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City to Jerry Remy: No free beer at new restaurant

The Globe reports Jerry Remy's new restaurant on Boylston Street will offer $500 "season passes" to people who don't wish to mingle with the rabble waiting to get in before games - which will include vouchers for some free food and a free beer for each visit.

Not so fast, Boston Licensing Board Chairman Daniel Pokaski says. He told restaurant reps this morning state law bans handouts of free alcohol, and suggested the restaurant increase the value of the food voucher instead.

The restaurant was before the board because it wants permission to add a 40-seat patio area in front - on part of the sidewalk that is privately owned. Also, the restaurant is seeking formal permission to change its closing time from 2 a.m. to midnight - at the request of nearby residents.

The board decides on the patio and closing hour at a meeting tomorrow.


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No more Nomah

Red at SurvivingGrady.com brings us the news that Nomar will retire today as a Red Sox. The 1997 Rookie of the Year and 5-time All-Star will be signing a one-day minor league contract with the Red Sox at a press conference today and then announce his retirement and new job as an analyst for ESPN.


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Handbag snatched on normally quiet JP street

Capt.

Tue, 03/09/2010 - 17:40
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Officials talk up school closings

First libraries, now schools. All kinda vague at this point, and very last-resortish of course, and if it whips up anger and organizing among lots of parents - especially parents of elementary-school kids - well, that's just a coincidence, and surely not at all a repeat of last year's dire warnings of 700 layoffs.


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Today's hot new job: Twitter optimization expert

Allegedly, some local social-media concern is willing to pay $250,000 a year to somebody who can drum up thousands of followers a week for their clients, who include "Fortune 500's and celebrities." It's on Craigslist, so it must be true.


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Former aide to Jack Hart throws ring in South Boston state-rep race

Nick Collins, more recently a business marketing consultant, announced today he is running for the 4th Suffolk seat being vacated by Brian Wallace.

I look forward to a spirited conversation regarding the challenges facing our community and how we intend to address them. My hope is to be the leader who will bridge what is great about our past to the promise of our future.

Other Democrats considering the seat include Michael McGee, Jeffrey Poreda, Jake Bombard and Mark McGonagle. Patrick Brennan is running as a Republican in the district, which also includes a small part of Dorchester.


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Police: Super Mario's a fake

Boston Police report shutting down the Super Mario Store, 3115 Washington St., for selling counterfeit merchandise.

Police say the joint was hawking fake name-brand clothing and sneakers, including faux gear not really made by Timberland, Gucci, Lacost, Juicy Couture, Chanel, North Face, Polo, Oakley, Coach or True Religion. The several hundred dollars officers seized, however, was real, police say,.

Daniel Cabral, 42, of Roslindale and Mario Cabral, 51, of Jamaica Plain will be summoned to court to face charges of crimes against property.

Innocent, etc.


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Even without funding cuts, the Boston Public Library might still cut branches, chairman says

The youngest library supporter: Paul Facklam, 4, and his dad, opposed the closing of the Roslindale branchThe youngest library supporter: Paul Facklam, 4, and his dad
opposed the closing of the Roslindale branch

#bpl2010 - Twitter comments.

Addressing an angry if generally polite crowd of several hundred people at a budget hearing today, BPL trustees Chairman Jeffrey Rudman said that even in an ideal world, the nation's oldest public-library system simply has too many competing demands to address.

And this is far from an ideal world, Rudman said: The BPL faces a $3.6 million deficit in the coming fiscal year. "The arithmetic is the arithmetic, you can't do very much with it," he said.

Rudman emphasized at the outside of the hearing, held at the Copley main branch, that no decisions on branch closings would be made today.

Users of branch libraries rose to support their branches - and to object to being forced to fight against other residents.

Don Haber, co-chairman of Friends of the Jamaica Plain Library, said his group has collected 1,500 signatures on petitions to keep the branch open. He said it is unfair his branch is "very likely on the chopping block" because the city refused repeated requests to make the branch handicap-accessible.

"Boston is still a city of turfs," Sarah-Ann Shaw, president of Friends of the Dudley Branch Library, said. "If you decided to close certain branches and leave others open, it will be a mess in this city."

One resident after another rose to declare branches joyous learning centers for little kids, safe havens for teens, community gathering places for adults. Many declared books are far from dead and joined trustee John Carroll in calling them more important now than ever. Elizabeth Buckley, a patron of the Faneuil branch in Oak Square, declared her branch "the cultural and intellectual center of the community." Charles Levin declared "It is outrageous it has come to this. In times of economic crisis, libraries are needed most."

BPL President Amy Ryan said the current crisis provides an opportunity to refashion the BPL system for the digital generation. She said the system needs to do a better job putting resources where the demands are. And increasingly, she said, that means online. "Libraries have never been more important or useful than they are today. Now we are information navigators, helping sort through millions of hits from the Internet."

Ryan said that if bpl.org were a branch, it would be the sixth largest in the city. "We can't take a car designed in the 1970s onto today's information superhighway," she said.

But Carroll said he was deeply disturbed to hear the BPL has already cut its budget for acquiring books, CDs and DVDs. One of the BPL's most historic and fundamental roles is to ensure patrons can have access to any imnportant book in the English language. "Books matter to the library more now than ever," he said.

BPL Trustee Paul LaCamera said he has been busy of late meeting with state legislators to try to press the case that the legislature should, at worst, level fund library asssistance, rather than cutting it. He urged the several hundred people in the hall to write their own legislators.

One resident wondered why the BPL didn't just sell off all the stuff it has stashed in the main branch that it never displays. Rudman said the library has actually "decommissioned" some stuff - it recently sold 250,000 wax phonograph records to the Library of Congress - but said it might not be worth the effort. In the past, the BPL often accepted gifts "in perpetuity," which means selling it would involve considerable legal discussions (he said the library now insists that anybody who wants to give such a gift also has to provide money to take care of the item).

And battles over what to sell would dwarf the discussions over branch closings, he said: "Would you like us to hawk the Gutenberg Bible in New York? I don't think so."

Although a number of city councilors attended the hearing, none spoke. Council President Mike Ross was the first to a microphone, but he was shouted down by residents who said they knew the councilors all supported the library and they wanted to hear from other residents first. Faced with a near revolt, Rudman agreed to let the non-pols go first. Ross did post a copy of the remarks he'd planned to make.


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Zoning board says Southie street can go to the dogs

The Zoning Board of Appeals today approved a "doggie hotel" for a parcel between E. 1 and E. 2 streets that will feature 24-hour dog care, including physical and hydrotherapy.

Nearby residents opposed Fenway Bark, saying it would mean increased noise, odor and traffic. One resident said he'd been planning to sell his house to raise funds for care of his handicapped son, but ever since word got out, he hasn't been able to get a single South Boston broker to show the house because nobody wants to look at a house next to a kennel.

Because of their opposition, the mayor's office and the offices of City Councilor Bill Linehan, state Sen. Jack Hart and state Rep. Brian Wallace all opposed the facility. Wallace's office accused Fenway Bark of using "intimidation tactics" through phone calls and e-mail to neighbors.

But board members noted the building on the property used to be used for printing and that the only reason ISD issued a stop-work order on the renovation of the building for a kennel was because of "interim" zoning regulations adopted 11 years ago. Board member Michael Monahan said the owner had the right to use the property for some commercial use, especially one that would employ up to 40 people, and that if residents didn't want a printing plant and objected to another plan to build condos on the land, then they were going to get a kennel.

The project is still subject to a design review by the BRA and another zoning-board hearing on proposed parking lot. After the meeting, some residents spoke of appealing the board decision in court.

Proponents, some of whom live in South Boston, said Fenway Bark would be a badly needed resource for local dog owners. One said that when he travels, he now has to go all the way into Dorchester to board his dogs and that while that facility is OK, he has to pay to get his dogs clean because they play in the dirt there. John Moon, of New England Assistance Dog Services of Princeton, said the kennel would be a boon to veterans and people with guide dogs.

Fenway Bark lawyer Richard Lynds said the building already has thick walls that would screen out noise and that the interior would employ a special under-carpet sweeping system to collect wasted for removal two or three times a week.

Neighbors, however, said the walls were nowhere near as thick as Lynds said and that barking would be carried into the neighborhood through the building's tin ventilation system.

Lisa Ballard, who lives right next door to the building and has two young children, said she's also concerned by the number of cars coming and going to pick up pets.

"This will affect our lives," she said. "Every single day."


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bike accident in brighton?

Hearing word of a bike accident in which someone in a silver Camry talking on a cellphone t-boned a cyclist in Brighton on Stratmore St. He said the kid was a bigger guy on a blue bike and had a helmet on. Person reporting this didn't get too many details because he was in shock from how bad the crash was. Initial report is of severe injury or even death... Anyone know anything about this?

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