Community Corner
Swampscott Schedules Forum After Selectman Controversy: Patch PM
Also: Another Essex County jail inmate tests positive for coronavirus, roadwork will bring delays to Route 128 next month and more.
SWAMPSCOTT, MA —Today is Tuesday, June 23. Here's what Patch has been covering in Swampscott and across Massachusetts today.
Top Local Stories
JUST IN: Swampscott Resident Files Recall Petition For Selectman
Swampscott officials have scheduled a "facilitated discussion about race, discrimination, inequality and injustice in the Town" for Wednesday after Selectman Don Hause was accused of making disparaging comments about the Black Lives Matter movement while having dinner with his wife and another couple at a Swampscott restaurant earlier this month. Hause has denied making the comments and has said he welcomes the forum.
Find out what's happening in Swampscottfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
"Recent events in Swampscott and nationally highlight the critical need for all of us to acknowledge and better understand the existence of discrimination, injustice and inequality within Swampscott," the town said in a Facebook post promoting the event. "Doing so is an important step toward taking the necessary steps to eradicate any formal and cultural systems that keep any resident or guest in Swampscott from feeling safe, welcomed and loved."
Also on Swampscott Patch today:
Find out what's happening in Swampscottfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Elsewhere On The North Shore
- An inmate at the Essex County Correctional Facility tested positive for the coronavirus on June 17, according to the latest weekly report from the Massachusetts Department of Corrections. Last week's confirmed case of COVID-19 was the first at the jail since June 3, when two inmates tested positive. Since a court order mandating testing and weekly reports in early April, 75 inmates, 16 correctional officers and four staff members at the jail have tested positive for the coronavirus.
- A juvenile court judge did not have to release a teenager deemed dangerous and awaiting trial on gun charges on $500 last month, according to a ruling by the state's highest court. In its ruling Monday, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court said that, taken alone, trial delays caused by the coronavirus crisis are not enough of a reason to release a person on bail.
- Work on a $24.7 million bridge reconstruction project will cause delays on a stretch of Route 128 through Beverly in both the daytime and nighttime hours throughout the month of July.
Across Massachusetts
- The Baker administration set Aug. 39 and 30 as the dates for the state sales tax holiday. The state's 6.25 percent sales tax won't be collected on ourchases made those days. The sales tax holiday was made permanent in 2018.
- Columbia Gas was sentenced Tuesday for violating the federal Pipeline Safety Act in relation to the Sept. 2018 Merrimack Valley gas explosions, prosecutors announced. The company will pay a $53 million fine and sell its Massachusetts business, in accordance with a plea deal announced in February.
Dave Copeland writes for Patch and can be reached at dave.copeland@patch.com or by calling 617-433-7851. Follow him on Twitter (@CopeWrites) and Facebook (/copewrites).
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.