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FULL SHOW: Catholic Church Reckoning; Photoshoot For A Cure; Democracy And Beer; #BagelGate
Full episode of Greater Boston from September 13, 2018. -
In Downtown Crossing, A New Brewery Mixes Politics With Pleasure
The worker-owned business wants to be an incubator for activism. -
Boston Marriott Hotel Workers Vote To Strike, But Have Yet To Walk Out
The chain says if workers do strike, the hotels will continue to operate. -
Latest On The Long-Running Labor Lockout At National Grid
Local unions have been battling with National Grid for months, claiming public safety may be at risk – and today, locked-out gas workers rallied in Boston to bring attention to their cause. -
FULL SHOW: Trump Ties; 'Towering Excess'; Puerto Rico One Year Later
The full episode of Greater Boston from September 11, 2018. -
Walsh Says He Plans To Look At Policies Affecting High-End Construction
The Institute for Policy Studies wants the city to levy a tax on high-end real estate transactions over $2.5 million. Mayor Marty Walsh says he plans to look at his policies affecting high-end construction, but isn’t interested in such a tax. -
Are Boston’s Luxury Apartments Serving As Cash Cows?
A new report from the Institute for Policy Studies finds that more than a third of the units in Boston’s new luxury buildings are owned by limited liability companies and trusts – thus allowing their owners to remain anonymous. -
How Are Catholics Responding To Latest Church Scandal?
Reverends Irene Monroe and Emmett Price try to balance their faith with new allegations of sexual misconduct. -
Boston's Long Island Bridge Request: Denied
Quincy's Conservation Commission voted unanimously to reject the permit request in their meeting Wednesday. -
Has The Bolling Building Lived Up To Its Promise?
The Bolling Building was pitched as an opportunity for economic development in Dudley Square. But the question still remains three years after the renovation: is it working?