Puny solutions won’t beat back surge of floodwaters

It is sad to see architects collaborate with Urban Land Institute members to come up with such puny solutions to the climate change-related threat of sea level rise and storm surges (“Ideas for a Hub beset by rising seas in 2100,” Page A1, Sept. 30). The magnitude of the floodwaters is far greater than the solutions proposed in the report as summarized by the Globe, and the huge costs of the various ideas proposed would be mostly wiped out when a Sandy-like storm hits even now, well before the impact of sea level rise aggravates the problem. The solution that needs Continue reading >>>

US has an even greater role to play in Africa’s health crisis

Gary Neill for the Boston Globe This piece will be featured in the Oct. 5 print edition of The Boston Globe. AS SUMMER wound down, I e-mailed my closest childhood friend, a distinguished Swedish doctor named Christian Sundberg, to inform him I’d soon be visiting his hometown. He responded that he was “in Sierra Leone at a pediatric emergency hospital in the middle of the biggest Ebola outbreak in recorded history.” The health care systems in West Africa, the epicenter of the current Ebola crisis, have been crippled by the outbreak. Aid workers Continue reading >>>

Emily’s List: Never Will I Ever

Greater Boston host, Emily Rooney, joined Jim Braude and Margery Eagan this week for another installment of her weekly list of obsessions and observations, "Emily's List." This week's theme dwelled on all the things Emily vows, without exception, never to do. 1. Skydiving — tandem or otherwise. "I don't want to die, I'm not going to skydive." 2. Enter a pie eating contest. Simply because, "I can't win." 3. Going to China. "I'd be swept up in the government and put in jail." 4. Sudoku. "I'm not good with numbers."  5. Playing golf. "It's a rude sport. It takes too much Continue reading >>>

State to highlight areas seeking development

State officials have teamed up with cities and towns in Greater Boston to put together a list of developer-friendly neighborhoods and parcels, a move being applauded by a local development association.“Developers would find life a lot easier if you just told them in advance, here are some places in communities (that) would like to get stuff built,” said Greg Bialecki, the state secretary of housing and economic development. “(In the past) we have not been open and transparent about where we want things and where we don’t want things.”Yesterday, the state released a list of 12 “Priority Continue reading >>>

Three Men Indicted Over Mob Link To Boston-Area Casino Deal

BOSTON — A federal grand jury on Thursday indicted three men on charges they tried to conceal a mob associate's ownership stake in land near Boston upon which Wynn Resorts has proposed to build a $1.6 billion casino.The Wynn Resorts proposal beat out one by Mohegan Sun for the sole license to operate a casino in Greater Continue reading >>>

Wayfair IPO marks the start of a new era for the Boston tech community

When Wayfair’s founders rang the New York Stock Exchange bell Thursday morning, they didn’t just announce the company’s arrival on the public market—they rang in a new era for the Greater Boston technology and innovation ecosystem. Raising $304 million in its initial public offering (the company actually traded higher than expected starting at $35.25 this morning), the IPO is one of the biggest for a Boston-area technology company. It also signals a historic shift for the local tech community. During the golden age of the “Massachusetts Miracle” driven by innovators coming out Continue reading >>>