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Founder and President of the Association of Black Citizens of Lexington Sean Osborne was nominated by Sen. Cindy Friedman, D-Arlington, and Rep. Michelle Ciccolo, D-Lexington, as an honoree for the Massachusetts Black and Latino Legislative Caucus’s annual Black Excellence on the Hill event.
“It is an honor to be nominated a Black Excellence Honoree,” Osborne said. “And it’s great that the Black and Latino Legislative Caucus hosts a program that recognizes the wonderful people across the Commonwealth who are working to increase Black political power, wealth and welfare. I am grateful to my parents and brother for being models of Black excellence and to Sen. Friedman, Rep. Ciccolo and others in the greater Lexington community who continue to work with me to share the history and culture of the peoples of the African Diaspora. The stories we tell shape our future. Let’s continue to share stories of Black Excellence.”
Paul Brassil of
Medfield has joined the company as senior vice president/chief information officer and will oversee PCU’s information technology and digital innovation efforts.
Brassil has more than 25 years of experience in the information technology leadership field with entities such as Commonwealth Medicine (a division of UMass Medical School), the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, EMC Corp. and Siemens IT Solutions and Services Inc.
He holds an MS in computer information systems from Bentley University in
Waltham and a BA in Business Administration from Bridgewater State University.
Brassil s community involvement spans initiatives focused on workforce development and industry leadership serving as a member of the Tech Hire Advisory Group of Boston’s Private Industry Council (comprised of Boston CIOs developing summer intern programs for low/moderate income students in the Boston Public Schools); an adviser for Fintech Women (helping women in banking/finance/fintech a
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court shocked many plaintiffs' attorneys last week when it abolished an "unnecessarily confusing" alternative standard used by juries to determine whether a health care provider caused a patient's injury, with some calling the ruling unnecessary and a sweeping transformation of decades of jurisprudence.
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The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court recently held that Uber’s notification of its “terms and conditions” during the registration process for its app did not provide “reasonable.