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The Massachusetts House is turning to a group of representatives with emergency response, public health, and nursing and medical backgrounds to provide leadership during the coronavirus crisis.
Working groups are taking shape in both the House and Senate as the Legislature searches for ways to take up bills at a time when the governor has largely banned group gatherings of more than 25 people. There are 40 seats in the Senate and 160 in the House, and the branches have been operating with limited attendance.
Rep. Jon Santiago of Boston, a captain in the U.S. Army Reserve and emergency room doctor in the city, is among five members of a working group announced last week to help guide the House and its deliberations.
Rep. William Driscoll of Milton, a Boston College graduate who describes himself on Twitter as a "seasoned disaster responder turned politician," is also on the group, as well as the current and former House chairs of the Legislature's Public Health Committee, Reps. John Mahoney of Worcester and Kate Hogan of Stow.
"The legislature & our colleagues in government weigh major far reaching decisions on the regular," Driscoll tweeted late Sunday night. "We are prepared to do our part to find solutions as the situation evolves."
He was responding to House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Rep. Aaron Michlewitz of Boston's North End, who expressed on Twitter that the House is "prepared to help find solutions working with our colleagues in government that will help mitigate the economic damage to our communities and our constituents."
The final member is Rep. Denise Garlick of Needham, a registered nurse and vice chair of the Ways and Means Committee. She was previously chairwoman of the Mental Health and Substance Abuse Committee, as well as the Legislature's Elder Affairs Committee and also previously chaired the Needham Board of Health.
On Saturday, the News Service reported about Santiago's efforts on Twitter to draw from his work as an emergency room doctor at Boston Medical Center and offer regular social media updates on what he is seeing at one of the region's busiest hospitals during the outbreak.
"You have a role to play in stopping the #coronavirus #covid19 epidemic from worsening. PRACTICE social distancing. Let’s all come together and play our parts. See you in the morning!" Santiago tweeted late Sunday night.
Driscoll, who has been active on Twitter during the state of emergency wrote on Saturday, "The #GreatestGeneration was asked to go to war. We are being asked to stay at home. Staying at home & limiting physical interaction with others may save members of Greatest Generation, vulnerable people & it may save you."
From 2012 until 2017, Driscoll was executive director of NECHAMA - Jewish Response to Disaster, a voluntary organization that provides natural disaster preparedness, response, and recovery services nationwide. Before that he was interim president and CEO of National Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster and U.S. operations director for All Hands and Hearts - Smart Response. According to his LinkedIn page, he founded Persevere Disaster Relief in 2006 and led its Hurricane Katrina Project along the Gulf Coast of Mississippi.
Sen. Jo Comerford of Northampton, the Senate chair of the Public Health Committee, has been tapped to lead an internal group of senators to "advise the body on how it should approach the various challenges posed by this evolving epidemic, including any legislation that may be needed," the president said.
Comerford previously worked as director of programs at The Food Bank of Western Massachusetts and led the National Priorities Project, a national budget and tax priorities research organization, as its executive director.
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Worcester Business Journal presents a special commemorative edition celebrating the 300th anniversary of the city of Worcester. This landmark publication covers the city and region’s rich history of growth and innovation.
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