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Barbara Lynch to close all remaining restaurants, including Boston flagship

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In case you’re wondering why you hear musket shots coming from the Charlestown direction this morning, today marks the start of the 250-day countdown to the 250th anniversary of the Battle of Bunker Hill on June 17, 2025. (And yes, there will be a big kiosk to count down the days, too.)

But first, the news:

End of an era: Barbara Lynch, the pioneering Boston fine-dining chef who had been marred by turmoil in recent years, plans to close all of her remaining restaurants. As Eater Boston first reported yesterday, Lynch plans to close her Beacon Hill flagship restaurant No. 9 ParkB&G Oysters in the South End and her Gloucester passion project The Rudder. The closures come after Lynch shuttered five other restaurants in the South End and Seaport earlier this year.

Chef Barbara Lynch poses for a portrait inside of her now-shuttered restaurant The Butcher Shop in Boston. (Jonathan Wiggs/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

Holding out hope: Massachusetts officials want to try to prevent a third hospital from falling victim to Steward Health Care’s financial catastrophe. While two hospitals in the state have already closed as part of the for-profit health care company’s bankruptcy process, Steward leaders moved this week to quietly abandon a third: Norwood Hospital. It had been under construction since a flood forced it to close in 2020, but this new move would also affect four nearby outpatient clinics.

Wu’s warning: Boston Mayor Michelle Wu provided more specifics yesterday about the potential property tax bill hike homeowners could face next year, if Beacon Hill does not pass her plan to shift more of the tax burden onto businesses. Wu’s office says the average single-family home in Boston (valued at $838,000) would see its tax bill rise by 28% — an overall hike of $768 per fiscal year.

Paging Bill Weldcyanobacteria bloom advisory for part of the Charles River has been lifted. The advisory had been in effect since Sept. 20 for the stretch of the river between the Longfellow Bridge and Charlestown locks. But water samples collected by state health officials this week showed no signs of the blue-green algae.

P.S.— If you’re not meeting The Makers in person tonight at CitySpace, this week’s episode of The Common features three of the artists from this year’s cohort. Listen to the episode here.

This article was originally published on WBUR.org.

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