-
ok
-
Is it an emergency situation
that you would need
-
an oncall animal control officer
to go there?
-
Do you by any chance know if your parents
were married at the time of your birth?
-
She wants to speak about food tax.
-
Is the control box or open or missing?
-
So we just got a call from Boston Fire reporting a one alarm fire at 33
-
Browning Ave. in Dorchester,
-
and there’s no displacements
at this time.
-
Just wait one moment while I do
some research for you.
-
I’m going to open up a case for
the Parks Department. They deal with trees.
-
I got a call from Boston Police. The intersection of the VFW Parkway and LaGrange Street in West Roxbury.
-
The traffic signal is out.
I just want to confirm that you had it.
-
I have a constituent that’s asking about
road maintenance. Is it OK if I put him through?
-
Is it a stray dog?
-
She said she couldn’t see a visible cause.
Like there was no down wires or anything.
-
But the whole block appears to be out.
-
Is it blocking both the roadway
and the sidewalk?
-
Constituent’s saying her landlord turned off
her electricity to her apartment.
-
She said that she’s going back and forth
with him. They’re in court
-
with something and she thinks
she turned it off on him.
-
I had a meeting with some community activists.
-
One of the biggest pushbacks I got was
-
not on the police.
It’s after the police do their thing,
-
after an incident happens,
what’s the follow up on trauma?
-
We have the counselors obviously
and police have their counselors too I explained
-
in the police walks, works with the family
through I think the burial.
-
And then what happens after that.
-
And what happens to the greater community.
Like what happens to the group of friends and...
-
And I know we’re taking, I’m taking criticism
for Carlos Henriquez.
-
Part of the role for Carlos Henriquez was going to be
-
to coordinate services to make sure
that there’s follow up. So, for example...
-
Kind of like Operation and Support.
-
When there’s something going on in the community,
whether it’s a development or street cleaning,
-
or whatever, Jerome’s shop O&S goes in and does their thing
-
and they’re working with Planning and Development
and they’re working with the Housing.
-
With all the different departments
and they’re kind of the constant in the neighborhood.
-
And I thought
- and it hasn’t fully vetted yet - but
-
I thought of doing something like that
around the streets.
-
When the police, when your work
is done, what happens then?
-
And we’re not going in and and we have
public safety doing their thing for a while
-
working to keep areas calm and combat violence
and the street workers are out there doing their thing.
-
But there’s not coordination necessarily
of services.
-
So when a person gets killed and there’s a lot
of indirect concern and, wreckage of that,
-
we don’t have a coordinated effort per se
to coordinate that.
-
I thought of Carlos’s work in returning citizens
and working different areas
-
could slowly build up capacity
and bring on individuals, like O&S,
-
that will be actually
the intake coordinators in the community
-
and work with everyone
that needs to work with.
-
Because I think what happens now is
when we have, like we did few months ago
-
we had 8 people killed in 10 days,
-
everyone’s looking for a blame.
-
Police get blamed because the violence is up.
Street workers get blamed because they’re not there.
-
Trauma councilors get blamed
because they’re not there.
-
City gets blamed because it’s happened
in the city. Everyone’s blaming.
-
Our thing is: can we coordinate services
so there’s a better coordination of services
-
to follow these families through
-
and maybe get into a family
and see that: Wow,
-
there’s really some difficult situations here and can we help them
-
individually to connect them
to services as things move on.
-
That’s the intention behind Carlos’s role.
-
And that’s... whether it's Carlos,
whoever it is...
-
He was the person that I thought of
because he understands the streets
-
and he understands the community,
and he’s done the work
-
both as prior to being elected
and after elected.
-
He’s done a lot of difference at work,
-
that’s kind of why I think the missing link here.
-
I think we have a lot of great things going on,
-
the police department
does some great programing.
-
It does some great programming.
-
I think that there’s an opportunity now through,
not necessarily through Nora’s office,
-
but what Nora’s doing
and how do we tie it in?
-
Because you can’t do it, and Nora needs
to have a contact. "Who should I call?"
-
Instead of me calling Marty
-
and Will and Chris and Mark and
-
Danny and Conan and Jerome
and Laurie and me,
-
is there one person she can contact
that can actually help pull all this stuff together
-
and that will be a liaison
in the neighborhood.
-
- I like that.
- That’s what I’d look at.
-
That came out of a conversation with...
-
Danny put a meeting together and the room
was a very honest meeting.
-
It was a very honest... people in the community
were very... it wasn’t a bad meeting.
-
It was one of those direct meetings and people
didn’t understand all the work that we’re doing.
-
And I don’t think we do
-
a good enough job of telling that story,
what we actually do in the city
-
We also don’t do a good job
of tying it all in together.
-
That’s where I think
we want to go with that.
-
So, I’m just letting you know
that I’ve got a list of people.
-
So, you guys, if anyone wants to come in
you may just want to let me know so I can
-
give the Mayor the list of people
-
that need to see him before the weekend.
-
What is the budget? The budget is a set
of financial documents. It’s how we spend money,
-
how we raise money, how we decide
how to pay everyone’s salary.
-
But it’s also a statement of priorities.
-
It's one annual time a year that the city
can take a pause and take stock of what’s going on,
-
what are the decisions we’ve made,
the decisions we need to make,
-
how is the city changing
and how do we make investments to do that.
-
The budget refers to both the day to day
operational side of things,
-
so that’s everyone’s salaries, that’s what you pay
for utilities, that’s what you pay for heat.
-
It also means the capital plan
which is what we do for five years,
-
big projects, like roads and bridges
and schools and all the big stuff that you see.
-
Boston’s budget parameters.
By that we mean,
-
we can’t do everything that
everybody wants all at the same time.
-
The reason that is, is because we live in a really
-
kind of constrained fiscally
-
tight structure. What I mean by that is
we can’t run a deficit like the Federal government.
-
The State law requires us
to have a balanced budget every year
-
and we are capped in what we can raise
in our own revenues.
-
We’re capped
by our property tax at 2,5 %,
-
we also don’t have the ability
to say raise an income tax
-
like other cities across the country
or the State.
-
So we’re living within a pretty tight
fiscally constrained world.
-
Which means we have to make
strategic investments. We have to make priorities,
-
to make tradeoffs
²between what those things are.
-
The reason that that is a good thing
at the end of the day
-
is because when there is an economic
downturn like there was in 2010,
-
we do a lot better than the State, a lot better
than other cities and towns across the country.
-
A lot of other seasoned towns had massive layoffs
in 2010 when the economy tanked.
-
The State obviously
ran a billion dollar budget deficit.
-
This city, because of the way it’s run
-
and because of the way the history
of financial management has gone,
-
actually came out on the other side pretty unscathed.
-
And frankly we avoided a lot of the pitfalls and a lot of the
-
negative consequences that came
with the economic recession in 2010.
-
What do we have for revenue
at the end of the day?
-
We collect money in different buckets
as you can see here.
-
The FY19 budget is about 3.3 billion.
-
70 % of that comes from property taxes.
State aide makes up of about
-
13 % and then we have other revenue,
excises, local permits, all these other types of things
-
that are out there in the world.
-
Property tax is vital. Property tax is not only 2,5 %
we grow every year on our existing property,
-
but also what we call new growth which is the new buildings, new residential
-
all the new construction that comes
into the city every year,
-
which is a little bit harder to predict,
but at the end of the day
-
is a lot of what we build our bread and butter on.
That’s how we’ve been able to make
-
strategic investments over the last few years
and continue to kind of push the city forward.
-
State aid is on there at 13 %.
-
Ten years ago,
that used to be about 20 %.
-
And 20 years ago, it used to be 30 %.
-
So that means that the State
used to represent a much bigger
-
portion of our budget: that’s both a decrease
in what we call State aid at the end of the day,
-
and property taxes has been so strong in the last few years.
-
That actually helped increase
our reliance as well.
-
So overall we’re in a growing environment.
-
We grow about 4 or 5 % every year.
-
both from the property tax and other strategic revenue initiatives
-
that we push forward in the last year.
-
Moving onto how we spend
the $3.3 billion dollars.
-
It’s in basically 5 big buckets right now.
-
There’s obviously a lot of complexity
that goes into each of those.
-
The first one should be
familiar for everyone.
-
Education represents about 40 % of the budget.
That’s both BPS and Charter Schools.
-
Obviously both of those have been
increasing since the Mayor’s been in office.
-
$200 million more per year for public schools
as a part of the last budget
-
and our charter assessment is up
another $100 million dollars in that time.
-
So since the Mayor’s been in office,
-
education spending has increased by about
$300 million which is something to be proud of.
-
Public safety, that’s Police and Fire.
They make up about 20 % of the budget.
-
City departments. That’s things like streets,
Public Health, Parks and everyone in this room.
-
We make up the smallest portion of this budget,
but it’s an important part of it.
-
And it’s something that we tried to grow
a lot more, but there are a lot of demands
-
on many different parts of the City budget.
-
Fixed costs like pensions and debt service
-
and then finally Healthcare that support
all the other city departments
-
are basically how we spend the majority
of that 3.3 billion on the operating budget side.
-
The other big piece of the budget that we have
is the capital plan.
-
Right here is a map of what we have
from a top down view ofl the different types
-
of projects that we have out there.
-
It’s a 2.4 billion dollar plan over 5 years
to invest in roads and bridges
-
and schools and libraries
and all the great things that you have.
-
A lot of folks, especially in the rating agency world
-
and people who buy our debt
want to see that we’re making
-
investments in places that we planned for.
-
That’s why the Mayor committed 10 %
of all new capital funding
-
towards climate resiliency.
We have the billion dollar Public School plan
-
and a whole host of other things
that we’re investing in. The annual capital plan
-
is over a 5 year period because
these projects are typically bigger in scope.
-
We borrow money for them and we pay for it
on the operating budget side for debt service.
-
So they’re companion piece
to the operating budget,
-
but something that goes
through the very similar process to
-
what we do on the operating side.
-
We have come to join Becka and Molly in marriage,
-
a wedding is a joyful celebration of the promises you make today.
-
Learning to love each other
and live together in harmony
-
is one of the greatest challenges
of a marriage.
-
But know that love, trust and loyalty
are the foundation of a happy enduring marriage.
-
Remember to listen, respect, encourage
and inspire one another.
-
Support each other dreams
as you build your lives together.
-
Comfort one another during times of struggle.
Laugh together during times of joy.
-
Now if you want to face each other
we’ll do vows.
-
I Becka.
-
Take thee Molly.
-
To be my wedded wife.
-
And I promise to be.
-
A loving and faithful wife.
-
Through joy and sorrow.
-
Sickness and health
-
To love and to cherish.
-
From this day forward.
-
Now do you Becka take thee Molly
here present to be your wife?
-
Excellent. All right Molly’s turn.
I, Molly.
-
Now, do you Molly take thee Becka
here present to be your wife?
-
Excellent. Now we’re going
to go on to the rings.
-
These rings are a symbol of eternity
and made by your friend.
-
The unbroken circle, it represents
the unbroken circle of love.
-
Today you’ve chosen to exchange rings
-
as a sign of your love for one another
and the seal of the promises you make today.
-
You’re going to repeat these vows after me
-
and then the last line
-
you’re going to put the ring on Molly’s finger when you say "with this ring".
-
This is my favorite part.
-
Just as this ring.
-
Encircles your finger.
-
So does my love.
-
Encircle your heart.
-
Now you can place it on her finger
and say/: "With this ring
-
I thee wed.
-
Molly’s turn. "Just as this ring.
-
Now, with this ring.
-
I thee wed.
-
Perfect.
-
In as much as Becka and Molly
have exchanged rings,
-
have consented to matrimony and vows,
-
by the authority vested in me
by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
-
I now pronounce you hus...
-
married.
-
Here we go. Stand together.
-
Smile.
-
Let me show you what we got.
-
I want to congratulate
-
Alex Cora and the Boston Red Sox
-
and the entire organization for an incredible run.
119 wins from start to finish
-
I didn’t realize until last night that they had won the Spring Training Leagues
-
and the regular leagues and then obviously
the World Series last night,
-
it’s exciting here in the City of Boston.
-
I want to congratulate Red Sox Nation
for our 9th World Championship in Boston.
-
This is an all-time great team that we had.
I think a lot of people enjoyed watching this team.
-
Everybody contributed.
-
I was talking to people
on the way to work this morning
-
and thinking about everybody in this whole team.
Everyone had a special play in this World Series.
-
Congratulations to the entire team
for your resilience
-
and your positivity, and the way you carried
yourself on the field and off the field.
-
And even last night
during the interview session.
-
Thank you to all the players
for the great work they did.
-
These players are role models
and we want to celebrate them in Boston style.
-
A championship duck boat parade will take place on Wednesday,
-
starting at 11:00 on Boylston Street
by Fenway Park.
-
We hope to see a big crowd out there,
-
but we do have a few messages out there.
-
Do not try to drive to the parade.
Take public transportation.
-
They’ll be traffic and parking restrictions
surrounding the route.
-
We’re working on a web page.
-
It will be up in a little bit.
It will be Boston.gov/Redsoxparade.
-
As far as safety goes,
be respectful of the City.
-
Be respectful of the property, of the people,
of the businesses, be respectful
-
of the Red Sox. We are a City of champions
so let’s celebrate like champions.
-
I’m going to turn the microphone over
to Commissioner Gross.
-
And then we’re going to turn it over
to Chief Green
-
and then I’ll open it up for questions
that people might have.
-
Thank you Your Honor.
-
Good morning everyone.
-
Well, I'll say congratulations
not only to the Red Sox,
-
but the City of Boston.
We would ask everyone to act
-
responsibly
and be respectful
-
of the other revelers in the parade.
-
Also we will have full coverage
in our neighborhoods.
-
But for those attending the parade,
no public drinking.
-
Alcohol will not be tolerated.
-
And you should know this. This should be
common sense, but no weapons at all either.
-
So we fully expect
-
to have a great parade.
It’s time to celebrate.
-
Well now I’ll turn it over to Chief Green.
-
Thank you Commissioner.
-
You know this doesn’t get old. I think this is
my 11th Championship in the last 16 years?
-
It just doesn’t get old.
-
That being said, the transit police
are well experienced
-
and prepared for special events
such as Wednesday’s parade.
-
We encourage everyone
as the Mayor says, to
-
come in the City of Boston,
utilizing the MBTA transit system.
-
We will have increased coverage,
both uniformed and in plain clothes
-
throughout the system
to ensure a safe and travel by all.
-
We ask our riders
to be respectful to one another
-
and especially mindful of those with young children,
-
the elderly and people with disabilities
as you utilize the MBTA transit system.
-
And as the Commissioner stated, alcohol
-
consumption and or unruly behavior
will not be tolerated at all on the MBTA.
-
Currently we got updates from the brick.
-
There are no known credible threats to this event.
-
With that being said,
we also ask our riders to
-
please if you see something, say something.
-
Nothing’s too small.
We need you to be our extra eyes out there.
-
Contact us immediately and we will send
an officer out to investigate.
-
With your help
-
we can have a safe
and enjoyable celebration.
-
So, the goal of the taskforce
is really to focus
-
on eviction prevention.
-
We would like to meet 4 times.
This is the second meeting.
-
And ultimately to put together a list of
-
recommendations for public comment
by Spring of 2019.
-
And then to present those recommendations
to the Mayor
-
and to the City Council.
-
With some sort of legislation
to come out of it.
-
What’s the total amount for the awards, roughly?
-
2.5 million dollars.
So put two and a half million dollars out
-
for tenancy stability and eviction prevention,
it’s a sizable commitment.
-
Our office has also been working
in conjunction
-
with the Neighborhood Housing Department
here in DND.
-
And to put together an eviction prevention
policy that is required for all landlords,
-
or all property
-
prospectors who are looking to purchase
property or bid on property here in Boston.
-
That policy was implemented
and it went out in the Request for proposals for
-
September of this year.
-
The proposals that we’ve received
are now under review
-
and we’ll try to figure out exactly
-
how effective that was
during the first implementation of it.
-
The same policy was out
under our Dudley Square RFP,
-
and that I believe is wrapping up today.
-
Those proposals, the Dudley proposals
are due today.
-
Which is very exciting
and like Dominique said,
-
there was a very clear requirement
that anyone submitting for land,
-
submitting proposals
for the four sites in Dudley,
-
had to provide a proposal
on how they were going to...
-
how their development was going to
not contribute to displacement
-
and including, if they were going to develop
housing, an eviction prevention plan.
-
So it was very, very, specific language
-
and before you leave,
I’ll make sure you have a copy.
-
The Neighbourghood Housing proposals:
if you want money from us,
-
you’re going to tell us how you’re going...
what’s your eviction prevention plan,
-
and Dominique’s shop is reviewing them
right now with NHD.
-
And if they’re not adequate
-
we’re going to have to make it a deficiency
if we really love the proposal,
-
or not fund the proposal altogether.
-
Really asking new developers
of new developments
-
to tell us how they’re really going
to reduce evictions.
-
We cannot just scratch things
on the surface
-
because they usually come back
a few years later, stronger, deeper, uglier.
-
In the meantime
those folks who are facing eviction,
-
they keep facing eviction all of their lives.
I know someone
-
from the age of 12, she faced eviction.
-
And now she’s 39 and
she’s facing eviction again. So it’s a cycle.
-
If we really want to fix it
we should think about
-
community land trust also,
have a site for it.
-
What we need is more, in my opinion,
we need more housing.
-
More and more housing.
You can’t have enough.
-
And everything you do short of that
-
and that’s just one way of thinking about it,
but everything you do short of that,
-
is gap filling kind of thing.
-
Not that it’s not necessary,
but I guess what I’m wondering
-
based on what I’ve heard so far is,
it sounds like we’re...
-
It’s so easy to move broader than simply
what are we doing about evictions.
-
I’m asking the question: are we focused
on the eviction question or are we
-
morphing into, or is it part of the mandate here?
-
How are we going to fix the big problem?
-
Until we have enough
of affordable housing for everyone,
-
we need the office of housing stability
and to work on evictions
-
because not everybody’s safe.
-
But we do have a housing plan.
It’s pretty robust in the City,
-
I can share it with you about increasing housing
overall. Increasing affordable housing,
-
preservation, getting people to buy homes.
-
So, we’ve done a lot of work
on more of the systemic issues.
-
But we still get 100 calls a week
from people that are
-
in market rate housing
that are getting their rents increased.
-
Or, are in subsidized housing,
-
but have fallen behind in their rents,
et cetera.
-
There’s a special sort of work
that we’re all doing that is not
-
fixing our larger housing issues.
Does that make some sense?
-
Say there’s 30,000 notices to quit
served in Boston every year.
-
It’s what we are estimating.
-
I think the challenge
with early intervention
-
is that it’s super valuable, super necessary,
probably more effective and opens up
-
the target population that you could serve
to be large enough
-
that it’s impossible to even conceive
of how to serve them.
-
1,100 households
who were in subsidized housing
-
actually went to court,
somehow didn’t get raft,
-
didn’t get anything else,
did get evicted. In a year.
-
The thing that we also know is that
subsidized household who were evicted
-
are not eligible for Emergency Assistance.
-
Which to me just makes them
the red alarm population.
-
And so to some extent there is a benefit to...
-
I think that there is a benefit
to focusing on that population
-
above all else if only for that reason.
-
If you get evicted from subsidized housing,
-
or you have a housing voucher
and you get evicted,
-
you can’t access family shelter at the State.
You have no safeguard.
-
You make the lowest income
-
and you’ve been evicted probably
for rent arrearage, small amounts.
-
And you have absolutely nowhere to go
because you can’t access the shelter system.
-
For three years.
-
What could we do to intervene sooner?
-
And what I thought was...
-
I guess it’s reinventing the wheel,
except we haven’t invented it yet.
-
I think we do a particularly bad job
of informing and persuading.
-
Maybe the small landlords in particular
are informed that there are resources,
-
but persuading them to actually use them?
-
The small landlord groups seem to feel
like they’re battled
-
and they approach everything
from that point of view.
-
And it’s just economics.
-
It would make so much more sense
to be able to say,
-
We’re not going to hit you over the head.
You don’t have to do this.
-
But if you know somebody’s chronically late,
or somebody’s not budgeting,
-
or somebody is falling behind,
catching up every 4 to 6 months,
-
clearly that’s not a good business model.
-
Bring them to us, we’ll help them budget.
You bring them to us early.
-
We’ll do this
and it’s so much more cost efficient.
-
But we don’t do anything.
-
Because I was talking to the Citylife Group,
I said,
-
could Citylife see its way to holding itself
out to that. I’m not sure because...
-
But somebody should be able to say,
-
on a more intimate basis than simply
"we’ve got a website":
-
Here’s what we can use.
-
Here’s how to do it and I think
that’s the only way you’re going to get to them.
-
If we're really concerned about
what we’re doing,
-
we need to also think about
community land trust.
-
For those folks who really can’t do anything,
they could go there and it will be a safe zone.
-
And it could go from generation to generation.
Why can’t we do that? Other places have done it.
-
That’s good.
-
Everybody gets the first round.
But you can only get one.
-
What do you want? You want pie now?
-
Apple, cherry...
What kind do you want, sir?
-
Not right now. You have to come back
the second time. Let everybody go through.
-
Let some more people get to have some.
That’s all I got. Thank you.
-
M'am, no problem.
-
I don’t mean for nobody to get mad
but I gotta get enough for everybody.
-
Please don’t take the ice.
No, go on with that, go.
-
If you take it, the rest won’t be cold.
-
Any questions?
-
I’m a victim of PC scam.
-
I thought it was Microsoft and it wasn’t,
-
it turned out to be some scammers.
-
I actually gave them my name,
my card. I need help.
-
Don’t give any information out
over the phone.
-
If somebody says it’s your doctor:
"send me a letter".
-
If somebody says, you’re going to shut
your cable off tomorrow: send me a letter.
-
Don’t give them your email.
Tell them to send you a letter.
-
Serve it. If they say you owe money,
send a constable.
-
"Send somebody down, petition me".
Don’t even bother.
-
You’re going to get letters in your house.
If you own your home.
-
My mother gets them. Because I go to her house
and do her bills and I get the mail
-
There’s always: oh, you can earn
a lot of money on your home.
-
Or we can give you a mortgage
a low interest mortgage.
-
Just don’t believe any of this stuff.
-
Unless it comes from the City,
from the Counselor’s office or our office,
-
or something that your civic association
might have talked about.
-
Do not give anybody any information.
-
The Counsel was talking about scams.
Somebody might call and say to you:
-
we have your grandson.
-
We’re not going to give him back
until you give us money.
-
Your instant reaction is:
"Is it Billy or Bob?"
-
I got Billy.
-
That’s all they need
-
and they will frighten you into
you will think that they’re kidnapped.
-
There are literally people
that do this from other parts of the world.
-
They scam people and people
will give them money, they’ll run around,
-
get money and they’ll give it to somebody.
So do not, do not do that.
-
If Eversource calls you for a deal:
-
"Can I have your name and number?".
-
Call your City counselor, call the Mayor’s office
and say does Eversource have a deal?
-
Does Comcast have a deal? Does RNC Cable have a deal?
-
Does whatever it is, make sure you follow up.
-
I’m going to follow up with you.
Emily’s going to get your information.
-
And we’ll get on it today and we’ll find out,
we’ll contact the authorities.
-
We also have a couple police officers,
so if we need to take the next step we will.
-
From my area in Lower Mills,
-
those calls and those phone numbers
and those people knock on the door.
-
They come into the station.
-
And they report it to the police department
and they take it over to the detective department.
-
But the thing about it is
nothing never get back to me or anybody else.
-
What has taken place since we reported this?
-
And the calls and the number thing,
you could have them right there.
-
So how do we handle that to get some response
to what we’re trying to stop?
-
One thing I would suggest, maybe what we’ll do
is at one of the meetings coming up,
-
I’ll ask Nora Bastian to come in.
-
Nora is the new Superintendent.
-
Her role is community policing.
Her role is, under community policing,
-
to follow the Elderly Department.
As far as going out to districts.
-
So we’ll ask Nora to come to
your next meeting and she can explain
-
and come up with a process.
There might not have been a process.
-
My experience has been
that the information flows back and forth.
-
But we’re going to make sure
that it really does flow back and forth.
-
If you make a complaint at a civic association,
you should get a call back
-
because it's reporting it into a black hole,
if you’re not getting information back.
-
And then you can share the information
with other people.
-
We’ll have Nora come to the next meeting.
-
If you live in a BHA Housing Development
and you’re not getting a response,
-
my advice are two things.
-
Number one is call your complaint into 311.
Because 311 is the City hotline.
-
And it’s a public information
and it’s in my office.
-
I see it up on the wall.
-
I will follow up
and say what’s going on with that?
-
Number two, reach out
to the Elderly Commission.
-
There’s been times where I’ve gone
to different events.
-
Some of you have grabbed me
about situations
-
that might not be related
to the Elderly Commission,
-
but the advocacy there, they will call over.
And when they call over, I’m calling over.
-
It’s important to you to use those different steps.
If you’re not getting somewhere,
-
and you live somewhere, you call 311 and make a public,
-
and when they ask you why’d you do that?
The man told me to.
-
And if you see me in the street grab me
and tell me what the problem is.
-
Because I guarantee you by the time
I get in the car and to the next stop after this,
-
somebody at the BHA
will be talking to me. All right?
-
Questions over here
then I’ll come back this way.
-
Now I had medicine that I actually need
-
and they want me to pay
-
a co-pay of 65 dollars that I can’t afford.
-
And I need that medicine
and I don’t know what to do about it.
-
We have to really think about here,
-
in Massachusetts, at the Legislative level
and in Congress at the congressional level
-
to do something about
pharmaceutical costs.
-
They’re out of control.
-
My father passed away in 2008,
but before he passed away...
-
and I didn’t know
what a "donut hole" was until then.
-
He was on a pill, once a day for prostate.
-
It was $500 a month, the prescription.
-
So for the first five months of the year,
-
it was covered a 100 %
by his health insurance.
-
The next $2500 dollars as you know,
the Donut Hole,
-
the next 5 months was out of pocket.
-
And then the last 2 months of the year
were covered by insurance again.
-
What Obamacare did, what the Affordable
Care Act did was close the Donut hole.
-
And that Donut hole now is there,
but what they’ve done is...
-
I don’t know what the right answer is,
but they’ve done something with prescriptions
-
that you end up paying more out of pocket.
-
I haven’t seen it in any of my prescriptions,
but it happens to seniors all the time.
-
So we do have to think about legislatively
how do we file something
-
that closes that gap for you.
Because many of you,
-
all of us, as you get older you take
prescriptions for high blood pressure,
-
for cholesterol, whatever it is you have.
-
It’s important that we understand
there’s more health risk as you get older.
-
Because the body breaks down a little bit.
-
There’s more chance that you’re going
to be on a prescription as you get older.
-
And we need to make sure that that’s covered.
-
The answer is we have to look legislatively
fixing that.
-
One of the reasons why
we have the Elderly Commission
-
is to advocate on your behalf.
The people that work for the City work for you.
-
They’re there to service you. So take advantage
-
of that opportunity.
-
Take advantage of that office. Ask questions.
They’ll get the answers.
-
And if we got to a point where,
what I’d like to do,
-
I’ll have to double the size of the Elderly Commission
because the amount of calls they get.
-
Believe it or not, we don’t get
that many calls. We get a lot of calls,
-
but not as many as there are people
in Boston that are over 60 years old.
-
We need a bigger budget.
-
We’ll get the budget there,
but we need you to use the office
-
because I’d rather you talk to
one of the specialists we have
-
and get a benefit
than be taken advantage of.
-
That’s why they’re there. They’re there for you.
They work for you.
-
Our primary purpose is to help people
-
with the situations you might have.
So, please, call them.
-
As usual, it was busy night
last night on Halloween
-
and just be aware of any kind of violence
that might extend from it.
-
Townsend and Warren: there was a firearm
recovered at 7 p.m. with an arrest.
-
There was a person shot and stabbed
at 137 Center Street.
-
There was a large party,
a couple hundred people.
-
Full notes on the person shot,
but they’re probably going to survive.
-
The gang unit then had a car chase through H block
of Bailey Associates, so be aware of that.
-
And around 3 a.m. this morning,
-
the K-car got a firearm arrest
in Upham’s Corner.
-
And that was,
-
I don’t know if it’s related, but there was a violent assault up there.
-
That was the reason why people were up there and led to a firearm arrest.
-
Any issues?
-
Concerns? Check your assignments.
-
Let’s have a good day. Fall out.
-
I had a chance,
-
over the last 5 years to get to know
almost every single person in this room.
-
And what’s amazing is that we have
developers in this room
-
and housing developers in this room,
that believe in resiliency.
-
And that are here month after month
after month after month,
-
after meeting after meeting
I should say.
-
We have developers developing buildings
in town? that believe in resiliency.
-
We have folks that work in the area of
whatever it is and you come back here.
-
We have Universities. We have Universities.
-
Boston University is one of our great partners,
and we have construction companies.
-
And to me it’s special.
This room’s a special room
-
in the sense of the commitment
by the people in this room.
-
Since I’ve been Mayor, a lot of natural disasters
have happened in different cities across America.
-
Houston kind of...
-
hit me a little different.
-
I was talking to Mayor Turner
as it was going on and...
-
when he was talking about his City,
he was a brand new Mayor,
-
literally brand new Mayor in his first term.
-
The people of Boston wanted to send things out to Houston,
-
we were going to send one tractor trailer down,
we ended up sending 18 tractor trailers of stuff down.
-
And I thought to myself:
what if that was Boston?
-
And it wasn’t the giving to Houston
that struck me,
-
it was the need in Houston
that struck me.
-
It was the 18 trucks going down there
and that wasn’t enough.
-
When you think about 18 tractor trailers
from Boston and other places around the country,
-
that wasn’t enough and I thought to myself:
-
where are we in our city? Where are we in the City?
Not in the Green Ribbon Commission,
-
not on the global plans, not working
with the State. Where are we in the City?
-
So we have, I don’t have it here
with us today...
-
We have a plan that literally protects
-
the harbor, protects the shoreline,
creates 47 miles of shoreline.
-
We talk a lot about bringing people
back to the water.
-
This plan brings people back to the water.
-
This plan allows people access to the water where we
have 67 acres of new open space on Boston Harbor.
-
It creates 122 acres of
revitalized open space in the waterfront.
-
It’s about protections and connections.
-
So when people like you in this room
look at what’s happening,
-
you know that we’re protecting
-
what we have to protect in our neighborhoods.
-
We’re protecting Charlestown and East Boston
and South Boston.
-
We’re protecting downtown, North End,
the Dorchester coastline.
-
We’re protecting Roxbury.
-
We’re protecting the South End. We’re protecting
all of those different neighborhoods in our city
-
that it’s important for us to do.
-
What we’re doing here is
I think important for the future.
-
I think it’s time for us to take this conversation
beyond our walls.
-
I think it’s time to take this conversation
to the editorial boards.
-
And let them understand fully
what’s happening here.
-
Because the first editorial that came out...
-
in all due respect, a nice editorial, but it was:
how to pay for it? Who’s going to pay for it?
-
The question’s not Who’s going to pay for it?
How’s this going to happen?
-
It’s not about who’s going to pay for it.
It needs to happen.
-
The editorial needs to say, and the press needs
to start and other people need to start saying:
-
'This has to happen'. It’s not about the costs.
-
It’s not about whose going put up
he biggest chunk of money,
-
its how do we get everyone together
to put this plan together?
-
The Green Ribbon Commission
is vital in this work.
-
As we continue to move forward
in this work,
-
we need to help convey the urgency
and bring diverse partners into our strategy.
-
We need to talk to all of our schools,
not some of our schools.
-
We need to talk to all of our museums,
not some of our museums.
-
We need to make sure all of our hospitals understand
the importance of this, not some of the hospitals.
-
And more importantly we need to make
business people know that this is really
-
important for them as well.
It’s important for us,
-
for the health and safety of our residents
are at stake.
-
Making sure that Houston,
-
Puerto Rico, Florida, New Orleans,
-
Louisiana, Florida again,.
-
New York, all of those different cities
and areas had a storm.
-
If you talk to Mitch Landrieu the former Mayor of New Orleans
who wasn’t the mayor when Katrina happened,
-
he said if they addressed this
20 years earlier
-
the outcome might have been different.
It still would have been bad
-
because Katrina was a bad storm,
but it would have been not as detrimental.
-
We have to think about that now and think about,
how do we prevent that from happening?
-
We need to work with other leaders, with other
elected officials. We need to let the legislature
-
know and the city council know
the importance
-
of focusing on the work
that we’re doing here today.
-
We know that mitigation is resilience.
-
It’s about the impacts here in Boston and it’s about
the example we set for the nation and the world,
-
By showing that it can be done
we can improve public health, create jobs
-
and also help people in our neighborhoods.
-
We can also show the way
-
and help rally the global community
to do their part.
-
I know that what we wanted to do here
is be a leader in the country
-
and a leader in the world here in Boston
as far as resiliency.
-
And now that we have the plan it’s about,
what’s the next steps
-
and what’s the actions? We know
we don’t have a national government, at least
-
a leader down in Washington, a president that
does understand the importance of resiliency.
-
We know that we don’t have the commitments
right now in the EPA down in Washington
-
that understands the importance of resiliency
and what we’re doing here.
-
Even if we had the greatest champion in Washington,
it’s still incumbent upon cities and towns
-
across America to carry out the plan.
-
I do think it’s important first
that we start
-
to take this conversation outside this room
and have real conversations.
-
I would suggest that we go
-
to editorial boards of the news outlets.
-
I would suggest that we start talking
to more business leaders.
-
I would suggest that we start thinking
about how do we amp up this plan
-
so it’s not just the people on the inside crowd,
-
whether it’s the Chamber of Commerce or here at the Commission.
-
We need to take this conversation beyond this.
-
So what are we here for today?
-
- Fire blocking.
- OK, so the rough inspection?
-
When are you guys looking to insulate?
-
Insulate next week.
-
Next week you have on schedule.
-
On schedule for Monday.
-
So you’re thinking Monday.
-
Monday, Tuesday. He said two, two and a half days
he’d have it all wiped out.
-
- What are you doing, spray foam?
- Spray foam, closed cell.
-
Closed cell on the exterior.
-
So you’re thinking that if all goes well today,
you have them scheduled for Monday.
-
For Monday. I spoke with him earlier, he said two,
two and a half days to wrap it all.
-
He’ll send two crews.
-
I’m going to be off on Thursday.
-
If we could get you may be, well provided
he sends two crews Monday.
-
All right. So then you’ll just email me.
-
And let me know how that goes.
-
And if Wednesday comes around and I have time
I’ll squeeze you in to keep it going.
-
So all the fire blocking’s done.
All the penetration.
-
- Fire caulking.
- Use the caulk and the 3M caulking?
-
- No foam, right?
- No foam.
-
Now what do we do down the basement is
extended living spaces as a part of this unit?
-
Extended living space for the first floor
master suite, master bath, master shower --
-
- And this is fully sprinkled, right?
- Fully sprinkled.
-
This was new underground plumbing.
-
We had our plumbing inspection yesterday,
so we can close out.
-
So he got a look at it?
-
This is a master bedroom.
-
Master bedroom, master closet,
master bath, laundry.
-
- Extended from that unit up above.
- Correct.
-
And then you have this door here
for your egress?
-
What are we going to do with this here?
How are you going...
-
It’s going to be a drain here
with a wet bell on the bottom.
-
And it’s going to be two steps up.
-
We’re going to get all that stuff
and some flagstones or something.
-
Are you going to patio this?
-
All the way out to the back.
-
Fire caulking is done. All the penetrations.
-
And then this is all getting closed cell.
-
And then as I said they’ll be
all batts in between.
-
Where’s your sprinkler head down here?
-
One there, there’s one over here.
This is to go outside underneath the deck.
-
So that’s going to go out.
-
There’s one on each floor.
-
- Exterior, right?
- Exterior.
-
Low temperature.
-
What are you doing for railings here?
-
The railings are all on the second floor.
-
- Iron?
- It’s iron railings, the wire.
-
That’s not a bad view.
Are these going to be sold or rentals?
-
These are condos.
-
So you’re going to put them
on the market when you’re done.
-
- No roof deck?
- There is a roof deck.
-
- How’s the access?
- There’s going to be a spiral.
-
That’s on the plans?
-
Then this is all being spray foamed, right?
-
This is what you’re using, right?
-
Let’s get on the second floor.
-
And then with this over here Brendan,
you’re going to box this all out.
-
So you’re going to come off,
box out that sprinkler, right.
-
It will all be boxed in.
-
And then you have all your heads here.
And then that.
-
You’re going to need
some ledger lock on that right?
-
It’s not a bad view
until that building gets built.
-
Have you seen any plans for that one yet?
-
It’ll probably go up just as high.
-
Take a picture of this, Brendan.
Someone’s going to throw this out.
-
Take a picture
and make a copy for the record.
-
Hold onto that.
-
So you’re all set Brendan. Give me a shout
early next week. It’s a short week.
-
If 16 year old
-
have services at Bridge, and they’re
connected to the services at Bridge,
-
if they’re no longer served by Bridge they don’t have
a relationship with Bridge anymore.
-
So it’s like how do we...
and I’m not sure how we do this.
-
This is why we need the RFP,
the definition is like
-
it has to be not connected to the services
that they’re getting.
-
Because once the services go away
the relationship goes away,
-
Which is what keeps young people in the cycle
because they don’t have long term relationships.
-
So the challenge
-
that the RFP’s addressing,
the first one is that unfortunately,
-
the scope of services for youth or young adults
experiencing homelessness is limited.
-
Not only in Boston,
but across the country.
-
And most services around people experiencing
homelessness are services for adults.
-
And so the adult shelter system,
-
unfortunately sometimes is the place where
-
18, 19, 20 year old find themselves
if they’re homeless on the street,
-
dealing with behavioral health challenges,
end up finding themselves in a shelter.
-
What we’re trying to do is to tell these shelters:
-
the services, the environment
and the culture are created for adults
-
who may experience chronic homelessness,
who are 40.
-
It's different for a 19 year old
-
who we know statistically - and I think this would be in the RFP -
-
is more likely to be LGBTQ,
more likely to be people of color,
-
experiencing other issues.
-
What we want to say is the challenge here
is that the gap of services
-
to meet the specific needs of youth and young adults
experiencing homelessness is great
-
and multiple parts.
Mayor Walsh’s plan is working on that.
-
However, in the meantime we know youth and young
adults already find themselves in the adult shelters.
-
We’re trying to say is that in an ideal world
we want youth and young adult shelters.
-
But in the meantime, the city’s plan is to not just wait until we have those shelters, or have those services.
-
We’re going to meet the needs
of youth and young adults today.
-
We want these shelters to do that.
-
That’s the challenge or the need
we’re trying to meet in that first one.
-
And to be fair we want the shelters
to think about how they’re doing this
-
in a way that what do they need to do
to do better? You know what I mean?
-
You know this better than I. Some types of shelters
will say, well we have a separate space.
-
Like upstairs in the corner these 10 beds
are meant for 18 to 24 year olds.
-
OK, I guess a separate space is important.
-
But when I have to get through all the chaos
of the shelter to get to the separate space,
-
I still have to go downstairs
to the kitchen to eat.
-
To go to the shared bathroom.
-
And at night there’s only one person upstairs,
or one staff person.
-
How are they thinking about the fact that youth
and young adults are vulnerable in these spaces?
-
So we want them to say we know it’s a gap.
-
We have to say this because we know our funders
don’t agree with us. It’s not a long term solution.
-
But that’s where they find themselves today
so we’re going to meet them where they’re at.
-
So this solution that you would envision...
-
We’re talking about physical space.
We’re talking about policies and practices.
-
We’re talking about competencies of staff.
-
We’re talking about
-
how we do outreach
and engagement and connection.
-
All the stuff we know about. How do you make
a space youth friendly? Same thing.
-
How do we think about all those things that we
already know? I think that’s how you would bucket it.
-
We’re talking about space,
about policies and practices.
-
They're concerned about
the onetime funding? I get it.
-
There’s a lot you can do with onetime funding
in all of those buckets.
-
That then they have to sustain post that.
-
So I think that’s what that is.
-
And would you like for me to stay
-
a little bit away from programing
because it’s not multiyear funding?
-
On the challenge that RFP’s trying to address
-
is that we know that young adults
experiencing homelessness lack
-
the social capital and the personal connections
with caring adults in their lives
-
to help them navigate
the challenges that exist.
-
So to help them access opportunity,
but avoid the challenges that are in front of them.
-
And that too many of the relationships
and this comes from youth and young adult voices,
-
too many of those relationships are relationships
based on the provision of service.
-
And what young people have told us through this process
is they need more permanent connections
-
that are not tied to a service,
not a case manager, not a clinician,
-
not a behavioral health specialist
at the community center, whatever,
-
but people who just care about me
and my wellbeing, separate from that.
-
Permanent connections,
-
the more relationships young adults have,
the more likely they are to be successful
-
and overcome these challenges.
And so that’s what we’re trying to address.
-
That youth and young adults need this
especially LGBTQ
-
and youth of color who are more likely
to experience homelessness.
-
Program folks, five dollars here.
-
Get a program for the World Series champions,
folks. Five dollars here.
-
Program folks. Get a program for the World Series
champions folks. Five dollars here.
-
Comes with your free bumper sticker.
Best team ever.
-
Red Sox parade folks,
-
get a program, 5 dollars
for the World Series champions.
-
119 wins, 108 during the regular season, 11 more
in the post season to bring the championship home.
-
Thank everyone for coming herein today.
I wanna thank the Red Sox, an incredible organization
-
starting with the ownership down to
our general manager. I had the chance
-
to go to Puerto Rico with Alex Cora in the very beginning
of the season and I saw what type of person he was.
-
He’s an amazing man, an amazing team, with the best fans in the world. Go Red Sox!
-
- Mayor Walsh, how you doing?
- This is great. I’m doing good. I can’t complain.
-
It’s the World Series, Red Sox parade, people
are happy, what else can you ask for?
-
This isn’t our first rodeo. As a friend of mine in LA
said, didn’t you guys invent the rodeo?
-
I think we did. I was saying that earlier today
in the car, driving to the police roll call,
-
Other cities are dying for one and we’ve had 11
in the last 14 years or 15 years. It’s amazing.
-
- Everyone’s won one too which is incredible.
- So much goes into this.
-
What does it do for the city?
-
Sports is so engrained in the City of Boston.
-
When there’s a parade in the city,
what does it do for the City,
-
despite all the logistics
and all the issues that go into it?
-
When our teams are doing well,
it’s good for the city,
-
for the restaurants, the bars,
all the different venues. The excitement in the city.
-
The team's being part of the community,
so that’s another important part of these teams.
-
They’re part of our neighborhoods
and community.
-
It’s great for the city,
and the parade keeps the spirit up
-
and I think today in the world of politics and what’s going on in the world,
-
the horrible incident that happened
in Pittsburgh, I think something like this
-
makes you realize
to be positive and move forward.
-
Thank you for being proud of who you are
and where you’re from.
-
And as I look around the room,
a lot of you are the future leaders
-
of the City. You might not see that, you might not
understand where your pathway’s going to take you,
-
but it’s going to take you
to amazing places.
-
So when you think about advancement,
when you think about moving forward,
-
it’s about who you are as a person and the commitment
you have to your own professional career
-
in being recognized and realized and involved
and engaged and moving forward.
-
Whatever you do there are opportunities.
-
When you think about the Latino community,
-
when I first became the Mayor, I spent a lot of time,
I still do, but I spent a lot of time
-
with organizations particularly
Latino community organizations
-
that felt that they were underrepresented
or not represented in a lot of different places.
-
And we sat down
and we really started to look at
-
Boards and Commissions and staff and who’s around
and how we’re doing, what’s going on.
-
And making a real concerted effort
to change that reality. Not image, reality.
-
To make sure our people have opportunities
within City government.
-
And as I think about you,
all of you in this room,
-
I think about being future leaders
in the business sector,
-
future leaders in the nonprofit sector.
-
This is a starting point. Some people are going to stay, come
from the City, work their whole career in the City
-
and I commend you for that and love you for that.
-
Some of you will say it’s time to move
to something else.
-
and go into the business sector.
-
And that's honestly what you have to start
thinking about how we do things.
-
And how you advance yourself, number one.
First and foremost.
-
Second piece is Latino pride.
-
And I think that is really important.
These service projects are about education.
-
They’re about pride.
-
One of the thing that’s special
about Latino community
-
is that you are a diverse community
within your community.
-
Because as you we’re going around here
and everyone’s introducing themselves,
-
every time Columbia was mentioned.
-
There are some Venezuelan’s here that were excited.
The Mexicans seem really excited as well.
-
So there is a sense of pride.
-
And I think for us in the City,
doing these service projects,
-
you’re doing it because you’re trying to help people,
-
but what you’re also doing is
you’re teaching people about government.
-
You’re also teaching people
about what can be possible.
-
You’re also creating opportunities
to open doors.
-
How do you take your expertise
and what you know as a person,
-
as your heritage and your nationality
-
and also what you’ve learned, whether it’s been
in school, if you were born here,
-
if you weren’t born here,
what you learned at home and take it
-
to the community
and give people opportunities.
-
The day that Trump came down
-
with the ban, I looked up at the screen,
I saw what was going on and I’m like
-
what’s he doing today? And Dan says:
you know he’s doing a Muslin ban
-
and he’s banning against immigrants.
-
I said let’s do a press conference.
When? I said in a half hour.
-
I said I want every single immigrant
that works in the building standing behind me
-
and I want every first generation person
-
in there as well, because I didn’t think I had enough
immigrant community behind me to fill the room.
-
We were out in the hall, out in the hallway,
it was packed.
-
That was a proud moment
-
because I was standing amongst my peers
-
because I might be the Mayor,
but I’m a public employee.
-
We’re no different.
And I was proud of that moment.
-
And that has nothing to do ...
So I’m proud of where my heritage is.
-
And I think back to comparing,
maybe doing a little history of the Irish.
-
In the end of the 19th century
Irish were called dogs,
-
servants, slaves, pigs, monkeys, animals.
-
If you look at the portrayal of Irish people back then
it was completely racist.
-
And a group of people got together
and started to think about being a power broker.
-
And they slowly but surely started to go into cities
around America and they got elected to
-
town councils, city councils
and then a couple legislatures.
-
And eventually continued to build up
a brief of support and understood who they were,
-
and next thing they’re Mayors.
-
And that’s really what every community
that comes to this country has done over time.
-
And you don’t settle at politics.
-
Our job is to represent and support
the people of Boston.
-
That’s our job.
-
Whether it’s for, through somebody or directly
for somebody, that’s what our job is.
-
And when you’re a public employee
you have responsibility for that.
-
And I think that everyone in this room is
more motivated than the average person at City Hall
-
in a lot of different ways, and take that motivation,
-
take that desire and keep that moving forward.
Because that’s who we have to be.
-
This car doesn’t have
an active registration.
-
I should have brought my passport, but
that wouldn’t have been any good either.
-
So to get married it costs $75 cash
on the date of the ceremony.
-
So you can only park at the meter
between those times. 12 to eight.
-
I’m looking to get an Allston Brighton
parking pass.
-
It doesn’t have your Boston address.
-
There are 3 fairly significant master plans
that are happening in
-
city departments right now
that we’re going to be a part of.
-
The first one
is the Boston Public Library.
-
They’re starting a master planning process
in the spring to look at the McKim Building
-
which is the old building of the library.
-
Specifically for interest to our community
is looking at the front entrance.
-
As we know,
-
thanks to great advocacy of the Board
and an individual Boston resident
-
they installed a semi-permanent ramp
earlier this year
-
so that the front entrance
is now accessible.
-
However, they want to build a permanent ramp,
-
a very nice artistic structure so they don’t have
a temporary metal ramp up there for long.
-
So that’s going to be worked
into the master plan.
-
And also there are two meeting rooms
in the library
-
in the old McKim Building, that the only way you can
access them right now is with a lift, a vertical lift.
-
That is the Map Room
and the Commonwealth Salon.
-
We’re going to be looking at those areas
to see if there’s a way to improve accessibility.
-
Unfortunately there was a meeting scheduled
-
a few weeks ago to give updates
on the PCA Program,
-
scheduled by Mass Health
and there was some communication
-
where the Library staff
told the people at Mass Health
-
the room was accessible and it was one of
these rooms which is technically accessible
-
but when you have 20 and 30 people
coming in wheelchairs, trying to go up
-
that lift,
it was not very accessible, so...
-
I’m working on communication with the library
and looking at
-
different strategies
to try to improve accessibility.
-
Another master plan that’s happening
is the Parks Department
-
is working on a master plan
for Boston Common.
-
There is a large barrier in the Common
-
that we’ve been interested in working on
for a long time.
-
And that is the set of steps
at the Shaw Memorial
-
which go from the Common up to Beacon Street,
across from the State House.
-
Right now if you’re in the Common
and you can’t use the steps,
-
there’s no way to get to the State House
except to go back to Tremont Street
-
and walk all around up Park Street
to Beacon Street.
-
So it’s a really long path of travel
and even that path is not very accessible.
-
So, we had worked with the Parks Department
for a few years
-
to try to get some measurements of slopes
-
and come up with some design concepts to either
do a ramp or an exterior elevator in the Common.
-
So this will be included
in the Master planning.
-
I heard you say on the Master Plan
regarding the Boston Common
-
with the steps going up to the State House
that input would be valuable.
-
I get complaints all the time as the ADA
Coordinator at the State House. Would it help if I
-
got a letter from the State House
saying that we would appreciate
-
those steps be made be accessible?
-
Yes, I definitely think a collaboration
between the City and the State
-
because it’s definitely the State House
which is part of the Freedom Trail.
-
When they have people with disabilities
on the Freedom Trail they have to detour
-
and they can’t go on the standard route.
-
It happens almost every day.
-
So I think we can definitely
collaborate on that.
-
I’ll put together a letter and have it
signed by the Superintendent of the State House.
-
Great.
-
To me this is personal.
-
When I was seven years old
I was diagnosed with cancer.
-
For 4 years I was treated at the Children’s
Hospital in Dana Farber Cancer Institute.
-
And the people that were in our corner
every single day, the doctors were there,
-
but around the clock it was the nurses.
-
It was the nurses who we got to know.
It was the nurses who comforted my parents.
-
It was the nurses who helped everybody. It was the nurses that held my hand.
-
It was the nurses that did everything
in my life and I never forgot that.
-
And it’s something that’s really important
for all of us never to forget.
-
Because in a time of need in the hospital
it’s the nurses that show up at your bedside.
-
It’s the nurses that comfort your families.
It’s the nurses that are there for you.
-
And I want to thank you for that. And I want to
let you know that that’s why I’m here today.
-
Because when I needed to be taken care of
and my family needed to be taken care of,
-
it was the nurses that took care of my family.
-
So thank you for that.
-
Pedro and I have talked pretty extensively about
-
some of the work that’s been being done
on the opioid crisis in Boston.
-
Pedro expressed a particular interest in that work
-
and in exploring how we might use public art
to inform or tell a story,
-
or whatever it is we want to do
about that particular crisis.
-
I told him the last time we met
about a couple things in particular.
-
The Engagement Center and also the effort
to build a Recovery Campus on Long Island.
-
And thought it would be a good idea to put
together this particular team who are working
-
on arts and culture and the Recovery Campus
and the whole host of other things
-
to have a conversation and see
if there’s something we might be
-
thinking about doing in art and recovery.
-
Something small or something significant, I don’t know.
But it seems there’s a great opportunity if there are
-
patrons around who might like to help us
-
tell the story of the Recovery Campus or of the Engagement Center.
-
So I’d like to try and figure out how to,
-
if that’s something that you want to explore,
how to get you access to
-
these two places.
-
What’s interesting is that Long Island,
if you think about being the place that is the long term,
-
sort of recovery place for people,
-
kind of completing our continuum of care
that we offer as a city.
-
The Engagement Center is really the low end.
It is the thing that starts the continuum of care.
-
In bureaucratic speak called
a low threshold space because
-
even people who are kicked out of shelters, people kicked out of programs,
-
are allowed to be there.
You can be
-
in any state of mind
as long as you’re respecting the space.
-
You can come and sleep,
you can come and play games.
-
You’ll see some pictures.
-
What’s interesting is that we try
to make the best of what we had.
-
It was a storage tent basically.
-
Like with a structure.
Like it has air conditioning and it has
-
things you’d find in a building,
but it’s still canvas.
-
And so, very quickly
-
the most random assortment of ragtag gang
of people in the City from many departments
-
came together and figured out
what to do with this space
-
to make it habitable, but more importantly
to make it a place that people wanted to be.
-
Because we really wanted this
to be a place
-
where you’re not on the recovery spectrum yet.
You’re no necessarily wanting recovery.
-
Maybe you are, maybe you aren’t.
It’s just a place for people to go
-
so that they’re not on the streets,
-
so they’re not in danger of falling into the highway,
because that’s where this is located.
-
And just a place where people could
-
be their full selves. It’s important to people.
It’s home for a lot of people.
-
To follow up on what Sabrina said,
-
you were talking about your art in a way
that we’ve been talking about
-
some of the artistic approaches here
and we sort of discussed around a civic art.
-
It’s art that is not just public. It’s not just there
to see, but rather there’s some purpose,
-
or the artist or the community
can articulate
-
this is doing, this is this.
This is how we’re going to put it to use.
-
And here it’s not just because it looks nice.
-
It’s the little teeny things
that like push people into recovery.
-
The little breath of fresh air. Being able to talk
to somebody that gives some meaning to your day.
-
And that is totally what this space
could always use.
-
We’re year 2 into this.
-
We put some money in the capital budget
for a permanent space at some point,
-
but we have no idea how long it’s going to take to actually do that.
-
In the meantime, this space
is being very well utilized.
-
To the point where things are wearing out
faster than we would like them to.
-
So very cognizant of trying
to make sure that the place is
-
welcoming
and a good place for people to be.
-
But the administration is committed to
-
keeping an engagement center in some form
up and running pretty much permanently.
-
There are a number of people
who have found their way
-
to recovery
through the Engagement Center.
-
It’s like Steven said, it’s a low threshold space.
These are folks who
-
might not have even thought about that yet.
-
But at least having the ability
to ask for help,
-
makes it I think probably a little bit more likely
that you might actually ask for help.
-
A friendly space
allows you to take that first step.
-
- Springboard. Not even a step.
- Springboard.
-
Because there’s no
expectation of recovery.
-
it’s not like most other services, you don’t go there because you’re ready necessarily.
-
You can go there just to get your snack,
-
but then over enough time maybe
that will be the thing that springs you forward.
-
You got everything from 'hey I’m looking
for a coed space that I can be with my partner'
-
to 'I’ve been barred from all the other spaces
that the City provides,
-
but I definitely need to access
-
fruit cups in order to deal with
my low blood sugar.'
-
This space offered that opportunity
to provide that for them.
-
And then sort of ease them back
into being a part of
-
whatever they may have not been
a part of before.
-
It acted like an incredibly interesting mediation space for some, a social space for other,
-
a living room, a pit stop,
-
a sort of community
and again being in that meeting,
-
hearing everyone talk about this
is like a family.
-
So I think we’re in
a really interesting point where
-
yes, we’re trying to think about
how to refresh the space as a city,
-
trying to think about what does it mean to keep
the Engagement Center? What does that look like?
-
Does that mean more of them? Does it mean
a better version of what we have right now?
-
All that aside, also thinking about how do we
tell the story about what’s happening here?
-
Both on the level of the humanizing folks
and meeting people where they are,
-
but also functionally we’ve done something here
that clearly is filling a gap and a need
-
and really what’s the story
that Boston’s trying to tell around recovery?
-
Being such an epicenter, regionally?
-
So I think there’s some interesting connections
to think about.
-
How do we talk about this?
How do we talk
-
about Long Island?
-
Obviously there’s a political side to all of this too
because this exists in a neighborhood.
-
The South End neighborhood has been very good
-
about accepting the amount of social services
-
that have to be absorbed by that community because
-
the shelter is in that a neighborhood.
There’s a methadone clinic in that neighborhood.
-
So this is the corner of
Melnea Cass and Mass Ave.
-
People call it methadone mile.
We call it Recovery Road.
-
We need to do a better job of telling the story,
-
also lifting up the neighbors in the South End
who’ve been good
-
about absorbing all of this activity that
not every neighborhood would be so open to receiving.
-
It goes a long way that most people have
substance use disorders somewhere in their family.
-
Most people probably have it
pretty close in their families, so that helps,
-
but we owe it to them to tell a story
about why this is needed.
-
This is sort of a short term, it’s big for us,
but it’s also small and short term when you...
-
in the context of the Recovery Campus
on Long Island.
-
Much longer term project.
-
It calls for the rebuilding of a bridge
and obviously there’s a
-
a court case
that’s going to go on about that,
-
an argument between two municipalities
about how that gets done.
-
But Long Island was a place where a lot of programs
like this existed for many years.
-
And the Mayor’s made it clear that he wants to build
-
this Recovery Campus which will serve
long term residential programs in recovery.
-
Where it used to be there was a homeless shelter,
at least one homeless shelter, maybe two.
-
There was 2 shelters out there.
-
So where it used to be
there would be a night shelter.
-
That’s not going to be the case anymore.
It’s going to be focused on long term recovery.
-
It’s residential as opposed to
-
shuttling homeless people out at night and
bringing them back into the City in the morning.
-
So there’s a whole, where I actually don’t know what the latest update is on
-
when we could even expect a bridge to be rebuilt,
but it’s at least 3 or 4 years out.
-
In the meantime we’re thinking
about programming,
-
assessing the viability
of all the buildings that are out there
-
and trying to figure out how
to tell the story of Long Island.
-
Because we definitely have a story that we need
to tell because we need to build
-
political will to actually
make the Recovery Campus happen.
-
So that it can serve not just Bostonians,
-
but people dealing with substance use disorders
from around the greater Boston area.
-
So there’s some great opportunity there for storytelling
and we’re very much in the beginning stages of that.
-
I think I’ve mentioned Swoon in the past.
-
Swoon she was actually,
I mean this is public.
-
She was raised by...
her parents were addicts.
-
Heroin if I remember correctly.
-
So it’s a topic that she’s very attuned to
and I think
-
she’s made it clear
that she wants to dedicate
-
maybe the rest of her career to
really looking at addiction and trauma.
-
And how you know,
trauma leads to addiction.
-
So the project I did with her in Philadelphia,
she worked with
-
men at Graterford State Prison
-
Inmates, of the largest state prison, maximum
security prison in the state of Pennsylvania.
-
Women in a re-entry program and...
-
I’m sorry.
-
Women in halfway house
and a re-entry program.
-
The most important thing
was the element of telling the story.
-
She worked with participants
to teach them how to tell their story.
-
And we were all crying. It was so...
-
you know, powerful.
-
I think that the oral histories
-
are very important.
-
The portrayal of people
who we often forget about,
-
disregard,
are really important tools for humanization.
-
So much of recovery
-
is about story telling anyway.
Who knows what tomorrow might bring
-
and so I think the more that
we can use these stories
-
to put them out there, but also to really put
at the center of all this work,
-
the idea of storytelling.
Or, the idea of like owning your story
-
and sharing it.
-
I think a fan belt inside the generator
-
caught fire. So,
-
they extinguished it. I think they shut the power off.
They’re on their way down now.
-
I just want to give a brief background
of how this event came to be.
-
For those of you familiar with Sebastian Junger,
who’s a writer, his last book was called Tribe.
-
In this book he explores
the concept around homecoming
-
and belonging
within the Veterans community.
-
And he often talks about
how the best thing a community can do
-
for our Veterans is to listen to their stories
without judgment and with full support.
-
And this is what this Town Hall
is intended to do.
-
This is a community forum
-
aiming to establish greater understanding
between local Veterans
-
and the friends and neighbors
that they fought for.
-
We took care of English and American soldiers
when they came back from the front.
-
Some of the soldier’s wounds would heal
and they were able to get up,
-
but most of them were bed patients.
-
We helped the soldiers recuperate
-
from physical and mental injuries.
-
Back then we called it shell shock.
-
We tried to keep the soldier’s spirits up.
-
Many of the soldiers had lost a leg or an arm
or sometimes both legs and arms.
-
Those men were sent to Walter Reed to receive
artificial limbs and appendages.
-
I had a patient
who wrote a letter to his wife
-
to tell her that he had lost his leg.
-
He was worried that she wouldn’t want him
-
when he came home.
-
But his wife wrote to him and told him
that she was just so happy that he was alive.
-
He cried and I cried too.
-
The Street right down a few houses
away from me
-
was named Andrew Biggio Square and
as I was introduced, that’s my name.
-
Except that Square was not named after me.
It was named after my uncle
-
who was killed in action in World War II.
-
The first Andrew Biggio.
-
When I was a kid
I didn’t know anything about it.
-
I told the other kids just what my parents told me
that it was named after my uncle.
-
It wasn’t until I was getting ready
to go to my first tour in Iraq...
-
I was looking at that Street sign
saying Andrew Biggio Square
-
and it was a weird feeling knowing that
-
I was the...
-
I'm the next Andrew Biggio to go to war
-
and the first Andrew Biggio went to war and didn’t come back,so...
-
I survived Iraq.
I survived a tour in Afghanistan
-
and I came home and I was staring
at that Street sign again and I said
-
I got to find out what happened to that first
Andrew Biggio on that hill in Italy in 1944.
-
I went to my grandmother’s house. I asked her if she still
had Andrew’s letters that he wrote home from World War II.
-
She said she did. I went upstairs. I pulled the
shoebox out of letters and I started reading them.
-
I started to track down men
from his company that were with him.
-
It went from men from his company
-
to different types of Veterans and I ended up covering
almost the whole war on the rifle as far as
-
divisions, places, battles.
-
How did I get the rifle?
-
I go through Andrew’s letters and I read
-
on how much he enjoyed to shoot
the M1 Garand.
-
I said I’m going to buy an M1.
We should have this
-
in our family history, we should have it forever.
He died carrying this kind of a rifle.
-
I purchased the M1
-
and I’m in my house
and I’m aiming in at the wall and I’m
-
playing Army man again at 30 years old
in my living room.
-
But I said, who do I bring this to?
-
I can’t show my family. Would they
really understand? They’re not Veterans.
-
It’s great, but now what?
I bought the rifle, now what?
-
How do I fit the puzzle piece together
on what happened to that first Andrew Biggio?
-
So I thought about my neighbor.
My next door neighbor, Joe.
-
He had fought in the Battle of Okinawa
and was a grouchy prick to me my whole life.
-
Anytime a foul ball would land
in his backyard I’d hear an earful from,
-
he wouldn’t crack a smile to me
until I graduated Marine Corp Bootcamp.
-
Then I started to see him
wave to me from his yard.
-
The relationship became different.
So I said I’m going to go show this rifle to Joe.
-
I went to his house, opened the door and he’s sitting
in the wheelchair. He was 92 at the time.
-
And I said hey, check what I bought.
-
I placed the rifle which was empty,
not covered in signatures like it is now,
-
I put the rifle into his arms.
-
He was in his recliner.
His legs had atrophited
-
to nothing after years of not being able
to walk at his age and illness,
-
and he brightened up.
-
It was like a burst of energy
soared through his body.
-
He started waving the rifle around the room,
smiling like he was 18 years old again.
-
I said holy crap,
I am holding something special.
-
He said go into his top drawer.
-
I want you to have these now.
-
I went into his top drawer,
I pulled out a velvet Crown Royal bag.
-
Inside of it were Japanese gold teeth.
-
He said, I want you to have these now.
-
Now, I’m not sitting here justifying war
or what happened in the 1940s, but
-
I figured out this is why this man
was a grouch.
-
I finally understand what was
bothering this man my whole life
-
and what he had seen
and what he had went through.
-
I wanted to, this was more than just
oh my God, let me hear a war story.
-
He began to pass on the advice,
-
life advice and suggestions on how
to live a long successful life after combat.
-
I was 28
-
when I had this conversation with him
and he was 92.
-
I said, I want to remember this forever.
I said Joe sign the rifle.
-
He was the first signature on it.
-
I left his house and I said I’m going to go around
-
and get as many World War II
Veteran signatures as possible.
-
I want to be able to pass on to the younger Veterans
how to live a long successful life,
-
to have a career, have a job
-
If these men could do it, what they saw
in Okinawa, Iwo Jima, Normandy, Burma,
-
France, Belgium, Germany,
Saipan, Tarawa, Tinian,
-
that our generation could do it too.
-
And that is the story of the rifle.
-
We come out
-
of the factory,
and for you Ramadi vets,
-
we’re out on Route Michigan
-
and we stop two possible VBEDs.
-
They’re both coming down Michigan
to the point that we have
-
I believe two Humvees.
-
We stop. Everyone dismounts to get more guns
down range to back off the vehicles.
-
While that happened
about 450 to 600 meters out
-
I look at what would be known as the
White Apartments for anybody that served in Ramadi.
-
There’s three military aged males or...
-
At that time because I’m old in comparison
to these new kids, Al-Qaeda,
-
on a roof
and they’re tactically observing us.
-
So I go to take the shot
-
and then its Ramadi, it’s the middle of the day.
Everyone’s getting sniped, everyone’s getting killed.
-
I’m going to tell the Lieutenant I’m making the shot
so guys don’t think its incoming fire.
-
When I go to take the shot,
the whole thing was a setup.
-
It was a sniper from my three.
-
So I turned at the last second
before I took the shot to tell the Lieutenant.
-
The round actually blew
through my holographic sight
-
and into the side of my chest.
-
But I didn’t know that at the time.
-
So, I said I’m hit.
-
I get in the Humvee and then I said no,
I said I’m good.
-
I said it’s not being top. I said your adrenalin goes
through the roof. Anybody that’s been shot here,
-
my man over there knows to say the least.
And I said no, I’m good.
-
They stop the Humvee,
I go to get back out of it,
-
I open the door and my platoon sergeant
reaches over and grabs me
-
because blood's coming out
of the side of my chest.
-
And I know at that point
-
he hit me exactly where he wanted to hit me,
-
they were shooting through the side
of the pectoral into the heart.
-
We believe that same sniper killed
a couple of my friends the same exact way.
-
They rushed me into the forward operating base
and on the operating table.
-
I think OK, maybe a piece of plate got me.
I feel good. I’m feeling fine.
-
I get out of the Humvee and
that’s always a big thing. Everybody knows
-
if you can walk in the hospital,
even if you die on the floor,
-
if you walk into the hospital, that’s how it goes.
So I said don’t touch me.
-
Take my clothes off
-
and one of the baddest guys
I’ve ever met in my entire life
-
that had survived a battle over there
with a handful of our guys getting killed
-
and you know he was...
-
one of two survivors
out of like seven guys.
-
He looks at me and he’s mortified.
-
And I have a big gaping hole
on the side of my chest.
-
What happened was because it shot
through my holographic sight,
-
it created like buckshot.
-
So now at this point I’m like,
I know I’m going to die. It is what it is.
-
I believe in the cause, I feel good,
you know, in terms of like
-
hey this is what it’s going to be,
I’m a true believer.
-
They get me on the operating table
-
I’m saying, no but I, you know,
I feel good.
-
They tell me the bullet’s still inside so everyone’s
just waiting for me to bleed out on the table,
-
bleed out internally and die.
-
My Commanding Officer’s holding my hand
and he said,
-
hey you know Kurt, hang in there buddy.
Do you know what the date is?
-
Do you know what’s going on?
And I said I know what you’re doing.
-
I said today’s October 10th.
-
I said I’m a lifelong Patriot’s fan.
-
Adam Vinatieri just kicked the game winning
field goal. Best kicker in football.
-
I looked around the operating room
and everyone was mortified,
-
but they knew I was going to survive.
-
I make it through surgery
-
and they said you know son,
-
thank you for your service, you’re going to go
from Ramadi to Bagdad, Bagdad to Germany,
-
Germany back to the United States.
-
I said with all due respect, everyone’s dying,
I’m not going anywhere.
-
And they said, you’re stupid.
They said
-
the bullet’s still in there,
your chest isn’t going to close.
-
No granulation. You need skin grafts.
-
You’re going to get infected
and you’re going to die over here.
-
And I said like it is what it is.
-
I’m staying.
And I checked myself out of the hospital.
-
I talked to my father via Sat phone
and then always one of my biggest supporters,
-
I called my Aunt.
She’s a former nun who then went onto be
-
very successful on Wall Street,
-
a no nonsense kind of woman
who grew up here in the City of Boston.
-
And I said, you know, I need you
to grab my back in this. I said I got shot.
-
And I’m staying. And she said,
well I wouldn’t expect anything differently.
-
I continued to fight on the ground
for eight more months
-
and you know, it was heavy.
We lost guys
-
but I wouldn’t have done it any differently.
-
I’m an open book and I tell everyone:
-
listen, war is war and it's tough, but honestly
the hardest part was coming home.
-
I said I actually know Tommy because
I went through the home base program
-
and same thing,
not to get too organization specific.
-
But it was the best thing I ever did.
-
Because I said I wasn’t scared.
-
I wasn’t scared when I hit IEDs.
I wasn’t scared when I was shot
-
I knew I was going to die,
but I said when I came home
-
and I’m on the side of 93C and my family
-
and Local 103 has Welcome Home from Iraq,
Sergeant Kurt Power. I said it hit me.
-
What am I doing back here?
I don’t belong here anymore.
-
I had never thought I would have to prepare for it
because I never thought I was going to survive.
-
And there was a...
-
for guys and gals
that were over
-
there’s a certain comfort level to that.
-
Listen we’re all
going to die someday right?
-
You know it’s sooner than later over there,
well then why sweat it?
-
That’s the reality of it.
The best way to honor the guys
-
that didn’t make it home is to do what you can
to make the world a better place
-
That’s how I live my life every day
and I just want everyone to know
-
that our coming home and our going through things
that you’re not alone.
-
We’re all in this together. Because
-
we’re losing 22 Veterans a day
-
because everyone thinks they’re the only one
that ever went through anything.
-
Nightmares and cold sweats and anxiety,
that’s all part of the process.
-
The only way we’re going to get people to get help
-
and to continue to live another day
-
is by being open and talking about it.
So keep fighting.
-
Keep fighting for the guys that didn’t make it.
Keep fighting for the gals that didn’t make it.
-
We’re proud of all of you. Thank you so much
for your service and God bless America.
-
We went further north.
In Ai Quoc.
-
You can see it in Ken Burns’ documentary.
He focuses on Con Thien.
-
But we were at Con Thien. We were
at Geo Lin, at Camp Caroll
-
and almost every time we went to one
of those places we were under siege.
-
And they were shooting rockets.
-
We could literally look right into North Vietnam.
We could see the little sparks from the artillery guns.
-
And they’d usually fire three at a time.
They’d fire them every hour.
-
Some of you have seen
the Boston Marathon bombing.
-
Remember the panic when the first bomb went off
and folks started running one way
-
and another bomb went off
and folks didn’t know what to do?
-
That’s what was happening to us every hour.
-
Three artillery rounds would come in
and guys were literally getting blown to bits.
-
It was clear
-
that we were being sacrificed. We were at the most
northern outpost that the Marines had.
-
It was almost like we were a pawn
in somebody’s chess game.
-
And I had the opportunity to call home.
-
I called my mother
-
and the first thing I said to her was Ma,
I want to just
-
apologize to you for all the problems
I caused you when I was in high school.
-
She said why are you
talking to me like this?
-
I said because you’ll probably
never see me again.
-
She said what do you mean?
I said everybody in my unit’s dying.
-
We’re the most northern outpost
that the Marines have. We’re surrounded.
-
They’re bombarding us every day.
Sometimes they don’t even bring us water.
-
We have to drink mud and eat grass.
-
And my mother said, you’re not going to die.
I said Ma, I’m trying to tell you something.
-
She said, I talk to God every day.
And you’re special. You’re coming back.
-
I said Ma, everybody’s mother
thinks they’re special.
-
I’m putting pieces of special people in bags.
Listen to what I’m saying.
-
Don’t believe what you read in the Globe
or what you see on the 6:00 news.
-
We’re losing the war.
We’re being sacrificed.
-
You’re probably not going to see me again
and she kept saying,
-
you’re coming back. She tried to tell a joke.
She said besides, you got to come back.
-
I said what do you mean?
She said,
-
if you don’t come back
who’s going to pay
-
this telephone bill?
And everytime I see or hear
-
anything about Veterans
who lost their lives in Vietnam,
-
I pull up on the corner and I see guys with the cardboard placards
-
and their cups, I realize how blessed I am.
Having gone through all that
-
everything that I do I do it for them.
I do it for the guys that didn’t make it back.
-
I do it for the guys who lost their arms and legs
and guys who
-
even lost their minds.
-
I long for the day with all this technology, like
we walk around with computers in our pockets,
-
I long for the day
when we can evolve to a point where
-
we can resolve conflicts without sending
our sons and daughters to kill each other.
-
Let us not forget the total cost of war.
-
World War I was among the deadliest conflicts
in human history up to that time at least.
-
The total number of military
and civilian casualties in World War I
-
was around 40 million people.
-
40 million people
-
of which 9.7 military personnel
-
and approximately 10 million civilians lost
their lives as a direct result of this conflict.
-
About 23 million military personnel
were also wounded.
-
In the United States which was isolated
from the combat conflict in Europe,
-
321,000 military casualties was approximately 3 %
of the total military casualties of the Great War.
-
To put things in perspective,
and why this date is so important,
-
90 million casualties of
-
World War II
-
and later conflicts further signified
having a day each year
-
to honor and remember
-
all Veterans and their sacrifice
-
to protect our freedoms
and their way of life.
-
Thank you for your service
to our country.
-
Thank you for your sacrifice
to our country.
-
To your loved ones,
thank you to your loved ones as well.
-
Because oftentimes we don’t realize that
-
families are affected
by not having their loved ones here.
-
Any gold star families here?
We pray for you
-
and thank you as well.
I have a great uncle that fought in World War I.
-
My family and my father
didn’t talk about him much.
-
His name was Patrick and he left Ireland
-
to America and came to South Boston
and he enlisted in the Army.
-
He went over to France
and never came home.
-
I was at an event right after I got elected Mayor,
-
and I was talking to some
World War I guys about
-
about keeping the memory alive
of World War I service members.
-
And they sent me his draft, his card.
The day he signed up.
-
And they sent me the letter that they sent to his brother Jimmy when he died,
-
when he got killed in action.
-
We never talked about in the house
and never really
-
thought about it much.
And my father never talked about it.
-
I grew up in an Irish home,
-
you didn’t talk about your things
and I’m not a Veteran.
-
But I know the importance of telling
what’s on your heart sometimes.
-
I’m in recovery.
So my connection
-
to getting help is in recovery.
-
I grew up in Dorchester,
-
I went to work construction
and you didn’t tell your feelings back then
-
when you’re drinking and things like that.
-
My drinking got out of control
-
so much that I ended up in detox.
-
It was the last place that I wanted to be.
-
But when I was in there...
-
I didn’t go there to stop drinking.
went there to get the heat off me.
-
But while I was in there
the first night a meeting came in,
-
you know, an AA meeting came in and they talked
and whatever it was I was interested.
-
It kind of perked my interest
and the rest of that week,
-
I listened to talk of addiction.
-
And I learned about what alcoholism was.
-
And when you get out of there
you’re not cured.
-
The key for me is the aftercare.
-
And 23 years later
I’m still working on it.
-
And you think about every now and then about
situations you might have put yourself in.
-
And if you don’t deal with it
and you don’t talk to somebody else about it,
-
it’s going to stay inside of you.
-
Because whether you’re in the battlefield
and you come home
-
or you’re in the barroom
and you’re not talking about it,
-
or you’re in a dark room where they’re putting
a needle in your arm, and not talking about it,
-
there’s no way of helping.
-
And I equate, I connect the...
not the same way because it’s very different.
-
The fighting for your country and coming back
is different on the surface of alcoholism,
-
but inside it’s all the same.
-
It’s that feeling that hopeless, what I had,
-
helpless,
don’t know what to do about it feeling.
-
And like I said, everyone had suggested
that I go get help.
-
Many times I’m like yeah, yeah. I went to one AA
meeting one time and used that as an excuse.
-
Yeah I got help, I went to a meeting.
And I used that for about 5 years.
-
But it wasn’t until I hit my bottom.
-
And when I hit my bottom I didn’t realize
it was my bottom, but I knew, it was pretty low.
-
And a lot of other things happened
in my life that built up to that point.
-
Every time I drank I didn’t get in trouble,
but every time I got in trouble I was drinking.
-
So, you think about that and I think about
-
sharing experiences and I love, I go to,
I still go to my meetings.
-
Hearing people share their experience, strength and hope
-
about addiction, sometimes there’s
somebody talking that’s in so much pain
-
that they don’t see the benefit.
-
They don’t see the hope. They don’t see the help.
They don’t see the end game.
-
And if I get a chance to talk to them
I just say, it’s a day at a time.
-
When I first got sober I’d hear people
talk about they have a house,
-
a job and a car and they have this and that,
and I used to be like, I want that.
-
But I was in no way in the situation
that I could get that at that particular moment.
-
And seven years later I bought my house.
-
And I remember sitting
on my back porch of my house, even
-
10 years after I had it.
I looked up and I can’t believe it’s mine.
-
And it all goes back
to going for help and asking for help.
-
And I know many of you in this room
-
shared your story today
and I thank you for that.
-
And there’s probably
some people in this room
-
that might be listening and saying
I don’t know what I’m going to do.
-
Just reach out.
Put your hand out and ask for help.
-
That’s all you got to do. That’s the first step.
That’s the first step.
-
You fought for this country.
We owe it to you to help you.
-
That’s our job.
As a government that’s our job.
-
Our Veterans office, Veterans Affairs office,
-
I’m proud of the work we do
because we’re there for the veterans.
-
I said this earlier as we went out.
-
In my five years as Mayor, I have never once
had to suggest to the Commissioner of the Office,
-
you need to do this for the Veterans or do that
for the Veterans. They’re already doing it.
-
It’s setup for you.
If it weren’t for the Veterans
-
of the Revolutionary War,
of World War I, II, Korea, Vietnam,
-
Iraq, Afghanistan
fighting all over the world,
-
I wouldn’t have the opportunity
to be the Mayor.
-
We wouldn’t have
the opportunity of a democracy.
-
It’s because of you.
-
Because you fight for that democracy.
-
Thank you for being here.
-
Thank you for what you’ve done for our country.
For what you continue to do for our country.
-
For me, Veteran’s Day is a day on the calendar
just like Memorial Day’s a day on the calendar.
-
But Veteran’s Day, Memorial Day is every day.
It should be every day in our country.
-
Everybody go 45 degrees towards the center.
-
Tuesday after the election for the Congress
was complete,
-
I reached out to Richard Neal. Congratulated
Richard Neal. He’s in line to be
-
the next Chairman of the Ways and Means
from Springfield.
-
I reached out to Jim McGovern.
Congratulated him.
-
He’s in line to be
the Rules Chair from Worcester County.
-
That’s the seat formerly held
by Joe Moakley who he worked for.
-
So we have some really good allies in there.
I mean obviously they can’t favor Boston
-
per se on Massachusetts,
but having them there
-
in their office, there’s a contact for a lot of
different issues. Education, climate, transportation,
-
fire stuff, police stuff.
That’s really important to have.
-
We’ll have staff in those offices
that we can call, reach out directly to.
-
On a national level
that will be important.
-
I also just reached out to the Governor
to say that I’d like to get together with him
-
to talk about education, transportation
and climate issues
-
and is there an opportunity for us
to go and lobby in Washington
-
for those funds
for the Commonwealth and the City.
-
I think we have decided
to take a different approach.
-
The last couple years we haven’t done
much of that because
-
we were used to going
right to the White House.
-
We could go right to the Secretary’s
when Obama was there.
-
We haven’t done that with this President.
But I think there’s an opportunity for us to go
-
to Washington and lobby for a whole lot
different pieces that we’re looking at here
-
through the Congressional folks right now.
That’s usually how it worked in the past.
-
It changed under Obama
the last couple years, they really made
-
a concerted effort to build a relationship
directly with mayors.
-
Usually you go through the Legislative leaders
like you at the State House.
-
So, I think that’s a really good thing for us.
-
Hopefully, I’m hoping good things
can happen out of Washington.
-
There’s an openness that John has.
If he opens it up we get a really
-
bad storm to 30 or 40 women.
-
It doesn’t go back down. Right.
-
He was willing...
it worked well last winter,
-
to fill some beds between six and 8 p.m.,
but then leave a little room
-
for overflow from other places.
-
There needs to be some space
because if he’s going to step up
-
he needs to be able to know that there is space
that he's going to take these people to.
-
That we’re not going to be in a situation
where he’s showing up at Pine Street or somewhere
-
and say you can’t.
-
A group of women who are
sort of chronic...
-
they seem to be severely mentally ill
who don’t leave shelter at all.
-
I mean they’re in it because
we’re open 24/7 and they don’t leave.
-
I think we have a number of people also,
-
with sort of a combination of behavioral
-
and substance use disorders
that are a combination there.
-
There’s a host of women who just
desperately want to get housed,
-
who just don’t have the income you know.
-
Like we have a woman, an evacuee
-
from Puerto Rico
-
who just wants to get housing,
-
but has like a $535 Security Income check
and that about 50 %
-
of the women also had some sort of
domestic violence
-
or violence issue prior to coming, so we’re
trying to get more service providers in.
-
There does seem to be a group of women
who are like hiding.
-
Just trying to stay under the radar
for whatever reason.
-
In the cold weather transit stations
are places where people who are
-
sometimes less well-known or sometimes
kind of hanging out have aggregated
-
and we know last year
how the unintended consequence
-
of the compassion of the T at South Station
-
that really attracted people
who were not so vulnerable, but....
-
- Predatory.- Taking advantage.
-
There was some of that for sure.
-
So we just want to think about this year,
-
what the approach is working with the team
because I think
-
Superintendent, you want to talk a little
about what you pivoted to last year,
-
when it was clear the South Station
wasn’t working in January, February.
-
Unfortunately we had to just keep
muddling through it.
-
Unless we come up with something better,
-
I think we’re going to have it worse this year.
So at its peak we had 170 people in there.
-
There’s no vetting.
-
The place is not secure.
There’s no metal detectors.
-
There was all kinds of activity going on,
inappropriate, criminal.
-
A lot of people were telling me
just throw more cops in there.
-
That’s not the answer, that’s treating
the symptom and not the cause.
-
We’ve intelligence that suggests this year,
-
and everyone’s aware of what’s going on
at Mass and Melnea.
-
We’re right in the middle. That’s where
our headquarters are. There’s anywhere
-
as low as 50 to, as high as 200 people
that are gathering there,
-
using drugs, engaged in violence,
prostitution, you name it.
-
We’ve intelligence that’s already telling us
that core group which is in the dozens
-
are going to South Station when it gets cold
to do whatever they want to do.
-
So, it’s great. One or two nights,
we hit some extreme weather,
-
they come in there, but last year as you know,
it started November 10th.
-
Right away was the first day
we had to do shelter in place.
-
Two weeks after that we went on a stretch
that went 17 straight nights.
-
We just can’t do it.
-
I think we’re doing them more disservice,
-
we got killed in the media.
We got killed amongst homeless advocates
-
because when you think of a homeless shelter,
right away you think of showering facilities,
-
food, mental health, medical.
We have none of that.
-
And I can tell you that the folks that are paying
-
a lot of rent inside South Station
were beside themselves.
-
Commuters coming in, in the morning
were beside themselves.
-
This isn’t me getting it thirdhand,
and I personally would respond.
-
I would say a vast majority of,
probably weren’t even homeless.
-
And it’s impossible for us,
-
I wouldn’t ask my officers to subject themselves
to all kinds of accusations just to go around
-
and pick and choose who should stay in there
and who shouldn’t.
-
I think we need to come up
with a better solution.
-
I’m willing to hire people
-
and transport people all over the city,
all night long.
-
We want to be good and responsible neighbors
and we want to do our part.
-
But just from seeing that firsthand, I think
we were almost causing more harm than good.
-
None of the folks who left South Station
when the overnights ended,
-
very few of them ended up out in the street
in places we saw.
-
They migrated to other places.
-
We have to work together to make sure
that the transportation is offered,
-
that the shelter capacity we’ve added is available.
-
The most humane thing
that we can do for people
-
who find themselves in the middle
of a very bad weather situation
-
is to get them to the place where they can get
the support and the resources they need.
-
Get a meal, there’s a bathroom,
there’s a shower and there’s support there.
-
Leaving them at South Station
especially some of the more vulnerable folks...
-
I feel like the public position,
-
we’re in a strong position to say
that the T is stepping up doing what it does best.
-
Transportation.
-
The weekly outreach meetings on Tuesdays
-
we’re making sure that we have represent...
because the other first responders,
-
the Boston Police Department, District I,
-
the Boston EMS, the Squad 80 Group,
-
and the State Police are all at that meeting.
-
Making sure we have conversations in those meetings
about how the outreach networks can help.
-
Anything in your pockets?
-
Do you have anything in your pockets, ma’am?
-
- Any metal in your pockets? Phone, keys?
- Belt?
-
No, belt's fine. Just your pockets
-
Have a good one, sir.
-
The Fair Housing Act of 1968
pretty much eliminates
-
or it makes it illegal for anyone
to discriminate
-
when it comes to housing,
especially for certain classes of people
-
based on race, gender, color, sexual orientation
and a bunch of other things.
-
Currently, House and Urban Development
has proposed a new rule.
-
It’s proposing a new rule
under the Trump Administration.
-
And as you know,
-
the Fair Housing Act of 1968 has
for the last 50 years governed or guided
-
the laws of fair housing.
-
What’s happening is that with this new rule,
-
under the Fair Housing Act, let me start by saying
that there’s a portion they call Disparate Impact.
-
Under Disparate Impact what it does is
it allows a complainant,
-
meaning anybody that has a complaint
of discrimination happening in housing
-
against a policy or practices that are happening
to bring a complaint, formerly bring a complaint
-
against a bank, landlord, lender,
or any kind of housing provider.
-
So, currently what’s happening is
-
the HUD wants to propose a rule
-
that is going to make it basically
next to impossible for people
-
or anyone who is
-
experiencing any kind of discrimination
under the Disparate Impact Rule,
-
to be able to bring a complaint.
How this will work is:
-
currently there’s a very neutral task for it.
All that needs to be shown
-
is that there is a...
-
whatever the policy or practice is
has a wide reaching discriminatory effect.
-
But under this new rule
what’s going to happen is that
-
anyone that brings these complaints
-
will now have to show
not only that it’s doing this, but also intent.
-
That whomever the housing provider is,
-
has these policies or practices
that are happening
-
and not only do they have them,
but they intend to discriminate against
-
a person of color, race, gender,
sexual orientation, what have you.
-
The problem with this is that
-
it makes it next to impossible because people who
normally bring these complaints don’t have the time,
-
the money, the resources
under the current rule as it is to do this.
-
That’s why we’re able to investigate
if such a thing happens.
-
Under the current Disparate Impact Rule
we’re able to look into it.
-
Or HUD is able to look into it and investigate
and figure out if this is happening.
-
With this new rule
it makes it next to impossible.
-
And it shifts the burden onto the complainant.
The complainant will now have to show this
-
that it’s happening. So we have written a letter
along with the Mayor to challenge
-
the Federal government on it.
Challenge HUD on this new proposed rule.
-
Our department has linked up
with other city agencies
-
and we have been part of the comment period
that is currently open
-
and the Mayor has also written a letter to HUD
-
opposing this new rule because if it does in fact pass,
-
then this thing not only is it going to affect
how we currently
-
do fair housing
under the Disparate Impact Rule,
-
but it has far more wide reaching effects
which is an attack against civil rights.
-
Because the Fair Housing Act
was enacted under civil rights.
-
And if you can erode this rule
then you can erode civil rights,
-
when it comes to discrimination,
segregation, voting rights,
-
equal opportunity in employment because these
things we all follow the same thinking process.
-
And it’s under the civil rights umbrella.
So if HUD is able to do this
-
that means later they’re going to be able
to attack all these other civil rights
-
that the country has fought for
over the last 51 years to make sure
-
that people have or are being treated fairly.
-
So, this is a really huge thing at the moment.
-
We don’t know
what’s going to happen with it.
-
We’ve submitted a comment letter. We encouraged
all of the other FHIPs and FAPs,
-
fair housing providers and the agencies
that are involved in this work,
-
to submit comment letters as well too.
-
The mayor wrote a really good
comment letter
-
that hopefully we’re praying
we get some traction with HUD.
-
But in the event that it doesn’t pass, a
-
and the HUDs new proposal rule does pass,
then we are now in a situation where
-
basically we are watching the erosion
of civil rights in the country.
-
What do we have here in Boston
-
that highlights the strength of diversity
and of our immigrant population?
-
How can we celebrate
what unites us here in the City?
-
And having Boston be a city of immigrants
-
with a majority, minority population?
-
What do we have to say here
-
and what can we do to really communicate
-
and celebrate that our diversity
makes us stronger
-
and it actually leads us back to one another
and to a sense of unity
-
and solidarity with one another?
And that is that our diversity
-
and our strength really comes
from the immigrant population.
-
So that’s really where it came from.
-
Just really thinking about how can we
highlight these intersecting types
-
of issues around health
which have to do with food,
-
with the activity that we started with
-
at the Armenian Heritage Park starting with
walking and physical activity and meditation.
-
And then coming over here and being,
-
and having a cooking class to sort of
celebrate all of us being together,
-
healthy food and again,
all the ethnic cultures of Boston.
-
That was really the goal of this series,
-
to break down some of the barriers that have
historically existed here in Boston
-
and sort of, by being next to one another,
by being together sort of
-
create the sense of community
-
that really exists and breakdown
some of the separations that have historically
-
existed here in the City.
-
So the meal that we’re going
to demonstrate today
-
is Shrimp Lo Mien.
-
So Mien in Chinese means noodles.
-
And Lo in Cantonese means stirred.
So it’s a stir fried noodle.
-
And noodles in the Chinese cuisine
symbolizes longevity and prosperous life.
-
Traditionally, it’s served at celebrations
such as Chinese New Year or birthdays.
-
So, for the sauces
we are going to use today
-
is oyster sauce, low sodium soy sauce,
cooking wine and a little bit of sugar.
-
Some spices, either chili powder or the pepper, black pepper.
-
And it will also give it a flavor
without adding too much salt.
-
That’s what we call rice noodle.
-
So it has different flavor
and goes with different kind of sauces
-
and a lot of people from China, they go back
to their home town just to have that dish of
-
the noodles that were
in their childhood memory.
-
And we also put a tablespoon
of our cooking wine
-
and just to give it a little flavor\and also to reduce
-
the fishy smell in the shrimp as well.
-
Now we put into the shrimp.
-
So the shrimp is already cooked
-
for our demonstration,
but we do recommend
-
to prepare the protein separately
from our noodles
-
just to make sure that it’s cooked
all the way through
-
and then reach the internal temperature
that’s recommended.
-
55 % of Bostonians
-
are non-White, so in addition to be
a majority city of color, we are also
-
a city of immigrants.
And so 28 % of Bostonians are foreign born
-
and come from about
150 countries of origin.
-
Immigrants own 33 %
of incorporated businesses
-
And in 2014,
according to Brookings Institute,
-
Boston was ranked number one
in terms of income inequality.
-
By 2017, they ranked us number seven
and that was due primarily
-
to the increase of income
in the lower income brackets.
-
And the Federal Reserve Banks'
Boston’s Color of Wealth Report,
-
it listed different things.
First it was the first report to
-
break out net worth by ethnic groups.
-
It’s a fascinating report if you have
a chance to look at it,
-
but for Black Americans,
U.S. Blacks as it listed it,
-
the net worth, median net worth
for U.S. Black families was $8.00.
-
And the medium net worth for White families
in the same period of time $247,000.
-
This is not something we’re proud of.
-
Many Bostonians are
-
under employed, over credentialed,
-
so meeting with companies
and doing a comparison on their job postings,
-
in Boston versus job postings
around the country,
-
we’ve got some folks,
-
I won’t name them, but
-
we looked at one company and like 100 %
of their jobs you need a Bachelor's.
-
And it’s like really?
-
And then when you look at like jobs
around the country it’s just not true.
-
And so having conversations with employers
that allow us to access those jobs is important.
-
Jobs are a big part
of the work that we do.
-
So the Boston Resident’s Job Policy
which was a policy that was developed in 1983,
-
was recently updated by Mayor Walsh.
And this policy essentially
-
mandates that in the construction space
-
where there is any private development,
or public development that is looking for a private
-
variances or any kind of public approval,
-
we are mandating
-
51 % of those on a construction site
be Boston residents,
-
40 % people of color, and 12 % women.
-
And this is something that
-
is really important because the construction jobs
end up being pretty good jobs.
-
And so part of that is creating a pipeline
-
in working with the Unions and others to make sure
that we have a diverse workforce
-
so that we can hit those numbers.
-
The other one frankly though is the new
-
good jobs policy
that the City just announced on RFPs.
-
So any City land that is being disposed of,
-
the Mayor announced that we will be looking
for a good jobs analysis, or a good jobs program
-
for the permanent jobs
that will be built or attracted to
-
the developments built on City land.
-
We don’t have the necessary legal levers
to demand certain wages,
-
so we set criteria definition for what good jobs are
and certain wages and benefits and conditions.
-
And we want the developer
to respond to that.
-
Once the developer
responds to that program and says
-
here’s what we’re going to do
in front of the community and of the City,
-
we will then codify them in the City agreement
to what’s going to happen on that land.
-
We are leasing the land so we will have
-
serious legal levers on any lease, on what
they should be doing with permanent jobs.
-
On the small business side,
the other piece is following the
-
Federal Reserve Bank's Color of Wealth
Report, we do believe that there is
-
an ethnic strategy to wealth creation.
-
So the ethnic groups are very different in how
they approach wealth and wealth creation.
-
So, how do you have the conversation
with the immigrant communities?
-
And the different immigrant communities
look very different.
-
Some immigrant communities are
-
high unemployment so their employment rate
for some of the immigrant communities.
-
Cape Verdean’s, which is an immigrant group
here, from West Africa,
-
their employment numbers
are really high,
-
but their entrepreneur numbers
are really low.
-
It does something for income,
but does nothing for wealth.
-
How do you have that conversation
with that community;
-
When you look at the Black community
which is very diverse in Boston,
-
when you look at the U.S. Blacks,
-
it’s one picture.
When you look at Caribbeans,
-
the Blacks from the Caribbean,
it’s a different picture.
-
How do you help to think about
-
what’s happening there
and how we have different strategies.
-
So we’re rolling out
and we haven’t announced this publicly,
-
but we’re rolling out conversations
that are ethnic based. The BDPA has
-
set up some research around it.
We’ve got some numbers.
-
We did an internal presentation recently
-
and we’re going to roll out ethnic based conversations
to have a conversation about the difference
-
in approach in our ethnic communities,
not bad or good.
-
But we’re going to put out the number,
-
we’re going to set up panels of people
from the community to have the conversation
-
about what this might mean
and what might be new strategies
-
and how we can approach this
to make sure we’re having
-
a very responsive conversation
about the economy that people live in.
-
We’re now mandating that people tell us
how their team
-
is diverse and inclusive in all areas.
And then we will score them on that
-
diversity inclusion in a way obviously
-
that those who are more diverse
-
and inclusive of women and people of color
on their construction team,
-
on their design team,
on the development team,
-
on finance, on operation, on ownership.
-
And so we’re driving to use public assets for...
-
and align it to the Mayor’s agenda.
-
We’re also asking that people work with us
-
in terms of what the community has said
it wants to see in the neighborhood.
-
The recent RFP that we put out is actually
in response to what's called Plan Dudley Square.
-
And we’re making sure that there is clarity between
alignment on what the community has asked for
-
and what these developments are bringing.
The second innovation is we picked
-
a neighborhood, following
-
the first comprehensive citywide plan
that Boston’s done in 65 years,
-
or 50 depending on how you look at it,
alled Imagine Boston 2030,
-
to pilot an effort of trying
to develop a neighborhood
-
without displacing the neighborhood.
-
One of the strategies called for the City
being more aggressive in acquiring property.
-
It’s something we’re doing now
on the housing side as well.
-
We are out there acquiring existing property
-
and not trying to just create affordability
on new developments that are coming.
-
How do we go after the high risk property, buy them
and then make them permanently affordable,
-
hopefully making the tenants
the owners of those properties.
-
So now we’re doing that on a neighborhood wide scale in Upham’s Corner,
-
acquiring as much property as possible
before we launch any kind of public conversation
-
around the development of those properties.
The third one would be
-
working with corporations
that are coming to Boston
-
who are looking for tax incentives or any
kind of incentive to relocate to our city.
-
Or bring a headquarter to our city.
We have an agreement with Amazon
-
who is building about a million square feet
in the Seaport
-
which equates about 4,000 jobs
in two waves.
-
2,000 for the first wave,
another 2,000 for the second wave.
-
There’s an agreement with Amazon
that we will use a linkage fees
-
that that construction is producing
-
to create a workforce,
-
development and placement program
specifically for those 2,000.
-
We’re meeting with HR this December. We’re going
to look at the criteria’s, skills, what’s needed.
-
We’re then going to work
with Tren and her team
-
on an RFP that looks at the workforce
development in being specific
-
in designing that pipeline,
or that journey to those jobs.
-
This is something we’re doing
more and more of
-
is linking the employers or employment
opportunity to the development
-
and programs that are happening
all the way down to high schools.
-
Which is something we didn’t talk about here,
but Boston’s effort to map
-
the job development ecosystem and then link it
in a way that it’s more effective and evaluated.
-
The concept of resilience
is a powerful one.
-
It resonates
with every aspect of city life and planning
-
in our city and what we do
in our city every day.
-
And our decision to focus
-
on our racial equity work
was important to our city to move on.
-
And to move forward really.
Not move on, move forward.
-
It’s something that’s important.
-
I grew up in Boston in Dorchester during
the bussing, when bussing came in.
-
I was at grammar school
-
and I used to walk to...
-
my mother and father
are immigrants from Ireland.
-
And when they came here they sent me
to parochial school, Catholic school.
-
I used to walk by the William E. Russell
every day in the early 70s
-
and the kids would come up
in the school buses, but they were led
-
by motorcycle police officers.
-
And there was a motorcycle police officers
behind them, and one on each side.
-
And they were moving kids in and out of schools and I thought that was
-
a little hard when you think I’m walking
down to St. Margaret’s down the street.
-
We’re walking down to school and these kids are being
escorted by the police. Not understanding at that time
-
what was going on because
I was six and seven and eight years old.
-
I wasn’t really sure
what was happening and going on.
-
Since that time Boston has made
some progress.
-
And we’ve worked on that progress
with other elected officials
-
and talking about addressing the disparities,
-
addressing racism and addressing the past
that we’ve experienced in the City of Boston.
-
But the disparities remain deep
-
and there’s a real, the distrust we have
is real in a lot of areas of our society.
-
People wanted more open
and honest conversations
-
and I saw the duty as a Mayor
who’s a White Mayor,
-
Irish Catholic White Mayor of Boston,
-
to start by listening and learning.
-
And that’s something important
you have to do because
-
if you get somebody making conversation
and trying to make up answers,
-
like I did when I was a candidate, it’s not
the way to go. And I did that as a candidate.
-
Trying to see what I could do.
-
A city can’t thrive if we’re disconnected
from each other.
-
And that’s something also important as far as
the work that we do moving forward.
-
Racial disparities are our deepest form
of disconnection that we have in this country.
-
And I realize in Boston we can’t solve the problems
of the United States of America in here.
-
What we can do is work on the issues
that we’re dealing with here in Boston
-
and hopefully other cities will see
what we’re doing
-
and mistakes we might make,
they won’t have to make those mistakes.
-
And what is successful in our city,
-
they can say OK this is something
we can do and use in our cities.
-
We were just in Columbia, South Carolina
-
with Mayor Stephen Benjamin a couple weeks ago,
about 40 mayors I think there,
-
and inevitably this conversation comes up
about equity and race. And we tie it into
-
what happens on a national level, but we also come
to saying that the impact can be made locally.
-
All it takes is one city.
-
One city to do something about it.
To be able to share best practices and ideas.
-
That’s what we do as Mayors, as cities, as city councils.
-
That’s what legislatures do: they take ideas
from each other and use best practices.
-
I just continue to have these dialogues,
continue to have these conversations
-
and hopefully we can continue to move forward
as a City of Boston, but also as a country.
-
The Food Bank is a great partner
to the City of Boston.
-
They work closely with our Office of Health and Human Services
and Office of Food Access as they do with the State.
-
They’re member of our
Boston Food Access Council
-
and we all know how important
this partnership is.
-
One out of every 6 Bostonians
struggle with food insecurity.
-
One out of every 6 Bostonians
struggle with food insecurity.
-
We’ve added 20,000 new jobs every year
for the last five years.
-
We have $9 billion dollars of new development
going on in the City of Boston.
-
We’ve built almost 28,000
-
new homes in the City of Boston
in the last five years.
-
We have great prosperity
in the City of Boston right now
-
and one out of every six Bostonians
are struggling with food insecurity.
-
That’s the message today.
-
That’s something that we need to work together
to tackle this issue
-
to get that number to zero.
No one should have
-
to worry about
where their next meal’s coming from.
-
Everyone deserves access to food
and that’s everyone’s basic human right.
-
In Boston, we need to know that that work
of fighting hunger is important
-
and the impact that we’re doing in fighting
has to go much further.
-
I don’t know what it’s going to take
the United States Congress and Senate
-
to recognize the need for gun legislation.
-
And also, we can look at Boston and see
when we have a homicide in Boston,
-
you can generally tie it back to poverty,
-
maybe dropping out of school, lack of education,
desperation, whatever it might be.
-
I don’t think anyone’s ever done a real study
on what’s going on with these mass shootings.
-
These mass shootings
don’t happen in other countries.
-
They happen in the United States of America.
They’re targeting seniors, religious groups, kids
-
and nightclubs.
It’s the second nightclub shooting
-
in the last couple of years here
and Pulse was the first.
-
Something has to give here.
-
You can only protect the NRA for so long.
-
They have an obligation,
the National Rifle Association,
-
if they don’t want to change the laws,
-
they have an obligation to the American people
to come up with some solutions.
-
When Purdue Pharma,
I’m not going to give him credit here,
-
had their back put up against a wall
on oxycodone, they tried to offer some solutions.
-
The Labor Movement, when their back's up against
the wall they have to come up with solutions.
-
The NRA needs to be held responsible
and accountable for coming up with solutions.
-
And if we can’t pass legislation
maybe that’s the route we have to take.
-
The NRA is allowing
-
mass shootings to happen by not letting
any action happen in the Congress and that’s a sin.
-
The ultimate goal of making this stuff usable,
at getting out here to West Roxbury
-
is one way to get to this data, but if we get it
all online you don’t have to travel all the way up here.
-
Let’s say somebody is looking at
-
a governor’s mansion in Virginia and wants
to compare it to the governor’s mansion in Massachusetts,
-
they may not even have to do
anything more than open a computer
-
to get all of our data.
-
They might have to email or call us to find out
-
what do we mean by this or that
or the other thing,
-
but the more accessible our data is
the more usable it is.
-
Frankly, the more usable it is even here. So when I look for something,
-
I either have to know which box
of the 2000 boxes we have contains the artifact
-
or I can look it up on our searchable database
and open it up.
-
If a researcher comes in looking
for a certain type of artifact
-
I can actually search our entire database
to see if we have it or
-
how many do we have
and what sites it turns up in.
-
And within 20 minutes Sarah or I could
get out to the box and pull it for researcher.
-
Which is how it works. Usually when I get
research requests, somebody will say,
-
I want to look at
one particular type of ceramic.
-
If I don’t know where every piece of that ceramic
is in our two million artifacts,
-
I can’t make it accessible to them
even though I know we might have some of it.
-
It’s making them usable by people
who may not even know that
-
we have these collections. I, myself
am still learning what we have every day.
-
I haven’t seen most of this stuff,
even while we were digging,
-
because I was in the home most of the time, not seeing the actual artifacts, but...
-
there’s some really cool stuff here.
-
Can I talk about the clams real fast
because the clams are really cool.
-
I’ll take it all.
-
When we were digging we got down to the very
bottom of the site and we hit a layer of clay
-
which is this deposit here,
in the very bottom of our site.
-
It was manmade as far as
-
where it came from because there’s little bits
of brick in it, so we know it wasn’t natural clay deposit.
-
But it’s a blue clay.
We call it Boston blue clay.
-
And it’s a marine clay
that was deposited by the glacier
-
right after the glacier left.
It melted a lot of soil.
-
Basically the ground that Boston is
was pushed down by the glacier
-
and when the glacier melted
it was still down a little bit deep.
-
It’s almost like jumping off a dock.
The ground bounces up after the glacier leaves.
-
But before that happened
the ocean flooded Boston.
-
So we have a couple thousand years
around 10,000, 15,000 years ago
-
where Boston was under water completely.
And then it bounced back up above water.
-
But during that time it laid
a huge deposit of clay
-
and that’s the Boston blue clay. And you see it
in construction sites all over the place.
-
We found clay that was then dug up
by somebody probably in the
-
late 1800s, early 1900s
and they used it to line something,
-
we’re not even sure what it is.
A cistern, a water collection, something like that.
-
And they dug up the clay and they
pulled out all of these shells in the clay still.
-
These were stuck in the clay from where they dug it out.
So these are actually clams that were living in Boston
-
when it was flooded that are
between 11,000 and 15,000 years old.
-
So these are like prehistoric clams.
They’re really thick. They’re huge.
-
And it’s just really kind of fun to see them
from 11,000 years ago stuck in the clay,
-
scallop in two soft shell clams.
-
I just think they’re really cool to find.
Basically they’re fossils.
-
We don’t get to find a lot of fossils
in archeology so we don’t do dinosaurs,
-
but it’s nice to happen
every once in a while.
-
In that deposit we also have artifacts
from the 1700s, like this
-
1800s, like this glass.
And 15,000 year old clams.
-
Not very typical, but it’s interesting.
-
Do minority and women owned businesses
face any barriers
-
when it comes to city contracting?
-
The disparity study is designed to assess
that question in a number of different ways.
-
So first, we’ll look at the degree
to which minority and women owned businesses
-
participate in city contracts
relative to their availability for that work.
-
I’ll unpack those terms in just a few minutes.
-
We’ll also provide a comprehensive analysis
of the local marketplace to help understand
-
whether minorities, women and minority and women own businesses
-
face any barriers working in the Boston region,
and whether any of those barriers lead to
-
less success with city contracting
in particular.
-
We’ll also provide a comprehensive review
of the contracting policies
-
and program measures
that the city uses to help identify
-
any policies or practices
that might be inadvertently
-
making it more difficult for small businesses
and minority and women owned businesses
-
to compete successfully for city contracts.
-
Then we’ll also provide a great deal
of insight and recommendations
-
around how the City can refine
-
the programs it uses to encourage minority
and women owned businesses' participation
-
and what programs it can consider using
in the future.
-
Educate me a little bit about this.
-
Disparity studies. I’ve been in this business
in my industry for the past 30 years.
-
I have encountered all kind of difficulties and I’m
still a small contractor after 30 years in business.
-
When you say disparity study,
meaning a study that is a doubt.
-
Is there a doubt that this exists?
-
Because I find it in this 30 years
the difficulty in contracts
-
for me to achieve all years in the study.
I don’t think there should be a kind of a doubt.
-
Maybe we're looking for proof.
-
But I been part of it
and not too long ago,
-
I was a minority in a contract,
a State contract with housing.
-
I was a third tier subcontract
-
just so I can fill the minority quorums,
-
but there is a major company, let’s say White
right in front of me to hire me just for that.
-
Is that something why
wouldn’t I be directly to the GC?
-
Why do I have to be
second and third tier?
-
So we know that thing happens where connections
are made to just use us for the particular.
-
I’m sorry if I’m out of the equation
-
or I’m getting out of the point
that we’re talking.
-
But for the past 30 years,
-
I can feel it...
If the dollar is taken green,
-
I’m suddenly all the qualifications...
I can’t meet them.
-
Usually like I was speaking here to Greg,
-
I cannot do a 20 or let’s say $10 million,
let’s say $2 million project.
-
But I have 10, 12, sometimes 15,
$200,000 projects.
-
I can do 20, as many as 200, but at one
-
then so really you'll see that
-
what is there that is something to keep us
or keep me still on that $200-300,000,
-
but where the dollar is greener.
So the disparity is there.
-
If it’s proof you’re looking, you come to me.
I’ve been a victim of it for the past years.
-
It’s been very hard for a small company
like myself to grow.
-
And usually I find let’s say
major stream what do you call it,
-
not by using the color of the skin,
-
but the mainstream companies
in five years in construction,
-
they do it in 20 or 30 million
and they speeding up there.
-
And what we say
if you really want to help this,
-
I don’t understand that
in bigger companies, bigger projects.
-
Like I heard Honeywell has so many million dollars,
negotiated contract with the city.
-
The casino was negotiated.
-
Why with a small contractor
so we can’t negotiate with the city
-
to get that has to be
different ways of doing it
-
that we can sit down and negotiate contracts
and make sure we eliminate that gap.
-
Suddenly with us it’s illegal. With major companies
it’s not illegal. That’s my point.
-
Question is there.
I think essentially it was
-
why do the disparity studies?
So there’s a belief on the ground that
-
these barriers exist.
-
So there’s a few reasons
why we have to go through this process.
-
One is as researchers we,
as strong as though, as strong as
-
our feeling is
that these barriers might exist or not,
-
we’ve got to do the work
and understand and look for evidence,
-
objective evidence that this exists.
The reason why is because
-
in order for the city
to develop its program
-
and for the city to develop a program
that can stand up to legal scrutiny,
-
there has to be
objective evidence in place
-
that they can point to that informs what programs
they use and why they’re using those programs.
-
That’s really the reason.
-
I wouldn’t use the word doubt necessarily,
-
but it’s really an exercise
in making sure that we’re gathering
-
the evidence that the city needs to make sure
that it’s tailoring its program appropriately.
-
That’s really what it comes down to.
-
There is no doubt that there are disparities
that exist in doing business.
-
There’s no doubt that there are disparities
in our economy.
-
In fact, the Mayor would be very clear
and has been very clear,
-
his number one priority right now
is addressing
-
inequities that exist
in the participation of our economy.
-
All over the City.
-
Now we think the inequities that exist in the
participation in doing business with the City
-
is where we need to put real effort
and try to lead.
-
And so there’s been historic
-
challenges doing business with women owned
and minority owned businesses here in the City
-
way before we got in,
-
and there are systemic barriers
and policy barriers.
-
And we want to address them.
-
We’ve been doing things
-
and there also have been challenges,
-
legal challenges to policies that the City
-
before we got into office,
but all over the country,
-
whenever a City adopts a policy
-
that begins to work with one group
or another, people will challenge it.
-
And say hey, is that fair?
Is that not fair?
-
BBC, Sameer, is representing the city’s effort
to make sure that we are well informed
-
when we introduce
any of these policies.
-
And more importantly,
that they can stand up in court.
-
Good boy.
-
So the good news is to take his temperature
I don’t have to put a thermometer in him.
-
I have a scanning thermometer
I can just put on his skin.
-
And it’s going to scan for his temperature.
-
- Perfect. He doesn’t have a fever.
- He’s neutered correct?
-
So the plan for today because
he’s already got his rabies vaccine,
-
we’re going to do
a distemper parvo vaccine.
-
We're going to give him a kennel cough vaccine
which is a drop that has to go into his nose.
-
We’re going to give him a de-wormer
and we’ll do a blood test.
-
We’re testing him for heartworm disease.
That’s transmitted by mosquitoes
-
and it’s a horrible disease
-
to have to treat
that’s really easy to prevent.
-
Distemper. Ready?
-
What was that? Nothing.
-
Rabies. I’m sorry little girl.
-
So you want to giver her a bath now?
-
You can call 1-800-PETMEDS
and ask for a prescription
-
of heartworm medication and they’ll call
here to verify that the test was clean.
-
But the way to keep him healthy
-
is to have him on the preventive medicine
once a month, all around the year.
-
This organization is incredible.
-
Morgan Memorial we all have a story
growing up of Morgan Memorial
-
and Goodwill,
providing opportunities for training,
-
for housing, for food,
-
for supplies, for clothing,
-
helping people. This organization has always
wrapped its arms around people that are in need.
-
It’s one of our largest employers for people with disabilities.
I want to thank you as well for the great work you do there.
-
I want to thank all the people that are here today
that we had the honor of serving.
-
Thank you for letting us serve you today.
Thank you for letting us be part of this day.
-
Thanksgiving is...
-
one of those holidays I think that
-
allows us the opportunity
to come and serve somebody else.
-
And a chance to see people and it should
fill our hearts with gratitude for what we have.
-
And on behalf of myself and all the folks
from the City and the State,
-
I want to thank you because
my heart is filled with gratitude today
-
because of the great work
that Goodwill does
-
and the great work of the young people
and the people that are here today.
-
So I’m going to stop talking and then
we’re going to have, we’re going to have dancing.
-
Will the runners go to the kitchen
and dinner will start.
-
We’re going to be doing the general contracting.
We’re the developer and the property manager
-
and this is some of the additional organizations
that we have.
-
We’re very proud of Cruz’s Care
because it’s a nonprofit that does
-
outreach to youth. We mentor young people,
we take them on trips, we do computer learning.
-
We do all kinds of backpack giveaways,
but the most important thing is we spend time
-
with youth that live on our properties
because we think mentorship
-
and interaction
is vital in young people’s lives.
-
And next slide.
-
We also have heard through the community
in this process,
-
about the wealth gap that exists.
-
And we all know in the Black community
the wealth gap
-
between Blacks and Whites is 275,000
-
for an average White family and 750 for an average Black family.
-
So one of the things that we made
as part of our mission in this proposal
-
is to give as much back
economically to the community
-
and leave it better than we find it.
-
We just want to give folks a bit of sense
of what we do from a payroll standpoint.
-
This is the last seven years.
You'll see our people
-
of color percentages go up
from 77 to 93.
-
Boston residents are in the 60’s.
Women and Section 3 workers.
-
And we continue to put money back
in the community.
-
And this is not only
on an employee’s standpoint,
-
but on a business standpoint.
-
We think it’s very important
that we support local businesses of color.
-
So these are MBE numbers.
-
Utilization of firms of color
in the last seven years.
-
And you see out of 152 million of total
development costs that we’ve done on average
-
75 to 78 % have gone to firms of color.
And you look at the worker hours.
-
We’ve hit as much as 95 % on 35,000 hours.
-
So again it’s about
Ngiving back to the community.
-
To talk about the program, it’s now 160 units.
When we were selected it was 150.
-
But as you get more into design
-
and more finite layouts you find that
you have a little bit more footprint.
-
So right now, it’s 160 units of which
105 are home ownership condominiums
-
and there’s 15,500 square feet
of retail space.
-
That’s also an increase
-
from when we were designated because during,
we’ve had about nine meetings
-
with DND, BPDA and part of the feedback,
-
most of the feedback we incorporated
-
and you’ll see in the design we have more of a street presence
-
and as that evolved
it opened up for more retail space.
-
So you’ll see when they do
the architectural
-
that our retail space has in fact increased.
-
Estimated real estate tax, people ask us,
is about $700,000 annually.
-
As some of you know, as part of our community
benefits we are going to be leasing space
-
to the NAACP at no cost for 10 years.
-
In addition to that we’ve endowed
a $5,000 scholarship
-
annually for 10 years for them to allocate
anyway that they want.
-
We also have agreed, YouthBuild Boston
for those of you who aren’t familiar,
-
is an organization
that trains young people in the trades.
-
Helps them get on a straight path.
-
We’ve committed $100,000
to that organization over five years.
-
Plus we’re going to hire at least
one YouthBuild graduate
-
in every major trade
or during the life of the development.
-
The life of the construction and we have
estimated that to be about 20 positions.
-
Community benefits should be
driven by the community
-
and not by a developer.
-
I’m not taking issue with that.
It’s a broad statement that I’m making.
-
It’s not targeted at crews specifically.
-
What, in that sort of proposal and package
can we revisit and look at
-
and really build more consensus around
from the community’s perspective
-
as to what they would like to see
as a community benefit.
-
Much of what you listed out
-
of course NAACP, I’m not sure they need
1,000 square feet of space.
-
And some of the others that are noble endeavors,
but could there be others?
-
And that make more sense
particularly for this site?
-
So I would just like to hear,
-
I think from not only the IAG group,
-
but also from the community
-
and have that community benefits process be more
-
inclusive of what the community wants,
-
as opposed to relationships that developers
have with specific groups of people.
-
It may not be that thing,
but it can look like that.
-
For us to go a little deeper on that.
-
I would like to respond.
-
We tried to get out ahead of...
-
Anytime we put in a proposal, as part of that we
think about the benefits back to the community.
-
And I think the Roxbury Strategic Master Plan
Oversight Committee asks the question,
-
how come the Cruz’s proposal has benefits
and none of the other’s had them?
-
And it’s because we always try
to be proactive.
-
So we can always have a discussion.
-
You know John’s always open to having
conversations and considering things.
-
But we made a commitment to the NAACP
in writing.
-
That not only would we give them
free space for 10 years...
-
Not to date myself, but when I was growing up
the NAACP was on Mass Ave, the prominent side.
-
You drive by you see them, you had ethnic pride
because you knew their mission.
-
Now, unfortunately
-
they’re in the Washington Park Mall
where no one sees them.
-
So we thought it was an excellent idea
-
to have them visible,
where better than in Dudley Square.
-
When people come down.
So we made that agreement with them.
-
We also made an agreement
to fund a scholarship
-
at $5,000 a year for at least 10 years
that they would have the control
-
to determine who got it.
We wouldn’t be involved in that at all,
-
just from the vantage point
of giving them the money.
-
And with YouthBuild.
YouthBuild does a great job.
-
If you’re not aware of them
just Google them.
-
Not that a lot of organizations don’t,
but they do a great job
-
taking our troubled youth
-
and turning them around
when their next step is either incarceration
-
or they have to turn their lives around.
And so we thought that that was a high priority
-
for us to make a commitment on
-
and providing jobs.
We’ve worked with them before, in fact
-
John has hired at least 10 YouthBuild graduates
-
in probably the last 10 or 15 years
because we think it’s so important.
-
It’s like ex-offenders. They need a chance.
They need another chance.
-
So, conversation on community benefits
-
is not off the table,
but the ones that we’ve given
-
we feel like we’ve given our word
to those people.
-
To those organizations.
It would be hard to go back and say,
-
we’ve changed our mind.
-
Community benefits should be driven
by the community.
-
It should have its focus
come from the community.
-
I understand that you as a developer
and others want to, some of you,
-
not all developers want to get ahead of that
and put on the table,
-
meaningful, long term community benefits.
-
That’s the other thing
and this is also more for the City that
-
community benefits shouldn’t just be
a shot in the arm. It should be long term.
-
It should be, it should you know,
-
build equity in the community.
-
That’s my concern and my concern
is that the voice
-
that carries that piece
around community benefit
-
resonate and comes
from the community.
-
I’m here today to tell my story on
-
how I got in front of the hydrant
and why I’m in front of the hydrant.
-
First of all I’m not denying I parked there.
I was wrong in parking there.
-
How I ended up there?
-
My industry’s biggest conference
of the year
-
is September 22, 23rd.
That’s something I know.
-
It’s also happened to be two weeks
before my wife’s due date.
-
It was a big debate throughout the year
if I should go, if I should not go.
-
That conference was in Rockland, Maine.
-
So predictably,
-
Tuesday night, September 23rd, I get
a phone call, my wife’s having contractions.
-
And I race home to, from Rockland, Maine,
Bar Harbor area.
-
So I drive home
three and a half, four hours.
-
It’s East Boston past midnight.
-
There’s no parking anywhere
within two miles of my house.
-
I’m a first time father, new father.
-
I have no idea what to expect.
I just have to get a parking spot.
-
2:30 in the morning
I park in front of the hydrant.
-
I wake up the next day and there’s not one,
but two tickets on my car.
-
So, I’m here,
letting you know I was wrong,
-
but as an exhausted, stressed,
tired new father
-
that is facing a pile of medical bills,
asking for reprieve from one of those tickets.
-
Based on the evidence you provided,
-
as well as the evidence provided
by the Officer who wrote the tickets,
-
factoring what I’m allowed to factor in,
legally speaking
-
I should deny the appeal today.
-
What I’m going to do however instead
I’m going to dismiss both tickets.
-
One with a warning
the other with a final warning.
-
That means is a couple of things.
-
First, in the future you got to make sure
-
you check where you park
because especially with issues like this,
-
and with no stop or stands,
they can tow the car if they really wanted to.
-
Which would not have been helpful
in this entire process for you.
-
Second, if you filed an appeal
you do need to bring
-
all evidence that you have
that can corroborate any testimonies,
-
paperwork, receipts, photos, whatever.
-
And third, means you don’t have
to pay anything today.
-
Thank you very much.
-
For the record we’re here today
for ticket 754471406
-
issued to us in a resident permit only
on 8/9/2019
-
at 10:09 p.m. at 343 Congress Street.
-
So what can you do to prove
the ticket was given incorrectly.
-
It’s tough for me to prove the ticket
was given incorrectly, but --
-
when I parked the car
there wasn’t any sign for
-
resident permit parking there.
-
It was just a meter I thought
-
and I mean I lived in this town my whole life.
I didn’t even know anybody lived down there.
-
I haven’t been down there
in a long time, so
-
for me to park in that part of town
-
and think, wait a minute,
this might be resident permit,
-
like it was the Hill or like it was the Back Bay
-
or like it was the South End.
-
I just didn’t see a sign
-
and I figured 9:00 I’m fine and I come out
and get a ticket at 10.
-
I can’t understand what happened.
I don’t, I just don’t know.
-
So what could have happened,
there are some parts of Boston
-
where it’s resident permit after six.
-
So without any evidence that
there isn’t a sign posted on the block,
-
more likely it was given correctly,
but I’ll dismiss it.
-
Just make sure every time you park the car
even if you’re at your in meter.
-
I have to check a little bit harder
than I did that night. Certainly.
-
I was even on a date the other night
and I’m like:
-
Hold on, I made her wait,
I got to check the signs
-
Just keep going until you find a sign there,
there’s always going to be one.
-
I just didn’t think to look.
Again, because who lives down there?
-
Evidently a lot of people
live down there now.
-
Maybe it’s like a new high rise
or something, I’m not sure.
-
Back in the day, nobody lived down there.
-
So that’s a copy of the decision.
Do you have any further questions?
-
Thank you for hearing me because
I missed my date and everything.
-
- You missed your date?
- Like I said, but the guy said you can.
-
Except for Atlantic, nothing’s that bad.
-
Don’t worry. It’ll get there.
-
Harold Street’s not bad so far.
-
So far it’s not bad.
It’s going to be getting bad.
-
Starting to build up
in the Sumner tunnel.
-
8th Street is not bad tonight.
-
I made a little adjustments
over there earlier.
-
You figured they’d start diving off
the highway, cutting through the back streets.
-
Looks like the highway
is starting to slow down.
-
The expressway’s starting to slow down.
-
Everyone is going north skiing.
-
Got to stay ahead of the traffic.
Got to stay ahead of the problem.
-
I might make this change permanent.
-
- Which one?
- Upham’s corner.
-
I’m always doing this. I just don’t think those
left turns need that much green time.
-
I never see that many cars making the move.
-
It backs up.
-
Some nights it doesn’t, but --
-
It don’t do it all the time though.
-
No, but it’s 50/50.
-
Gotta give it time. It will clear up.
-
What’s that? Double parked?
-
Hi it’s Keith from the Tech Center.
Hey, how’s it going?
-
I’ve got a vehicle stopped in the bike lane
on Congress Street at Milk Street.
-
Great, thanks.
-
I am the Executive Director of the Mayor’s Office
of Women’s Advancement here in Boston
-
and you’re now joining a community
of almost 8,000 women
-
that have been trained to know their worth
and demand fair pay.
-
You may know that Latinas in Boston
through the data that we measure locally,
-
and we are the only city that measures
these pay gaps locally,
-
Latinas are making 49 cents
to the White man’s dollar in Boston.
-
And then the figure nationally
-
is slightly different, but almost the same
which makes today Latina Equal Pay Day.
-
We have to work up until November 1st
-
to make the same amount of money
that White men made last year.
-
And so if you think
that’s shocking and depressing as I do,
-
that’s why you’re here.
-
And I wanted to say thank you.
You are part of the solution.
-
We have a two or three prong solution
-
that we’re working on putting together
at the Mayor’s Office of Women’s Advancement.
-
The first part of it is training ourselves,
empowering ourselves
-
and learning how to navigate the system as it is.
-
So we acknowledge that the system is unfair and that
-
it’s not our individual fault that we are
experiencing this pay gap as Latinas.
-
But there is something that we ourselves
can do about it and that is
-
learning to negotiate,
learning our work, our worth,
-
doing our research
and then demanding fair pay.
-
At the same time at the Mayor’s Office of
Women’s Advancement we do understand
-
that’s only going to get us so far,
so on the other hand
-
we are working on fixing that system and leveling it off so that
-
we are playing in a more equal play field.
-
What that entails is doing
a lot of work with employers.
-
So that you guys will learn how to negotiate
and demand your worth here,
-
they have to be ready for that
on the other end.
-
We work with more than 200 employers in the
greater Boston area to talk about this issue,
-
to get them to measure their own
wage gaps and then to come together,
-
and learn and propose strategies
for what they’re going to do about it.
-
Part of it is, how do you figure out
for this role,
-
how do I know
that I should be getting paid more?
-
Or that I should even get anything
outside of just a paycheck? What is that?
-
With the advent, thank goodness,
of the Internet,
-
that type of information
is very readily available.
-
So one of the things that I did learn
-
at an early stage thanks to the same manager,
because we had a conflict at one point.
-
And it was a conflict about
the size of my skirt.
-
It taught me one of these lessons, a good
negotiating point and why I researched.
-
Somebody complained
that my skirt was too short.
-
Now mind you compared to these days, woo.
It was like having knee length skirt.
-
But I asked him: would you ask or say
something, say the same thing to a man?
-
I mean obviously at that time,
-
men didn’t have the option they do or --
-
non-binary wasn’t a thing then,
so we didn’t have those types of conversations.
-
Then he said I’m going
to teach you something.
-
I don’t care if you’re a woman or a man.
-
He said do you want people to think about
these things because you’re a woman
-
or do you want them to think about
the value that you bring into your role?
-
And so, he did teach me that,
so part of that was
-
every time when I go for a new role,
or I’m helping someone,
-
I say go look up what a man
and a woman’s making for that role.
-
Find out what they’re making here
-
and what they’re making
in other parts of the country.
-
Find out what that scale is,
and then use the men’s scale.
-
The other thing too,
when you talk about knowing your value is:
-
besides that number on a piece of paper,
-
what else should you be negotiating for?
And that’s one of the great things
-
about doing your research
between the Internet,
-
what the company’s offering
and what other people are making.
-
Do you have bonus potential?
-
Are you moving expenses?
Do you have training that’s involved, or
-
memberships
for professional associations?
-
There’s so many things
that you can actually negotiate,
-
they should all be on the table.
-
So how my strategy changed
was I learned how to research.
-
I learned how to do those types of things.
But the other thing I also learned how to do
-
and Evelyn you touched upon this.
This is so very important.
-
Learning how to read people.
-
You can have all the knowledge
in the world,
-
but if the person across from you does not want to negotiate
-
or you don’t think they want to negotiate,
or you don’t know their negotiation style,
-
you may go nowhere in that conversation.
-
So another really important part
of that negotiation is
-
trying to figure out a person’s
negotiation style. It’s not that difficult
-
to be honest with you. One of the things
I had to learn early on in my career
-
because when I started negotiating
there was not that many women in my field.
-
So it was non’t even women of color,
it was just women.
-
And I had to learn to hold my own
-
with all these men that in a lot of times
I was leading, especially early in my career.
-
I was 23, 24 leading men that were,
-
had been in corporate careers for 20, 30, 40 years if not more.
-
So that was my first lesson
because I remember,
-
just from a cultural type of perspective,
-
a gentleman from Alabama
called me Sug one day.
-
Now I knew culturally that
he wasn’t trying to be offensive
-
and I also knew him personally,
-
but I also knew that that could impact
how other people looked at me.
-
And when you talk about value that’s not
a dollar sign value at that point in time.
-
Although it could translate into it
at a later point.
-
I had to go to my manager and say,
I know he doesn’t mean harm by this,
-
but he could be creating harm
-
based on the fact that I’m a woman.
And I’m a woman, a female negotiator.
-
So one of the things that I had to learn
from a cultural and just the value as a woman,
-
was my job was a negotiator.
-
If I could not negotiate my salary, what
was I saying to my potential employer?
-
So it was even more stressful
to be able to put a package together.
-
A couple of things that I learned,
I actually learned a lot from men.
-
I had a lot of male mentors.
-
Mostly because of the fact that
there was no one else again in that space
-
that were women. And they were definitely
not women of color, very seldom.
-
Very seldom did I ever run into
a woman of color.
-
So I had to lean outside of that space
-
to actually find women and women of color
who were doing something different
-
and that they could teach me
and they could give me a voice.
-
So mentorship was huge for me.
-
Without that mentorship,
-
I would not have learned as a woman
and as a Latina what my value was.
-
Then the other thing I did lean on
-
as far as my approach was concerned,
was I watched men.
-
And I watched how
they conducted themselves.
-
When you talk about learning your value,
-
a lot of times where I learned
were at bars at happy hours.
-
So number one,
-
I was taught you should not be a woman
going to a bar at happy hour with all these men.
-
I had to take a risk at that time in my career
to say there’s something going on there.
-
And so I would go and have a beer or two.
-
And have these conversations
because again, negotiation strategy.
-
People let their guard down at different points
and it was usually at the bar for men.
-
The other thing that I had to learn as far as
what was going on corporate America at the time?
-
Things were happening on the golf course.
-
I didn’t play golf. We played no activities.
We had no money for it.
-
So, I went and I took golf lessons
at the public golf course. I was horrible.
-
The first time I joined the company golf league
and I would tell them, I’m horrible.
-
The first time that I went up to hit the ball,
I missed it. And I missed it horribly.
-
But I told everyone.
I said I told you I was not good at golf.
-
At least people knew I was going to play golf,
but I was going to be on that golf course.
-
And I knew at the time that especially
when I was living in Pittsburg,
-
there really was not that many
women of color in the community,
-
much less in corporate America that I was doing
these things, that I was representing,
-
so I had to be careful of my actions.
I had to be careful of my words.
-
But when that did translate into salary,
-
I was at a stronger position
-
because people knew
that I was willing to do these things
-
to understand what my value was.
-
Because at that point I wasn’t
comparing myself to other women
-
and I definitely wasn’t comparing myself
to women of color because they weren’t there.
-
I was learning what to do and what
my value was compared to a guy,
-
compared to a White man.
-
And so that was huge for me as far as
my career in negotiation was concerned.
-
We had a shooting today
at Quincy and Ceylon Street.
-
It was a guy on a -- a kid on a scooter.
-
The scooter’s been recovered,
-
but the suspect’s still outstanding.
-
Pull it up, it’s on the brick, but I printed out
-
like 15 copies
so you guys can grab one if you need to.
-
Check your emails. It’s in there.
-
Otherwise, we’ll be
on the lookout for him.
-
And 7 p.m., the 201 --
what did I say 201 was?
-
Hogan and Lahey. You guys do
-
the Gloucester versus Boston Latin game
up at Madison Park.
-
Go up there. A couple code 19s. Or just
drive around at 7 p.m., take a look
-
and let us know if anything
needs attention up there.
-
I remain concerned about the precedent
-
establishing past practice of this committee
to approve such a request as this
-
of allowing the increase in enrollment
for a school,
-
when we know that the current
physical capacity of their building
-
is not equal to
what we are proposing going to.
-
And that we’re setting ourself up
for a year or two years from now,
-
the school rightfully coming back to us
and saying,
-
'we expect a bigger facility,
-
'you told us we were going
to have a bigger facility'.
-
And this is something that
-
this committee has perpetually done
time after time.
-
This is no reflection on the school.
-
But I’m concerned
we’re setting up a conflict
-
a year or two from now
-
when you’re trying to expan
to your approved enrollment level
-
particularly when there’s a lot of demand
for your school because you’re doing
-
really good things there with some youth
who are very challenged.
-
You’re doing outstanding work.
-
And yet, unless I hear otherwise,
-
the answer I have here was about
suspension, but was not yet about facilities.
-
This is a long setup to then hear
from the Superintendent on
-
where the District stands
-
about what we will do for facilities
-
because I remain deeply concerned
about approving this amendment.
-
I recognize we’re in a challenge.
We’re doing this because of the State review.
-
And yet we’re setting up a problem
a year from now.
-
I believe there was testimony last time that
the school is already well in excess of its
-
approved enrollment and so part of what is
in front of us right now
-
is an opportunity to right size
the maximum enrollment of the school
-
that would capture
what the excess enrollment will be.
-
So that’s not an excuse and that’s not
-
a total answer for what your question is, but I think
-
just to give that context, we are serving
through the current building,
-
or the current facility, students in excess
of what our current allotment is.
-
So there is a need for an additional building
-
or additional space.
I don’t want to presuppose a building.
-
And within that context I think that
might be helpful for the District to further
-
elaborate on its own comments
on the facilities from the last meeting.
-
But Mr. Chair, correct me if I’m wrong.
We are not just approving
-
for the Charter, for the enrollment to go up to
what the existing enrollment is right now,
-
we’re going beyond that
which would allow the school to expand
-
particularly in the 2.0, right?
So this is a kind of a newer program.
-
So this will be an expansion
for the school, it’s not just --
-
part of it is correcting where they are, right?
-
I agree with you,
but just help me out with that.
-
Absolutely and I want to just make sure
that within the context of that,
-
the increase is not 100 students.
-
The increase to the approved
maximum enrollment is 100 students.
-
But the increase I believe
in the actual enrollment is --
-
can you help me out with
what that number might be?
-
Next year is 430. And the enrollment
is 405 in our Charter.
-
- And this is a multiyear enrollment?
- Over 3 years.
-
The idea would be to grow 100.
-
- Grow 100 additional students?
- To 505.
-
To 505.
-
That’s 100 additional students,
but over your existing maximum enrollment.
-
- its’ about 70? - 70.
-
70 students over your actual enrollment.
-
- And that will require new physical space.
- More space.
-
So, we’re setting ourselves up here
for a big challenge.
-
So we’re not proposing simply
-
to adjust the amendments
to the actual enrollment right now,
-
but we’re proposing now
to allow them to expand
-
for students that we know
we do not yet have space for.
-
We cannot identify specific space
so we can’t say a plan is part of it.
-
Am I correct in that?
-
I can tell you that we are committed
-
to finding space for the current students
who are offsite already.
-
So we will be finding
space for them regardless.
-
They’re currently in an offsite location
this year.
-
- They’re in the Dearborn?
- In the Dearborn.
-
And Dearborn’s going
to need that space next year?
-
So we already know we need
to find some space for them?
-
But now we’re talking about
additional space beyond that.
-
This is a great problem to have.
-
It’s because you’re an outstanding school
doing outstanding work.
-
There is huge demand. When we talked to folks
at the Reengagement center,
-
they would love to have
so many more students there.
-
It’s not about a bad problem.
-
But it’s a problem that we’ve done
over and over again here.
-
And that’s what concerns me.
-
I wonder if we can come to a compromise
-
of what the enrollment actually is
for the building
-
and come back and have this conversation.
-
In order to capably serve
-
the varied and diverse
-
and high needs populations
within our district, we need to be able to
-
walk and chew gum at the same time.
Be able to move these programs forward
-
while we also continue to think about
how we are best creating the facilities
-
and the architecture around the district
to support these programs.
-
I’m wondering if it may be better for us
since we’re improving policy
-
just to make it clear that we’re approving you
to 435 or whatever the number is immediately
-
and to 505 contingent upon finding
a suitable facilities solution for the school.
-
So the school and their leadership
and their students and their staff
-
know that this is a priority
for the school committee
-
to find that solution for the school.
-
And that we’re also
very supportive of the school
-
because we know the population
they’re serving is critical.
-
But also now it’s a school committee by policy,
-
putting it back to the District
that it’s critical we find a solution.
-
Not putting it solely on the back
of the Superintendent to say,
-
we’re going to find something.
-
My recommendation at this point would be
-
rather than change the number which
would require a whole new process of approval,
-
that we table the current request
-
until we have completed
their satellite location identification
-
and we will bring this back to you
-
subsequently with that space solution
connected to it.
-
What about simply adding the sentence
-
to the approval that
-
the expansion is subject to finding
an appropriate facility solution?
-
Does that create a problem?
-
Thinking about
-
the issue that the Interim Superintendent
just laid out,
-
I suppose an approval like that
-
would allow the District to move forward
-
simply upon notification to the committee
at a later date that space has been found.
-
And so what that would then do would be--
-
it would simply be delaying the opportunity
for BDA to move forward to the State
-
and seek the approval
for the full 505 at a later date.
-
In other words, we would be taking care
of our committee business this evening
-
with that provision
-
and in the alternative,
-
if we were to table this
we would be voting at a later date.
-
Either way, it’s going to result in
-
an action from BDA to DESE
-
that follows the identification of space
for these students.
-
So, you know, I think it’s probably
six of one, half dozen of the other.
-
We do think that’s
a wise path forward. It allows
-
the current Charter proposal as presented
to be approved,
-
but the approval of moving beyond the 435
-
is contingent on us coming back to you with their offsite space plan.
-
So if you want to propose
the amending language
-
that would give them the approval
-
and also make it clear that
before we submit it to DESE,
-
we will have come back to you with the space plan.
-
Alison, if that buys you the right amount of time?
-
We’re not waiting until fall next year.
-
No. We’re talking about
before the end of this school year.
-
To bring it back from the very
-
focused conversation we had
about facilities this evening.
-
This really isn’t about facilities. That’s just a condition precedent to
-
allowing you to continue to serve
the population that you serve so well.
-
And expand that service to
-
a number of students across the district
who really need it.
-
We’re very excited.
-
Something that was lost is that you’re also
changing your enrollment policy
-
as part of the Charter amendments
that are going forward and so,
-
making it easier and more accessible
for students to find
-
high quality education at BDA
-
is the sum and substance of the Charter
amendments that you put before us tonight.
-
We’re very happy to approve those
and we wish you well.
-
And we look forward to hearing
about your new location.
-
So your main issue is the rodents?
-
I found one of them dead under that cabinet.
I moved the refrigerator --
-
I had to throw him away.
He was about that big with a big fat tail.
-
And oh, it stunk bad.
-
- It pulled out the refrigerator.
- You were seeing ‘em over here?
-
I threw one away. I killed one.
I had traps under there.
-
Trays and they were empty.
And then I smelled a bad odor. Really bad.
-
He was like that big. That wasn’t no mouse and
he got a big fat tail with rings around it.
-
So it could possibly be a rat.
-
Did you already clean out
the droppings under there?
-
Yeah, but I did take some pictures
on my phone.
-
I wanted to just check around here
just to make sure.
-
They’re possibly getting in
through right there.
-
He’s coming through the cellar I think.
-
We can take a look.
-
But those droppings right there
are pretty big.
-
It’s not a mouse. I had three tomatoes
on the top of the counter.
-
They we’re smashed all over the place.
I’ve never seen a mouse do that.
-
How often have you been seeing them?
-
Every day for the last month,
month and a half.
-
Since they’ve been working on the streets.
-
- I can’t even sleep at night because --
- Because that’s been going on?
-
I mean I saw one of them running,
he runs fast.
-
And then I hear him in the broiler there
where I left him some peanut butter
-
and then the next day it’s half gone.
-
I’m surprised he’s still kicking.
But there might be more than one.
-
This is probably the second one.
There might be three or four.
-
Those kick plates underneath the cabinet
can come out easy, they’re not nailed in.
-
If you kick it or--
yeah I can kick it with my foot.
-
- There’s definitely heavy activity down there.
- I know I wasn’t imagining it.
-
- I’ve never seen rats before here.
- You’re getting a lot.
-
Before this I had raccoons
in my ceiling.
-
They dug two holes and I patched
-
that one, but with the heavy rain
he dug a big circle in the wood
-
and the water was coming in and the rain,
the sheetrock just came down.
-
Does the management usually get back
to you when you try --
-
My sister’s got problems
her side of the house. Water leaking in.
-
So it’s you on this side
and your sister on the other side?
-
And my two brothers own a part of this
-
and one of my brothers is trying to evict me
because I think
-
he wants to come down into my apartment
which is better than his.
-
Got you.
-
I put all those in there.
They’re pretty clean.
-
There’s no food on them,
but I don’t know.
-
- What’s going on with the flooring?
- It’s just cracking from the water.
-
It’s been that way for the last year or so.
-
It was with all the little leaks.
-
When you have a chance and possibly
get to it sooner than later,
-
start scrubbing that, getting rid of
that heavy build up, that grease.
-
- Because any sort of food source --
- He ate half of my--
-
I had a sponge with some food on it
and he chewed half of it away.
-
So what you really want to do
-
is not leave any kind
of food source out for them.
-
So anything like for instance
these onions right here.
-
If you can, get a plastic container
and just put them in there
-
at least until --
-
I’ll let the management or the landlord know
what’s going on as far as the issue.
-
But in the meantime, you’re going
to have to do your part.
-
So, that would be the stove
and putting
-
these onions or any kind of fruit
or vegetable in a plastic container.
-
What I’ll do is I’ll try to talk to them,
-
find out what’s going on.
-
And where the disconnect happened so hopefully
we can come to some sort of resolution
-
where you’re not living
with a pest infestation and the leaks.
-
Because they spread disease too.
-
And I try to keep it clean as I can here.
I’m a bachelor right now
-
and living here for 18 years
since I got divorced.
-
I’ve made my mistakes, but you know,
I don’t do drugs or anything.
-
- I’m clean.
- That’s good.
-
I have a glass of of wine here and there
and lately my spirit's broken.
-
Because they want to throw me
to the street after all.
-
Anybody’s spirit would be broken.
-
I’ve been going through mental health
through Veterans.
-
And I got some anxiety pills,
I’m on blood pressure pills,
-
baby aspirin because I got
stents in my heart.
-
But I’m still alive. Hopefully
move onto something better soon.
-
We’ll try to help you out
as much as possible.
-
And I’ll talk to them to see
what exactly is going on.
-
Anytime, and I’ll leave my card for you.
-
On the back of my card
-
I’ll leave my cell in case you have
any issues or if anything comes up.
-
Most of this stuff will be on a 30 day notice.
-
Some things that I deem is an emergency
will be on an emergency notice.
-
And so, once they get an emergency notice
that’s 24 hours.
-
The other stuff will be 30 days
so they’ll have 30 days to fix that.
-
What I need from you is
when they come by
-
or when they’re letting you know
-
like within the 24/48 hours like
-
I’m going to come by and do the repairs.
Just let them in.
-
That’s no problem. Sure.
-
I want the repairs to be done. Believe me.
-
- I know.
- I don’t want to live like this.
-
I hear you. So, like I said I’ll touch base
with you later on today
-
after I talk to your siblings
and then we’ll take it from there.
-
Currently
-
we need to finalize the community
process which we’re doing right now
-
and then finalize the host community
agreement with the City.
-
And then apply to
-
to the Cannabis Control Commission
for the provisional licenses
-
and then that will allow
-
617 to move forward with the build out
and final inspections and hopefully,
-
ultimately license to operate.
-
How close are the cannabis shops
going to be to the school?
-
How many people are you hiring?
And where are you hiring them from?
-
I believe the closest school
is about 600 feet.
-
To say that we just want to offer jobs
is actually a misnomer.
-
We actually want to
help people with a career.
-
We also have
-
a cultivation facilities
in Southwestern Massachusetts
-
that’s going through licensing processes.
-
Anybody can get a job. That’s very easy.
-
But in this industry,
we want to be able to mentor somebody
-
and to let them have
a pathway to a career.
-
If you’re interested in edibles,
we can help you with that pathway.
-
If you’re interested in extractions,we have
a facility going up that will be able
-
to mentor people
to go through that particular program.
-
If you want to be a grower,
-
we do have some pretty good growers on our
team that would be able to mentor people
-
to get to a certain point where they can
become successful in this industry.
-
And not just so
they can go get a job, right?
-
We’re looking for pathway to a career,
a mentorship program that can
-
really turn some things around
for this neighborhood
-
in certain ways that a job
just probably couldn’t.
-
How many parking spaces do you guys
have dedicated to your facility?
-
What's it like in the surrounding area?
Have you done any traffic studies?
-
And then how many shoppers can you
physically handle inside your store?
-
What’s your plan for line management
and overflow?
-
I only saw a small mantrap on that floor plan.
-
So I’m curious if you could address that.
-
Someone would come into a vestibule.
-
He would be identified
with the proper government I.D.
-
and then he would buzz
into the retail area there.
-
So, as soon as we want,
-
we’ll have someone outside
telling everybody, have your I.D. ready.
-
We’ll try to move that line as fast as
we can safely, professionally and securely
-
that allows them into the next.
-
And then when they make the purchase
they will exit a different door
-
so there won’t be
that backlog right there.
-
Are you going to have a line down the block?
Are you going to have a waiting area inside?
-
Just these are the things
you need to think about
-
because these situations will come up when
-
you’re at capacity and people
are going to be standing outside.
-
These are things that you got
to think about.
-
Given the neighborhood,
given the location,
-
we absolutely think
that a lot of the traffic
-
and customers are going to be pedestrian
based as well as public transportation.
-
And then certainly rideshare
which is being used all over the place.
-
When you talk, you’re speaking
to the host community groups,
-
I’m sorry, there’s some of those groups
-
that are being talking to
that really don’t matter.
-
And some of those people
that you’re talking to
-
are making decisions
for the rest of us in this room
-
that don’t consider us.
-
Like some of the people over in Savin Hill
that don’t like this side of Dorchester.
-
So, I think when we’re talking about --
-
when we’re making plans about host community
and talking about to the community,
-
I think you need to reach out
to the regular people of the community
-
because some of these organizations
and some of these little groups and meetings
-
don’t really give a crap about us.
-
And it’s all about their agenda that
they have set forth. That’s one thing.
-
Also often in our community
-
we do have Asian businesses
that are run,
-
but there’s not people that look like me
that work in those Asian businesses,
-
I don’t want -- we’ve talked Richard
so I don’t have a problem with you
-
and we’ve already discussed this.
-
I’m just concerned that are we going
to make this a multicultural employment area?
-
Like I said, a lot of the times
-
the Asians that do come in our community, they don’t hire me.
-
We have to hire locally
because that’s the easiest
-
community outreach we can do
-
and also for the operations sense is the best way to do it.
-
As a business owner,
-
once you get in here
and I’m not going to say right away,
-
but maybe six months or a year
depending how your profit goes,
-
are you willing to personally give
something back to this community to help
-
educate the young African Americans,
the young Cape Verdeans, the young Asians
-
that live in this poor community
that’s riddled by gun violence
-
and other drugs that are not marijuana
that keeps everybody calm?
-
If everybody was on marijuana
they’d be calm someway.
-
Your first comment regarding the various
groups that we are supposed to meet,
-
and I strongly use the words
'we were supposed to meet',
-
because a lot of those
are dictated by the City.
-
Exactly! That’s my point.
-
So you know for us to jump outside
of that particular parameter
-
is not very easy for us.
-
As a business man, as a lifelong
resident of Boston, Massachusetts,
-
we would want to give back.
-
But because there are some things
that are beyond our control as a business,
-
there are only so many things we can do
per the host community agreement.
-
Now if you want to touch upon
a personal stuff,
-
that’s a personal passion of mine
to really give back
-
and do things for the community.
-
I can’t promise you anything today,
but I can pledge.
-
Let me finish.
I can pledge
-
that there are times
we will outreach to the community.
-
People that think that we didn’t
include them in this particular
-
round of talks and everything like that,
because that is a personal mission for me.
-
That is something I hold dear and near
and it's passion for me.
-
First things first. I need to make sure that
I cross my T’s and dot my I’s with the City.
-
They are the ones that are in control
of a lot of things in our situation here.
-
I just want to make sure that
-
whatever funds that you’re going
to be giving out of your pocket
-
goes into a great entity in this community
that really matters
-
and that is actually having an effect
on our community.
-
As I said, I support you guys. I just want
to make sure that you have a solid plan,
-
and especially around security
-
and the overflow thing is really, we need
to address that as the young lady said
-
becaus we can’t have a line of people
-
particularly if we have people coming
from like Milton or other places.
-
It’s kind of like Oh look at them,
let’s go setup for robbery.
-
I want to make sure
that those are addressed, OK?
-
I guess I want to find out from you
what you’re going to do
-
truly to address safety concerns around
the store that you’re looking to open.
-
We have some phenomenal officers in our
neighborhood. They work extremely hard
-
to keep us all safe.
-
And it sounds like part of your
public safety plan is to lean on the Polie.
-
And I think that’s a bit unfortunate.
-
There’s a lot going on
in this neighborhood that isn’t good.
-
And we lean heavily on them
to help support the community.
-
So that doesn’t help when we’re layering
something additional onto the BPD.
-
Second question has to do with
the process for approving this.
-
If someone can just sort of address
-
whether or not the community
has an opportunity to vote up or down.
-
This has to go through another process.
-
The Board of Appeal which they have not
received a date as of yet.
-
You can make your voice heard
through that process as well.
-
This is not a done deal here today.
-
They have more meetings to do.
We have more applicants to
-
visit and do outreach to as many people
in the neighborhood as possible.
-
Leaning on the police for their expertise
-
in this neighborhood and what the police
needs for resources in this neighborhood.
-
I don’t think we want
to stand up here and say
-
oh, we’re going to do X, Y, Z
for security.
-
And then the police say You don’t want
to do that in this neighborhood',
-
or 'That’s not what we need
in this neighborhood'.
-
I think that conversation is ongoing.
-
And one of the big things
that I think 617 can do as an entity
-
is obviously that surveillance
and extending that circle of surveillance
-
really in conjunction with BPD
and what they’re looking for.
-
Making sure those systems
talk to each other.
-
But also making sure that BPD and who’s ever
running the store have a relationship.
-
My concern is I’m an abutter
to this whole establishment.
-
So, I’m right behind Walgreens.
-
I maintain it. There’s dumpster
diving back there with Walgreens.
-
They park in my driveway.
I can’t get in and out of the alley.
-
Half the time I got to call the police.
I got to call 311.
-
It’s a huge major --
-
If I wasn’t such a gentleman
I would say what it is.
-
So what I’m saying is that
having no parking,
-
dealing with the security issues
that I’m dealing with right now,
-
I’m not having it.
Just dealing with the restaurant
-
and dealing with the smoke shop
and dealing with Walgreens is enough.
-
I can’t even get in and out
my driveway as it is.
-
I got people dumpster diving in the middle
of the night. I have security cameras.
-
When the police come and they look
what stuff that goes on back there,
-
doesn’t do anything.
-
Those are my issues whatsoever.
-
The parking -- People that park from
Boden Str. and down Blakeville Str.,
-
blocking the driveway just
when people are going to the restaurant.
-
So never mind having a dispensary there.
-
Where they going to park at?
Where they block
-
my neighbors, I got one, two, three, four,
four or five abutters here
-
that they block their driveways here
and we always like
-
up in a rage trying to figure out
whose car is blocking your driveway.
-
So what are your plans for that?
-
We’re going to have cameras out front
that indicate
-
that someone’s there and we’ll have
one of the security go out there
-
and ask them to move.
-
We’re going to work hand in hand
with Boston Police on this.
-
There may come a time
when we may have to hire some details
-
to help us out at the early goings on this.
-
We’re going to have conversations
with them. They’ll approve our plan.
-
They’re going to have input to our plan
-
and those are things
that we’ll discuss with them
-
that they can be on the lookout
when they send their patrols by as well.
-
And I can tell you that there is no way
-
that we’re going to let our customers
double park in front,
-
say I’ll be right back and run in.
-
They won’t be allowed entry
into the store.
-
We have personnel who will be onsite
inside and outside
-
as well as some sort of combination of
Boston Police outside,
-
and our store person checking people
as they get in. And we won’t let them in.
-
Walgreens is a staple of our community
and an intersection where people go get
-
family supplies, go get Pampers,
they go get their medical needs.
-
So within that going on,
-
they have to pass through
a smoke shop, a weed shop.
-
Then that alley that’s running there
is famous to becoming a smoke --
-
destination. Before the smoke shop got there
that was a smoke destination.
-
The smoke shop came and it became
a bigger smoke destination.
-
A barber shop was there.
It became a bigger smoke destination.
-
The Walgreens has been raided,
I mean from --
-
us doing an event for the community
-
and people going across the street
and raid it.
-
There’s been shootings and other
negative things going on in the community.
-
So just having an entity there constantly
is really worrisome for
-
our seniors, our young people
who have teen centers.
-
We have schools,
even though there’s a radius.
-
At the end of the day this is
a common intersection for everyone.
-
Those imaginary lines don’t exist
because we have to go to Walgreens
-
to get our medications,
we have to go get Pampers
-
and our daily stuff
that we need right away.
-
We need Walgreens in our community.
-
We don’t necessarily need a smoke shop
or a weed shop, but we do need Walgreens.
-
As I read this,
you guys are talking about
-
'fostering a mutual beneficial
healthy and safe partnership'.
-
Again, we had a store, never got robbed,
never got anything,
-
but we have seen people who have been
getting shot in corners, inside stores.
-
There is a lot of trauma
in this neighborhood
-
and in your whole beautiful presentation
I didn’t see
-
bullet points around
-
how you guys are doing all that
and bringing it back to the community.
-
And also about,
-
where you say that you’re creating a positive
economic impact beneficial to Boston,
-
and Dorchester neighborhood.
Bowdoin Geneva is a high needs.
-
We don’t have police available
in the evening hours.
-
So it’s my concern how you guys are saying
that you’re going to reach out
-
and get support from, you know,
-
the police department
which is all nice and dandy,
-
but they’re short staffed. They have
people retiring day in and day out.
-
And academy’s coming in
-
and we’re not getting the people
that we need in order to
-
provide the services that we need,
in order to be a safe environment.
-
So bringing in this flow where you guys
are going to have somebody at the door,
-
I didn’t hear anybody directing traffic
or telling people
-
where to go and how to park.
It sounds beautiful when you’re saying
-
we’re going to tell people
to move their cars,
-
but that’s not how it works around here.
-
We are not in downtown.
We are not in Back Bay.
-
We are in Dorchester where people say
-
I’ll leave my car there,
what you gonna do about it?
-
I think that it we all agree that earing that type of feedback
-
is the starting point because
we don’t have all the answers right now.
-
You’re absolutely right.
There are certain things that we don’t know.
-
And we need the feedback
from the community
-
to be able to work together
to come up with a plan that works.
-
Are we going to have
all the answers on day one?
-
I hope so, but it’s unlikely.
-
We’re not going to know what problems may arise.
-
There may be problems that are resolved
by our presence just as much.
-
We can commit to working with you
to resolve them as they come up.
-
I mean that’s all that we can promise
right now. Hearing that,
-
that’s something that’s important.
-
It’s noted. We want
as much feedback as we can get
-
on those types of issues that we may not
be able to see at the moment.
-
And if we can help prevent
issues like that
-
and there’re ideas on how to do that,
we’re all ears.
-
It may sound like
we haven’t addressed it,
-
it’s only because there are a lot
of moving parts that we have to
-
make sure that we coordinate
with the City.
-
Having community meetings like this
to meet with you
-
to talk about stuff that concerns you guys
-
and incorporate that into our business plan
and plans moving forward.
-
This isn't by far a done deal.
This is something that we would like to discuss
-
with everybody in the community as well
-
and hopefully
tonight’s a great start to that
-
and something more elaborate
and a little bit more lengthy in the future.
-
This community meeting is part
of the process for you to get your license?
-
And then does this community meeting
have a process to vote?
-
So does this community, after we talk
and we vent, and we cry and we laugh --
-
- What happens?
- Nothing.
-
We take what happens here
back to City Hall.
-
We have a conversation there
about what happened --
-
To City Hall meaning the Mayor or --?
-
We go back and reiterate
what happened here.
-
So you also have an opportunity yourself,
-
if you’d like to send in an email,
a phone call, write a letter
-
- And it gets taken a look at.
- It goes into a file for this applicant.
-
I’m new to this. I’m sorry.
-
So that’s how the information that --
-
the public puts out gets put into play.
-
'Mr. Mayor, this is what they said'.
And then what happens?
-
In a nutshell we go over what happens
and it’s deliberated,
-
it's decisions made and if they move
forward they move forward.
-
You have good intentions. I believe you.
-
If you have good intentions,
forget the requirements!
-
Communicate with us.
Go above and beyond.
-
Make sure that everybody knows about it.
-
- Too much?
- No, no you’re right.
-
You have good intentions.
-
Do more, make sure that everybody knows
about it because you know what?
-
I know this kind of stuff is beneficial
to Black communities if done properly
-
because I’ve done my research.
However,
-
if done in this way
and just an ill prepared manner --
-
I’m not saying you have been
because I don’t know enough --
-
then you have detriment at your hands.
-
This kind of business,
if it doesn’t benefit our community
-
is a detriment and will disproportionally
affect brown and black people.
-
We have been outreaching
to the community members.
-
They work at the neighborhood associations
to address us and to introduce us.
-
We cannot go knock on every single door
in Dorchester. That’s not possible.
-
Those neighborhood associations
are predominantely represented by Whites.
-
So what happens is the people that
-
or we’re saying that are impacted,
the people that suffer from trauma or not,
-
we’re not generalizing this culture saying
everybody suffers from trauma. We’re saying
-
that this is a poorer neighborhood
and poverty affects us in this way.
-
So, the people that it impacts
are not being communicated to.
-
And so, it makes sense then
-
if you have good intentions
that you go above and say look,
-
we want everyone to be aware
-
and we want to be very transparent
so we’re going to do more.
-
This process is not dictated by us,
the applicant. As much as we want to be
-
in control as business owners,
this entire process is dictated by the City.
-
Let me reiterate it. This entire process
is dictated by the City.
-
Many things you brought up and concerns,
I personally am bothered as well.
-
Some of the things that you talked about
and you reiterated,
-
some other people have said
that same thing.
-
We heard it. Several, many times.
-
But the fact of the matter
is a lot of things that we’re hand tied.
-
To go above and beyond something
that was instructed us to do by the City,
-
we just do what the City asks us to do.
-
Now to say forget about crime,
just go ahead and do that.
-
We can’t.
We listened tonight and we shall.
-
We need to get organized
and get to the City then.
-
We need to change this process.
-
I represent the Bowdoin Geneva community.
-
It’s an amazing community, but that has
some of the worst public health outcomes.
-
If you look at the geography of
incarceration today in our Commonwealth,
-
about 60 % of the people
in the Massachusetts jails
-
actually come from the zip codes
that I partially represent.
-
And so I want to just ask
a couple questions
-
that constituents brought to me. First,
I’ve only been in office 7 weeks.
-
The State didn’t do a good job
-
and I’ve said this
at every cannabis meeting
-
because applicants
are educating residents
-
about things that should have been done
by State and City government.
-
At least that’s my opinion.
-
And so I offered to bring the Office
of emerging industries and the Commission
-
to come and talk to our community
directly because we have questions
-
that can’t be answered
-
by asking an applicant and having
an agitated conversation with the residents.
-
The first is this is one of the most
diverse communities in the entire City.
-
It is the poorest part of Dorchester.
-
It’s over 90 % of color.
-
My question is
do you have anybody on your team
-
that represents one of the major
ethnic groups in this community?
-
I know the Vietnamese community is 20 %
so that answered probably yes.
-
I don’t want to assume Asian identity.
-
Two, also mass incarceration
has deeply impacted our community
-
and when this law was first passed
I know a lot of people went to vote
-
because we wanted to right the wrongs
-
of also what has happened to our community
because of the war on drugs.
-
Do you have anybody on your team
-
that has been impacted by that
or have you thought about that?
-
Third, we know that the host agreement
goes into a general fund,
-
so the other question I had is
have you discussed as a team
-
how you will put resources together
for this community
-
that is highly under resourced,
-
also by the City and State government
to be quite honest,
-
but there’s an immediate needs on this --
-
in this corridor that are not represented
in areas like
-
Neponset or in Lower Mills.
That the Bowdoin Geneva specifically
-
been deeply impacted by bad policy
and under resources. So those were
-
three questions and are you open
to a second meeting or conversation?
-
This district is 42 % Cape Verdean
-
and a lot of the times at these meetings,
I might see 4 or 5 Cape Verdean Americans,
-
but nothing is translated in our language
-
and so what I find is that
they’re not even participating
-
in these conversations,
not because they don’t want to.
-
They care about this community,
but you’re not going to walk into a room
-
where they don’t speak your language
or try to have things translated for you.
-
So I just wanted to know
if you’d be open to another --
-
because you’re only required to have
one meeting,
-
so the question is
are you open to another conversation?
-
So those are the points that I want to share
that mainly came from constituents
-
who couldn’t be here tonight,
-
so part of my job is to
represent their interest and share that.
-
Somebody brought up
a comment earlier about
-
when they walk into these
particular stores they don’t really see
-
a representation of themselves.
-
Well I do want to note
that we’re not open yet.
-
And so we will have representation
of this neighborhood.
-
A lot of people have asked us
to drill down hard on that number.
-
That’s a business question. I don’t have
that answer for you because
-
that has not been answered
during our business plan discussions.
-
But we're willing to have more conversations
and more dialogue with everybody
-
that should be involved.
As you stated in your first comment
-
before saying anything else that
the State didn’t do a very good job on this.
-
And I felt the applicant’s the guy that
has to elucidate and enlighten the public.
-
And we’ve done that.
-
Through our own pockets, through our own
measures and through our own grit.
-
We don’t want to see this industry fall.
-
Because yes, Dorchester has been
disproportionately affected by this.
-
I don’t see anybody else stepping up
-
to really say hey, let’s bring this
to Dorchester and really make this happen.
-
You see a lot of Colorado people,
-
you see a lot of Washington people,
you see a lot of California people.
-
But the barrier is so high
during the DPH era,
-
for you to get into this
that it was nigh impossibility
-
for anybody thinking of bringing a medical
marijuana establishment to Dorchester.
-
You’re talking high six figures
to even be heard,
-
so not only have you been
disproportionately affected
-
by having your members
of your community arrested,
-
and now there is an economic barrier
for you to go ahead and overcome
-
just so you can do business
in this industry that has affected your life
-
and generations down the road.
-
We’re not the type of people
that’s going to come in and say
-
I can go ahead and clean this up for you.
-
I’m not that type of person.
But what I can pledge to you
-
is that we can come down here
-
and have discussions and
frank conversations with everybody
-
to make sure we include
as many people as we can.
-
We can’t do everything for everyone,
-
but we can do a lot of things
for a lot of people.
-
But again, we are not open yet.
Give us the opportunity to come down
-
and really show you our medal
and show you what we’re really all about.
-
And let the State know that what they did
-
and what they have been doing
is not the correct process.
-
And with your help we can go ahead
and let them know
-
that we can overcome that situation
and bring this neighborhood around.
-
This is the poorest neighborhood
in Boston.
-
Do you guys not want economic development?
-
Do you guys not want to be
a piece of something
-
that has taken your lives away from you?
-
I’m the catalyst for that and so be it.
I can do it. I look forward to helping you
-
and you helping me
and we can accomplish this together.
-
We see everyone who’s at the table here,
-
and as a community we need to make sure
that we’re holding them accountable.
-
So we shouldn’t just be
saying this now in the moment,
-
but we really need to take everybody
who has a hand in this to task.
-
When things are not working correctly
-
because you all have to live here.
We have people who work here.
-
We have people who care about this
community who’s been here for many years,
-
putting in the hard work and effort
to get ourselves together.
-
And so the way we do that is
every time somebody says something to us,
-
let’s make sure
we’re going back to them.
-
And let’s make sure
that we’re holding them accountable.
-
And let this evening not be the only time
where we’re continuing to do that.
-
Because if we do that, you know what?
It’s just going to be another situation,
-
same old, same old and we get to hold
the crappy end of the stick.
-
And we’ve been doing that for many years
-
and so let’s hold folks to the fire
and let’s hold folks to task.
-
There’ll be business cards
on the back table. If you have comments
-
you can call up
or you can shoot an email.
-
We’ll be responsive and we’ll make sure
it’s noted and it’s on file.
-
We talked about this you know from a
year ago when we first met to talk about
-
utilizing the restore program.
Hiring an architect through our program
-
to work with you and your family,
to really elevate your business.
-
I know one of the other goals was really, I
mean this is a very successful supermarket.
-
I think that you have a very
loyal customer base,
-
but I do know
-
and this is true for any business
in the city,
-
it’s always important to
attract new customers.
-
So were you hoping,
is one of the goals
-
that by doing this project it will attract
some new customers in the city?
-
Yeah, absolutely 100 percent. You know
I know during the rush hour traffic
-
in the morning,
rush hour traffic at night there’re
-
thousands of cars that go along
Cummins Highway that pass the
-
store and probably don’t even
think twice about
-
ever coming in here to do their
grocery shopping. But I think
-
once we remodel and redesign
the front I think they might
-
have second thoughts about
that and maybe give us a chance
-
and see what we have to offer
for them and their family.
-
Yeah, I mean we do know like through this
program that when people complete a project
-
of this scale, two things happen.
Your existing
-
customers feel
grateful and taken care of,
-
and it in many ways it’s a thank you to
them for shopping here.
-
And I think people get
very excited when a project
-
like this, a store that they’re
going to constantly is transformed.
-
But I think also
-
people discover you for
the first time
-
and as you said, people are driving
up and down Cummins Highway
-
and not pulling into
your parking lot.
-
Because they’re not really seeing you.
And I think that’s absolutely going to
-
happen for you and we see this happen over
and over again for many of our projects.
-
Is that people walk by a storefront
and once we actually transform it
-
through the restore program with
a new signage and design, you know
-
it’s getting people through that door.
And obviously that helps you
-
be more successful.
-
Who are the
customers that come to this store?
-
So predominately residents of Mattapan.
-
We also get a fair amount of people from
-
Dorchester, Hyde Park, a little bit of
Milton as well.
-
And you know demographic wise come
from many different countries,
-
all the Caribbean countries,
South, America, Central America
-
hat’s predominately where
customers come from.
-
And you know I live in the neighborhood
too, so I know
-
America’s Food Basket’s been in
the neighborhood for so long.
-
I do know that based on
the constituency that
-
America’s Food Basket’s
been serving in your four locations,
-
so do you carry specific foods and
that really the community needs?
-
Yeah, yeah absolutely especially in the
meat department, the produce department
-
and grocery department as well.
Basically we want customers when
-
they come in they feel like they never
left their home, left their country.
-
Whether they’re Haitian or Dominican,
they want, we want them to be able
-
to come in here and get whatever it
is, whether it’s Plantains, Yucca, Ox
-
Tails, you know whatever seasonings
that they use in their countries
-
we want them to be able to use that same
recipe that their grandmother and mother
-
used when they were growing up
back home. Only now they’re in Boston.
-
So how do you develop that list of
ingredients and foods over time?
-
I mean the founders of
Americas Food Basket,
-
you know they’re Dominican so that
aspect the Caribbean aspect
-
of it was fairly easy.
-
Then as you’re in the store, as you gain
experience dealing with different types of
-
types of customers, they’ll ask you
what they’re looking for
-
and we try our best to get
whatever it is that they’re
-
asking. And you know I think
to a great extent
-
we’ve done a good job of that,
kind of serving to their needs.
-
Managing expectations is important
so, where we can get folks
-
in a room who are interested
because they’re calling me too
-
and they have all these great ideas
and I said well that’s not how
-
National NAACP conventions work.
We’re not organizing from the
-
ground it’s really organized from National
and there’s some local activities.
-
So, I’ve had to
educate folks locally on that,
-
but I think if we can have
a community conversation
-
I think Tanesha could host.
-
And then I manage expectations
-
that it’s convention of delegates,
it’s a voting convention.
-
So people are here to do business.
-
They’re here to go to luncheons,
-
be part of panel discussions.
There’s not a lot of free time
-
to leave the area that they’re
in,
-
and if they leave the area they’re not
there to vote
-
on a particular matter that’s
coming before the body.
-
So there’ll be some limited opportunities
-
to get out of the convention
area and see Boston
-
and we just got to be intentional
about when those opportunities come up.
-
We talked about that.
There might be NAACP
-
members that are police
chiefs and fire fighters
-
and nurses,
and doctors
-
that want to like get a tour of behind the
scenes at Mass General or
-
go to Dimock in Roxbury
-
and see how the recovery community
that they have there,
-
one of the best in the country.
Look at these different
-
places and so we can
offer that up for people.
-
We have a criminal justice community here
so if we tap Harvard, and some of our other
-
higher Ed institutions say
hey, we need Skip Gates
-
to be at the convention and we as
the City of Boston are reaching out
-
to you Harvard to say make
your folks available.
-
I think there’s an opportunity for
us to provide value in that way.
-
If we can do that basic part first then
all the extras come along after that.
-
There’s a fuller picture of Boston’s
history good and bad that I want
-
West Roxbury to know
and Roxbury to know
-
and Dedham to know and I think we have an
opportunity to share that through different
-
ways so that it’s
an education for us
-
Bostonians and an
education for our visitors.
-
I think it’s great.
And I say this all the time.
-
I know there’s kids in
Roxbury, in West Roxbury
-
that have no idea,
they don’t even know busing
-
because they weren’t even here.
Their families were
-
where their families impacted by it.
-
And not even understanding,
I think even bussing there was a
-
step before that that’s
not talked about if the
-
school committee elected
at the time took action
-
Yes, would have staved
off that whole experience.
-
So that was a lack of, inaction by local
represented people elected by the people.
-
And if they’d dealt with it and
addressed it history might have been a
-
little different. And it would have been,
maybe a little different if you tackle
-
the issue at the time, in a different
manner, but it wasn’t thought of so.
-
And not to debate that,
but I think what’s interesting
-
is the values of the city
wasn’t fully reflected by that
-
City Council as it is today right?
We see the diversity
-
in the City Council today.
The diversity, the lack of
-
diversity at that time didn’t
take the racial imbalance
-
issue seriously enough that
if they had had more diversity
-
they would have said no,
let’s avoid court action and let’s
-
do something proactive to
create the kind of diversity
-
Wanna back up even further,
Civil Rights Movement? That same
-
diversity wasn’t in the City
Council today that it was back
-
then. And they took action.
And the abolition of slavery, a lot
-
of things, so it’s like that
generation had an opportunity.
-
Yeah, they missed it.
-
And you mean obviously it’s easier to
talk about it today sitting here and
-
not saying you should do that.
But there’s a different mindset today.
-
So we talked about all the talent here,
the Cornell West, the Skip Gates, the
-
Academic Institutions,
the healthcare industry,
-
dominant industries
here in this City
-
and in this region. We say hey, we can
offer those up as resources as you have the
-
conversation here. So we know the folks
from Partners are already interested.
-
We know the folks at TGS companies. I talked
to Bob Rivers today at Eastern Bank and
-
the banking community wants to be involved.
Now we just got to sort of harness all
-
that interest and I think they’re reaching
out to me and to you and Tanesha and it’s
-
exciting that this is, in my years of
being President of NAACP, there was never
-
this much focus on being involved in civil
rights. And contributing to it, so we
-
just have to harness that. How do we get
Black and Brown and White Boston to become
-
observers, delegates, alternates at the
convention during that week?
-
That would be huge and I’ve not seen it
done as well as I think Boston could do it.
-
That we have an additional 3,000 Bostonians
-
at the convention to listen
to the Presidential nominees
-
or Presidential candidates at
that point to partake in the conversation
-
around criminal justice and what’s going on
in terms of today with mass incarceration.
-
The folks are here and the interest is
here. We just got to get them over to
-
-I think it’s the marketing.
-Right
-
It’s how do we market it to let people
know this is open for you, so that you
-
live on whatever street it is you live
on, Humboldt. This is your convention. You
-
might not be a credential voting delegate,
but you are as engaged in this conversation
-
as everyone else. We need you to get that.
And I think it’s about marketing.
-
We’ve done all this,
-
but yet we’re still
not where we need to be
-
And why did that happen?
And how do we take the past
-
and celebrate it, but also
understand where the problems happen
-
and I think that you
know, when people talk about you
-
know racist Boston, racist
Boston, racist Boston, you know
-
like you said, a lot was done here.
-
So to bring equality,
-
but for some reason we have more
work to do.
-
And I think there’s an opportunity for
maybe one month’s a reflecting month.
-
History is the key thing.
Right. Is if people
-
know history they get the
good, they get the bad,
-
they got a context for
where we are
-
and then they can act. But the problem
is many of us don’t know our history.
-
So we think that the poverty rates in
our communities is an accident.
-
People just decided to be poor
or our health disparities
-
is an accident.
People just need to eat better
-
and they don’t understand
the context for access
-
and opportunity and inequities.
So I think there’s
-
a unique opportunity with
the convention coming
-
here and the work that
you’ve been doing around
-
racial justice and equity
and these conversations
-
is to have it be a
citywide conversation as
-
you said that plays out
throughout the course of
-
the year and it’s really
grounded in history.
-
Oh say can you see by the
-
dawn’s early light, what so
-
proudly we hailed at the
-
twilight’s last gleaming.
-
Whose broad stripes and bright
-
stars through the perilous fight
-
O’er the ramparts we
-
watched were so gallantly
-
streaming.
And the red rockets red glare
-
The bombs bursting in air.
-
Gave proof through
-
the night that our
-
flag was still there.
Oh say does
-
that star spangled
-
banner yet wave
-
O’er the land of the free
-
And the home of the brave
-
To the people of Boston,
thank you for the privilege
-
of serving you these past five years.
I love my job
-
Every day I get to go out
into the neighborhoods to talk
-
listen and work with the people of Boston.
-
Every day Bostonians walk
through the doors of City Hall
-
and share
their hopes and dreams with me.
-
They remind me of how
grateful I am to live my dream
-
and walk through those doors
as the son of immigrants.
-
I think of another
door that opens. It was
-
the morning after
my election in 2013.
-
I was in a hotel room and opened the
door for the worker to deliver breakfast.
-
Her name was Letty. She emigrated
-
from Africa to follow her
dreams here in Boston.
-
She came around the cart
and gave me a big hug and she was crying.
-
She said we did it. We won.
We are going to be Mayor.
-
Letty’s here somewhere.
Thank you Letty.
-
It hit home right at that
moment what this job means.
-
It means opening doors for more
Bostonians to walk through.
-
People of every race,
creed and class.
-
Changing a city.
Changing a nation.
-
One year ago I pledged my
second term to strengthening
-
and expanding Boston’s middle class.
-
Today more people are working than
any other time in our city’s history.
-
Unemployment is 2.4 percent.
-
The lowestever recorded.
-
We are ranked number two in the nation for
moving people up and into the middle class.
-
And we’ve been named the best city
in the entire world to find a job.
-
We have thrown open the
doors of opportunity
-
and Bostonians are surging through them
-
to live their dreams
and lead us forward.
-
And because we are drawing
on more of our people’s strength
-
the state of our city
is stronger than ever.
-
But I’m concerned
about the state of our Union.
-
What happens in Washington,
we feel on the streets of Boston.
-
But here’s what matters more. What we
do in Boston can change this country.
-
We’ve shown that differences
don’t have to divide us.
-
When we come together anything is possible.
That’s democracy in action.
-
That’s how we
built this administration.
-
We won office in a coalition that
wasn’t supposed to be possible.
-
Working people, Black, White,
Latino, Asian, all came together.
-
We created the most diverse
administration in Boston’s history from
-
the Cabinet to the frontlines.
-
We listened to the voices of every
community. We took on Boston’s toughest
-
long standing challenges and
we began changing our city.
-
We are opening doors to new
schools, new libraries,
-
new homes, new jobs.
-
We’re listeningto new voices.
It’s not always easy or comfortable,
-
but a more open conversation means
better solutions for our City.
-
The sign of a more vibrant democracy.
-
We put social justice
at the heart of our vision.
-
Because a more equal conversation
means a more resilient city.
-
So we’ll keep leading the
fight to defend immigrants.
-
We’ll continue our groundbreaking
work to achieve gender equality.
-
And we’ll never stop protecting the
rights and embracing the
-
identities of our LBGTQ community.
-
Five years together, we made
Boston a more compassionate, a more
-
dynamic, a more democratic city.
-
We’ve listened, we’ve learned and
we’re leading. I’m proud of what
-
we’ve achieved.
We should all be proud.
-
And we should be ready to do more.
Our city needs us, our country needs us
-
and we’re
just getting started.
-
Boston 311. How may I help you?
-
1,367 customers affected. Estimated
time to be fixed between five and 5:30.
-
And is this only in Brighton
or does it extend beyond that?
-
And you said that it fell
onto your property, correct?
-
No, so that’s furniture
and furniture you can
-
just throw that out
with the regular trash.
-
If you want I can connect you
over with the Credit Union.
-
OK, but if you were in Watertown that
would be a responsibility of Watertown.
-
It wouldn’t be anything with Boston.
-
OK. Is it a whole tree,
a limb or a branch?
-
The first step is to request a
birth certificate request form.
-
You print it out, fill it out
and then with that form you would
-
send it in with a $14 money order or
check, addressed to City Hall.
-
So the senior shuttle you mean?
-
I can connect you with
their department so you
-
can see exactly when it’s
going to get there OK?
-
OK, I have down that
you reported that there
-
is something wrong
with the hawk’s eyes?
-
And that the hawk isn’t acting
normal since it is feeding on
-
a pigeon on the street other
than flying away with its food.
-
There are a lot of people
around the hawk and
-
the hawk doesn’t seem
able able to fly away
-
But it’s only picked up on
your specific trash day.
-
Yeah, so if it’s public housing
-
you want to contact the
Boston Housing Authority
-
Work Order Center to get
that replaced for you.
-
Sir, please don’t yell
-
I just have someone on the other line
that’s trying to locate a gravestone.
-
They have a name, but they just are
trying to find the burial ground