Boston-Wynn saga reaches end as Walsh, casino reach agreement

Boston-Wynn saga reaches end as Walsh, casino reach agreement

The long legal battle between Mayor Marty Walsh and developers of an Everett casino on Boston's doorstep is over. Walsh on Wednesday night announced he'd reached a surrounding community agreement after engaging in direct talks with Wynn Resorts Chairman & CEO Steve Wynn.

According to Walsh's office, the agreement includes $31 million over 15 years for community impact; $25 million over 10 years for Sullivan Square infrastructure improvements; $11 million for traffic mitigation in Charlestown; $250,000 for a regional working group on a "long-term fix" for Sullivan Square; a "good faith effort" to purchase $20 million annually over 15 years from Boston businesses; and $1 million for reimbursement of professional expenses. Wynn Resorts has also agreed to work with the City of Boston "to explore moving the Boston Water and Sewer Commission's Materials Handling Facility with the goal of creating public open space along the waterfront in Charlestown."

Black lives threatened most by violent criminals, not police, report says
crime

Black lives threatened most by violent criminals, not police, report says

CNS News

(CNSNews.com) — A new think tank report takes aim at the Black Lives Matter movement's contention that law enforcement's use of lethal force unequally targets blacks compared to other racial or ethnic groups.

According to the report by the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, not only are a higher percentage of whites and Hispanics killed by police, the greater threat to blacks comes from violent criminals within their own communities.

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