Health & Fitness
Get Vaccinated? These Troopers Would Rather Quit: Patch PM
Also: A grave mystery is being solved; Annoyed residents are sounding off; 9 hurt in T escalator accident; More.

MASSACHUSETTS — It's Monday, Sept. 27. Here's what you should know this afternoon:
- State Police are resigning by the dozens rather than get the mandated COVID-19 vaccine.
- A mystery involving gravestones found in a centuries-old shed will be solved just in time for Halloween.
- Nine people were injured in an escalator accident at Back Bay Station.
Scroll down for more on those and other stories Patch has been covering in Massachusetts today.
Today's Top Story
The State Police Association of Massachusetts said dozens of troopers have submitted their resignation papers Monday as a result of the state's recent coronavirus vaccination mandate.
Find out what's happening in Bostonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Superior Court Judge Jackie Cowin on Thursday denied a request to delay Gov. Charlie Baker's state employee COVID-19 vaccine mandate. The union, representing 1,800 members of the State Police wanted to delay the mandate until the details could be worked out or bargained.
Per Gov. Baker's new mandate, the state is requiring all executive department employees to show proof of vaccination by Oct. 17, or risk losing their jobs.
Find out what's happening in Bostonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
"Dozens of troopers have already submitted their resignation paperwork, some of whom plan to return to other departments offering reasonable alternatives such as mask wearing and regular testing," the union wrote after Cowin's decision.
Like this article? Sign up for our newsletter and get it delivered every weekday. It's free!
Monday's Other Top Stories
Grave mystery solved: It looks like the mystery of two gravestones found in a 220-year-old Sudbury shed used to store hearses will be solved just in time for Halloween. Sudbury is in the process of returning the gravestones found in the 1799 Hearse House — a structure at the Revolutionary War Cemetery that once stored Sudbury's lone funeral carriage — to their original home in Natick.
Residents sounding off: With pressure bearing down on them to do something — anything — to alleviate the constant barrage of train horns in Wakefield, Town Council will meet Monday and discuss the Broadway Crossing.
Escalator accident at Back Bay Station: Nine people were hurt after an incident at MBTA's Back Bay train Sunday night. The MBTA said the incident involved an escalator connecting the Amtrak/Commuter rail platforms to the street-level lobby of the station.
The acting mayor has spoken: Kim Janey endorsed City Councilor Michelle Wu as Boston's next mayor ahead of a historic election.
The 2021 Boston Marathon is Oct. 11. Read the latest on Patch's 2021 Boston Marathon hub.
Picture this

This charred, boarded-up house at 20 Berkley St. in Melrose hit the market last week with an asking price of $399,000, according to real estate website Redfin.
By The Numbers
80 — That's the percentage of students at staff at a middle or high school who need to be vaccinated in order to apply for an exemption from the state's newly extended school mask order.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.