The Massachusetts Commission on Economy and Efficiency reflected the new concern with conservation.
Seelye was on the Massachusetts Commission on Taxation from 1874 to 1875.
The case led to a hearing before the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination and was ultimately settled.
She spoke to the meeting as the representative of the Massachusetts Commission.
In April 1909 she resigned from the Massachusetts Commission for the Blind.
In 1981, she became deputy director of the Massachusetts Commission of Retardation, working to remove the retarded from institutions.
In that same year, he became pathologist to the Massachusetts Commission on Mental Diseases.
Four years later, the Union initiated a successful lobbying campaign to create the Massachusetts Commission for the Blind.
Lewis had second career as a housing investigator for the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination.
He was a member of the Massachusetts Commission to Consolidate the Laws from 1917 to 1920.