THE
INDEPENDENT
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N E W S PA P E R
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TUFTS
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T HE T UFTS DAILY
VOLUME LXXXIII, ISSUE 25
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
tuftsdaily.com
Friday, March 4, 2022
New city-sponsored child care program Jesse Zhang (E’14) promises affordability, accessibility to named to Forbes 30 Somerville families Under 30 list by Madeline Wilson Assistant News Editor
ELIN SHIH / THE TUFTS DAILY
Eliot-Pearson Children’s School at 105 College Ave., under the Eliot-Pearson Department of Child Study and Human Development at Tufts University, is pictured on Feb. 16. by Ariana Phillips
Assistant News Editor
Somerville introduced its new Child Care Access and Affordability Program on Feb. 3. The program will provide families with financial assistance to send their children to daycare and preschool. To qualify for the program, children must be between 15 months and four years old by Aug. 31, and families must meet income eligibility requirements, which vary by household size. Applications for the next school year will be accepted until March 11. CCAAP is funded through the American Rescue Plan Act of
2021, which provided municipalities with federal aid to respond to the economic and public health impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. Somerville is investing $7 million of its $78 million in ARPA funds into child care. Somerville City Councilor-atLarge Jake Wilson told the Daily that CCAAP is an appropriate use of the federal pandemic assistance money since the pandemic emphasized working parents’ reliance on access to child care. “What the pandemic has really laid bare is the degree to which [members of] the workforce who are parents require child care in order to go into an office or be present at work, and the extreme
challenges that these parents then face when daycares and preschools are closed,” Wilson said. CCAAP is a partnership between the Somerville Promise Alliance, Somerville Public Schools and local child care centers. SomerPromise is an initiative of the City of Somerville that aims to bridge both the opportunity and achievement gaps for supporting school-age children using research and programming. Christopher Hosman, director of SomerPromise, said that all parties were aligned in their purpose and intended impact for the program from the beginning. see CHILD CARE, page 2
Jesse Zhang (E’14) was selected as a 2022 honoree of the Forbes 30 Under 30 list in the social media category. Zhang is the co-founder of Beacons, a startup that provides the tools for content creators to generate a website with their information and other relevant links. Zhang graduated from Tufts with a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering, then received his master’s degree and Ph.D. in electrical engineering from Stanford University. He is currently the chief product officer at Beacons. The Forbes 30 Under 30 is an annual list of 600 of the most influential people under age 30 in 20 categories, including social media, music, art and style and social impact. Honorees can nominate themselves or be nominated by someone else. Zhang described Beacons as a “storefront” for content creators on social media platforms. Beacons condenses creators’ information and revenue streams into one homepage and allows users to customize their website to their liking. “As we talked to more influencers and content creators, we started gaining conviction that content creators are like the businesses of the future, and we wanted to build tools to help them succeed,” he said in an interview with the Daily. In order to grow the company, Zhang and his colleagues reached out to TikTok creators and creat-
ed personalized Beacons homepages for them. Zhang attributed the viral growth of the company to its users and their audiences. “Whenever someone uses a Beacons link, it says ‘Beacons. ai’ in the URL, and everyone else can see it, so they’re essentially marketing the product,” he said. “Most of our users are content creators, so they come with very large audiences.” Zhang also discussed the future of Beacons and how he and his colleagues hope to expand the company in the future. “Beacons today is like the storefront for the content creator, and we want to eventually evolve into the entire suite of software tools,” he said. “If you imagine the content creator as a business, there’s all these things they do that have nothing to do with creating content … just managing their audience, analytics and all that … we basically want to make all of that as easy as possible for them.” Neal Jean, another co-founder and the present CEO of Beacons, emphasized Zhang’s impact on the company. “At different points in time, he’s been a full-stack engineer, designer, data scientist, user researcher, and social media manager – Jesse’s never complained and always steps up to new challenges,” Jean wrote in an email to the Daily. “Today Jesse focuses on leading product, helping to set the product vision and roadmap, and then aligning the team to execute against the roadmap.” see FORBES, page 2
City of Medford lifts indoor mask mandate, vaccine requirement at large venues by Ella Kamm News Editor
The Medford Board of Health voted unanimously to lift the city’s indoor mask mandate for private businesses, effective Feb. 16. The decision comes in light of falling COVID-19 positivity rates in the community. “We’ve seen a dramatic decrease in positive cases in Medford, as well as across the state,” Board of Health Director MaryAnn O’Connor said in a press release. “The data is encouraging and shows that with the steady rise of vaccinations and expanded eligi-
bility for booster shots, we’ve reached a point in our COVID19 response where mitigation efforts, like mask-wearing, while still recommended, no longer requires a mandate be in place.” Medford reported a 1.96% positivity rate for the week of Feb. 19, the most recent week for which data is available, coming in below the state’s overall rate of 2.95%. The fall in cases has led many municipalities, including the City of Boston, to relax their masking requirements. The Board’s decision aligns with the current recommendations of the CDC, which on Feb. 25
revised its risk evaluation criteria and has stated that 70% of Americans now live in counties where it is safe to take a break from indoor masking if they are not at risk of severe illness. The CDC considers Middlesex County a low-risk area. In addition to lifting the mask mandate for businesses, Medford will no longer mandate that large scale entertainment venues like the Chevalier Theatre require proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test for entry. Individual performers are still see MASKS, page 2
GRACE ROTERMUND / THE TUFTS DAILY
Medford City Hall is pictured on March 12, 2021.
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