New Bedford Educators Association to host School Committee Candidate Debate on Wednesday

The New Bedford Educators Association is proud to sponsor a School Committee Candidate Debate scheduled from 6-8 PM at the Keith Middle School Auditorium on Wednesday, October 23, 2019. Tune in to New Bedford Guide’s Facebook page as we will be broadcasting the debate live.

This event will be the third time that NBEA has hosted an event that gives community members the opportunity to meet with, and ask questions of, New Bedford School Committee candidates. We encourage all community members, including parents, teachers, and students to attend.

There will be a panel that will ask questions that each candidate will have an opportunity to respond to. Audience members will be able to write down their questions, and these will be presented to the panel to ask on their behalf as time allows.

The panel which will ask the questions consists of:

Dr. Kathleen Mackenzie – Mental health Professional and Counselor in NBPS
Fred Pearson – Vice President of NBEA and elementary special educator
Jodi Spencer – Nurse at NBHS and parent
Jacelina Goncalves – President of Class of 2020 New Bedford High School




New Bedford Ward 4 City Council candidates discuss gentrification

At the candidate forum at Gomes school last week, Ward 4 City Council candidates Joseph ‘Jo Jo” Fortes and Derek Baptiste were asked what they would do to protect Ward 4 families against gentrification.




Where should addiction treatment centers be located in New Bedford?

Where should addiction treatment centers be located in New Bedford? The 10 at-Large City Council candidates answered that question at Tuesday’s candidate forum held at Gomes School.




New Bedford Ward 4 City Council Candidate Derek Baptiste discusses addiction

New Bedford Ward 4 City Council Candidate Derek Baptiste pointed out childhood trauma as a core cause of addiction and some of his ideas of combating it.

All Ward and At-Large City Councilors were asked questions form the children at Alma Del Mar school during a candidate forum last night. Full video: https://www.facebook.com/NewBedfordGuide/videos/440759813312161/




New Bedford City Council Candidate Forum at Alma Del Mar

Live for the candidate forum at Alma Del Mar on Wednesday, October 16. All the Ward and At-Large City Councilors will be asked questions form the children at the school.




Carlos Felix, Michael Janson and Brian Gomes argue at New Bedford candidate forum

Carlos Pimentel Felix calls out Brian Gomes; Brian Gomes almost walks out; Michael Janson tries to grab the microphone from Carlos Pimentel Felix and then walks out.

Here’s a look at the pandemonium during last night’s at-large City Council closing statements.




Tyson Moultrie asked about his claim that “the Mitchell campaign seems a little corrupt.”

During Tuesday night’s candidate forum held at Gomes School hosted by Buddy Andrade, New Bedford Mayoral candidate Tyson Moultrie was asked to clarify his comments that “the Mitchell campaign seems a little corrupt.” Mayor Mitchell also responded.




New Bedford at-large City Council closing statements

Here are the New Bedford at-large City Council closing statements from last night’s candidate forum at Gomes School in New Bedford.




OPINION: Include texting and driving in the definition of “driving under the influence” and make punishment the same

We now live in a world where scrolling through social media on your phone or using it text someone is ubiquitous. In fact, it so the new norm – you are the weirdo if you are sitting at a cafe, standing in line or in public and your phone is not glued to your hand.

It is so prevalent that if you observe people in a line that is 20 people deep, to say 18 of them will be buried in their phone would not be hyperbole. The art of small talk with your neighbor or stranger next to you in line is dead. Social skills be damned.

It is such an epidemic that it is also normal to see people texting while driving. It’s everywhere, everyone is doing it. This is one reason very little is done about it – it is accepted and ignored because people know they do it too and if they have a sense of integrity they won’t be hypocritical by being very vocal about banning and punishing people for it when they do it.

It is a form of addiction which has commonalities with other addictions. There is a “substance,” e,g, heroin, crack, meth, gambling, pornography, phones. You need a fix regularly to appease brain receptors. You are willing to do extreme things to make sure your habit is fed – with opiates people often steal or commit petty crimes, even rob or mug people. With gambling and pornography, you hurt your family and friends through spending too much money or time “feasting” on your substance. With alcohol, there is that plus the common verbal or physical abuse when inebriated.

With the phone, people are willing to risk their passengers or other people on the road. The only difference between phone addiction and the others is in the preferred substance, but the result is the same: hurting others or placing them at risk – risk that can lead to injuries or even death.

A study by the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA) demonstrated texting while driving is six times more dangerous than driving while inebriated. Car and Driver magazine published a report actually show how poor reactions times are on par with being drunk or worse.

This begs the question: if it is as bad or worse than being drunk why are the penalties not the same? In some states, like Massachusetts, our feckless politicians have made 5 attempts to ban it. Meanwhile, residents continue to be hurt or killed on our roads. The saddest part of everything is that these people are doing nothing important: they are simply scrolling their social media news feed, having a general conversation, even sending a “LOL” or “What u doing?” Even if it was an important message, common sense which is now uncommon these days would dictate waiting the few minutes to get where you are going or if you are on a long commute, pill over and text.

If people are going to be selfish with their phones it’s time to have a punishment that matches it. If texting or using your phone while driving is as dangerous or more so than being drunk, we need to have the same punishment for it. Since police cars and officers themselves typically have cameras now, we have video evidence that can back it up and phone records can be accessed.

One of the problems for years is the dishonesty of the people who use their phones while driving. They will deny they were being ignorant so they can escape a fine.

Until such a time as driverless cars are safe and infrastructure can be put in place for them, people will continue to hurt to kill themselves or others unless our politicians and law enforcement officers do something about it.

I don’t see people changing their behaviors under current law and policing – they seem determined to win Darwin Awards. It’s time to get their attention by including phone use while driving under the umbrella of driving “under the influence” because the end result is identical.

1st Offense: up to 2 1/2 years in jail, $500 to $5,000 in fines, and a 1 year license revocation,
2nd Offense: 60 days to 2 1/1 years in jail, $600 to $10,000 in fines, and a 2 year license revocation.
3rd Offense: 180 days to 2 1/2 years in jail or 2 /12-5 years in prison, $1,000-$15,000 in fines, and an 8 year license revocation.




Deadline to register to vote in New Bedford’s municipal election is October 16

The New Bedford Board of Election Commissioners reminds New Bedford voters that Wednesday, October 16, 2019 is the deadline to register to vote in the November 5, 2019 municipal election, as well as to notify the Board of Election Commissioners of any change in voter name or address.

The Election Commission office is located at City Hall, 133 William Street, in Room 114. The office will remain open on Wednesday, October 16, from 8:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m. in order to allow the public more time to complete their voter registration process and make necessary updates to their names or addresses.

In the municipal election on November 5, 2019, New Bedford voters may cast their vote for Mayor, Councillor at-Large, Ward, Councillors, Assessor, and School Committee.

Any voter who is unable to get to the polls on Election Day may vote by absentee ballot during regular Election Commission office hours, Monday through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., or may request to have an absentee ballot application mailed to their home address by calling the Election Commission office at 508-979-1420. The Election Commission will announce further information regarding absentee ballots as soon as they are available.

In addition, the New Bedford Election Commission office will be open on Saturday, November 2, from 8:00 a.m. until 12 noon to give voters additional time to cast an absentee ballot.

Any New Bedford resident whose address has changed since the last election, would like to request an absentee ballot, or is uncertain about their voting status or designated polling location, should contact the Election Commission office at 508-979-1420.