Author Archives: dunster

Havern’s Campaign Receipts

I wrote about this topic in September about the pre-primary filing. Since then, there was an October pre-election filing. It is equally interesting as September’s. My source is the state’s Office of Campaign and Political Finance. To see the data yourself, you can:

  1. Check out the database.
  2. Click “Candidates.”
  3. Enter “Havern” for the last name.
  4. Click the “ Pre-election Report”
  5. In particular, I’m talking about Schedule A

Havern’s receipts were $11,000. Again, a big chunk (more than $4000) was from PACs, lobbyists, unions, and lawyers.

What is more interesting in this particular filing is the industry of the donors. The legislature was working on the health care bill – and more than a dozen donors appeared from hospitals, insurance companies, and other healthcare industry representatives. I don’t believe that this is a coincidence. The industry is donating more in the same period that major healthcare changes are being implemented.

Another curiousity in this filing. Why are there two different donations from the National Association of Government Employees (the union known as NAGE) that add up to $700? Neither lists a committee number. The legal limit for such donations is $500. (The curiousity in the last filing, the $100 contribution from the “Alcohol Beverage Control Commission,” was not amended). I’m going to write a letter and ask for clarification on both.

Americans In Jail

The US DoJ issued a report and press release last week. The headline: “One in every 32 adults was in a prison, jail, on probation, or on parole at the end of 2005.” I struggle wrapping my head around that statistic. Then you look at black men between the ages of 25 and 29, and one in 13 are in jail or prison – not even counting parole. Can you imagine if out out of every 13 of your friends went to jail?

What are we doing wrong as a society that such a high fraction of our population is monitored and/or locked up?

I believe our first mistake is the war on drugs. The report shows that approximately 20% of state prisoners and 55% of federal prisoners are for drug offenses. I’d be very interested to see those broken down into violent and non-violent crimes. If we de-criminalize non-violent drug behavior, we will have a lot fewer people in the justice system.

It’s not just the raw numbers of people in jail, either; it’s also the growth. In the last 8 years, the number of federal drug offenders increased by 65%. (At that rate of growth, 50% of the country will be in federal prison for drug offenses by 2040!)

Reports like this one show that our drug policy doesn’t make sense. It is time for us to revisit our drug laws.

Get Your Christmas Gift Idea Here: Create a Book

Last week Tabblo launched a new product: books. We have 4×4″ books and 8×9.5″ books. The smaller ones are a linen cover, a nifty, small form factor. The bigger ones have your photos as the binding and cover.

What happened in your friends and family last year? Travel? Wedding? New baby? Sports team? Anniversary? Did you take photos of anything? Wouldn’t those photos make a great book?

Nora Tosti Vigil

Allan and BarbaraTosti
38 Teel Street
Arlington, MA 02474
781 646-4599
abtosti@rcn.com

Our daughter, Nora Tosti, died one year ago. We are planning to have a one hour candlelight vigil in her memory on the anniversary of her death, Friday night, December 8, from 7-8 P.M. on the sidewalk in front of Bournewood Hospital, where she died.

We are doing this for two reasons. The first is to honor her memory. The second is to focus attention on how needless her death was and how easily it could have been prevented.

To explain the second reason, we need to review how and why she died. Nora was about halfway through studying to be a Medical Assistant at Clark University Computer Career Institute. She had earned straight A’s and was very excited about her new career, but was struggling with a long-standing drug problem. She checked into a detox program at Bournewood for help. Between 9:00 P.M. on December 6 and 9:00 P.M. on December 7, her medical record reported that she was given 2 doses of methadone, 4 doses of lorazepam, 2 doses of trazodone, 3 doses of quinine sulfate, 2 doses of depakote, 2 doses of dicyclomine, and 1 dose of trimethobenzamine. She was supposed to be checked for safety every 30 minutes. At approximately 2:00 A.M. she died in her sleep. For the next 6 hours, hospital staff continued to check her off as OK every 30 minutes. By the time a staff member finally realized she was in trouble, at about 8:00 A.M., she was already in rigor mortis.

After a six-month investigation, the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health concluded that the hospital had acted in a “manner that was dangerous.” The DMH Director of Licensing ordered the hospital to revise its safety check policies and improve training. In its corrective action letter Bournewood Hospital stated, “Upon this clinical review and discussion, we have elected not to change our policy regarding safety checks to specify how staff check/assess breathing.” This refusal to correct a clearly inadequate safety policy was rejected by DMH. After several more sets of correspondence between DMH and the hospital, Bournewood finally submitted sufficient information to satisfy DMH on October 27, 2005. Unfortunately, this policy speaks only to checking breathing to determine if a patient is still alive. There is still no plan to provide monitoring to determine if a patient is in trouble in time to save the patient’s life. We are very concerned that patients’ lives continue to be jeopardized by a combination of multiple potentially dangerous medications and minimal monitoring.

Last August there were stories in the Boston Globe, TV Channels 5 and 56 and WBZ radio in reaction to the DMH report. As a result, we heard from another parent whose son died in a similar manner in another hospital. We are determined to do whatever we can to assure that this does not happen to any other family. We are pushing in every way possible that hospitals be required to safeguard the patients under their care. This vigil, in addition to remembering our beloved Nora, is one way to do this. We want to focus attention on these needless deaths.

Please join us from 7-8 P.M. on Friday, December 8th. Bring a candle if you have one or use one of ours.

Bournewood Hospital is located at 300 South Street in Brookline near the VFW Parkway. We will be on a long public sidewalk on the east side of South Street between Intervale Rd. and Clearwater Rd. There is no parking on South Street, and the Brookline Police have asked us to park on side streets. Asheville Road is across from the road that leads into the hospital grounds. You can park on Asheville Rd. or any of the streets off it, Clearwater Rd. or Intervale Rd. Please try to carpool, because parking is limited. We do not want to park or walk on the hospital’s property. Please be careful to avoid blocking driveways and be quiet and courteous so we will not disturb or inconvenience the hospital’s neighbors. If you have space in your car or you need a ride, please contact us and we will try to get you together with someone else for the trip.

Al and Barbara Tosti