One last time in 2024
Good morning friends and happy — believe it or not — National Greg Day.
This is our final newsletter for 2024.
It’s been my honor riding the local business news and trends rollercoaster with you. I’m grateful to all who’ve taken the time to read, share perspectives, argue and tolerate my rants and my typos.
I’m especially appreciative of our chamber’s 1000-plus members, annual partners, committee members, volunteers and the chamber team who make our programs and advocacy possible.
If you aren’t yet a member, please join today. Our advocacy depends on your financial support and participation.
Here’s to a joyful, peaceful and prosperous holiday season.
Great places to work and great leaders, right in our backyard
Congratulations to the Charles River Chamber members that earned a spot on the Boston Globe’s 2024 Top Places to Work — several appearing on the list for multiple years in a row.
Locally-based members that made this year’s list are Bright Horizon Family Solutions, Benchmark Senior Living, Fairway Independent Mortgage Corp, Family Aid, The Village Bank, Boston Showcase, Clifton Larson Allen, Good Shepherd Community Care. Riverside Community Care, Visiting Angels Newton/Canton, Needham Bank, Celtic Angels Home Health Care and Fidelity Bank
Also making the Globe’s list were 10 chamber member companies that have headquarters outside our core footprint but do business within our communities -- that list includes Rockland Trust - Independent Bank Corp, Baystate Financial, Leader Bank, Avidia Bank, New England Development and the Marsh McLennan Agency.
And a belated shout out to the BBJ's Power 50: Movement Makers for 2024. Honored leaders within our chamber include Joseph Campanelli of Needham Bank; Stephen Davis of The Davis Companies; Colette Phillips of Colette Phillips Communications; Bob Rivers of Eastern Bank; and Amy Schectman of 2Life Communities.
MBTA Communities keeps adding wins
Massachusetts’ bipartisan MBTA Communities law is the most consequential bill designed to address the state’s chronic housing shortage in a half-century.
The law requires 177 cities and towns to rezone parts of each community and make it easier to build small multi-family homes near public transit.
So far more than 115 municipalities — including all four communities served by our chamber and, just this week, Waltham — have adopted zoning to comply.
A handful are refusing to act, even at the risk of losing access to millions in state grants. Others are racing to meet an end-of-year deadline. And 35 small towns have a deadline to comply by the end of 2025. (Boston Indicators updated map here).
Needham passed its compliance plan in October. But an effort is now underway to repeal that plan in a referendum on Jan. 14. (Gloucester and Shrewsbury will also hold referendums in 2025.)
A repeal would be most unfortunate because the plan before Needham voters has great economic upside for the town, its businesses and its residents.
But don’t just take my word for it.
Please join me via Zoom on Friday Jan. 3 at 10 a.m. for a conversation with Needham business owners explaining why they support a “Yes” vote on the Jan. 14 referendum and why they believe creating small, multi-family homes in Needham’s near local shops and restaurants is vital to their success
We’ll explain what Needham’s housing plan does and doesn’t do, as well as the potential consequences of being out of compliance with state law.
But our main focus will be an opportunity to hear directly from, and ask questions to, local employers who believe the Neighborhood Housing Plan is critical to their ability to hire and retain workers and to a vibrant Needham.
We’ll announce our panelists soon. But please RSVP before you unplug for the holidays. We’ll be sure to send you the link and the video recording too.
And if you’d like to display a “YES for Needham” sign at your place of business email Max Woolf and he’ll bring one over.
An overstuffed final grab bag of 2024
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Another win in West Newton
The folks diligently working to save the West Newton Cinema from the wrecking ball and transform it into a cultural destination keep scoring wins.
This week the Newton City Council granted the West Newton Cinema Foundation $98,500 in matching Community Preservation funds to study restoring the distressed venue.
The Massachusetts Cultural Council chipped in $35,000 with the rest coming from individual donations.
This follows the receipt of an eye-popping $5.2 million gift from an anonymous donor in April to purchase the building and help with restoration.
The foundation expects the study will be completed by June.
Black plastic panic overstated
In my house -- and perhaps yours -- we recently rushed out (in our case we went to the timeless China Fair) to replace all of our black plastic spatulas, sporks and other black utensils.
We were alarmed after seeing many news reports saying black plastic can be made from recycled electronic waste containing toxic chemicals that can leach into food while cooking.
Turns out the authors of the viral study behind the concerns made an error in their calculations. The risk was actually “an order of magnitude lower” than the study suggested.
Experts still say there may be good health reasons to replace these items (or thank Santa if he replaces them for you). But the urgency appears to be overstated.
I found this New York Times article (free link) provides some perspective.
Needham joins generational tobacco ban bandwagon
Finally today, if you’re not at least 21 years old by the end of this month, you’ll never be allowed to purchase tobacco products anywhere in Needham.
Ever.
The town’s board of health adopted the new “age-gated” tobacco ban policy, last week, making Needham the 12th Massachusetts community to adopt an “age-gated” tobacco ban policy, reports Peter O’Neil at Needham Observer.
Anyone born after Jan. 1, 2004 will never be able to buy tobacco products in Needham no matter how long they live, which presumably may be longer if they never smoke, but about the same if they take their tobacco shopping elsewhere.
And that’s what worries the Needham’s six licensed tobacco retailers who stand to not just lose sales of tobacco products but on all the other items that customer might have bought at the same time.
Merchants will receive a warning for violating the ordinance prior to April 1 and then face escalating fines ($1,000 for the first violation) and suspensions of their tobacco product sales permit.
And that’s what you need to know for today — did I mention it’s National Greg Day? — unless you need to know about the invention that is responsible for the suburbs as we know it.
Peace out. Merry Christmas. Happy Hanukah. Happy Kwanzaa. And happy new year.
Greg Reibman (he, him)
President & CEO
Charles River Regional Chamber
617.244.1688
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