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The MSPCA took in dozens of animals after Helene. Now, they’re preparing for Milton

People visit the beach Tuesday in Fort Myers, Florida as storm clouds hang overhead before Hurricane Milton's arrival. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
People visit the beach Tuesday in Fort Myers, Florida as storm clouds hang overhead before Hurricane Milton’s arrival. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

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Today is the anniversary of New England’s “Great Snow Hurricane.” And though today’s local forecast calls only for more crisp, blue-sky weather, many are focused on another storm hundreds of miles south.

Hurricane Milton is approaching Florida’s west coast today with alarmingly destructive wind, waves and rain. Here’s what to know about the local impacts:

Milton’s ripples: As Florida braces for Milton’s landfall tonight, local animal shelters are preparing to handle a potential wave of displaced animals. As WBUR’s Andrea Perdomo-Hernandez reports, leaders at MSPCA-Angell in Boston say there’s no doubt animals will be impacted by the Category-5 hurricane. “If this storm is as bad as it is predicted to be, people’s houses will be destroyed, animals will be displaced and there will be a lot of need for animals to come into care right after the disaster hits,” Mike Keiley, the vice president of MSPCA-Angell’s animal protection division, told Andrea.

Gunning for 2026: Gov. Maura Healey may have prevented opponents from pausing the state’s new gun law, but the issue might very well go before Massachusetts voters in 2026. WBUR’s Walter Wuthmann reports that gun rights activists plan to turn in over 90,000 signatures today to add a referendum to the 2026 ballot on whether to repeal the law. (It’s more than double the amount they needed to file.)

Big in the local beer world: Everett’s Night Shift Brewing is getting bought by Framingham-based Hendler Family Brewing (aka the company that owns Jack’s Abby and Wormtown).

It’s happening: After five weeks of throwing Jacoby Brissett to the wolves behind that offensive line, the New England Patriots are planning to turn to rookie quarterback Drake Maye. The Associated press reports the first-round pick will make his starting debut under center this Sunday in Foxborough against the Houston Texans.

P.S.— There’s still time to get tickets for tonight’s CitySpace talk with Sum 41 frontman Deryck Whibley. The Canadian singer and guitarist, who recently nearly died of COVID, will discuss never-before-revealed traumas and triumphs within the music industry with WBUR’s Amory Sivertson. Signed copies of his new book will also be available.

This article was originally published on WBUR.org.

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