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From YouTube: Boston City Council Meeting on April 10, 2019
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A
B
You,
madam
clerk
I,
am
informed
by
the
clerk
that
a
quorum
is
present
at
this
time.
If
all
colleagues
guests
could
please
rise,
councillor
Edwards
will
have
her
clergy
come
up
for
the
day.
She
will
introduce
our
clergy,
who
will
provide
the
invocation
I
ask
that
everyone
remain
standing
for
the
Pledge
of
Allegiance.
C
Good
afternoon,
everyone
today,
it
is
my
pleasure
to
introduce
pastor
Matt
love
from
the
Church
of
the
well
in
East
Boston.
Pastor,
love
is
a
transplant
from
Berkshire
California
who's
come
here
and
only
amplified
the
mission
of
the
church.
The
well
it's
vision
is
to
impact
the
city
of
Boston,
spiritually,
socially
and
culturally,
by
giving
back
to
the
community
through
acts
of
service
so
I.
It
is
with
my
pleasure
that
I
have
pastor
love
here
to
talk
about
that
mission
and
also
to
start
our
proceedings
today.
D
Thank
you.
We
moved
out
here
of
roughly
about
eight
years
ago
with
the
whole
goal
of
being
an
impact
in
the
community.
We
are
churches
in
East
Boston
and
we
have
three
non
profit:
coffee
shops
in
downtown
Boston,
one,
that's
inside
South,
Station,
one
that's
at
100
summer
and
the
other
one
is
just
opened
in
October-
is
on
the
corner
of
Washington
and
State
right
next
to
the
Old
State
House.
D
We
pick
a
different
nonprofit
each
month
to
show
case,
and
our
whole
goal
is
that
we
can
allow
people
who
are
in
the
neighborhood
our
work
in
the
city
to
purchase
a
cup
of
coffee
and
know
that
the
proceeds
that
Kaffir
covering
the
cost
go
back
out
into
the
community
that
they're
a
part
of.
We
appreciate
that
we
have
been
able
to
partner
with
over
thirty
six
different
nonprofits
in
the
Boston
area,
and
we've
come
to
love
and
notice.
D
How
much
Bostonians
are
are
caring
and
compassionate
and
desire
to
be
a
part
of
something
that's
giving
back
to
their
community
that
they
love
and
share.
I
would
like
to
say
a
few
things
before
I
pray.
I
would
like
to
thank
everybody
that
has
taken
on
the
heavy
burden
of
being
the
person
of
this
castle
room
that
has
decided
to
lead
the
community,
our
community.
D
Sometimes
the
decisions
that
you
make
in
this
room
may
go
unnoticed.
Sometimes
you
might
receive
scrutiny
or
praise,
but
we
know
that
as
your
hearts
are
for
the
community
and
your
hearts
are
for
the
neighborhoods
that
the
decisions
that
you
are
making
are
hopefully
going
to
be
impactful
in
the
in
the
right
way.
Taking
us
in
the
direction
that
is
going
to
help
us
be
progressive
and
also
to
help
all
of
the
community
to
grow
closer
I
would
like
to
pray
for
us.
D
If
you
would,
please
bow
your
heads
emilie
father,
we
thank
you
for
this
day.
We
thank
you
for
this
opportunity
that
we
can
come
together
that
the
decisions
that
are
going
to
be
made
here
today
Lord
that
they
will
be
heartfelt,
that
they
will
be
used.
Wisdom
proverbs
3:13
says
that
wisdom
is
more
valuable
than
gold
more
precious
than
jewels
and
there's
nothing
that
we
desire.
D
E
Thank
you.
Thank
you,
madam
president,
for
giving
me
the
opportunity
to
present
a
special
guest
today
before
the
Boston
City
Council
I
want
to
introduce
director
General
Douglas
Hsu
from
the
Taipei
economic
in
cultural
office
in
Boston,
for
a
presentation
today
is
actually
the
40th
anniversary
of
the
Taiwan
Relations
Act
being
enacted.
This
Act
provided
the
foundation
for
relations
between
the
United
States
in
Taiwan,
and
it
allowed
to
have
economic
and
cultural
engagements.
E
Tako
is
very
active
in
our
Chinatown
community.
They
attend
many
events
throughout
throughout
Chinatown,
but
they
also
provide
invaluable
assistance
to
the
Asian
community,
not
only
here
in
Boston,
but
throughout
Massachusetts
jack.
Director-General
sue
is
someone,
that's
respected,
not
only
here
in
Boston,
but
in
in
Taiwan
as
well.
Taipei
in
Boston
are
also
sister
cities.
We
are
grateful
for
that
tremendous
relationship.
We
want
to
say
thank
you
to
Jett
general
director
sue
and
we're
happy
to
have
you
here
today.
You
know
behalf
of
the
Boston
City
Council.
F
Well,
thank
you
very
much
console
thing
for
the
introduction
and
Madam
President
and
all
the
year
city
councilors.
Ladies
and
gentlemen.
Well,
it
is
indeed
an
honor
for
me
to
be
able
to
once
again
speak
on
the
floor
of
the
Boston
City
Council,
not
only
as
a
director
general
type,
economic
and
cultural
office
in
Boston,
but
also
as
a
friend
and
I
say
this,
because
over
the
years,
tech
of
Boston
has
forged
a
solid
relationship
with
the
city
of
Boston
Massachusetts
and
the
surrounding
communities.
F
I
assure
you
that
Taiwan
very
much
value
this
relationship
and
thanks
Council
thank
the
council
for
all
the
support
you
have
shown
over
these
many
years
today
marks
a
very
special
day
in
the
u.s.
Taiwan
relations
40
years
ago
to
the
day,
in
fact,
on
April
10th
of
1979,
the
Taiwan
Relations,
Act
or
tra,
was
signed
into
law
by
President
Jimmy
Carter.
F
The
TI
provides
a
ray
of
hope
in
a
dark
period
for
Taiwan,
when
the
United
States
decided
to
cut
up
the
official
diplomatic
relations
with
the
Republic
of
China
Taiwan
on
January
1st
1979
too
many
Taiwanese
people.
It
was
a
time
of
uncertainty
when
it
appears
that
we
lost
our
well
strongest
allies
and
causes
friend
a
friend.
F
Fortunately,
however,
the
sweet
passage
of
the
Taiwan
Relations
Act
by
the
US
Congress
brought
I'd
renewed
hope
for
the
u.s.
Taiwan
relations
over
the
past
four
decades.
This
say
this:
this
piece
of
legislation
has
proven
a
success
by
ensuring
the
continuation
of
the
robust
relations.
The
TI
is
considered
the
cornerstone
for
relations
between
our
two
countries
and,
in
fact,
sets
a
stage
for
Taiwan's
continued
relations
with
all
50
states
across
the
United
States
and
with
great
cities
like
Boston
at
the
local
level.
F
Taiwan
Boston
relations
provide
a
perfect
example
of
TR
A's
success
as
I'm
sure
you
are
aware.
Taipei
the
capital
city
of
Taiwan
and
Boston
enjoy
a
meaningful
sister
relations
sister
city
relationships
for
more
than
two
decades.
So
much
has
transpired
things,
then,
of
course,
and
our
relationship
has
continued
to
grow,
I,
believe
it's
even
more
energized
than
ever
with
the
booming
development
of
the
life-science,
a
eye
and
green
energies,
which
presents
even
more
opportunities
for
Boston
in
Taiwan's
cooperation.
F
As
of
now,
in
just
2019
alone,
two
mayors
of
the
largest
city
in
Taiwan
Taipei
and
Gao
Xiang
visited
Boston
to
further
strengthen
their
relations.
This
shows
how
much
we
view
Boston
as
a
place
of
opportunities
and
our
reason
for
taking
concrete
actions
to
turn
such
opportunities
into
realities.
In
fact,
there
are
already
many
successful
Taiwanese
investment
in
Boston,
and
there
are
about
1,000,
telling
students
study
in
Boston
and
also
for
Boston
Symphony
Orchestra.
They
just
got
their
first
ever
Taiwanese
assistant
conductors
score
mr.
Yun
Chao.
F
By
the
way
he's
gonna
have
his
debuted
in
the
Tanglewood
Music
Festival
this
August.
So
it
is
really
when
you
look
at
the
big
picture
of
these
many
interaction
that
take
place
between
Boston
and
Taiwan.
That
one
begins
to
realize
this
dignities
significance
of
our
relationship.
Taiwan
is
not
just
a
far-off
countries
in
the
distance,
but
rather
a
reliable
partners
and
integrable
integral
members
of
the
community.
I
must
say
the
relations
in
Taiwan
and
Boston
look
bright
with
possibilities
for
trade,
investment,
education
and
cultural
exchanges
that
are
only
limited
by
our
imagination.
F
The
Taiwan
Relations
Act
plays
a
major
role
in
ensuring
that
special
relationship
between
Taiwan
and
Boston
will
continue
to
grow
even
stronger.
The
tra
may
be
serve
as
a
bridge
of
friendship
that
linked
Taiwan
and
Boston.
If
you
have
any
doubts,
just
consider
the
fact.
This
year
we
will
see
the
largest
presence
of
Taiwan
in
the
upcoming
Boston
Marathon
next
week,
with
about
two
hundred
runners
from
Taiwan's
going
to
take
place.
Take
that
20
point
26.2
mile
track.
F
So
today
we
celebrate
40
year
numbers
anniversary
of
the
Taiwan
Relations
Act,
to
be
honest
with
you,
I
can
think
of
no
other
place.
I
would
rather
be
than
right
here
with
you
among
friends,
to
mark
this
occasion.
Mei
relations
between
Taiwan
and
Boston
over
the
next
40
years
grow
even
stronger
and
again.
Thank
you
very
much
for
your
invitation
and
allow
me
to
speak
on
the
floor.
Thank
you
very
much.
G
H
Thank
You
Madame
president
also
like
to
Karl
our
colleague
district
district,
6,
City,
Council,
Matt,
O'malley
and
also
I
know
that
Jerome
Smith,
the
CEO
chief
of
civic
engagement
from
the
mayor's
office
of
Jerome,
can
join
me
along
with
our
guest
of
honor
Anthony
bassani
and
his
beautiful
wife
Amelia.
If
you
would
like
to
come
up
and
join
Anthony
you're
more
than
welcome
to
do
that
as
well
right.
H
So
I
have
the
point
of
Amelia
I.
Had
the
pleasure
of
introducing
a
friend
in
in
a
real
gem
of
a
guy
in
a
tremendous
talent
and
a
tremendous
resource
for
us
city.
Mr.
Hasani
was
born
in
Cambridge,
but
two
great
parents,
Anthony
and
Josephine
Ian.
He
attended
Beverly,
High
School
and
excelled
in
baseball
as
an
infielder
before
coming
a
resident
of
the
city
in
1961.
He
was
married.
He
married
Amelia
D'agostino
in
1967.
H
They've
got
two
children,
Emilia
Bianca
in
Giancarlo
and
two
grandchildren,
Olivia
Pisani
Rio
Connie,
and
a
Leonora
pisani
reach
gianni
bini,
both
from
Arezzo
Italy
and
now
reside
in
Boston
with
their
parents.
His
foundation
as
an
architect
is
rooted
in
his
education
of
the
skooled
Museum
of
Fine
Arts,
and
also
diploma
with
honors
from
the
museum
school.
He
has
worked
at
several
world
renowned
architectural
firms.
He
also
worked
on
major
projects
in
the
u.s.
Puerto
Rico
Canada,
Mexico,
Ireland
and
Japan
he's
no
transit
to
the
city
and
he's
also
no
strangers
to
the
City
Council.
H
So
it
is
with
great.
It
is
with
great
honor.
It
is
with
great
honor
that
I
recognize
Anthony's
retirement
from
the
Zoning
Board
of
Appeals
ended
on
March,
the
29th
of
2019
and
celebrated
his
time.
Energy
and
efforts
on
behalf
of
the
city
of
Boston
and
on
behalf
of
the
city
council,
would
like
to
proclaim
today
April
10
2009
as
Anthony
and
Bassani
day
in
the
city
of
Boston,.
I
You
councillor
Flaherty,
what
more
can
I
say
other
than
was
a
wonderful
member
of
this
body,
whom
we
lost
far
too
young
Brian
Honan,
who
would
often
refer
to
every
other
Tuesday,
is
the
day
that
he
would
lose
votes
and
lose
friends
at
the
Zoning
Board
of
Appeals,
and
we
have
a
lot.
We
can
learn
from
Anthony
because
you
can
clearly
see
he
never
lost
any
friends.
I
J
J
You've
always
had
great
character,
but
you
also
did
a
great
job
of
balancing
residents:
public
public
right
property
rights
without
and
against
the
community,
not
against
it
can
be,
but
also
vowing
what
the
community
had
to
bring
forward
and
trying
to
find
that
balance,
and
you
did
a
good
job
between
the
two
and
so
I
really
do
truly
want
to.
Thank
you
for
everything
on
behalf
of
the
mayor,
all
the
mayor,
liaisons
that
are
sitting
up
or
deque
in
the
chamber
today
and
myself.
Thank
you
very
much
for
everything.
K
Well,
part
of
this
is
what
happens
when
you
come
from
a
large
Italian
family.
No,
it
has
been
honestly
a
great
honor
and
pleasure
to
have
had
the
opportunity
to
serve
the
city
and
not
so
much
serve
the
city.
It
has
been
the
fact
that
my
view
the
city
has
served
me
the
ability
to
have
the
opportunity
to
look
at
and
understand
and
go
into
the
different
communities,
all
xxii
and
the
opportunity
to
assist
the
single
homeowner
to
work
on
projects
that
have
multis
multi-storied
and
for
multifaceted,
has
just
been
an
education
for
me.
K
What
has
struck
me
through
all
this
through
all
these
years
is
the
incredible
diversity
and
dedication
of
the
people
you
that
work
for
for
the
city,
I
mean
the
city
councilors.
That
Tuesday
after
Tuesday
would
sit
in
the
hearing
and
present
their
local
communities
view
the
VRA
in
their
ability
to
examine
and
give
large
overview
examine.
Every
project
is
d
and
their
ability
to
do
the
initial
work
and
more
important,
most
importantly,
the
incredibly
dedicated
staff
of
the
CBA
that
often
could
in
a
difficult
position
when
people
do
not
understand
what
is
actually
happening.
K
And
many
of
the
calls
coming
into
the
CBA
in
fact,
are
not
bouquets,
because
people
get
very
worked
up
as
they
should,
because
they
understand
what
is
going
on,
but
the
ability
of
the
CBA
staff
to
treat
everybody
with
care
and
dedication
and
with
a
calm
voice
and
to
allow
the
process
to
continue
on
in
a
fair
fashion.
I
because
for
me,
has
been
a
great
education
I.
Thank
you
for
the
opportunity.
B
G
G
B
B
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Clearly,
the
party
could
go
on
forever.
I
just
wanted
to
think
thanks
again,
councillor
Flaherty
and
councillor
Malley,
for
the
special
presentation
and
before
we
get
into
our
regular
course
of
business
just
want
to
quickly.
Thank
you
just
want
to
quickly
acknowledge
a
group
of
folks
that
are
behind
councillor
Flaherty
councillor
Flynn
international
visitors
from
the
international
visitors
Leadership
Program,
which
is
a
part
of
the
United
States
Department
of
State.
The
u.s.
Department
of
State
I
should
say
so.
Thank
you
guys
for
being
here
really
appreciate.
I.
B
Mean
James
thinks
together
the
leadership
and
for
always
extending
invitation
to
our
council
meetings,
really
appreciate
you
and
your
service.
Thank
you
very
much
and
now
moving
on
and
we
do
have
a
long
agenda.
So
I
want
to
be
respectful
of
my
colleagues
time.
I'm
gonna
move
right
on
move
right
along
to
the
approval
of
the
minutes,
but
there
are
no
corrections
to
be
made.
The
minutes
from
the
last
council
meeting
will
stand
approved,
seeing
and
hearing
no
objection.
The
minutes
from
the
last
council
meeting
are
so
approved.
B
A
In
order
to
provide
funding
for
various
transportation
and
public
realm
improvements.
These
projects
are
aligned
with
the
goals
of
Gove
Austin
2030,
the
city's
transportation
master
plan.
The
funds
shall
be
created
shall
be
credited
to
the
capital
grant
fund.
From
the
parking
meter
fund
filed
in
the
office
of
the
city,
clerk
on
April,
8th,
2019,
docket
number
zero.
A
The
funds
are
to
be
expended
under
the
direction
of
the
Commissioner
of
Parks
and
Recreation
for
the
maintenance
and
improvements
of
Boston,
Common
and
Parks
in
existence.
Since
January
12th
1887
filed
in
the
office
of
the
clerk
on
April,
8th,
2019,
docket
number
zero,
six,
three
zero
message:
another
approving
an
appropriation
of
four
million
four
hundred
thousand
dollars
from
the
21st
century
fund,
also
known
as
the
public,
educational
or
governmental
access
and
cable
related
fund
known
as
peg.
A
Consistent
with
the
franchise
agreement
between
the
cable
operator
and
the
city,
including,
but
not
limited,
to
supporting
public
educational,
governmental
access,
cable
television
services,
monitoring
compliance
of
cable
operator
with
franchise
agreement
or
preparation
of
renewal
of
the
franchise
license
filed
in
the
office
of
the
city,
clerk
on
April,
8,
2019,
docket,
number,
0,
631
message
and
order
authorizing
the
Law
departments
revolving
fund
for
fiscal
year,
2020
to
purchase
goods
and
services
for
repairs
to
city
property.
This
revolving
fund
shall
be
funded
by
receipts
from
recoveries
for
damages
to
the
city
property
caused
by
third
parties.
A
The
law
department
will
be
the
only
unit
authorized
to
extend
from
the
fund,
and
such
expenditures
will
shall
be
capped
at
$500,000
docket
number,
zero.
Six,
three
two
message
and
rod
are
authorizing
a
limit
for
the
mayor's
office
of
tourism's
revolving
fund
for
fiscal
year,
20
to
purchase
goods
and
services
to
support
events
and
programming
on
in
or
around
City,
Hall
plaza
to
advance
tourism
and
to
promote
participation
in
public
celebrations,
civic
and
cultural
events.
A
This
revolving
fund
shall
be
funded
by
receipts
from
the
payments
for
the
use
of
City
Hall
plaza
pursuant
to
city
of
Boston,
cold
ordinance,
11
7.14,
the
mayor's
office
of
tourism
will
be
the
only
unit
authorized
to
extend
from
the
fund,
and
such
expenditures
shall
be
capped
at
one
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
dollars.
Docket
number
zero
633
message:
Inara
authorizing
a
city,
a
limit
for
the
Mia's
Office
of
Arts
and
Culture
revolving
fund
for
fiscal
2022,
purchase
goods
and
services
to
support
the
operations
of
the
Strand
theater.
A
A
Docket
number
zero
634
message
in
Auto
authorizing
a
limit
for
the
Mia's
office
of
Arts
and
Culture
revolving
fund
for
fiscal
year,
2020
to
purchase
goods
and
services
to
support
public
art
to
enhance
the
public
realm
throughout
the
city
of
Boston.
This
revolving
fund
shall
be
funded
by
receipts
from
easements
within
the
public
way
granted
by
the
public
improvements.
Commission,
the
Mia's
office
of
arts
and
culture
will
be
the
only
unit
authorized
to
extend
from
the
fund,
and
such
expenditures
shall
be
capped
at
one
hundred
and
fifty
thousand
dollars.
A
Docket
number
zero
635
message
and
order
authorizing
a
limit
for
the
just
distributed.
I'm
sorry
distributed
energy
resource
revolving
fund
for
fiscal
year,
2020
to
facilitate
the
purchase
of
offsets
of
gas
house
gas
emissions.
Greenhouse
gas
emissions,
which
shall
be
associated
with
a
portion
of
the
electricity
consumed
by
the
city
annually
and
to
operate,
maintain,
monitor
and
expand
the
city's
existing
solar
arrays
in
Boston
Public
Schools,
combined
heat
and
power
facilities.
This
revolving
fund
shall
be
credited
with
any
and
all
receipts
from
the
sale
of
renewable
and
alternative
energy
certificates
and
demand
response
program.
A
Revenues
produced
by
combined
heat
and
power
units
located
at
Boston,
Public
Schools
sites
and
solar
renewable
energy
certificates
produced
by
the
photovoltaic
arrays
receipts
and
resulting
expenditures
from
this
fund
shall
not
exceed
one
hundred
thousand
dollars.
Docket
numbers
0,
6,
3
6
message:
an
order
authorizing
the
limit
for
the
PAX
departments
revolving
fund
for
fiscal
year,
2020
to
reimburse
for
the
administrative
costs
to
those
city
agencies
which
enforce
CBC,
chapter
16,
section,
1,
9
and
and
1
9b,
and
for
costs
associated
with
licensing
and
registration.
A
This
revolving
fund
shall
be
credited
with
any
and
all
receipts
from
tuition
paid
by
parents
or
guardians
for
children
enrolled
at
the
Center
receipts
and
resulting
expenditures
from
this
fund
shall
not
exceed
150,000
dollars.
Docket
number
0
6,
3
8
message:
nada,
authorizing
a
limit
for
the
Boston
Public
Schools
revolving
fund
for
fiscal
year,
2020
to
repair
and
purchase
Boston
Public
Schools
computer
technology,
including
computers,
mobile
devices
and
instructional
software.
A
This
revolving
fund
shall
be
credited
with
any
and
all
receives
from
equipment,
sales
and
repair
fees
for
Boston,
Public,
Schools
technology
receipts
and
resulting
expenditures
from
this
fund
shall
not
exceed
1
million
dollars.
Docket
number
zero,
6,
39
message
and
water
authorizing
a
limit
for
the
Boston
Public
Schools
revolving
fund
for
fiscal
year,
2020
to
support
the
maintenance
and
repair
for
bps
facilities,
including
custodial
and
utility
costs
for
extended
building
time
floor,
refinishing,
landscaping
and
building
repairs.
Receipts
from
lease
permit
for
use
and
packing
fees
for
bp's
BPS
facilities
will
be
deposited
in
the
fund.
A
Docket
numbers:
zero,
six,
four:
zero
message:
an
order
authorizing
the
limit
for
the
Boston
Public
Schools,
resolving
fun
revolving
fund
for
the
fiscal
year;
2024
Boston,
Public,
School
transportation
costs,
including
bus
and
public
transportation
costs.
This
revolving
fund
shall
be
credited
with
revenue
received
from
the
Boston
Public
Schools
Department,
for
provisions
of
transportation
to
groups
and
entities
for
field
trips
and
activities
other
than
transportation
to
and
from
school
receipts,
and
resulting
expenditures
from
this
fund
shall
not
exceed
more
than
$400,000
docket
number
zero.
A
Six
four
one
message:
an
order
authorizing
a
limit
for
the
Boston
Police
Department
revolving
fund
for
fiscal
year,
2020
to
pay
salaries
and
benefits
of
employees
and
to
purchase
supplies
and
equipment
necessary
to
operate
police
department.
Fitness
centers
revenue
from
this
fund
is
derived
from
monthly
membership
fees.
A
Receipts
and
resulting
expenditures
from
this
fund
shall
not
exceed
one
hundred
thousand
dollars
filed
in
the
office
of
the
clerk
on
April,
8th,
2019,
docket
number,
zero,
six,
four:
two
message:
an
order
authorizing
a
limit
for
the
Boston
Police
Department's
revolving
fund
for
fiscal
year,
2020
to
support
the
canine
unit,
training
program
for
offices
and
police
dogs
from
non
city
of
Boston
law
enforcement
agencies.
The
special
operating
division
will
charge
tuition
and
other
fees
out
of
two
outside
law
enforcement
agencies
for
the
canine
unit.
A
The
tuition
and
other
fees
by
outside
agencies
will
be
used
to
purchase
training
equipment,
certifying
instructors,
update
facilities
and
provide
funds
for
other
training
needs
not
otherwise
budgeted.
The
Special
Operations
Division
will
be
the
only
unit
authorized
to
spend
from
this
fund,
and
such
expenditures
shall
be
capped
at
$75,000
and
docket
number
zero.
Six
four
three
message:
an
otter
authorizing
a
limit
for
the
Boston
Police
Department's
revolving
fund
for
fiscal
year,
2020
to
support
training
programs
for
offices
from
non
city
of
Boston
law
enforcement
agencies.
A
The
Academy
will
charge
participating
outside
law
enforcement
agencies,
tuition
for
each
recruit
police
officer,
a
special
police
officer
they
send
to
the
Academy.
The
tuition
paid
by
outside
agencies
will
be
used
to
purchase
training
equipment,
certify
instructors,
update
facilities
and
to
provide
funds
for
training
needs
not
otherwise
budgeted.
The
police
academy
will
be
the
only
unit
authorized
to
extend
from
this
fund,
and
such
expenditures
shall
be
capped
at
$50,000.
B
A
Docket
number:
zero,
six
four
five
message:
an
order
authorizing
the
city
of
Boston
to
accept
and
expend
the
amount
of
one
hundred;
ninety
nine
thousand
one
hundred
dollars
in
a
form
of
agreement
from
the
FY
nineteen
local
cultural
council
program
awarded
by
the
Massachusetts
Cultural
Council,
to
be
administered
by
the
office
of
Arts
and
Culture.
The
grant
will
fund
Boston
cultural
council
sub-grants.
A
Docket
number:
zero,
six
four
six
message
and
order
authorizing
the
city
of
Boston
to
accept
and
expand
the
amount
to
$50,000
in
the
form
of
a
grant
for
the
radical
amendment.
I'm.
Sorry,
radical
imagination
for
racial
justice
awarded
by
the
surgeon,
Sir
Donna
foundation
and
be
administered
by
the
office
of
Arts
and
Culture.
The
grant
will
fund
the
learning
cohort
working
to
establish
philanthropic
practices
to
support
the
implementation
of
certain
ax
foundations,
refine
funding
strategy.
M
Council
janie
of
the
floor.
Thank
you
so
much,
madam
chair
I
seek
suspension
and
passage
of
docket
zero,
six,
four
six!
It's
pretty
self-explanatory,
$50,000
grant
and
it
goes
to
support
the
radical
imagination
of
racial
justice,
something
that
I'm
certainly
passionate
about,
and
it
supports
the
learning
cohort,
as
the
clerk
has
already
suggested
so
I,
just
I'm
seeking
suspension
of
the
rules
and
passage
of
the
second
Thank
You
counselor.
B
Dream.
Thank
you
at
this
time.
Councillor
Janey,
who
is
a
chair
of
the
Committee
on
arts,
culture
and
special
events,
seeks
suspension
of
the
rules
and
passage
of
docket
zero,
six,
four
six,
all
those
in
favor,
say
aye,
any
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes
have
a
duck
at
zero.
Six
four
six
has
been
passed
moving
on,
madam
clerk,
two
reports
of
committees,
so
he
could
read
those
two
dockets
together.
Do
you
want
to
read
those
together,
council,
clarity
or
separately?
If
you
could
read
those
together.
H
Thank
you,
madam
president.
Dr.
0
to
1
is
a
Home
Rule
petition
that
seeks
to
allow
the
city
to
establish
sub
precincts
and,
in
some
cases,
additional
polling
locations
in
order
to
alleviate
the
crowds
and
lines
in
some
parts
of
the
city
that
have
experienced
significant
growth
and
development.
None
of
these
adjustments
will
change
any
any
Ward
boundary
lines
normal
to
change.
Any
representation
for
the
purposes
of
congressional
representatives,
toriel
or
council
districts
was
sponsored
by
our
mayor
mayor
Marty
Walsh
referred
to
the
committee
back
on
January
30th
of
2019.
H
The
impacted
precincts
are
in
areas
of
our
city
that
have
seen
dramatic
growth
and
large
pot
construction
of
new
multi-unit
residences.
They
are
as
follows:
would
three
precincts
six,
which
is
in
the
downtown
financial
district
in
parts
of
Beacon,
Hill,
Ward,
3,
precinct,
seven
South
End
or
three
precinct?
Eight
Chinatown
in
the
South
End
Ward
five
precinct,
one
Bay
Village
would
six
precinct
one
cell
Boston
to
Broadway
station
through
secret
routes
to
the
South
Boston
waterfront?
H
Would
nine
precinct
three
South
End
as
a
result
of
the
information,
the
feedback
that
we
gathered
at
the
hearing
as
Cheam,
recommending
that
this
matter
darken
zero
to
one
one
ought
to
pass
with
respect
to
darken
zero?
Three
one?
Four.
It
was
a
proposed
ordinance
that
seeks
to
amend
chapter
two
of
the
city
code
by
adding
the
appropriate
committee
of
the
City
Council
that
will
conduct
a
review
of
city
precincts
every
five
years.
H
The
report
shall
include
information
about
population
shifts
development
in
the
neighborhoods
and
impact
of
precinct
size
on
polling
locations,
staffing
in
election
day
operations,
as
well
as
other
factors
as
necessary,
attracted
zero.
Three
one
four
is
sponsored
by
our
colleagues
or
the
president
president
Campbell
and
constable
Wu.
It
was
assigned
to
the
committee
on
February
the
6th
of
2019
as
a
result
of
the
information
and
feedback
gathered
at
the
hearing,
the
docket
will
be
amended
to
add
the
commission
of
the
election
department
or
designee
to
review
the
city
precincts.
H
The
doctor
will
also
be
amended
from
its
original
version
as
follows.
The
first
sentence
is
amended
by
adding
the
phrase
and
the
Commissioner
of
the
election
apartment
or
a
designee
after
City
Council
and
second
sentences,
Ament
amended
by
adding
the
phrase
in
the
commissioners
after
the
term
committee
and
changing
the
term
committee
as
it
appears
in
the
second
sentence
to
committee.
H
E
Thank
You
Madame
president
I
I,
want
to
say
thank
you
to
council
Authority
for
his
important
work
and
leadership
on
on
this
issue.
As
counsel,
if
I
already
mentioned
many
of
those
presents,
are
in
district
two
that
I
represent
so
I
followed
that
debate
very
closely
and
engaged
with
city
election
Department
officials,
myself
and
council
Flaherty,
also
advocated
for
for
many
years
working
closely
with
the
city
administration
to
eventually
have
a
polling
location
down
at
the
South
Boston
waterfront.
E
So
we
are
making
great
progress
on
on
that
one
as
well
would
six
preset
one
physically
is
that
is
the
largest
voting
precinct
in
the
city
it?
It
goes
almost
in
the
Joe
Moakley
courthouse
to
almost
towards
Andrews
Andrews
square,
so
it
has
one
physical
voting
location
at
the
condon
school,
so
that
would
be
made.
That
would
be
great
progress,
adding
another
physical
location
down
at
the
South
Boston
waterfront.
So
voters
can
exercise
their
constitutional
right
to
vote
in
the
other
issue.
N
You,
madam
president,
for
your
partnership.
I
want
to
thank
the
chair
for
shepherding
this
through
one
cigar.
Both
knees
knock
is
through
once
again
on
the
first
one
really
fingers
crossed
about
the
Statehouse
I.
Think
folks,
remember.
We
had
submitted
this
past
it
already
as
a
homo
petition
that
counts
through
Linehan
and
I,
had
filed
in
2017
and
kind
of
went
down
at
the
Statehouse,
but
there's
a
fairly
limited
window
to
get
this
passed
in
time
for
it
to
be
effective
for
the
2020
elections
at
which
is,
when
we'll
see
the
fingers
crossed
again.
N
Humongous
humongous
lines
of
people
waiting
to
vote
and
wanting
to
ensure
access
there
so
I
know
I
will
be
joining
councillor
Flynn
in
directing
our
voices
up
there
to
move
this
through,
but
would
ask
for
everyone's
support
in
doing
that
and
thank
the
administration
and
the
mayor
for
really
pushing
this
again.
This
term
on
the
second
piece,
I
am
thrilled,
I.
Think
the
the
focus
on
repressing
ting
now
is
so
important,
and
it's
so
easy
to
not
remember
it
until
it's
too
late
to
actually
do
anything
about
it
again.
N
There's
a
limited
window
between
now
and
when
the
census
data
comes
back
and
if
we
don't
get
re
precinct,
ting
started
at
least
conceptually
in
this
window.
It
will
be
too
big
of
a
task
to
actually
get
done
in
that
technical
window
of
essentially
May
and
June
2021
to
be
able
to
finish
reap
resync
ting
to
be
able
to
and
do
redistricting
properly.
If
the
precincts
are
too
big,
it
makes
redistricting
too
hard
to
handle
because
we'll
be
working
from
building
blocks
that
that
don't
make
sense,
so
I
am
eager
to
get
started
on
this.
N
The
specific
language
does
say
that
it
gets
kicked
to
the
committee,
which
I
assume
will
be
the
census
and
redistricting
committee
to
start
mandated
to
start
in
the
year
after
the
ordinance
is
signed.
So
the
elections
Commissioner
and
his
team
have
already
said,
we'll
sit
down
to
get
that
ball
rolling
as
soon
as
this
may
go
through
and
and
become
law,
and,
of
course,
that
would
be
a
very
open
process
again
delay
the
found
work
for
important
work
ahead
in
2020
and
2021.
Thank
you
very
much.
B
Thank
You
councillor
Liu
anyone
else
looking
to
speak,
Thank
You
councillor
route
for
the
partnership,
particularly
on
docket
0,
3,
1
4,
look
forward
to
partnering
with
you,
as
well
as
every
other
colleague
in
the
elections,
commissioner,
on
the
reap
resync
ting
conversation
and
council
Flaherty.
Thank
you
for
your
leadership
and
it's
done
quickly
and
a
special
thank
you
to
Christine
for
drafting
the
language,
putting
together
reports,
particularly
on
docket,
zero.
Three
one
for
it
was
innovative.
It
was
creative.
So
thank
you
as
well.
B
We'll
take
each
docket
separately
for
docket
zero
to
one
one.
Councillor
Flaherty,
whose
chair
of
the
Committee
on
government
operations
seeks
acceptance
of
the
committee
report
and
passage
of
docket
0
to
1
1,
all
in
favour
passage,
say
aye,
any
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes
have
it
duck
at
0,
2
1
1
has
been
passed
for
dock
at
zero.
O
You,
madam
president,
just
yesterday,
I
believe
almost
all
of
our
colleagues
attended
in
person.
This
hearing
we
held
with,
among
others
of
police
Boston,
Police
Commissioner
cross
advocates
from
the
ACLU
from
workers
organizations,
including
folks,
who
had
been
the
subject
of
improper
immigration
enforcement
actions.
In
my
view,
it
was
a
thoughtful
I
think,
an
important
hearing
and
I
think
we
had
a
great
opportunity
to
talk
about
moving
forward,
as
was
stated
by
myself
and
others.
During
this
hearing.
O
Many
think
it's
very
important
he's
like
Boston
to
be
looking
prospectively,
not
just
on
making
sure
that
we
have
enforced
our
rules
on
the
books,
but
how
we
can
make
them
stronger
to
ensure
that
our
city
resources,
our
city,
employees,
whether
it's
the
police
department,
the
school's
Department.
Anyone
in
the
city
of
Boston,
is
not
unnecessarily
cooperating
with
immigration
and
customs
enforcement
for
what
our
civil
immigration
violations.
What
are
often
racially
motivated
immigration
violations
for
a
host
of
improper
uses.
So
I
do
think
we
had
a
philosophical
agreement
with
that
with
the
administration.
O
We're
not
gonna.
Have
people
in
this
building
doing
that
and
I
don't
think
it's
widespread
I
want
to
be
clear
on
that.
I,
don't
think
there
are
widespread
issues
at
this
time.
I
don't
think
people
are
violating
any
of
our
current
rules,
but
we
have
to
be
thoughtful.
We
have
to
be
proactive
on
this
and
I
look
forward
to
working
with
all
of
you
on
that.
I
do
want
to
thank
Commissioner
cross
sergeant,
detective
Gallagher,
the
advocates
the
folks
who
are
here,
including
mr.
O
Martine,
Paz
Flores,
who
was
the
who
had
been
arrested
by
ice,
who
now
has
legal
status,
but
who
came
and
shared
his
story
of
his
arrest
of
his
the
abuses
he
suffered
by
his
employer,
who
is
down
being
sued
by
the
Trump
Labor
Department
for
abuses
for
improper
action.
So
it's
a
really
I
would
say
it's
kind
of
a
crazy
confluence
of
events,
but
it
is
an
important
catalyst
for
us
to
act
awfully
proactively
on
this.
So
thank
you
very
much.
O
C
You
very
much
and
I
want
to
thank
the
leads
for
this
force
for
helping
to
pass
the
trust
act
in
your
leadership
in
2014,
but
also
for
making
sure
that
when
we
do
pass
an
ordinance
in
the
city
of
Boston
that
the
agencies
that
are
tasked
with
following
them
actually
follow
them.
I
agree
with
your
assessment
100%.
This
was
not
a
moment
where
we
were
blaming
the
Boston
Police
Department
for
doing
anything.
But
it
was
a
moment-
and
it
was
a
necessary
moment
for
us
to
ask
the
appropriate
questions.
C
C
That's
what
happened
and
the
question
for
us
as
the
City
Council's,
was
that
in
the
vein,
and
what
is
that
was
that,
with
the
spirit
of
the
trust
Act
that
we
passed
unanimously,
I
would
say
it's
not
and
I
think
that
the
conversations
were
gonna
have
to
have
with
the
practical
realities
that
our
police
officers
do
have
and
trying
to
catch.
Bad
guys
needs
to
happen
and
I
look
forward
to
that
working
session.
C
But
I
want
to
be
very
clear
and,
as
I
said
during
that
hearing,
the
issue
is
the
abuse
of
our
police,
the
misuse
of
their
resources.
In
time
people
have
used
it
many
times
to
exact,
bigoted
horrible
things
towards
people
of
color.
As
we've
seen
in
other
cities,
police
are
called
on
black
men
going
to
Starbucks
and
what
I'm
saying
and
what
we
said
during
the
hearing
is
that
they're
called
on
immigrants
fighting
for
their
rights
fighting
to
get
paid.
This
is
exactly
what
was
happening.
The
man
was
injured
on
the
job.
C
He
was
leaving
his
workers
comp
hearing
and
they
I
picked
him
up
because
they
knew
he'd
be
there,
because
the
employer
would
have
to
be
there
and
he'd
have
to
testify.
That
is
the
silence,
silencing
and
rippling
effect
that
we
are
trying
to
fight
against,
as
Commissioner
Gross
said
that
there
aren't
that
many
cases-
and
this
case
took
so
long
to
get
here.
So
this
is
not
a
rampant
issue.
Just
the
opposite.
I
have
been
that
lawyer
many
times
representing
that
domestic
worker
that
man
injured
on
the
job.
C
Two
men
asked
to
come
to
the
employers
house
to
pick
up
their
paychecks
when
they
got
there,
they
were
arrested
for
trespassing.
They
were
set
up
that
has
a
chilling
effect
on
workers
coming
forward.
I
had
to
fight
with
my
client
to
tell
her
to
go
to
the
hospital
with
a
broken
arm
because
she
fell
down
the
stairs
taking
care
of
a
child.
She
was
too
frightened
to
go
to
the
hospital
to
seek
care
because
she
was
undocumented.
C
The
people
who
should
be
frightened
about
working
or
employing
people
without
documents
are
not
the
workers,
it
should
be
the
employers
and
that's
the
conversation
we
need
to
be
having
at
the
city
of
Boston
and
the
Boston
Police
Department
goes
to
deal
with
an
employment
dispute
and
they
end
up
finding
out.
Someone
is
undocumented,
I
think,
there's
a
better
process
to
make
sure
that
person's
rights
are
protected,
but
also
our
citizens
and
also
making
sure
everyone
in
the
room
is
protected.
Physically.
That's
what
that
compromise
conversation
is
going
to
do
and
has
done
not
starting.
C
Yesterday.
I
also
want
to
be
very
clear.
We
cannot
allow
for
police
resources
to
be
used
to
union
bust,
to
hurt
people
workers
who
are
striking
to
also
stop
a
worker
from
saying
I
need
to
get
paid
for
the
work
that
I've
done
and
that's
what
will
happen
and
continue
to
happen
if
we
do
not
make
sure
that
the
trust
Act
isn't
more
trustworthy
and
we
don't
fill
in
those
gaps
and
work
with
the
police
to
help
fill
in
those
gaps.
C
And
one
also
note
that
in
some
cases
the
back-and-forth
between
myself
and
the
commissioner
was
referred
to
as
testy
was
referred
to.
As
you
know,
some
sort
of
there
was
some
sort
of
tension
throughout
and
afterwards
the
Commissioner
I
have
admit
in
constant
communication
and
I
personally
walked
him
over
to
the
advocates
of
domestic
violence.
Survivors.
C
The
advocates
of
immigrant
workers,
the
advocates
of
immigrants
in
general,
and
he
shook
all
of
their
hands
and
committed
to
working
with
each
one
of
their
nonprofits
and
talking
with
each
one
of
their
members
to
make
sure
that
they
know
and
feel
that
they
are
protected
in
the
city
of
Boston.
I.
Think
this
is
an
opportunity
to
rise
to
the
occasion
to
make
sure
that
we're
an
equitable
City-
and
we
understand
that
no
matter
who
you
are
you
are
protected.
You
are
welcome
here,
so
I
look
forward
to
that
conversation.
C
B
P
You,
madam
chair
yesterday,
I
held
a
hearing
regarding
the
admissions
policy
and
funding
changes
for
Madison
Park
technical
vocational
high
school,
with
my
two
co-sponsors,
counselors
Janey
and
counselor
woo
I'd
like
to
thank
those
of
you
that
were
able
to
join
us
yesterday
and
those
of
you
who
continue
to
advocate
in
partnership
with
us
for
Madison
Park
councillor
Campbell
in
particular,
councillor
Flynn,
councillor
Malley
and
comes
from
McCarthy.
For
being
there
we
were
joined
by
Michelle,
Silva
Rhea
who's.
P
To
be
fully
to
fully
realize
its
success,
we
were
also
joined
I
want
to
know,
with
with
we
were
joined
by
maybe
30,
to
40
teachers
from
Madison
Park,
who
really
were
impactful
being
in
the
room
being
very
good
about
sharing
their
feedback,
not
clapping
out
loud
too
much
with
the
things
that
they
heard.
I.
Think
it's
really
important
to
note
that,
because
it
it
shows
the
importance
that
the
Madison
Park
School
community
at
large
thinks
of
that
what
they
think
of
their
kids,
what
they
think
about
the
school's
future
success.
P
We
talked
about
the
application
process.
In
particular,
we
talked
about
enrollment
and
Madison's
goal
to
serve
1,500
students.
There
was
once
a
point
where
there
were
1600
kids
recently
in
that
school
many
years
ago.
The
school
served
about
maybe
2300
students
this
coming
school
year,
they'll
have
about
a
thousand
students
in
that
building.
We
also
talked
a
lot
about
funding
and
the
funding
sources
for
Madison
are
mainly
through
the
regular
BPS
process
and
perkins
money
that
comes
directly
from
the
state.
P
We
made
a
point
to
note
that
in
this
upcoming
budget
cycle,
we
will
have
a
deeper
understanding
of
some
of
the
funding
that
will
be
going
to
Madison,
especially
some
of
the
chapter
74
fundings.
I
want
to
note
that
we
look
forward
to
following
up
with
the
application
and
admissions
policy
in
particular
and
hope
to
do
that.
P
The
next
month
or
so
I
also
want
to
note
that
we've
asked
a
number
of
times
individually,
as
counselors
I've
asked
here
and
at
school
committee,
and
at
our
build
VPS
hearing
that
Madison
Park
be
a
part
of
the
build
VPS
plan
which,
to
date
it
hasn't
been
up
at
at
yesterday's
hearing.
Sam
Depina
did
mention
that
build
bps
will
include
Madison
Park
and
some
of
the
significant
renovations
that
need
to
be
made
over
there
as
part
of
it.
P
N
Yesterday,
yes,
yesterday,
about
revisiting
the
admissions
policy
which
had
already
been
drafted,
had
already
been
brought
up
to
the
state
for
feedback
and
never
implemented
revisiting
that
after
giving
VPS
there
month
to
review
internally
and
have
discussions
that
that
will
be
a
great
next
step
and
I
think
impact
a
lot
of
the
other
issues
that
the
school
community
is
looking
for.
Thank
you.
M
It
is
such
an
important
pipeline
in
terms
of
workforce
development
and
entrepreneurship,
and
we've
got
to
do
more
to
make
sure
that
Madison
is
successful
and
I
think
we
also
need
to
do
more
to
sing
the
praises
of
what
is
happening
in
terms
of
the
good
things
that
are
happening
in
the
classrooms
at
Madison,
which
are
many
we.
As
you
already
mentioned.
We
have
the
educators
here,
there's
a
lot
of
support,
a
lot
of
people
who
care
deeply,
but
certainly
as
a
body.
M
We
need
to
be
doing
all
that
we
can
to
ensure
that
they
have
the
resources
that
they
need
and
any
other
tools
that
they
need.
So
I
look
forward
to
us
continuing
this
work.
This
has
been
a
long
almost
a
year
and
a
half
process
with
my
colleagues
focusing
on
Madison
and
I
look
forward
to
the
continued
work
that
remains.
Thank
you.
Thank.
B
A
C
You
very
much,
madam
president,
tomorrow
April
11th
marks
the
51st
anniversary
of
the
Civil
Rights
Act
of
1968.
This
is
a
signature
piece
of
law
and
legislation,
and
it's
also
known
as
the
Fair
Housing
Act.
It
was
signed
just
one
week
after
Reverend
Martin
Luther
King
was
assassinated
and
outlaws
discrimination
in
the
sale,
rental
and
financing
of
housing.
C
In
doing
so,
it
paved
the
way
toward
a
society
that
is
more
just
more
fair
and
more
equal
today,
regardless
of
who
you
are
where
you
come
from
your
age,
your
ability,
whether
you
have
children,
your
race,
your
religion,
your
gender
identity,
you
have
a
right
to
equal
treatment
under
the
law,
especially
in
housing.
Fair
housing
has
always
been
more
about
more
than
just
about
ending
discrimination.
C
It
attacks
systemic
injustice
since
the
passage
of
the
Fair,
Housing,
Act
communities,
states
and
federal
government
have
increasingly
recognized
the
need
to
not
only
prevent
discrimination,
but
also
to
advance
policies
and
programs
that
create
social
equity
and
to
eliminate
those
policies
that
obstruct
it
in
fair
housing.
That
term
is
called
affirmatively
furthering
fair
housing.
C
This
is
actually
within
the
laws
that
we
have
passed
at.
The
federal
government
we
have
an
obligation
as
a
city
to
affirmatively
further
fair
housing.
The
federal
government
defines
this
as
taking
meaningful
actions,
in
addition
to
combating
discrimination
that
overcome
patterns
of
segregation
and
foster
inclusive
communities
free
from
barriers
that
restrict
access
to
opportunity
based
on
protected
characteristics.
C
Today,
in
this
council,
as
we
contemplate
the
next
50
years
of
fair
housing,
I'm
proposing
a
civil
rights
amendment
to
our
zoning
code
to
ensure
that
we
do
just
that
to
be
clear,
the
city
has
already
taken
important
steps
around
for
housing.
Our
Municipal
Code
establishes
a
Fair
Housing
Commission.
We
have
also
decided
to
move
forward
with
a
fair
housing
plan
that,
despite
a
lack
of
leadership
from
the
Trump
administration,
is
going
to
continue
in
the
city
of
Boston.
C
C
We
know
that
in
many
cases
the
chosen
these
challenges
were
built
in
planning
and
zoning
and
one
of
the
functions
of
government
that
most
deeply
impacts.
What
gets
built
and
how
communities
change
is
our
zoning
code.
We
need
to
make
sure
that
zoning
code
has
all
the
tools
necessary
to
compat
discrimination
in
our
planning
process.
We
must
assure
we
are
building
housing
for
families
with
children,
ensuring
access
for
persons
with
disabilities
and
ensuring
the
inclusion
of
immigrants
and
people
of
color.
C
We
have
to
use
public
dollars
and
regulatory
decisions,
including
zoning
and
public
benefit
negotiations
to
ensure
protected
classes
of
residents
share
in
housing
opportunities.
These
are
not
options.
This
is
not.
This
is
not
an
option
to
for
us
to
deal
with
in
terms
of
whether
we'd
like
to
or
whether
we
don't
want
to.
This
is
an
obligation.
There
are
obligations
under
the
civil
rights
law.
C
We
are
actually
charged
as
a
city
of
Boston,
with
taking
concrete,
meaningful
actions
based
on
in
pet
based
on
impediments
and
barriers
to
fair
housing
that
we
have
analyzed
and
committed
to
act
upon.
Historically,
one
of
the
most
effective
tools
for
racial
segregation
has
been
our
zoning
code
in
the
city
of
Boston
and
other
cities
as
well.
Zoning
and
planning
has
helped
to
concentrate
poverty,
has
helped
to
exclude
people
with
disabilities
and
has
certainly
helped
to
drive
displacement,
as
if
we
intentionally
did
those
things
redlining
blockbusting.
C
All
of
that
is
part
of
planning.
All
of
that
was
within
our
hands.
All
of
that
was
within
our
control.
All
of
that
we
can
undo
and
are
mandated
to.
This
is
not
an
attack
on
developers,
though
some
people
already
feel
that
it
is
instead.
This
is
assuring
that,
within
our
zoning
code,
we're
going
to
require
developers
rise
to
the
standard,
a
more
equitable,
just
and
fair
city
of
Boston.
C
If
we
look
at
our
data
on
income
and
race
in
neighborhoods,
like
East,
Boston
or
South
Boston,
and
we're
planning
new
developments
or
whole
neighborhoods
right
next
to
them
for
dramatically
higher
incomes,
fair
housing
tells
us
we
need
to
look
take
another
look.
When
the
city
negotiates
for
mitigation
from
developers.
When
we
have
a
limited
pool
of
funds
to
draw
from
fair
housing
tells
us
we
need
to
provide
basic
things
like
shelter
before
we
improve
neighborhood
amenities
when
neighborhoods
receive
better
municipal
services
than
other
neighborhoods.
Fair
housing
tells
us.
We
have
not
done
enough.
C
The
zoning
amendment
I
am
proposing,
creates
a
process
for
furthering
fair
housing
as
we
review
major
development
in
the
city
of
Boston,
as
I'd
mentioned
before,
we
already
have
partners
with
DND
with
VHA,
who
have
incorporated
furthering
fair
housing
in
their
everyday
practice.
As
I
also
mentioned
before,
zoning
has
been
the
most
effective
a
tool
at
segregating
our
neighborhoods.
So
this
amendment
invites
the
BPD
a
and
Zoning
to
be
part
of
the
toolbox
to
undo
the
damage
done
by
generations.
C
It
is
requiring
the
BPD
a
and
zoning
to
be
at
the
table,
with
D
and
E,
with
BHA
and
with
the
Office
of
Fair
Housing
from
it's
very
rubric
and
how
you
analyze,
how
you
plan
and
the
conversations
that
you
have
with
developers
the
BPD
a
has
the
check
the
BPD
a
is
the
gatekeeper.
Our
zoning
code
is
how
we
negotiate
the
future
for
the
city
of
Boston
to
not
have
the
perspective
of
equity
to
not
have
furthering
fair
housing.
C
As
part
of
that
conversation
is
a
dereliction
of
duty
and
it
undercuts
the
already
effective
and
move
movement,
basing
movements
that
we
have
done
in
our
other
city
agencies
concrete
examples
of
what
we're
gonna
do
with
this
amendment.
While
during
development
review
we're
asking,
we
asked
about
transportation,
we
asked
about
tidelands
we're
now
demanding
that
we
ask
about
civil
rights
by
men,
an
amending
article
80.
We
can
integrate
planning
and
zoning
into
the
crucial
work
already
going
on,
as
I
mentioned
a
DND
and
BHA
by
addressing
dis
placement
in
the
zoning
code.
C
For
the
first
time,
we
can
acknowledge
residents
right
to
remain
in
communities
they
have
built
up
and
the
city
that
they
hold
dear.
The
zoning
proposal
focuses
on
planned
development
areas,
because
these
developments
cover
thousands
of
housing
units,
substantial
public
benefit,
negotiation
and
years
or
decades
of
development.
It
focuses
on
large-scale
developments
because
they
present
our
greatest
opportunities
and
in
at
least
one
instance
seaport.
C
Our
greatest
failure,
planning
and
developing
integrating
communities
is
achievable
as
the
district
councillor
for
East
Boston
I
am
not
willing
to
sit
by
and
watch
the
Seaport
be
replicated
at
Suffolk
Downs.
To
that
end,
the
zoning
amendment
creates
a
higher
standard
for
public
benefits
in
East
Boston,
so
that
any
future
changes
to
the
PDA
at
Suffolk
Downs
meets
our
community
needs.
It
also
creates
fair
housing
standard
for
changes
to
any
planned
development
area
citywide,
so
that
modifications
to
these
large-scale
developments
bring
us
closer
to
Boston's,
fair
housing
goals.
C
So
as
we
step
forward
in
the
cities
in
the
next
50
years
for
how
fair
housing
I
am
asking
you
to
join
me
in
this
conversation
about
an
overhaul
of
the
zoning
code
to
advance
civil
rights,
we
will
do
this
in
conjunction
and
with
deep,
deep
respect
for
the
Fair
Housing
planning
process
of
the
city
has
committed
to.
We
will
do
this
thinking
of
the
future,
while
acknowledging
the
decades
of
activism
that
brought
us
here
today.
C
B
Madam
Clerk,
if
you
could
add
councillor
sorry
councillor
Flynn
councillor,
garrison,
councillor,
Janey,
Council,
Malley,
councillor
Wu
as
well
as
the
chair,
oh
I'm,
sorry,
counselor
Flaherty
did
I
miss
anyone
at
this
time.
Docket
0
6
for
7
will
be
assigned
to
the
Committee
on
Planning
development
and
transportation.
A
Docket
number:
zero:
six
for
a
council
Zakim
with
the
following
under
the
provisions
of
section
17
F
of
chapter
452,
of
the
acts
of
1948
as
amended
and
any
other
applicable
provisions
of
law
that
requested
information
in
the
following
order.
You
delivered
to
the
City
Council
regarding
communications
between
the
Boston
Police
Department
and
US
Immigration
and
Customs
Enforcement
councils.
O
B
You
councillor
taken
anyone
else
looking
to
speak
in
this
manner.
At
this
time
councillors
a
come,
seek
suspension
of
the
rules
in
passage
of
docket,
zero,
six,
four,
eight,
all
those
in
favor
of
suspension
of
the
rules
in
passage,
say
aye,
any
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes
have
it
dark
at
zero.
Six
four
eight
has
been
passed,
dark.
Q
Landlords
frequently
refused
to
compassionately
assist
their
tenants
to
adequately
maintain
the
basic
rights
for
housing.
I
often
say
that
elected
officials
talk
about
need
for
affordable
housing
in
Boston,
but
the
problem
is
that
our
concept
of
what
is
affordable
housing
in
Boston
is
not
real.
Affordable
in
the
real
world.
Working
families
and
low-income
residents
in
the
city
of
ours
are
forced
to
rent
at
extreme
high
calls
and
not
offered
acceptable
subsidized
rent.
Q
While
the
message
uses,
rent
control,
prohibition
initially
narrowly
passed
in
the
ballot
on
the
ballot
in
1994
twenty-five
years
later
is
a
long
time
and
we
find
ourselves
in
a
much
worse.
Housing
crisis
and
I
city
today
it
is
good
news
that
rent
control
ballot
initiative
authorized
cities
and
towns
to
adopt
forms
of
rent
control
for
six-month
period
after
what,
after
which
compliance
by
property
owners
would
be
voluntarily
I
believe
now
is
the
time
to
those
steps
further
for
the
City
of
Boston.
Q
Through
this
Home
Rule
petition,
the
petitioner
I
am
fallen,
is
a
balance
of
rent
control
and
a
balance
of
rent
control
and
concretely
helps
to
address
the
housing
crisis
in
Boston
by
holding
landlords
accountable,
which
also
securing
the
rights
of
Boston
residents
to
have
real,
affordable
homes.
Thank
you
very
much.
R
You
very
much,
madam
president,
I
look
forward
to
hearing
I
will
sign
on
to
make
sure
I'm
there.
Rent
control
has
been
an
ultimate
failure
in
the
past.
My
belief,
it
will
continue
to
be
failure.
In
fact,
in
the
long
run,
rent
control
as
a
permanent
policy
actually
restricts
construction
of
more
units,
as
investors
will
continue
to
shy
away,
as
as
artificial
caps
are
put
on
homeowners,
who
have
a
two-family
like
myself
or
three
family
for
yourself
have
no
incentive
to
put
new
coats
of
paint
on
or
redo
the
high
wood
floors.
R
If
there's
an
artificial
cap
on
and
in
1996,
Maureen
and
I,
when
we
got
married,
we
bought
a
two-family
home
in
in
High
Park,
and
our
idea
was
that
Maureen
was
gonna
work,
I
was
gonna
work
and
the
house
was
gonna
work
for
us
and
I.
Don't
think
government
should
tell
me
how
hard
my
house
should
work.
I
keep
my
house
beautiful,
obviously,
I
have
great
tenants
and
my
10
tenant.
My
rent
is
under
what
I
could
be
getting
and
I.
R
Think
there's
more
people
like
me
who
want
good
tenants
who
wanted
to
redo
the
pane
and
want
to
keep
a
great
yard.
Then
there
are
the
opposite,
so
I'll
be
speaking
continuously
against
rent
control.
I
wasn't
a
big
fan
of
the
Jim
Brooks
act
either,
but
I'll
be
here
through
at
least
till
the
first
Monday
of
next
year.
S
Seven
in
ten
dollars
comes
into
our
coffers
from
people
that
own
their
properties
and
now
we're
going
to
ask
them
to
to
provide
more,
over
and
above
what
they're
already
providing
seven
and
ten
dollars
tons
from
people
that
don't
own
their
properties
and
I.
Don't
think
it's
the
private
landowners
issue
to
provide.
S
Lower
cost
housing.
That
being
said,
but
I
also
know
people
like
myself
that
in
the
80s
90s
2000
start
into
the
property
game
that
are
from
the
neighborhoods
that
live
in
Boston
that
provide
good
units
at
less
than
what
they
that
they
could
get
and
those
I
think
of
the
people
that
will
all
either
condo
units
that
are
that
are
affordable,
that
are
affordable
to
people
to
live
in
or
they'll
just
sell
the
units
off
to
the
bigger
companies.
S
S
It's
the
small
guys,
no
pun
intended
it's
the
small
guys
that
are
in
the
neighborhoods
that
are
still
providing
housing
for
families
that
that
we
know
that
we
put
in
there
that
will
we'll
take
five
hundred
less
we'll
take
seven
hundred
less
if
a
families
got
to
go
into
into
someone's
apartment
and
be
there
for
ten
years,
it's
much
better.
Having
that
tenant.
Ten
that
person
there
for
ten
years
at
five
hundred
dollars
less
than
it
is
getting
that
extra
five
front.
S
But
every
year
you
have
new
tenants
coming
in
people
that
are
in
the
neighborhoods,
I
think
I'm
speaking
for
people
that
I
know
they
want
stable
buildings.
That
and
oh
there's
a
lot
of
people
out
there.
Just
because
people
landlords
doesn't
make
them
mean
bad
people,
there's
a
lot
of
good
landlords
out.
There
you'll
hurt
them.
We
were
here
already.
S
It's
not
always
going
to
be
like
that
in
2010
and
years
before,
when,
when
Maureen
was
in
this
seat
here,
the
city
was
hurt
him
and
the
four
more
years
in
my
life
than
not
was
trying
to
pay
its
bills,
and
it
was
good
leadership
like
like
Ray
Flynn
back
in
the
day
and
even
Tom
Menino
after
him
that
that
allowed
us
to
get
to
that
triple
a
bond
rating.
You'll
see
things
like
that.
That
I,
that
are
positives
in
the
city,
you'll
see
that
sort
of
stuff
chip
away.
S
C
You
very
much
I
wanted
to
commend
the
maker
first
I
think
really
having
your
understanding,
your
instincts
and
understanding
that
this
is
something
that
is
bubbling
up,
I
think
recently,
at
a
hearing
in
Roxbury,
our
colleague,
council
Florida.
Clarity
also
called
for
an
adult
conversation
about
rent
control.
I
am
and
I
do
think
we
do
need
an
adult
conversation
about
rent
control.
C
I
will
not
be
signing
on
to
this,
but
because
some
of
the
language
I'd
like
to
change
and
I'd
like
to
make
sure
that
we're
working
a
little
bit
more,
this
particular
Home
Rule
petition.
The
conversation,
however
I
think,
is
very
valid.
In
fact,
the
matter
is,
while
we
I
am
too
a
landlord.
I
am
to
a
small
property
owner
I'm,
the
first
homeowner
in
my
family.
It's
how
I
had
wealth
for
the
first
time
is
by
owning
property
in
Boston.
C
That's
why
I'm
still
able
to
afford
East
Boston,
so
the
concerns
of
being
a
small
property
owner
are
near
and
dear
to
my
heart
and
that's
why
actually
I
was
dealing
with
a
property
issue
this
morning
and
missed,
unfortunately,
some
meetings.
The
fact
the
matter
is,
however,
65%
of
Boston
is
tenant
if
they
were
to
actually
form
a
tenant
union
in
some
cities
where
they
had
that
they
would
be
the
biggest
voting
bloc
they
would
without
a
doubt
overwhelmingly.
Many
of
them
will
be
voting
for
this
majority
of
people
in
Boston
rent.
C
They
are
not
property
owners
and
a
lot
of
the
property
owners
in
Boston.
Who
would
come
against
this?
Don't
live
here
anyway,
they're
here
they
own
here,
but
they
don't
live
here
and
I'm,
not
saying.
Therefore,
we
should
ignore
them,
but
this
is
only
going
to
get
louder
because
the
market
is
out
of
control.
C
Working
people
cannot
afford
rent
here
in
Boston,
with
two
jobs
with
both
parents
or
partners.
Working
two
jobs
can
barely
afford
rent
here
in
Boston,
so
this
conversation
is
going
to
happen
anyway.
We
might
as
well
have
it
here
in
the
city
of
Boston
conversations
happening
at
the
State
House
representative,
Connolly
and
representative
Ella
guardo
have
introduced
a
local
option
to
allow
for
cities
to
have
this
conversation
and
potentially
opt
in
to
rent
control.
C
What
is
also
important
that
we
know
that
to
notice,
unlike
my
colleagues
and
I,
will
give
them
councillor
McCarthy
and
councillor
Baker
the
credit
that
they
deserve.
They
were
here
during
rent
control.
I
was
not
but
I
would
say.
A
large
majority
of
Bostonians
were
born
even
after
1994,
who
are
here,
who
are
trying
to
rent
we're,
also
not
familiar
with
this.
C
This
I
guess
doom
and
gloom
and
horrible
Boston
that
I
never
knew
yes,
I
knew
Boston
in
a
recession,
but
I
didn't
know
the
Boston
that
they're
describing
and
I'm
not
saying
it
didn't
exist,
I'm
saying
I
didn't
know
it.
I
wasn't
here,
so
it
I
think
a
good
chunk
of
Bostonians,
including
my
chief
of
staff
and
so
on
and
so
forth.
Many
of
our
Chiefs
of
staff's
and
staff
members
who
were
born
after
94
have
no
idea
what
that
feels
like
in
their
mid-20s.
C
What
they
do
know
is
they
feel
like
they
cannot
afford
to
stay
in
Boston,
no
matter
how
many
jobs
they
get,
no
matter
how
many
great
degrees
they
have
from
these
excellent
institutions.
Boston
is
not
welcoming
to
them
because
they
cannot
afford
to
stay
because
the
rents
are
too
high,
so
this
conversation
is
going
to
have
to
happen.
It's
going
to
be
one
that
I'm
sure
will
be
back
and
forth
and
at
the
end
of
the
day,
I
think
we
need
to
make
sure
that
we
understand
what
we
stand
for
is
a
city
I.
C
Believe
all
of
us
want
this
to
be
a
city
where
a
person
can
come
live,
have
a
decent
job
and
afford
to
pay
rent.
But
this
could
be
a
city
that,
if
you
have
nothing,
you
can
grow
to
something.
That's
actually
my
story.
I
believe
we
all
want
this
to
be
a
city
where
the
middle
class
is
vibrant
and
growing
where
families
feel
welcome
and
that
we're
developing
for
them.
C
So
when
we
have
this
conversation,
I
hope
we
keep
that
in
mind
and
we
don't
demonize
each
other
landlords
who
don't
want
this
or
tenants
who
do
we
should
not
be
throwing
rocks
at
each
other.
I
think
we
should
be
clear
about
what
we
want
as
a
city.
I
also
want
to
be
clear.
Rent
control
is
not
a
one.
Size
fits
all,
so
this
debate
over
the
concept
of
it
really
doesn't
meet
reality.
We
have
rent
control
right
now
on
city
property
that
is
developed.
C
We
have
deed
restrictions
that
caps
the
rent,
that's
a
form
of
rent
control.
We
have,
we
offer
incentives
to
developers
all
the
time
to
take
deeply
affordable
units
deed,
restrict
them
and
make
them
rent
controlled
every
day.
So,
let's,
when
we're
talking
back
and
forth
about
rent
control,
let's
see
it
comes
in
literally
hundreds
of
different
ways:
land
Trust's,
all
of
them
people
opt
in.
They
opt
out
the
incentives
to
get
them
there.
So
I
don't
want
it
to
be
a
yes-or-no
conversation.
C
M
Much,
madam
president,
I
also
want
to
commend
the
maker
for
bringing
this
piece
of
legislation
forward.
I
too,
like
council
Edwards,
have
some
questions
or
concerns
about
the
language,
so
I
won't
add
my
name
but
I.
Think
it's
a
very
important
conversation.
As
councillor
garrison
has
pointed
out,
we
have
a
crisis
in
our
city
when
it
comes
to
housing
and
whether
or
not
people
can
afford
housing
in
our.
At
my
hearing
last
November
on
gentrification
of
Roxbury,
this
certainly
came
up
right
now.
M
We
need
to
look
at
all
the
tools
and
see
what
can
work
and
what
can't
work.
We
need
to
make
sure
that
all
the
voices
are
around
the
table.
I
certainly
hear
the
concerns
that
my
colleagues
have
already
voiced
in
terms
of
what
this
could
mean
for
small
landlords.
I'm,
a
small
landlord
I
too,
have
always
tried
to
keep
my
rents
below
market
rate,
because
I
believe
in
attracting
good
people
who
want
to
stay
and
have
you
know,
build
that
community
with
them.
M
But
that
being
said,
you
know
this
is
an
important
conversation
and
we
need
to
have
this
conversation
because
we
need
to
be
looking
at
at
everything.
This
city
is
just.
It
is
too
expensive
for
the
current
residents
in
our
city,
particularly
our
young
people,
who
are
coming
up
I
know
so
many
young
people
who
are
doubling
up,
but
they
can't
move
out
of
their
parents
home
because
they
just
can't
afford
it.
There
are
our
elders,
who
are
facing
a
similar
crunch,
who
have
you
know,
maybe
a
house
that
they
cannot
no
longer
maintain.
M
So
we
need
to
be
looking
at
all
the
tools
in
the
toolbox,
this
being
one
of
them
I.
Think
it's
very
important
as
we
have
this
conversation.
This
councillor
Edwards
has
already
pointed
out
that
we
are
not
doing
the
finger,
pointing
that
we're
not
doing
the
blame
game
that
were
not,
but
we
can
really
have
a
conversation
about
what
affordability
in
our
city
is
and
isn't
and
what
we
need
to
be
doing
about
it,
so
that
people
who
live
in
our
city
can
continue
to
stay
in
our
city.
So
thank
you
for
bringing
this
forward.
B
T
Real
brief
I'm
in
total
agreement
with
Council,
McCarthy
and
Baker
again,
I
have
a
two-family
own
226
years.
I
also
have
two
millennial
sons
who
find
it
difficult
to
rent
a
home
in
our
community
without
the
family
subsidy
which
they
are
part
in.
One
of
them
is
partaking
of
as
we
speak,
but
that's
what
family
do
for
each
other.
I
would
like
to
just
point
out
that
in
this
conversation,
I
think
we
can
all
do
better.
T
However,
the
city
of
Boston
has
the
highest
deed,
restricted
units
in
the
United
States
of
America
I
want
to
also
point
to
our
friends
in
our
suburbs,
who
can't
even
get
to
10%,
and
we
talked
about
concentrations
of
poverty,
wealth
gaps.
We
need
our
suburban
friends
and
neighbors
to
step
up,
build
more
housing
that
will
relieve
pressure
on
our
city.
It's
time
it's
time
and
I
was
here
during
the
recession
when
we
were
doing
layoffs
and
closing
25
schools
in
the
matter
of
a
couple
of
years
in
the
print
department,
Frankham.
T
But
we've
come
a
long
way
since
then.
My
value
in
my
home
from
2008
to
2012
went
down.
Knowing
was
crying
a
river
for
me
or
my
tenants
that
I
didn't
raise
their
rents
for
seven
years
in
a
row,
but
I
did
that
because
I
wanted
to
keep
them
and
they
were
good
tenants
and
to
Frank's
point.
That's
what
good
landlords
do
small
landlords
do.
T
That's
why
I
voted
against
the
Airbnb,
because
we're
pushing
all
the
eligibility
to
those
homeowners
in
neighborhoods
that
do
provide
cheaper
rent
than
the
bigger
landlords,
so
I
just
think
we
should
be
careful.
I!
Think
rent
control
didn't
work,
it
degraded,
neighborhoods
people
didn't
invest.
If
we
go
it
alone
on
rent
control,
we
could
just
say
goodbye
to
all
the
development
coming
in,
and
investment
coming
in.
We
have
the
CPA
to
do
to
the
leadership
of
the
President
and
council
of
flower
tea
to
provide
more
affordable
housing
options.
T
I'd
be
open
to
even
more
more
homeownership
to
provide
pathways
for
people
of
color
to
get
wealth,
I
mean
small.
Businesses
is
a
great
way,
but
what
is
a
better
way
to
build
wealth
than
through
your
home
equity
I,
wouldn't
have
been
able
to
buy
the
condo
I
just
moved
into
without
the
equity
from
my
two
family,
so
I
just
think
we
should
be
cautious,
I
think
it's
maybe
a
conversation.
I
don't
know
if
I've
spent
a
lot
of
time
on
it.
T
B
I
You,
madam
president,
Albert
Einstein
is
often
credited
with
the
quotation.
The
definition
of
insanity
is
doing
the
same
thing
over
and
over
again
and
expecting
a
different
result.
Well,
I
for
one
much
prefer
Sir
Winston
Churchill's
quotation,
which
has
never
ever
ever
ever
ever
give
up.
That
is
why,
for
the
sixth
time,
I
am
introducing
a
hearing
order
on
creating
a
curbside
composting
program
in
the
city
of
Boston.
Now,
there's
a
renewed
sense
of
urgency
on
this
and
I
want
to
you
know.
I
I
can
explain
the
benefits,
but
you've
all
heard
me
talk
about
this
ad
nauseam.
I
want
to
come
at
it
from
a
different
angle,
and
that
is
that
it
is
financially
responsible
of
us
to
go
forward
with
this
program,
recognizing
that
there
will
be
some
costs
upfront.
The
fact
of
the
matter
is,
is
that
cities
are
seeing
the
commodity,
the
value
of
recycling
drop
precipitously
when
I
was
first
elected
to
this
body
in
November,
November,
30th
2010,
following
year's
budget,
so
my
first
full
budget
process
was
2011.
I
We
were
generating
a
revenue
of
about
I,
don't
know
five
or
six
dollars
per
ton
of
recycling.
We
were
generating
as
a
city,
we
were
paying
about
$80
per
ton
for
the
trash
pickup
feet
now.
The
current
rate
we're
paying
is
about
25.
Their
current
rate
for
trash
is
slightly
north
of
that
maybe
85
86
dollars
I'm
recycling,
instead
of
generating
a
revenue
of
$5
per
ton,
we're
paying
$25
per
ton.
So
we've
seen
a
$30
change,
that's
pretty
dramatic!
I
The
cost
of
trash
and
landfill
and
you've
seen
over
$100
per
ton
to
pick
up
recycling
when,
when
trash
traditional
trash
is
still
high,
80s
low,
90s.
Think
about
that
for
a
second.
What
you
have
is,
in
some
cities
and
I,
know
and
I've
talked
to
the
mayor
directly
about
this
and
his
team,
and
we
are
absolutely
committed
to
never
but
burying
our
recycling,
but
you
do
have
some
cities
that
are
doing
then
some
some
states
that
are
doing
that,
and
that
is
a
chilling
concept
when
we
really
have
12
years
to
get
it
right.
I
So
once
that's,
why
this
time,
I'm
feeling
bullish
on
our
chances,
if
we
can
actually
create
curbside
composting,
we
can
divert
at
a
minimum
20
percent
of
our
trash,
our
traditional
waste
stream
from
the
landfill
into
a
renewed
life.
Curbside
composting
composting
works
it's
this.
If
we
can
use
it
back
in
our
city,
parks
and
playgrounds,
we
can
make
it
an
opportunity
for
residents
to
take
advantage
of
as
they
do
in
countless
other
cities.
I
Cambridge
started
a
piloted
program
around
the
same
time.
I
had
first
introduced
this.
They
did
a
piloted
program
in
a
small
area.
It's
been
so
successful
that
it's
expanded
citywide,
even
though
it's
only
the
first
full
year
since
they've
been
doing
curbside.
Composting
they've
seen
her
waste
reduction
of
8
percent.
That's
just
in
the
first
year
there
are
a
hundred
municipalities
nationwide
that
have
some
sort
of
a
program.
Portland
Oregon
saw
their
decreased
trash
percentage
by
nearly
40
percent.
I
It
was
37%
in
San,
Francisco,
San,
Francisco
diverts
more
than
80%
of
its
waste
from
landfills
and
they've
been
doing
curbside
composting
for
a
number
of
years.
In
2017
last
year
we
collected
a
hundred
and
ninety
thousand
tons
of
waste.
We
could
divert,
as
I
said,
over
20
percent,
about
forty
thousand
tons
per
of
waste
every
year,
forty
thousand
times
$80
or
$89
per
ton.
That's
real
savings
right
there.
I
I
We
could
say
between
25
and
33
percent,
in
tipping
fees.
That
is
a
remarkable
figure
and
that
once
again
proves
that
every
fiscal
conservative
ought
to
be
an
environmentalist
and
is
the
stewards
of
the
city
and
our
budget
process
really
began
in
earnest.
This
morning
we
have
fiduciary
responsibility
to
our
citizens,
to
our
constituents
to
do
what
we
can.
This
is
a
great
opportunity
of
strong
policy
that
is
gonna.
I
Do
the
right
thing,
help
help
the
environment
and
say
save
rate
payer
money
and
a
little
bit
later,
we're
gonna
hear
about
the
green
New
Deal,
obviously
something
that
I
support
and
I
appreciate
efforts
that
have
been
underway
and
appreciating
what
we've
been
able
to
do
as
a
body
on
lead
on
a
lot
of
those
issues
for
many
many
years.
But
one
thing
that
I
think
the
green
New
Deal
has
really
highlighted.
I
Is
this
intersectionality
of
jobs
and
the
new
economy,
the
green
economy
so
called
the
green
collar
jobs
and
I
was
talking
with
my
dear
colleague
from
district
3.
The
idea
of
building
our
own
anaerobic
digester,
where
we
could
do
some
of
this
stuff
on
site,
would
create
jobs
and
provide
a
remarkable
service,
not
only
benefiting
the
people
in
Boston,
but
we
could
really
look
elsewhere
in
Greater
Boston.
I
This
could
be
something
that
generates
eventually
tens
of
millions
of
dollars
of
revenue
for
the
city
of
Boston,
while
diverting
our
waste
stream,
while
building
a
greener
city,
greener
country,
greener,
world
I'm-
really
excited
about
this
and
I
am
really
hopeful
that
we
can
finally
get
this
done.
Thank
you,
madam
president.
Thank.
H
President,
please
add
my
name
and
and
also
I
was
there
in
August
20:18
when
I
thought
we
were
really
close.
So
you
have
my
full
support
in
the
efforts
to
try
to
get
that
and
if
the
very
least
we
should
be
talking
about
a
pilot
program,
get
a
lot
of
successful
pilot
programs
here
in
Boston.
I
know
that
we
did
one
on
the
sandwich.
Boards
I
know
that
there's
been
a
pilot
program
around
recycling.
S
S
If
people
remember
I
brought
fruits
full
foot
in
here
a
couple
years
ago,
and
he
had
a
plan
for
a
digester
over
in
your
district,
I
think
Madam
President,
and
if
we
looked
at
it
as
a
way
now
in
the
70s,
we
lost
all
of
our
city,
Boston
used
to
collect
our
own
trash,
we
had
our
own
trash
trucks,
all
sorts
of
things
and
for
whatever
reason
we
got
away
from
that
model.
So
now
what
happens?
S
We
couldn't
even
get
back
well,
we
could,
if
we
had,
if,
if
we
wanted
to-
but
we
won't
get
back
in
that
space
and
that's
costing
us
probably
a
hundred
million
dollars
plus
a
year
and
I
think
that
this
presents
itself
for
the
new
opportunity
if
we
were
forward-thinking
and
we
built
that
we
built
our
own
digester-
put
our
own
people
there
to
work,
because
this
is
also
part
of
the
new
economy.
This
is
something
that
is
that
isn't
happening.
S
So
if
we
were
on
the
front
end
of
it
made
the
initial
investment
built,
the
infrastructure
I
think
we
could
use
it
as
a
job
pathway.
Also
I'm
excited
about
this
Matt
I
think
you'll.
Maybe
maybe
this
time
and
work
in
New
York
City
they
do.
They
do
compost
drop-off
at
train
stations
that
go
to
Red
Hook
to
a
community
community
group
that
does
all
the
compost
in
there
which
the
material
goes
out
to
community
gardens
and
whoever.
Whoever
else
wants,
wants
the
material
but
teaching
kids,
young
adults
from
that
neighborhood
how
to
compost.
S
It's
a
whole
new
industry
and
I.
Think
if
we
thought
about
it
and
when
we're
having
the
discussion,
if
we
keep
the
the
operation
of
it,
in-house
is
what
I
think
will
really
pay
dividends
for
us.
Well
cut
out,
will
we'll
cut
our
tipping
costs
and
then
we'll
also
be
able
to
train
people
for
new
jobs
and
and
hopefully
how
to
have
a
better,
more
healthy
City
then
add
my
name,
please
thank
you.
Thank.
E
You,
madam
president,
and
I,
just
want
to
say
thank
you
to
council
O'malley
for
his
long
time,
work
and
leadership
on
this
important
environmental
issue.
Madam
President
I'd
like
to
respectfully
ask
if
my
name
could
be
added
and
I
just
want
to
highlight,
as
as
Council
of
priority
mentioned
may
be.
Considering
a
pilot
program.
One
of
the
issues
I've
been
focused
on
over
the
last
year
and
a
half
is
trying
to
provide
as
much
services
to
the
Chinatown
community.
E
We
have
a
lot
of
restaurants
there
and
I
think
we
also
could
be
doing
a
better
job
it
with
this
type
of
program
with
with
curbside
compost,
but
also
working
closely
with
our
business
owners,
our
restaurant
owners
to
make
sure
that
food
waste
is
handled
properly
and
if
it's
not
handled
properly,
it
also
becomes
a
public
health
issue
as
well.
So
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
to
councilor
O'malley
for
excellent
leadership.
E
I
had
the
opportunity
to
spend
Saturday
at
the
Berkeley
community
garden
in
the
South,
End
and
I
saw
a
lot
of
the
people.
They
are
also
using
the
fertilizer
from
from
from
this
type
of
from
this
type
of
program,
and
it
was
a
real,
diverse
group
of
people
at
this
community
God
and
there
was
there
was
Asian.
E
There
was
young
professionals,
the
the
african-americans,
but
everyone
was
working
together
in
making
sure
that
our
environment
is
healthy,
that
there's
food
access
as
well,
and
so
it
was
just
a
great
great
opportunity
to
see
what
a
community
can
do
by
working
together
and
again.
Thank
you
to
our
council
Malley
for
your
important
workers,
important
work
on
this
important
initiative.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Madam
president.
Thank.
B
You
councillor
Flynn,
madam
clerk,
if
you
could
add
councillor
Flynn
councillor
Flaherty
councillor
Baker
as
well
as
councillor
co-moh
councillor
Edwards
councillor
Janey,
councillor
McCarthy,
councillor
whoo
councillors,
a
Kemal,
docket,
zero.
Six,
five
zero
will
be
assigned
to
the
Committee
on
Environment
sustainability
in
parks,
docket.
M
Council
Jamie,
thank
you
so
much.
Madam
president,
one
of
the
things
that
I
really
enjoy
about
working
on
this
body
with
all
of
you
is
your
deep
commitment
to
to
workers.
The
City
Council
has
been
very
active
and
advocating
for
workers
whether
it
was
standing
with
local
26
when
they
were
on
strike
the
hotel
workers
there,
whether
we
were
talking
about
the
locked
out,
National,
Grid
workers,
or
whether
it
was
advocating
for
employees
over
at
Whittier
health
center
when
they
were
organizing
and
and
wanted
to
form
a
union.
M
So
I
really
appreciate
that
about
this
body
as
a
city
councillor
representing
district,
seven
I'm
very
proud
to
introduce
this
resolution
and
support
of
non-tenure-track
full-time
faculty
at
Northeastern
University,
who
yesterday
took
the
courageous
step
of
filing
for
a
union
election
with
the
National
Labor
Relations
Board.
As
someone
who
has
been
a
strong
advocate
for
education
in
this
city,
I
know
how
important
it
is
to
have
the
voices
of
educators
who
are
trying
to
support
our
students.
Listening
to
those
voices
of
those
educators
northeastern
is
a
global
global
leader
in
higher
education.
M
They
provide
important
experiencial
learning,
opportunities
and
classes
that
are
often
designed
for
working
professionals.
It
historically
has
provided
important
educational
opportunities
for
Roxbury
residents,
including
my
father,
who
graduated
in
1969
with
the
bachelors
in
sociology
and
in
1973.
He
got
his
master's
in
education
from
Northeastern
before
going
on
to
BU
for
his
doctorate.
However,
in
recent
years,
Northy
there's
been
a
lot
of
tension
between
Northeastern
and
its
host
community
of
Roxbury.
M
We've
seen
Northeastern
rapidly
increase
its
physical
footprint
in
terms
of
encroaching
on
the
neighborhood
there's
a
lack
of
student
housing,
so
that
puts
a
lot
of
pressure
on
the
housing
market,
which
is
we've
already
discussed
here.
How
important
that
is
and
making
sure
that
we
have
housing
for
all
of
our
residents.
M
M
Last
November
2018
the
19-year
track
full-time
faculty
of
Northeastern
University
filed
for
a
union
election
with
the
National
Labor
Board,
but
the
response
from
Northeastern
was
to
declare
that
these
employees
were
managerial
and
therefore
not
eligible
to
form
a
union
in
order
to
well
the
last
thing
that
I'll
say
because
I'm
rambling
on
too
long,
the
last
thing
that
I
will
say
that
it
is.
This
is
not
about
beating
up
on
Northeastern,
as
I've
already
indicated.
M
It's
a
fine
institution
provides
a
great
education
for
those
who
get
into
to
Northeastern,
but
we
do
need
to
make
sure
that
workers
are
being
supported
and
that
they
are
able
to
organize.
If
they
choose
to
do
so.
And
so
you
know,
as
a
body,
we've
been
very
supportive
of
workers,
as
I've
already
mentioned,
and
it's
important
that
we
continue
to
stand
with
workers
to
ensure
that
they
have
working
conditions
that
work
for
them
and
that
we're
doing
all
that
we
can
because
and
the
other
thing.
So
not
the
last
thing.
I'll
say:
I'm
gonna.
M
Add
this
the
importance
of
the
labor
movement
in
terms
of
really
creating
the
middle
class
and
making
sure
that
we
have
the
wages
and
the
benefits
for
employees
to
actually
live
in
a
city
like
Boston.
So
when
we
talk
about
the
affordability,
crisis
and
housing
in
large
part,
we
just
talk
about
housing
and
we
need
more
housing.
We've
got
to
make
sure
that
people
have
the
wages
that
they
can
afford.
The
housing
in
the
city
of
Boston
we've
got
to
have
an
economic
strategy
as
well.
M
So
I
do
see
this
as
an
economic
justice
issue
standing
with
workers,
I'm
proud
to
do
so.
As
a
city,
councilor
and
I
know,
you
guys
have
been
great
in
the
past
and
I
hope
that
you
will
join
me
in
supporting
this
principle
of
freeing
an
election
one
more
time
and
I
seek
suspension
of
the
rules
and
passage
of
this
resolution
and
I
hope
that
you
will
all
sign
on.
Thank
you.
E
You,
madam
president,
I'd
like
to
respectfully
ask
that
my
name
be
added
counsel
at
Janey
said
it
best.
You
know,
unions
provide
a
decent
wage,
they
provide
great
health
care
working
conditions,
but
they
also
provide
respect
and
dignity
in.
Madam
president,
over
the
weekend
day,
the
opportunity
to
attend
a
attended,
New
England
Jewish
Labor
Seder
in
in
Brookline,
in
with
councilor
Janey
mentioned
they
recognized
the
unites
the
hotel
workers.
E
E
But
what
the
labor
movement
means
to
me
and
means
to
the
City
Council
is
making
sure
that
the
voices
of
workers
and
those
without
a
voice
really
in
society
is
treated
fairly,
is
treated
with
respect
treated
with
dignity.
We
have
access
to
health
care,
they
have
access
to
a
safe,
safe
working
conditions.
C
You
very
much
I
wanted
to
thank
the
maker
for
this
resolution.
Absolutely
add
my
name.
I
want
to
thank
the
organizers
of
5:09
and
making
sure
that
all
workers
have
a
voice.
I
think
that
this
is
this
is
something
that
we've
done
consistently.
We've
stood
with
our
colleagues
that
they
passed
resolutions
for
the
steel
workers
when
we
were
going
up
against
public
utilities
with
National
Grid.
We
have
consistently
said
one
thing
and
that's
when
workers
rise,
we
rise
with
them.
We
they
stand
on
our
shoulders
and
we
are.
C
We
are
going
to
fight
to
make
sure
that
workers
are
recognized
and
valued
in
the
city
of
Boston
when
they
move,
they
move
to
speak
and
we
are
going
to
be
their
megaphone
and
you're
sure
that
we
amplify
their
voices
for
civil
rights
for
workers
rights,
and
we
don't
back
down
if
it
is
against
a
non-profit,
especially
a
long
nonprofit
as
large
as
not
Northeastern.
They
are
an
employer.
C
Where
you
talk
about
civil
rights,
where
you
talk
about
workers
rights,
we
ask
that
you
hold
yourself
to
those
very
standards
that
you
teach
about.
This
is
an
excellent
University
I've,
been
there
many
times
to
talk
about
displacement,
to
talk
about
housing,
to
use
their
law
school
and
many
of
their
first-year
law,
students
to
help
fight
against
human
trafficking,
the
University
and
the
students
do
not
lack
dedication
or
social
justice.
The
administration
apparently
needs
to
listen
to
their
students
and
needs
to
listen
to
their
workers.
C
So
we
as
a
city
of
counsel,
are
going
to,
of
course
stand
with
those
workers
to
make
sure
that
they're
seen
one
of
the
first
things
usually
oppressive
employers
do,
however,
is
to
deny
someone's
status
as
a
worker
to
either
say
that
they're
our
student
say
that
they're
management
to
say
that
you're
not
really
a
worker,
and
what
that
really
says
is
we
don't
really
value
what
you
do?
We
don't
value,
we
will
not
call
it
work.
C
It's
certainly
not
voluntary,
it's
certainly
extremely
hard
and
the
degrees
that
they
require
a
lot
of
this
faculty
to
come
on
to
even
speak
to
their
students.
They
require
those
heads
high
standards
and
we
certainly
believe
they
should
be
compensated
for
that.
So,
of
course,
I
stand
with
my
colleague,
counselor
Janie
and
your
leadership.
Thank
you.
So
much
for
this
resolution
stand
with
the
workers.
We
stand
with
SEIU
five
out
nine.
Thank.
B
You
very
much
Thank
You
counselor
Edwards.
Anyone
else
looking
to
speak
on
this
matter
at
this
time.
Madam
clerk,
if
you
could
add
councillor
Flynn
councillor
Edwards
councillor,
Baker
councillor,
co-moh,
councillor,
flowery
councillor,
garrison
councillor,
McCarthy,
council,
O'malley,
councillor,
woo
councillors,
a
come
as
well
as
the
chair.
Councillor
Janey,
seeks
suspension
of
the
rules
and
passage
of
docket
or
adoption
of
docket
zero.
Six
five
one
all
in
favor
of
adoption,
say
aye
any
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes
have
it
docket
zero.
Six
five
one
has
been
adopted.
N
Food
production
systems
will
be
out
of
whack
and
we
will
be
even
more
dire
straits
and
the
climate
crisis
is
here
now
we
see
it
in
Boston
every
single
year.
We
are
working
on
it
as
much
as
we
can
at
the
city
level,
but
we
know
this
window
is
shrinking,
even
since
that
12
years
was
started.
The
time
started
on
12
years,
we're
now
six
months
in
so
we're
down
to
11
and
a
half
years
to
really
figure
this
out
and
as
much
as
we
do
locally.
N
We
are
pushing
on
curbside
composting,
we're
pushing
on
Net
Zero
we're
pushing
on
emissions,
we're
pushing
on
transportation,
we're
pushing
on
food
systems,
we're
pushing
on
housing,
connecting
it
all
to
jobs
and
economic
opportunity.
But
at
some
point
the
federal
government
has
to
wake
up
and
we
want
to
make
sure
that
I
want
to
make
sure
that
we
are
doing
our
part
to
lend
our
voices
to
this
current
push
and
also
to
be
getting
ready,
because
whether
it
is
for
this
push
now
or
a
next
iteration
of
it.
N
N
These
are
the
things
that
we
need
federal
support
on,
and
we
need
to
make
sure
that
we
are
standing
with
our
cities
around
the
country
and
with
our
state
and
federal
delegation
as
they're
asking
for
this
as
soon
as
possible.
So
we'd
like
to
ask
for
our
suspension
and
adoption
today.
Thank
you.
Thank.
C
M
Thank
you,
madam
chair
I,
just
rise
in
support
of
the
strong
leadership
of
my
colleague
Council
of
whoo,
with
the
green
new
deal
resolution,
as
well
as
councillor
Matt
O'malley
for
his
leadership
on
all
things,
green
on
the
City
Council.
Regardless
of
what
happens
and
at
in
Washington
DC,
it
is
important
that
we
as
a
city
continue
to
lead
on
these
issues.
M
None
of
this
matters
if
we
destroy
our
planet,
and
so
we
have
to
act
with
urgency
and
I'm
in
full
support
of
this
resolution,
and
thank
you
for
your
leadership
council
of
woo
and
Thank
You
councillor,
madam
alley,
for
all
of
the
things
that
you
have
put
forth,
including
the
composting
for
the
sixth
time
and
I'm
supportive
of
that
I
didn't
speak
when
you
mentioned
it,
but
I'm
very
supportive
of
that
as
well.
So
thank
you.
Thank.
B
You
councillor
Janey
anyone
looking
to
add
their
name
to
this
okay
at
this
time.
If
you
could
add,
madam
clerk
councillor
Zika
I'm
gonna
go
actually
go
this
way:
councillor
Zakim
council
of
malli,
councillor
McCarthy,
councillor
Janey,
councillor,
Flynn,
councillor
Flaherty,
councillor
Edwards,
as
well
as
the
chair
at
this
time.
Councillor,
who
seeks
suspension
of
the
rules
and
adoption
of
dock
at
zero.
Six
five
I'm,
all
those
in
favor
of
suspension
of
the
rules
and
adoption
say
aye
any
opposed.
They
may.
B
And
is
this
of
an
objection
to
I
guess
we
have
to
sort
of
pull
this
apart
now,
there's
a
obviously
on
the
table,
a
suspension
of
the
rules
and
an
adoption
of
the
docket.
Is
there
an
objection
by
councillors
to
suspend
the
rules?
Okay
and
then
now
moving
on
madam
Clerk
to
take
a
roll
on
adoption
of
this
resolution.
U
A
Counter
Edwards,
yes,
counselor
asabi,
George
counsel,
Flaherty
now
celerity,
yes,
counsel,
Flynn!
That's
the
Flynn!
Yes
comes
to
garrison
council
garrison,
no
counselor
Janie
mr.
Janie.
Yes,
council,
McCarthy,
council
McCarthy.
Yes,
counter
o'malley,
council
Mellie!
Yes,
counselor
whoa!
That's
the
rule!
Yes
come!
So
they
come!
Oh
so
they
come.
Yes.
B
B
Edwards
councillor
Edwards
seek
suspension
of
the
rules
and
passage
of
docket
zero,
six,
five,
four,
all
those
in
favor,
say
aye,
any
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes
have
it
duck
at
zero.
Six
five
four
has
been
passed:
docket
number
zero,
six,
five
five
comes
to
Campbell
for
councillor
Edwards,
councillor,
Edwards,
seat,
suspension
of
the
rules
and
passage
of
docket
zero,
six,
five,
five,
all
those
in
favor
of
passage,
say
aye,
any
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes
have
it
drunk
at
zero.
Six
five
five
has
been
passed.
B
Moving
right
along
I
am
informed
by
the
clerk
that
there
is
one
late
file
matter
which
in
the
which,
in
absence
of
objection,
will
be
added
to
today's
agenda.
Just
for
clarification,
it
is
a
personnel
order
for
a
councillor,
sobbing
George
hearing
and
seeing
no
objections.
The
late
file
matter
is
added
to
the
agenda.
Madam
clerk,
if
we
could
read
that
into
the
record,
thank.
B
B
Anyone
looking
to
remove
a
matter
from
the
green
sheets
moving
right
along
I
am
informed
by
the
clerk
that
there
is
green
sheets
Thank
You
councillor,
ma'am
I've,
informed
by
the
clerk
that
there
was
one
late
file
matter
which,
in
the
absence
of
objection,
will
be
added
to
the
consent
agenda
hearing
and
seeing
no
objections.
A
late
file
matter
is
added.
The
chair
moves
for
adoption
of
the
consent
agenda
at
this
time.
All
those
in
favor
of
adoption,
say
aye
any
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes
have
it.
The
consent
agenda
is
adopted.
I
You,
madam
president,
it's
been
a
great
tradition
that
I've
been
proud
to
have
brought
to
this
body
where
typically
the
Wednesday
before
the
marathon,
we
as
a
collective
body,
have
honored
Boston
Marathon
legends.
We
began
with
Dave
McGilvery
the
race
director,
then
it
was
Team
Hoyt,
Rick
and
dick
Hoyt
for
an
incredibly
emotional
day,
Jack
Fultz
winner
of
the
1976
race,
John
binoy
Samuelson.
Last
year
we
had
des
Lind
in
the
winner,
the
women's
winner
of
last
year's
race.
We
had
her
in
June.
I
We
obviously
don't
have
a
presentation
today,
but
I
am
honored
that
the
last
late
file
to
the
consent
agenda,
because
we
were
just
able
to
put
it
together
at
the
last
minute.
But
this
sunday
this
body
will
be
honoring,
mem,
Coveleski,
the
blessed
American
male
to
win
the
race.
Many
of
you
know
meb.
He
embodies
the
notion
of
Boston
strong.
I
It
was
particularly
emotional
as
he
won
the
2014
marathon
one
year
after
the
attacks
he
had
martin
richard
lingzi,
Lu,
Shawn
Collier
and
crystal
Campbell's,
and
initials
on
his
bib
he's
an
amazing
guy,
so
I'll
be
presenting
that,
on
behalf
of
this
body,
to
mem
on
Sunday
morning
at
9:30,
if
anyone's
interested
in
coming.
Let
me
know
the
more
the
merrier
but
I'll
be
great,
that
this
body
really
recognizes
meb's
and
continues
to
recognize
the
marathon
and
then
I
know
many
of
us
will
be
out
watching
it.
I
C
Just
a
brief
announcement,
as
many
of
you
are
fully
aware,
that
April
is
the
month
of
the
military
child
and
I
am
one
of
those
folks
divided
welcome
to
my
month
by
I,
wanted
also
to
acknowledge
that
kinship
that
I
have
with
folks
all
over
the
world
who
are
military
children,
but
to
our
veteran
serving
here
on
the
council
and
to
our
my
account,
my
colleague
and
friend,
Tim
McCarthy,
who
is
both
a
military
child
and
has
a
child
in
the
military.
So
I
wanted
to
just
acknowledge
that
today.
E
Thank
you,
madam
president,
Madam
President
I
rise
to
provide
a
little
information
to
the
my
colleagues
on
the
passing
of
a
World
War,
two
veteran
in
my
community.
His
name
was
ed
Hamilton.
He
was
a
friend
of
mine.
He
was
a
friend
of
council
where
he
was
also
a
friend
of
mayor
Walsh
as
well.
Edie
Hamilton
was
95
years
old.
He
was
a
father,
he
was
a
grandfather
and
it
was
a
great
grandfather
and
he
he
was
also
a.
He
was
also
a
Pearl
Harbor
survivor.
He
was
well
respected
in
South
Boston.
E
He
was
well-liked
in
South
Boston.
He
worked
with
Mayor
Walsh
and
operation
thank
Evette
and
even
at
his
age
of
in
his
early
90s,
who
is
always
trying
to
help
other
people
help
other
veterans
and
other
military
families
get
the
services
and
programs
that
they've
earned.
So
you
know,
I'm
gonna,
be
at
the
wake
today
and
I'll
make
sure
I
represent
all
of
my
colleagues
here
in
government,
but
I
just
wanted
to.
Let
let
you
know
that
on
the
passing
of
a
wonderful
American,
Hero,
Edie
Hamilton
and
we're
gonna
miss
him.
Thank
you.
Madam
president.
E
B
You
councillor
Flynn
anyone
else
looking
to
make
an
announcement
all
right.
At
this
time,
I
asked
I'm
all
counselors
guests
and
staff
to
please
rise
as
we
adjourn
today's
meeting
in
memory
of
the
following
individuals
for
councillor
Flynn
Donna,
Marie
Coakley
for
councillor
CMO,
Geraldine,
Wong,
Karen,
Kaz,
fillets
and
Robert
George
for
councillors,
a
calm,
Robert,
Michael
Adler
for
councillors,
Flynn
clarity
and
Baker
and
Hamilton
for
the
chair
and
councillor
Janey,
Eleanor,
Maloney
I'm
a
moment
of
silence.
Please.
B
Thank
you.
The
chair
moves
that
when
the
council
adjourns
today
it
does
so
in
memory
of
those
aforementioned
individuals.
We
are
scheduled
to
meet
again
in
this
chamber
at
Boston
City
Hall
on
Wednesday
April
24th
at
12:00
noon.
All
those
in
favor,
German,
say
aye,
any
opposed,
say,
nay.
The
I
is
habit.
The
council's
of.