Energi and Sponsors Host Symposium Style Conference on January 9th at the …

PEABODY, Mass., Jan 06, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Energi, a Massachusetts based Industrial Reinsurance Company, is hosting a symposium style event called Mobilize Energy Efficiency in New England on January 9th 2012 at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center. The event is open to stakeholders including contractors, property owners, financial institutions and municipalities, who will participate in educational seminars and learn methods to activate energy Continue reading >>>

Postal Employees Say Cuts are in Wrong Area [Poll]

Kelly Arpin held a sign asking management to "Do the Right Thing," last night at the Holiday Inn in Marlborough. She wants the U.S. Postal Service not to close the Central Massachusetts Postal Processing and Distribution Center where she works by the end of the year. "They are cutting in the wrong areas," said Arpin who is a mail handler at the center in Shrewsbury. "They have cut us two-fold and management hasn't been cut at all." The proposed cuts are part of the U.S. Postal Service's nation-wide plan to close a network of processing facilities including the one in Shrewsbury near the corner Continue reading >>>

Forays into the Future of Work

As part-time entrepreneurs and Gen Y-ers ourselves, with different backgrounds, we find ourselves hearing the same things. Young people seek careers that will give them a good income, personal fulfillment, plenty of learning opportunities, flexibility, and joy. Companies and organizations want new hires who will help them move forward, who can work within the current company culture, and by being active, engaged, socially-conscious citizens, also serve to meaningfully transform it. Companies want what they’ve always wanted: people who will help them remain relevant. It’s about keeping an eye Continue reading >>>

Postal center closing opposed at hearing

MARLBORO —  More than 500 people packed a meeting at the Holiday Inn last night to oppose a proposal to close the Central Massachusetts Postal Processing and Distribution Center in Shrewsbury and eliminate nearly 100 jobs. The often contentious meeting is part of a series of public sessions that U.S. Postal Service management is holding to get input from employees and to give them an overview of proposals to consolidate processing and distribution centers in Massachusetts. One of the proposals is to close the 20-year-old facility in Shrewsbury and move its operations to facilities in Continue reading >>>

Cupboards going bare

The official holiday season of giving may be over, but food banks, soup kitchens and shelter, both locally and statewide, are facing unprecedented demand for meals, as cash-strapped, struggling residents try to survive the costly winter months. The state's four nonprofit food banks — which supply food to organizations around the state — recently asked the Patrick administration to increase state funding to $15 million, a $3.5 million bump from the current year's spending. Recent cutbacks in food supplied by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and increasing prices generally make it harder Continue reading >>>

Eastern Massachusetts outpaces the nation in heroin-fueled ER visits

Eastern Massachusetts, including the South Shore, outpaces much of the nation in heroin-fueled emergency room visits and admissions to state treatment programs for opiate addictions, according to two recent federal reports on substance abuse. The findings from the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration highlight the state’s struggle to reduce overdoses and deaths from heroin and prescription drugs such as OxyContin. “We know and we’ve been saying for years we have an epidemic here in Massachusetts around heroin,” said Vic DiGravio, president and CEO of the Continue reading >>>

POLL: Will the Starbucks Price Hike Change Where You Buy Coffee?

Your "tall" morning java may soon cost 10 cents more. Starbucks recently announced it will raise prices in the Northeast, according to Jim Olson, who was quoted by the Associated Press saying the "tall" prices of six or seven beverages could change. The greater Boston area, as well as regions in New York, Washington D.C., and Atlanta could all see the hike. According to Olson, "grande" size drinks will stay the same in price. The price increase comes as costs for ingredients, and other expenses, such as fuel, are rising, according to the Associated Press. The last Starbucks price hike was in Continue reading >>>

Randall S. Goldstein Joins The Simon Companies as Vice President

BRAINTREE, MA — The Simon Companies, a professional developer, owner and manager of commercial and multifamily real estate, has hired Randall S. Goldstein as Vice President and Director of Fiduciary Properties. In this capacity, Mr. Goldstein will formulate growth strategies and actively develop new business opportunities for The Simon Companies, with a special emphasis on establishing new client relationships, by leveraging the firm's 45-year track record as a successful owner and integrated real estate service provider. Mr. Goldstein will work with property owners and other entities to promote Continue reading >>>

Thursday Tidbits: Dorchester Hosts

  Fields Corner, Dorchester (photo: PreservationNation/Flickr) LOCAL BITES A New Market Opens This Sunday, Jan. 8, Dorchester’s Codman Square Great Hall will be the site of a grand opening. The Dorchester Winter Farmers’ Market–called the first step toward a full-scale brick-and-mortar cooperative store in an area of low access — will open its doors as one of Boston’s only winter markets, and the only city market to accept EBT/SNAP and Boston Bounty Bucks. Hours are 12 – 3 p.m. on Sundays, Jan. thru March. The market will feature produce, Continue reading >>>

‘Fraternity’ recounts challenges of Black students at Holy Cross

DR. GLENN C. ALTSCHULERSPECIAL TO THE COURIER When the Rev. John Brooks arrived at the College of Holy Cross in Worcester, Mass., in the mid-1960s to teach theology, the only Black student on campus was a Bostonian named Bob Credle. By the fall of 1968, thanks in no small measure to Brooks (who would serve the college as dean, vice president and president), 19 Black freshmen and one sophomore were enrolled at Holy Cross. In "Fraternity,’’ Diane Brady, a reporter for Bloomberg Businessweek, recounts the collegiate experiences of five of them. A basketball recruit, Stan Grayson became deputy Continue reading >>>