By Bruce Mohl
The reader comments at the end of online newspaper stories are apparently becoming a battle ground in the fight over a proposed high-rise tower along the Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway.
Tom Palmer, a former Boston Globe development reporter who now does public affairs consulting for Harbor Towers residents opposed to the skyscraper, sent an email to his clients Saturday in which he praised the city for blocking the building with new height restrictions along the Greenway but bemoaned his former employer’s coverage of the issue.
Palmer said he learned the Globe’s Casey Ross was preparing another piece on Don Chiofaro, who wants to build two buildings of more than 500 feet on the site of the Harbor Garage. Palmer said he and fellow consultant Yanni Tsipis spent a lot of time telling Ross how the “unending focus on Don” is misguided. “But the Globe does what the Globe does, and so we at least got a promise from him not to do (another) puff piece, but to also tell something of the negative side of Don, of which there is much,” he wrote.
The Globe’s Chiofaro story hasn’t appeared yet, but Palmer is marshalling his troops for a counteroffensive. He told his clients that once the story appears they should attach comments to it critical of Chiofaro and his push for the tall buildings. He noted that online comments, which he described as “an important and even necessary way to influence opinion,” can be posted anonymously and repeatedly.
“[Newspapers] don’t like it, and some of them are even considering getting rid of the ‘comment’ feature because it clearly weakens their power,” Palmer wrote. “But for now we may comment and comment and comment – just as Don’s supporters do.”
Palmer, whose clients reside in two towers that wouldn’t get built today under the Boston Redevelopment Authority’s new 200-foot height limit, ended his email with a flourish.
Meet the Author

Editor, CommonWealth
About Bruce Mohl
Bruce Mohl is the editor of CommonWealth magazine. Bruce came to CommonWealth from the Boston Globe, where he spent nearly 30 years in a wide variety of positions covering business and politics. He covered the Massachusetts State House and served as the Globe’s State House bureau chief in the late 1980s. He also reported for the Globe’s Spotlight Team, winning a Loeb award in 1992 for coverage of conflicts of interest in the state’s pension system. He served as the Globe’s political editor in 1994 and went on to cover consumer issues for the newspaper. At CommonWealth, Bruce helped launch the magazine’s website and has written about a wide range of issues with a special focus on politics, tax policy, energy, and gambling. Bruce is a graduate of Ohio Wesleyan University and the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University. He lives in Dorchester.
About Bruce Mohl
Bruce Mohl is the editor of CommonWealth magazine. Bruce came to CommonWealth from the Boston Globe, where he spent nearly 30 years in a wide variety of positions covering business and politics. He covered the Massachusetts State House and served as the Globe’s State House bureau chief in the late 1980s. He also reported for the Globe’s Spotlight Team, winning a Loeb award in 1992 for coverage of conflicts of interest in the state’s pension system. He served as the Globe’s political editor in 1994 and went on to cover consumer issues for the newspaper. At CommonWealth, Bruce helped launch the magazine’s website and has written about a wide range of issues with a special focus on politics, tax policy, energy, and gambling. Bruce is a graduate of Ohio Wesleyan University and the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University. He lives in Dorchester.
“The city needs support on this issue and it has done the right thing in this study for us, the neighborhood, and the rest of Boston,” he wrote. “In addition to the public support letters we will be asking for you to send to the BRA in the coming months about the Greenway Study, these issues more and more get fought out in the ‘court of public opinion’ in the comments sections at the end of Globe and Herald stories. Let’s be heard!”
Read the full email.
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