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马萨诸塞州参议院通过了投票法案,该法案旨在维持马萨诸塞州在 COVID 大流行之外的邮寄投票

Bill sponsors say public restrooms need to be changed

State House News Service - September 9, 2025

Citing shifting gender and family dynamics, Rausch argued that diaper stations are needed beyond women’s restrooms. “Current practice is forcing parents and caretakers who don’t use the women’s restroom to change their baby’s diapers on a floor, sometimes in the dirty men’s bathroom on the floor, or wait to change a soiled diaper.”

Why Mass. still trails the nation in press protections

Boston Globe Opinion - August 26, 2025

“We in Massachusetts have shown a number of times that we can do at the state level what the federal government has failed to do,” Rausch said. “And we should do it in regards to freedom of the press.”

From her mouth to legislative leaders’ ears.

In face of extreme weather, Healey proposes ‘biggest ever’ investment in climate readiness for Mass.

Boston Globe - July 16, 2025

The overwhelming reception for the bill was positive, said Senator Rebecca Rausch of Needham, the committee’s co-chair. “The base has a lot of really strong pieces in it,” she said. “I’m looking forward to digging in further and to building upon it."

The Plastic Pandemic

Edible Boston - June 3, 2025

While working on this bill, Rausch and her colleagues collected the plastic trash that accumulated in their office, demonstrating the mountains of waste generated on a daily basis. There was so much plastic, when her children came into the State House during a day off from school, they “built a kindergarten-sized human completely out of plastic trash,” she recalls. “We called him Plastic Pete.” Rausch brought Plastic Pete out to the floor of the Senate and to a press conference in advance of a debate on the bill, as a “warning” to her fellow policymakers about its necessity. “I think people don’t want to become Plastic Pete,” Rausch says.

Here’s What Needham Looks to Get From the FY26 Budget

Needham Local - July 3, 2025

“Budget week is always a really intense, but also fun time in the Senate because we’re all together, and we’re all striving to achieve a common goal," said Rausch. She condemned the Trump administration’s “big beautiful bill,” which she has dubbed the “barftastic blunder bill,” and described as “a horrible stain on the history of this country."

Farewells aplenty as Fitzpatrick era nears its end

Needham Observer - June 25, 2025

State Sen. Becca Rausch said, “When Kate is involved, I never worry because it’s always done right. Every single time. We will miss your caring heart, your sense of humor, and your unwavering commitment to excellence.”

Thank You From The Medfield Kingsbury Pond Grist Mill Committee

Medfield Patch - June 22, 2025

“We are incredibly grateful to Congressman Auchincloss, Senator Rausch, and all those who have helped preserve this cornerstone of Medfield’s heritage,” said Dick Judge, chair of the Kingsbury Pond Grist Mill Committee. “Preserving the mill has been a true community effort over many, many years.”

Worries fuel push to elevate water woes on policy agenda

State House News Service - June 4, 2025

“I’ll be very frank, right, having done this role and for a number of years now … nobody ever wants to pay more taxes. So where would we get $3 billion for this?” Rausch asked.

‘Saturday changed everything.’ Mass. lawmakers weigh what personal info should be public after Minnesota shootings.

Boston Globe - June 18, 2025

State Senator Rebecca Rausch, a Needham Democrat, filed an amendment to a Senate spending bill that would scrub candidates’ street addresses from ballots amid other sweeping changes, including barring the state from making public a range of personal information, including the marital records, property tax records, and cell phone numbers for elected officials, their immediate family members, judges, and others.

‘It’s getting hotter’: Bill aims to implement strategies to protect outdoor workers in high temps

Boston 25 - June 18, 2025

The bill calls for the Department of Labor to adopt strategies that can prevent heat exhaustion or heat-related injuries for workers who are outdoors, most of which Sen. Rebecca Rausch says could be overlooked. “It’s getting hotter and it’s getting more dangerous for outdoor workers, and we don’t have any at the moment state or federal OSHA standards for protecting our outdoor workers from heat illness,” said Sen. Rausch.

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