Site icon WBHM 90.3

Red Line’s Braintree branch reopens with fastest speeds in years

An MBTA Red Line train barrels down the tracks on its way to Quincy Adams station in 2015. (Jesse Costa/WBUR)
An MBTA Red Line train barrels down the tracks on its way to Quincy Adams station in 2015. (Jesse Costa/WBUR)

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


October is already off to a spooky start. Let’s get to the news:

Phil speed ahead: It’s not often people are excited for a Monday morning commute. But yesterday was the exception for riders who take the Red Line from Quincy and Braintree. After enduring months of stubborn speed restrictions and over three weeks of shuttle buses, the MBTA greeted riders returning to the Braintree branch with the fastest commutes the line has seen in years. According to data tracked by Transit Matters, trips on the nine-mile stretch from JFK/UMass to Braintree haven’t been this fast since 2022. “After 24 days, we did what we promised,” MBTA General Manager Phil Eng told WBUR’s Andrea Perdomo-Hernandez in an interview.

Not shipping up to Boston: A strike by dockworkers is officially underway, bringing business to a halt at 14 U.S. ports along the East and Gulf Coasts, including South Boston’s Conley Terminal. The union for longshore workers is calling for higher wages and protections against automation from ocean carriers and port operators. But as NPR reports, the two sides appear far apart on a deal.

Not so fast: Gov. Maura Healey has stepped in to block construction of a controversial machine gun range at Joint Base Cape Cod. Though Healey said she’s committed to supporting the Massachusetts National Guard’s training needs, her office sided with local officials and environmental groups who expressed concerns about the range’s potential impact on the area’s water supply.

Prison problems: A 34-year-old person being held at the Massachusetts Treatment Center in Bridgewater is dead after an apparent fight at the facility Sunday morning.

P.S.— We’ll have live coverage of the one-and-probably-only vice presidential debate tonight. Turn your radio dial to 90.9 to listen or live stream the debate on our website starting at 9 p.m. (In the meantime, check out this story on the history of the past 11 running mate debates and why this one may have unusually high stakes.)

This article was originally published on WBUR.org.

Exit mobile version