Ned pointed me to this video on YouTube. It’s pretty clearly filmed in Arlington. It is totally neat.
Category Archives: Arlington
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
A Plague in Arlington: Coping with the Influenza of 1918
Tuesday, November 28 – A Plague in Arlington: Coping with the Influenza of 1918
7:00 PM doors open, 7:30 PM start, Town Hall (730 Massachusetts Ave). Arlington Historical Society Lecture, Dennis J. Ahern presenting.
Metaphor Alert
Please, someone notify the metaphor police. This photo exceeds all metaphorical safety margins.
Arlington Committee Summit
ITAC Resignation
A few years ago I was agitating for change in how the town made technology decisions, but I didn’t have a plan. I knew things were wrong, but didn’t know how to fix them. Annie LaCourt shared many of my views, and she had the plan that I didn’t. With her leadership we got the Board of Selectmen and Town Meeting to create the Information Technology Advisory Committee (ITAC).
Progress with ITAC hasn’t been as fast as I would like, but it there is progress. ITAC is the place where I feel like I make the most difference for Arlington. It’s an environment where my personality and experience are most effective. Its a lever. The things I do there have the broadest (and most beneficial) effects. It’s not an instantaneous change but it is good progress.
It turns out that state law (the Town Manager Act) says that I can’t sit on ITAC and FinComm at the same time. I value my work with FinComm too, though progress there is slower. I can stay effective with ITAC without having a vote. It would be harder to remain effective at FinComm without a vote. I resigned from ITAC.
It won’t change what I do. I continue to believe that ITAC can and will change Arlington’s process and budget, and I’ll work towards that goal. I’ll just do my thing without voting.
Dear Board Members:
It was recently brought to my attention that as an appointee to the Finance Committee, the Town Manager Act forbids me to accept any other committee appointments. I was unaware of this requirement and I apologize for any difficulty that may arise from this belated resignation.
Effective immediately, I resign from the Information Technology Advisory Committee and the Power Company Feasibility Committee.
I intend to remain active with ITAC. I’ve discussed the question with Deputy Manager Nancy Galkowski, and she agrees that I can continue to help the committee’s work without actually being a member. My role will change, but my activity will not.
The power committee is less active, but I am happy to volunteer if it becomes more active in the future.
Thank you for the opportunity to serve on these committees. I look forward to helping them in their future efforts.
Sincerely,
Dan Dunn
ITAC Department Head Review
The Information Technology Advisory Committee will review the progress on the technology needs assessments with department heads. Location TBA.
January 18th 2007, 5PM
Catch and Release
Yesterday’s lead headline in the Arlington Advocate:
Sting Nets 3 Prostitutes
And on the Arlington email list, Gabe Weiss writes the story: “I had to throw them back,” explained the rock star. “They were kinda small.”
Paying God’s Bills
The Arlington Advocate ran a story about a car that was set on fire in October. Run-of-the-mill crime story, right? Then you find out that the car was a 2006 Mercedes AMG S165 (V12 engine with 604 horesepower). Then you find out that it’s a rare car valued at $200,000.
Then you find out that the car is being leased by Gerson Silva, the pastor of Asambleia de Deus Renovada, a 130-member Baptist congregation. It’s not a run-of-the-mill crime story any more.
If I were a member of the congregation, I’d be asking some pretty sharp questions about why my donations were paying for a high-end Mercedes. I’d also be reeeaaaally curious how my minister managed to make someone angry enough to inspire arson.
I’m glad I’m not the one paying God’s bills.