pediatrics
    Christy Cummings, MD, Neonatology, Children’s Hospital Boston
    Eric Bluman, MD, Orthopedic Surgery, BWH
    Trimble Augur, MD, Internal Medicine, Hebrew Rehabilitation Center
    Dasha Weir, MD, Pediatric gastroenterology
    Amy Evenson Warren, Transplant Surgery, BIDMC
    William Oldham, MD, PhD, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, BWH
    James Kryzanski, MD, Neurosurgery, Tufts Medical Center
    Ben Zendejas-Mummert, MD, Pediatric Surgery, Children’s Hospital Boston
    Johanna Iturrino Moreda, MD, Gastroenterology, BIDMC
    David Berg, MD, Cardiology and Cardiac Critical Care, BWH
    Jennifer Crombie, MD, Hematology Oncology, BWH
    Jenifer Lightdale, MD, Chief of Pediatric Gastroenterology, U Mass Memorial Hospital
    Wayne Tworetzky, MD, Pediatric Cardiology, Children’s Hospital Boston
    Elaine Yu, MD, Endocrinology
    Jonathan Li, Infectious Disease
    Nancy Cho, MD, Surgical Oncology, BWH
    Eric Sheu, MD, Minimally Invasive Surgery, BWH
    Reza Askari, MD, Director, Surgical Critical Care, BWH
    Cindy Lien, MD, Internal Medicine and Palliative Care, BIDMC
    Hannah Parker, MD, OB/GYN
    Alysa E. Doyle, PhD, Center for Genomic Medicine, MGH
    Christopher Smith, MD, Internal Medicine, Charles River Medical Associates, Wellesley, MA
    Maya Greer, NP, Children’s Hospital Boston
    Rusty Jennings, MD, Pediatric Surgery, Children’s Hospital Boston
    Emily Oken, MD, Professor of Population Medicine, BWH
    Chinwe Ukomadu, MD, Head of Clinical Hepatology, Novartis
    Jennifer Kaufman, MD, Internal Medicine, BWH
    Ann Poduri, MD, MPH, Pediatric Neurology
    Susan Yehle Ritter, MD, Rheumatology
    Diego Martinucci, MD Psychiatry, Atrius Health
    Shih-Ning Liaw, MD, Pediatric Palliative Care, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute/Boston Children’s Hospital
    Wolfram Goessling, MD, Gastroenterology and Oncology, MGH
    Paola Daza, Pediatrics, MGH
    Juan Matute, Neonatology, MGH
    John Ross, MD, Internal Medicine, BWH
    Megan Sandel, MD, Pediatrics, Boston Medical Center
    Kathy Calvillo, MD, Surgery, BWH
    Christine Greco, MD, Anesthesia, Children’s Hospital Boston
    Niteesh Choudhry, MD, PhD, Internal Medicine, BWH and Harvard T.H. Chand School of Public Health
    Chandru Krishnan,MD, Ophthalmology, Tufts Medical Center
    Amy Ship, MD, Internal Medicine, Associate Director of Medical Education, Atrius Health
    Yen-Lin Evelyn

  • Free Fun Concert for Kids & Families

    Free Fun Concert for Kids & Families

    On Saturday, November 9, 2019 at 11:00 am, Boston-based çkicks off its 45th season with Playdate, a free and stress-free musical event designed for children and families.

    This concert welcomes parents with young ones to enjoy the child-friendly environment of Rock and Roll Daycare in East Cambridge. The musical offerings are not explicitly designed for children, but rather, designed to musically satisfy an audience of both parents and children while inviting them to let go of standard concert etiquette.

    When: Saturday, Nov. 9, 11:00 am
    Where: Rock and Roll Daycare, 535 Cambridge Street, Cambridge, MA 02141
    Cost: Free

    Musical Program
    Pauline Oliveros – Sounds from Childhood
    Jen Wang – Occlusions for solo cello
    Peter Maxwell Davies – Solita for solo flute and music box
    Lou Bunk – Six Pococos for solo cello
    Jean Ahn – Lasso, Lassus for viola and cello
    Loretta Notareschi – Swerve for clarinet, viola, cello (Dino commission)

     

    Dinosaur Annex Music Ensemble

  • FREE Boxing After School Program for Kids!

    FREE Boxing After School Program for Kids!

    Nonantum Boxing Club is excited to announce their new FREE Youth after school program. Starting this fall school year we will be holding FREE afternoon boxing classes for youth ages 10-17.

    Sessions are held on Tuesdays and Thursdays after school for 90 minutes. If a student expresses interest in furthering their boxing journey, there is an opportunity to train with our elite team on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturdays as well.

    Our goal is to help students in character development, confidence and discipline as well as increase physical fitness and body awareness through the sport of boxing.

    Our focus is on teaching proper workout methods and proper nutrition to the students, reinforcing a healthy lifestyle that many kids lack. All students in the program will work out together in a team atmosphere, as well as incorporate many individual based drills and activities.

    We also have an area for studying. Space with tables and chairs will be available for those who need to study or do homework. We hope to work closely with teachers and guidance counselors to check on students progress in classes. As part of the requirement for every student, we will monitor grades and report cards must be presented.

    We are excited for the upcoming year and look forward to welcoming all Student-Athletes who are interested in the program. This is just the beginning!

    -The Nonantum Boxing Club Team

     

    STAY.. Motivated STAY.. disciplined STAY.. in shape

    STAY.. BOXING

     

    STAY Boxing REGISTRATION FORM

     

    The STAY Boxing Program is a 5013c charity program designed to give kids a free after-school outlet where they can practice boxing and also work on schoolwork in a fun, positive, and disciplined environment.Free Boxing After School Program Nonantum Boxing Club