No application for release on parole of a prisoner made by him or on his behalf shall be entertained by the parole board, but such a release of a prisoner by said board shall be solely on its own initiative. In every case where a prisoner is serving a sentence for a felony, except for those prisoners serving a sentence for any offense from the superior court for a term of one year or less or from the district court for a term of one year to a jail or house of correction, the parole board shall, within sixty days before such prisoner first becomes eligible for parole, grant such prisoner a hearing before the board and shall consider carefully and thoroughly the question whether a parole permit should be granted to such prisoner. Notwithstanding the previous sentence, the board may postpone a hearing until 30 days before a prisoner first becomes eligible for parole, if the interests of justice so require and upon publishing written findings of the necessity for such postponement. Prisoners entitled to such a hearing shall, so far as reasonably practicable, be granted a hearing in the order in which they respectively become eligible for parole. At least ninety days prior to the time a prisoner serving sentence for a felony first becomes eligible for parole, the commissioner shall submit to the parole board or to an officer designated by it, all information with regard to such prisoner not already so submitted. Such information shall include, in addition to any other pertinent information:
For those prisoners serving a sentence in a jail or house of correction, and for those prisoners serving a Massachusetts sentence in a correctional institution of another state, hearings shall be granted in accordance with section one hundred and thirty-four.
Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 127, § 136