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5 takeaways from Gov. Healey's Radio Boston interview

Governor Maura Healey on Radio Boston 3/22, courtesy of WBUR's Steve Brown
Governor Maura Healey on Radio Boston 3/22, courtesy of WBUR's Steve Brown

Editor's Note: This is an excerpt from WBUR's daily morning newsletter, WBUR Today. If you like what you read and want it in your inbox, sign up here .


Gov. Maura Healey’s bracket is busted — like mine and yours — as we enter the second weekend of March Madness. Here’s what else we learned from the governor’s interview on Radio Boston yesterday :

1. “We’ll do everything”: As residents and healthcare providers brace for a ruling on a Texas lawsuit that threatens to force a major abortion pill off the market , Healey told WBUR’s Tiziana Dearing that “we’ll do everything to fight that and ensure that women continue to have access to medication abortion.” Healey said her administration has filed an amicus briefing against the lawsuit and expects to remain involved through the potential appeals process. “We’ll see what any decision looks like and what appeals look like,” Healey said.

2. Raise the roof: In the wake of Silicon Valley Bank’s failure , Healey called on Congress to pass a bill raising the FDIC’s insurance limit. The current policy insures all deposits up to $250,000. “It’s too low right now,” she said.

3. Any minute now: Healey said she expects to name a new general manager for the beleaguered MBTA, as well as a transportation safety chief, “very, very soon.” The new, if vague, timeline comes two weeks after she said the announcements were “days, not weeks” away .

  • The Boston Globe recently reported that records show Healey interviewed an MBTA GM candidate in late February.
  • On a slightly longer track is Healey’s appointment of a new state police colonel. Her office recently announced a six-person search committee . It’s the first time a governor will be allowed to hire a State Police colonel from outside of the department.

4. No T-hanks: Healey received a listener challenge — not unlike ones her predecessor often got — to ride “the MBTA for a week” so she could experience the delays and slow zones. Despite living in Cambridge near the Red Line, the governor declined.

  • Healey contended she’s getting a very close secondhand view. “I talk to people every day who take the T, including many of the folks I work with regularly here in the office,” she said.

5. Not a sure bet : Healey said she’s “probably not” going to personally get into sports gambling, even if it’s now legal in Massachusetts . “I hope it goes well and there’s revenue for the state, and that people bet safely,” Healey said.

P.S.— It’s not all basketball this weekend. The men’s college hockey tournament drops the puck today with some local rooting interests. Our own Boston University takes the ice at 2 p.m. up the road in Manchester, New Hampshire against Western Michigan. Meanwhile, Harvard will take on Ohio State Friday afternoon in Bridgeport, Connecticut.

Related:

Nik DeCosta-Klipa Twitter Newsletter Editor
Nik DeCosta-Klipa is the newsletter editor for WBUR.

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