Women of PM Spotlight: Leslie Greffenius

Whether through leading a local chapter, serving on the Board, a committee, or as staff, women are the backbone of Progressive Massachusetts. This March, we want to highlight some of the many women who are leading our movement.

Leslie Greffenius. Leslie is Co-Chair of our local chapter, Neponset Valley Progressives (Dedham, Westwood, Norwood, Walpole). We are grateful for Leslie’s many years leading and mentoring at the local level and within the state chapter! Addressing climate change and protecting the Fair Share Amendment are among the issues NVP are leading on locally. If you are local and would like to connect, contact NVP, here. Follow them on Facebook, here. Thanks for all that you do, Leslie!

Get to know Leslie:

PM: Why did you choose PM as the home of your activism?

LG: By concentrating our efforts at the state, rather than the national level, we have more impact. Ultimately, too, progress made at the state level often catches on in other states and then nationally. Same-sex marriage, for example, though first legalized in Massachusetts, caught on elsewhere and is now, after 2015, legal everywhere in the U.S.

PM: What issue are you most passionate about? 

LG: Transparency in government, protecting immigrants, climate change.

PM: What was the first campaign on which you organized and what did you do? 

LG: I was shocked to discover that the Massachusetts State House is one of the least transparent in the country. Voting records of representatives are hard to find and committee votes are generally taken in secret. If you want to kill democracy, that’s one way to do it.

I was heavily involved in gathering signatures to place a non-binding ballot measure on transparency in several districts across the state in 2020. The question’s language: “Shall the representative for this district be instructed to vote in favor of changes to the applicable House of Representative rules to make each legislator’s vote in that body’s legislative committees publicly available of the Legislature’s website?” It was great fun collecting signatures for this because many Massachusetts residents were outraged when they found out how dysfunctional Massachusetts government was and, unfortunately, still is. Change of that sort will take time and patience.

PM: Who is your organizing or political idol? 

LG: Marshall Ganz, Harvard Kennedy School of Government.

PM: What movie or book about your passion issue is your favorite?

LG: “The Ministry for the Future” by Kim Stanley Robinson.

PM: What’s your favorite thing about canvassing or phone banking?

LG: Meeting kindred spirits in my community.

PM: What’s your go to quick campaign meal that is not pizza? 

LG: Chinese food.

PM: If you could have a mundane super power, what would it be?

LG: To transform into a fly (on a wall) at will.

PM: Tell us something you do that no one knows about or suspects?

LG: I study foreign languages for fun.

Join the movement! Tell us how you’d like to volunteer with Progressive Mass, here.

Women of PM Spotlight: Sandie Kimball

Whether through leading a local chapter, serving on the Board, a committee, or as staff, women are the backbone of Progressive Massachusetts. This March, we want to highlight some of the many women who are leading our movement.

Sandie Kimball. Sandie is a co-lead of our local chapter, Progressive Mass Western Norfolk County (Norfolk, Plainville, Wrentham, Medfield). Congratulations to Sandie on the one year anniversary of her chapter! Western Norfolk County Progressives have achieved many successes in their first year and we can’t wait to see what they’ll achieve in the year to come. If you’re local, reach out to them here.

Get to know Sandie:

PM: Why did you choose PM as the home of your activism?

SK: My local DTC was not open to discussing Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, which is more important to me than being a Democrat.

PM: What issue are you most passionate about? 

SK: Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, including teaching about racial biases in school curriculum, combating book banning in school libraries, and taking action to support equal rights for people of color and LGBTQ people.

PM: What was the first campaign on which you organized and what did you do? 

SK: I was Coordinator of Volunteers for Kevin Kalkut’s campaign for State Representative for the Ninth Norfolk District.

PM: Who is your organizing or political idol? 

SK: John Lewis.

PM: What movie or book about your passion issue is your favorite?

SK: White Fragility by Robin Diangelo.

PM: What’s your favorite thing about canvassing or phone banking?

SK: Nothing!

PM: What’s your go to quick campaign meal that is not pizza? 

SK: Lowfat Greek yogurt with granola and skim milk.

PM: If you could have a mundane super power, what would it be?

SK: Computer hardware super power.

PM: Tell us something you do that no one knows about or suspects?

SK: I love to take a plastic bag with me when I go for walks in my town and pick up trash.

Join the movement! Tell us how you’d like to volunteer with Progressive Mass, here.

Fair Share was a Transformative Win. Let’s Protect It.

Fair Share

Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Chair Moran, Chair Cusack, and Members of the Joint Committee on Revenue, 

My name is Jonathan Cohn, and I am the policy director of Progressive Massachusetts, a statewide, multi-issue grassroots advocacy organization with chapters across the commonwealth committed to fighting for a more equitable, just, sustainable, and democratic Massachusetts. 

Because of our commitment to a vision of shared prosperity, we have been involved with the Fair Share Amendment campaign from the start, and last year, we knocked over 100,000 doors for Question 1 — not to mention the work of phone banking, text-banking, tabling at community events, and talking with friends and neighbors. Everyday people around the commonwealth got involved with the campaign because they realized the need for a fairer code and the transformative potential of the investments we could make with new revenue. 

They understood that more revenue could mean greater reinvestment in schools to ensure that buildings are safe, green, and healthy; to address the social and emotional needs of students coming out of a pandemic; to ensure that underpaid professionals get the compensation they deserve; and to deliver on the promise of the Student Opportunity Act. They understood that more revenue could mean changing course from our decades-long disinvestment from public higher education and instead guaranteeing better pay for faculty and staff and ensuring that students can graduate without debt. They understood that more revenue could mean finally fixing the MBTA so that the buses and trains run frequently, reliably, and safely — as well as to more places and at lower cost. They understood that more revenue could mean fixing our roads so that they are no longer ridden with potholes and upgrading structurally deficient bridges that plague so many communities. 

The voters understood too, delivering a win for Question 1 in November. Massachusetts voters were clear: make sure the rich pay their fair share so that we can invest in our education and infrastructure

Elected officials said that the barrier to doing important things was money, so we went out and made sure to organize and mobilize to get that revenue. And the Governor’s proposal would give it right back. 

Regressive tax cuts account for almost $400 million of Gov. Healey’s tax proposal. The proposed cut to the short-term capital gains tax would be bad for the economy, by encouraging more speculative activities such as rapid stock trading and “flipping” real estate, and it would be deeply regressive, as the highest-income 1 percent of households would receive almost eighty percent of the tax cut at an average of over $7,000 apiece.

The proposed cut to the estate tax is also deeply regressive. We can acknowledge that “cliffs,” as exists in the estate tax, are not good policy designs, but that should not lead to excluding estates up to $3 million and providing a $182,000 tax cut to estates even larger than that. There is no world in which a $10 million estate needs an extra $182,000. If the Legislature would like to update the estate tax, it should heed proposals like H.2960/S.1784: An Act relative to estate tax reform, which would only lift the exemption threshold to $2 million and would provide no tax breaks to larger estates. Such a proposal, in contrast to the Governor’s, would preserve most of the revenue-generation, inequality-reduction, and fairness benefits of the estate tax, while eliminating the current cliff effect.

Other parts of the Governor’s tax proposal are, fortunately, not so regressive, but they still do little to address the cost of living in Massachusetts. A child tax credit providing $600 per child under 13 would not even cover two weeks of child care. An expanded renters deduction would lead to merely $50 more for renters, if they even qualify. Tax credits are an inefficient way to meet the very real needs of caregivers and renters, and the Legislature must act swiftly to pass legislation to address the high cost of child care and the impact of escalating rents. If the Legislature would like to advance the Governor’s tax credits, they should be paid for with progressive, revenue-raising changes to the tax code, so that they do not drain down payments on transformative policy that actually addresses the high cost of living. 

Massachusetts needs robust state revenue if we want to take action to address the child care affordability crisis, the housing affordability crisis, growing student and medical debt, the climate crisis, and an often-malfunctioning transit system. Moreover, as the federal government seems headed for debt-ceiling brinkmanship, Republican-led austerity, and the sunset of COVID-era aid, Massachusetts will likely see greater need for state revenue to fill in the gaps. Now is not the time for permanent, regressive tax-cutting. 

Sincerely,

Jonathan Cohn