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Following Boston, Cambridge announces its first chief climate officer

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


OK, this morning’s space walk looked cool, but I still don’t know if it can compare to this run of September weather we’re having. Here’s what to know before you head out into another gorgeous day:

Et tu? Boston appointed its first chief climate officer this past spring — and the city across the river apparently liked the concept so much that they got one, too. Cambridge announced former nonprofit leader Julie Wormser yesterday as its first-ever chief climate officer.

Round two: Another wave of hotel strikes have begun. More than 400 workers at four Boston hotels — Moxy Boston Downtown, The Newbury Boston, W Boston Hotel and The Dagny — are walking off the job today in protest of low wages and “arduous workloads,” according to their union, UNITE HERE Local 26.

In other news from the picket line: Resident assistants at Boston University say they’ve ended their strike. According to the BU ResLife Union, the strike ended Friday, less than a week after it began, after the university ended free room and board benefits for striking RAs. (BU holds the broadcast license for WBUR.)

Pump the brakes: Worcester plans to lower the default speed limit on city streets from 30 mph to 25 mph. Worcester’s City Council approved the measure this week following several serious crashes in which pedestrians were hit by cars. (The city still needs to notify the state before the new speed limit takes effect.) The decision comes nearly eight years after Boston dropped its speed limit to 25 mph.

P.S.— It’s that time of year again. WBUR’s fall arts guides kick off today, with a roundup of 14 albums by New England musicians.

This article was originally published on WBUR.org.

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