Politics & Government
Squeeze Play: Red Sox Bump Vaccine Site From Fenway | Patch PM
Also: Grand jury looks into Peabody High sex abuse allegations | Scammers forced to pay up | Cape Coast Guard comes through | More.

It's Thursday, March 4. Here's what you should know this afternoon:
- The Red Sox are stealing home. Baseball will soon return to Fenway — and that means the mass vaccination site is finding a new location in Boston.
- The push to help people get vaccinated is getting some local help from Somerville.
- The Boston boyhood home of Malcolm X is getting some historic recognition.
Scroll down for those and other stories Patch has been covering in Massachusetts today.
Wednesday’s Top Story
Peanuts and beer and will soon replace the coronavirus vaccine at Fenway Park.
Find out what's happening in Across Massachusettsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Gov. Charlie Baker announced Thursday the mass vaccination site will be on the move as baseball season ramps up. The vaccination site is heading to the Hynes Convention Center, which will begin administering shots March 18. Fenway will continue its vaccination efforts until March 27, four days before Opening Day.
Those who are scheduled to receive their second vaccination after March 27 will have their appointment transferred to Hynes, which will eventually administer 5,000 shots per day, according to Baker.
Find out what's happening in Across Massachusettsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
More than 25,000 vaccinations have been administered at Fenway. That number is expected to be doubled before the move.
Patch wants to hear from you — We are joining in the remembrance of all the lives lost since the first coronavirus death in Massachusetts almost a year ago. If you've lost a loved one to COVID-19, Patch wants to hear their story, who they were and how they should be remembered. Email samantha.mercado@patch.com
Today's Other Top Stories
Sex abuse allegations investigated — An Essex County grand jury will look into allegations of sex abuse at Peabody Memorial High School beginning in 1999 and continuing after the victim graduated in 2003. The victim has sued the city of Peabody and the teachers involved in federal court. The former student, who is identified as John Doe in court documents, claims he was given drugs and alcohol and sexually abused by Lynette Occhipinti, a former educational assistant at the school, starting when he was a freshman at the school in 1999.
Scammers pay up — A Melrose couple will pay $145,000 for their part in a plot that scammed elderly residents for tech support they didn't need. In a settlement announced Thursday by Attorney General Maura Healey's office, Shalu and Vishal Chawla also agreed to never again run tech support companies. Shalu Chawla owned VTech Software Solution and Techmate, Inc. His wife assisted in both companies' affairs.
Cape Coast Guard comes through — A U.S. Coast Guard crew from Cape Cod helped rescue 31 Canadian fishermen from a vessel that caught fire and sank about 130 miles off the Nova Scotia coast. The 143-foot Atlantic Destiny caught fire Tuesday night and began taking on water in high winds and rough seas, Coast Guard officials said.
They Said It
"The process was complicated and stressful, and it led me to look into what it looked like in Massachusetts."
— Somerville resident Diana Rastegayeva, who is organizing volunteers to help eligible Massachusetts residents secure COVID-19 vaccine appointments.
By The Numbers
1874 — That's when Malcolm X's boyhood Boston home was originally built. The house where the civil rights leader grew up was just added to the National Register of Historic Places.
More stories
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