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From YouTube: Boston City Council Meeting on November 28, 2018
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B
C
Have
a
quorum!
Thank
you.
I've
been
informed
by
the
clerk
that
a
quorum
is
present
at
this
time.
With
all
my
colleagues
and
guests,
please
rise,
our
lovely
clerk
is
going
to
take
us
through
an
invocation
and
I.
Ask
that
all
guests
remain
standing
after
the
invocation,
as
she
leads
us
through
the
Pledge
of
Allegiance.
Thank.
B
Blessed
are
the
jest,
for
they
have
their
reward
in
indestructible
integrity.
Blessed.
Are
they
who
labor
in
the
vineyards
of
the
public
realm,
for
they
shall
be
remembered
blessed?
Are
they
who
love
their
nation
enough
to
praise
its
strengths
and
criticize
its
weaknesses,
for
they
shall
be
made
wise
blessed?
Our
public
officials
who
are
responsive
to
the
needs
of
these,
the
least
of
the
people,
for
they
shall
be
deputies
of
the
community
blessed?
Are
they
who
serve
the
public
good
for
their
reward,
is
in
being
used?
B
Blessed
are
the
powerful
who
acknowledge
their
power
both
as
gift
and
responsibility,
for
they
know
the
binding
obligations
of
their
bounty
blessed.
Are
they
who
rebuke
narrow
self-interest
to
sustain
the
common
weal,
for
they
are
the
Patriots
the
nation
needs
blessed?
Are
they
who
rise
above
partisan
loyalties,
for
they
shall
administer
a
public
trust
and
blessed
are
all
people
who
seek
justice
in
an
imperfect
world,
for
they
shall
be
welcomed
into
the
beloved
community,
amen.
C
D
Hunger
and
homelessness
is
so
prevalent
in
American
society
that
the
issues
are
highlighted
in
a
national
week
of
awareness,
and
that
is
important.
Today's
presentation
is
to
emphasize
the
importance
of
extending
beyond
just
the
nationally
recognized
week,
and
especially
during
the
often
difficult
holiday
season,
to
remind
everyone
that
hunger
and
homelessness
are
problems
that
the
entire
country
faces
on
a
daily
basis,
and
many
of
our
families
here
in
Boston
are
experiencing
this
as
well.
One
thousand
three
one
thousand
thirty
one
871
Bostonians
or
twenty
one
percent
of
the
population
live
below
the
poverty
level.
D
Six
thousand
one
hundred
and
thirty
five
people
are
homeless
in
Boston
on
a
typical
night,
forty
two
million
Americans
are
at
risk
of
suffering
from
hunger,
one
in
five
children
in
the
u.s.
live
in
poverty.
No
one
should
have
to
worry
about
whether
or
not
they
will
have
food
on
their
plate
or
a
roof
over
their
head,
but
the
reality
is
that
hunger
and
homelessness
are
widespread
problems
that
affect
far
too
many
people
in
the
city
of
Boston.
As
chair
of
the
Committee
on
homelessness,
mental
health
and
recovery,
it
is
so
important
to
me.
D
D
I
would
also
like
to
take
a
moment
to
thank
and
recognize
the
many
people
who
dedicate
their
lives
to
anti-poverty,
to
housing,
to
homelessness
and
hunger
organizations,
including
the
staff
from
family,
individual
substance,
abuse,
domestic
violence
and
youth
shelters
across
the
city,
who
are
on
the
front
lines,
helping
those
experiencing
homelessness,
the
staff
from
anti
hunger
and
poverty
agencies
who
strive
to
ensure
food
access
and
security
for
families
and
individuals,
and,
most
importantly,
to
the
individuals
and
families
bravely
facing
and
working
to
overcome,
hunger,
homelessness
and
housing.
Instability.
D
Today,
I'm
honored
to
welcome
homes
for
families,
specifically
their
consumer
advocacy
team,
and
recognize
their
leadership
in
raising
awareness
about
hunger
and
homelessness
in
Massachusetts,
as
well
as
their
advocacy
in
ensuring
the
city
of
Boston
recognized
national
hunger
and
homelessness.
Awareness
Week,
even
if
it
meant
waiting
until
afterward
I
will
like
would
also
like
to
share
a
few
weeks
ago,
we
held
a
lunch
and
chat
Lunch
and
Learn,
and
we
talked
about
hunger.
D
We
talked
about
homelessness
and
we
talked
about
how
oftentimes
our
families
that
our
families,
in
particular,
when
they're
experiencing
homelessness,
we
find
them
housing.
We
get
them
into
a
unit.
We
celebrate
that,
but
those
that
support
them
in
stabilizing
that
housing
will
go
for
visits,
whether
they're
social
workers
or
caseworkers,
and
realize
that
there's
very
little
in
the
fridge,
often
what
they
left
the
shelter
with
originally.
D
We
often
forget
the
discussion
about
hunger,
and
so
we
thought
it
was
important
that,
although
we
had
this
one
week
of
awareness
that
it
really
should
be
a
month
long
celebration
or
awareness
celebration
in
a
good
way
when
we
talk
about
this
out
loud,
but
it
really
should
be
a
year
long,
Africa,
not
just
around
the
Thanksgiving
and
Christmas
holidays.
It
should
be
something
that
we
recognize
is
a
problem.
12
months
a
year
and
a
challenge
for
so
many
of
our
residents
across
the
City
of
Boston.
D
I
certainly
appreciate
everyone's
full
hearted
and
full
bellied
thoughts
about
this
issue
and
hope
that
you'll
consider
it
not
just
during
these
holiday
months
but
all
year
round.
Let
me
have
no,
if
you
want
to
share
something
before
the
council
briefly
and
putting
you
on
the
spot
right
now,
I
just.
E
Want
to
recognize
everyone
in
the
room!
That's
here
supporting
this
and
thank
you
to
the
councillor
and
the
full
body
for
the
awareness
I
think
when
we
meet
with
families
and
talk
to
families
and
residents
of
Boston
and
see
families
being
displaced
from
every
single
neighborhood
families
that
are
hungry
in
every
single
neighborhood
and
just
feel
it's.
It's
critical
that
we
do
better
and
do
more
so
that
the
to
end
the
suffering
and
to
take
care
of
all
members
of
our
community.
C
F
So
as
they
make
their
way,
I'm
very
honored
and
pleased
to
be
able
to
recognize
community
works
for
the
fantastic
work
that
they
do.
This
is
a
17
member
organization.
It
includes
the
Hawthorne,
youth
and
community
center,
which
Marshall
is
a
board
member
of
and
Kathryn
Joseph.
Here
with
me,
is
the
executive
director
for
community
works.
They
do
amazing
work
focused
on
a
range
of
issues,
including
youth,
empowerment,
public
health,
environmental
justice,
racial
equity
and
workers
rights.
Their
impact
is
both
local
and
global.
It
is
a
cooperative
that
seeks
to
raise
money.
F
They've
raised
millions
of
dollars
for
the
member
organizations,
and
this
is
nonprofit
work,
so
it's
so
important
and
that's
since
1982,
it's
very
fitting
and
important
that
we
recognize
folks
in
our
community
who
are
making
the
city
of
Boston
a
better
place
for
our
young
people,
for
our
seniors
for
adults,
for
families
whenever
we
can-
and
so
it's
a
great
honor
to
have
you
here
today
and
I'd
like
to
invite
you
each
to
say
a
few
words
if
you
like
and
I,
do,
have
a
resolution
for
you
and
your
good
work.
So
thank
you.
G
Yes,
hi
I'm
Katherine
I
represent
community
works.
We
have
a
cooperative
nonprofit
made
up
of
17
member
organizations
to
our
Greater
Boston,
all
of
whom
are
doing
social
justice
work
in
their
home
communities.
It
is
quite
fitting
that
we
come
after
homes
of
families
whom
I
know
very
well,
but
a
lot
of
the
issues
that
that
they
work
on.
We
also
intersect
with
it,
and
so
I
mean
it's
wonderful.
G
We
also
do
affordable
housing,
immigrant
rights,
not
to
say
that
you
don't
look
a
sexual
assault
and
domestic
violence
issues,
sort
of
all
of
the
cutting-edge
social
justice
issues
that
cut
across
the
the
gamut.
You
know
social
justice
issues
we
raise
money
primarily
by
going
into
workplaces
and
soliciting
their
employees
to
participate
in
a
payroll
deduction
program.
The
money
that
the
monies
that
that
employees
give
to
community
works
I
collected
to
us
and
then
we
dispersed
to
all
of
the
17
member
organizations
within
our
cooperative.
G
One
of
the
things
that
we
like
to
say
is
that
you
know:
building
community
is
not
just
a
tagline
for
us.
It's
something
that
we
do
every
day.
We
are
on
the
front
lines.
Doing
the
work
you
know
we
keep
women,
men
and
children
safe,
we
keep
families
together.
We
connect
community
members
to
resources.
We
work
with
the
self-determining
population
to
to
help
them
solve
community
issues.
One
some
of
the
members
come
from
the
very
neighborhoods
that
have
these
issues.
G
They
were
born
and
raised,
and
so
they
know
the
issue
issue
at
a
grassroots
level
and
they
know
who
to
go
to
and
what
people
to
connect
so
that
social
justice
work
can
be
carried
on
and
we
can
advance
our
work.
One
of
the
reasons
why
we
wanted
to
be
here
at
the
City
Council
is
because
we
want
to
solicit
city
of
Boston
employees
for
a
payroll
deduction
campaign.
We
have
been
involved
with
the
city
of
Boston
for
many
years,
but
I
think
with
the
change
of
administration.
G
Things
have
gotten
lost
and
you
know
so
we're
trying
to
raise
the
campaign,
but
we
also
want
the
City
Council's
to
know
that.
We
would
at
some
point
like
to
reach
out
to
you
to
see
if
there's
any
businesses
that
you
know
who
may
be
interested
in
the
work
of
community,
that
we
do
so.
We
we
are
based
in
mostly
in
Greater
Boston,
but
we
also
have
organizations
in
Somerville
and
in
Waltham
and
some
in
Quincy.
H
My
name
is
Michele
Rayner.
Let
me
say
something
on
behalf
of
Hawthorne.
As
Kathryn
says,
we
build
in
bridge
community
through
education,
cultural
and
recreational
opportunities,
and
we
serve
as
a
Center
at
Hawthorne
for
dialogue
about
the
community
as
I
walked
in
here.
I
saw
a
young
man
up
in
the
gallery,
who
had
been
one
of
our
hot
dog,
kids
and
I
was
working
on
homeless
issues.
So
it's
just
that
we
try
to
give
our
students
that
solid
grounding
so
that
they
can
be
better
citizens
in
the
community.
H
C
Thank
You
counselor
Janie,
so
we're
gonna
move
on
to
the
regular
order
of
business,
starting
with
the
approval
of
the
minutes.
If
there
are
no
Corrections
to
be
made,
the
minutes
of
the
last
council
meeting
will
stand
approved,
seeing
and
hearing
no
objection.
The
minutes
are
so
approved.
Moving
on
to
communications
from
his
honor,
the
mayor.
B
B
B
Well,
the
718
docket
number
one
six,
five,
eight
message:
an
order:
approving
a
supplemental
appropriation
of
1
million,
thirteen
thousand
seven
hundred
and
fifty
five
dollars
to
cover
the
FY
nineteen
cost
items
contained
within
the
collective
bargaining
agreements
between
the
Boston
School
Committee,
SEIU,
Local,
eight,
eight,
eight
administrative
guild.
The
terms
of
the
contract
are
September
1st
2016
through
August
31st
2017
and
September
1st
2017
through
August
31st
2020.
The
major
provisions
of
the
contract
include
base
wage
increases
of
2%
in
September
of
each
fiscal
year.
B
So
the
FY
19
cost
contained
within
the
collective
bargaining
agreements
between
the
Boston
School
Committee
and
the
SEIU
Local
888
administrative
guild,
docket
number
one:
six:
six:
zero
message:
in
order:
approving
a
supplemental
appropriation
for
the
Boston
Public
Health
Commission
and
the
city's
Housing
Trust
for
FY
19.
In
the
amount
of
two
hundred
and
eighty
thousand
two
hundred
and
twenty
nine
dollars
to
cover
the
FY
nineteen
cost
items
contained
within
the
collective
bargaining
agreements
between
the
Boston,
Public,
Health,
Commission
and
local
eight
eight
cai-you
programs
unit.
B
B
Number
one:
six,
six
two
Nestor's
not
authorizing
City
Boston
to
accept
an
an
amount
of
14
million
dollars
in
the
form
of
a
grant
for
the
continued
support
of
unique
planning,
exercises,
training
and
operational
needs
that
will
assist
in
building
enhanced
and
sustainable
security
capacity
to
help
prevent
respond
to
and
recover
from
threats
or
acts
of
terrorism,
including
chemical,
biological,
radiological
nuclear
and
explosive
incidents.
A
water
by
the
United
States
Department
of
Homeland
Security,
pass
through
the
maths
executive
office
of
public
safety
and
security
to
be
administered
by
the
mayor's
office
of
homeland
security.
C
B
Number
one
665
message:
an
order
authorizing
City
of
Boston
to
accept
and
expending
the
amount
of
$500,000
in
the
form
of
a
grant
from
the
planning
for
the
economic
mobility
lab
a
water
by
the
Rockefeller
Foundation
to
be
administered
by
the
mayor's
office.
The
grant
will
fund
the
cost
of
researching
and
planning
an
economic
mobility
lab
to
advance
economic
mobility
and
security
for
lower
and
lower
income.
Middle
class,
Bostonians
docket.
B
Thank
you,
docket
number
one:
six,
six,
six
messaging
order
authorizes
city
of
Boston
to
accept
and
extend
an
amount
of
four
hundred.
Ninety
three
thousand
three
hundred
and
seventy
nine
dollars
in
the
form
of
a
grant
for
the
title.
3,
the
caregivers
bless
you
water,
by
the
US
Department
of
Health
and
Human
Services
past
at
the
mass
executive
office
of
Elder
fee,
is
to
be
administered
by
the
elderly
Commission.
B
The
grant
will
fund
sub
grants
for
caregivers
services
to
seniors
and
green
parents,
raising
their
grandchildren
docket
number
one:
six,
six:
seven
message
in
Auto
authorized
in
city
of
Boston
to
accept
and
extend
the
amount
of
$300,000
in
the
form
of
a
grant
from
bus,
Boston's,
Children's
Hospital
to
be
administered
by
the
office
of
food
access.
The
grant
would
fund
the
Boston
eat
program,
improve
the
health
and
well-being
of
children
and
families
disproportionately
impacted
by
inequities
in
health
and
social
detriment
of
Health.
C
B
Number
one
six
six
eight
message
and
order
authorizing
the
city
of
Boston
to
accept
him
to
spend
an
amount
of
two
hundred
and
seventy
five
thousand
dollars
in
the
form
of
a
grant
for
the
cease
awarded
by
the
donor
group
to
be
administered
by
the
police
department.
The
grant
will
fund
the
city's
empowered
against
sexual
exploitation
network
in
Boston,
a
multi-sector,
a
strategy
among
law
enforcement
businesses,
the
faith
community,
legislators
and
survivors
who
are
working
in
partnership
to
abolish
and
amend
and
the
demand
for
human
trafficking.
Docket.
B
Docket
number
one:
six,
six,
nine
message:
an
order
authorizing
city
of
Boston
to
accept
and
expanded
an
amount
of
sixty
six
thousand
one
hundred
and
seventy
five
dollars
in
the
form
of
a
grant
of
the
F
FY
18
emergency
management
performance
grant
awarded
by
the
Federal
Emergency
Management
Agency
pass
through
the
Massachusetts
Emergency
Management
Agency
to
be
administered
by
the
mayor's
office
of
emergency
management.
The
grant
will
fund
the
increased
ability
to
effectively
provide
prompt
and
accurate
public
information
and
alerts.
B
I
C
B
Docket
number
one:
six:
seven,
zero
message
and
Roger
authorizes
city
Boston
to
accept
and
expand
an
amount
of
fifty
thousand
dollars
in
the
form
of
a
grant
for
smart
utilities
policy,
a
water
by
the
bio
foundation
to
be
administered
by
the
Environment
Department.
The
grant
would
fund
district
energy
micro
grid
engineering,
expertise
for
implementation
of
Boston's,
smaht
utilities
present
Policy
Council.
J
You
Madame
president
I
rise
to
ask
to
suspend
in
past
docket
number
167
zero.
This
is
a
fifty
thousand
dollar
grant
from
the
smart
utilities
policy
awarded
by
the
bar
foundation.
Essentially
what
it
will
do.
We've
had
a
change
in
our
article
80
process
that
projects
that
are
larger
than
1.5
million
square
feet
will
now
be
responsible
for
conducting
a
feasibility
study
as
it
relates
to
micro
grids.
This
is
very,
very,
very
good
news
and
I
hope
it's.
J
So
this
is
to
help
address
with
feasibility
on
many
of
these
programs,
it's
a
$50,000
grant
which
will
helps
get
some
of
these
off
the
ground
so,
rather
than
having
a
hearing,
I
think
that
we
need
to
free
up
this
money
and
get
to
work
as
quickly
as
humanly
possible.
So
I
ask
for
suspension
and
passage
of
this
docket
Thank.
B
1
671
message
an
order
authorizing
City
of
Boston
to
accept
an
extended
amount
of
$15,000
in
the
form
of
a
grant
for
the
strategic
planning
initiative
awarded
by
shear
our
strength
to
be
administered
by
the
office
of
food
access.
The
grant
will
fund
support
the
office
of
foods,
strategic
planning
initiative
to
hire
a
consultant
and
materials
council
Meli.
J
You
again,
madam
president,
as
the
vice
chair
of
the
Committee
on
healthy
women,
families
and
communities,
I
move
to
suspend
the
rules
and
extend
past
docket
160
71
as
the
clerk
just
read.
This
grant
will
fund
personnel
and
resources
for
the
office
of
food
strategic
planning
initiative
in
the
mayor's
office
of
food
access.
This
office
plays
a
major
role
in
ensuring
we
have
healthy
food
options
and
stores
and
farmers
markets
and
targeted
neighborhoods.
J
If
we
aim
to
build
healthier
families
and
communities,
we
need
to
be
more
inclusive
and
where
people
can
have
purchasing
power,
especially
for
those
who
do
not
always
have
access
to
fresh
and
healthy
foods,
as
vice
chair
of
the
Committee
on
women
and
healthy
women,
families
and
communities,
I
move
today
does
offend
the
rules.
Thank
you.
Thank.
C
You,
council,
Malak
council,
Mally
who's,
the
vice
chair
of
the
committee
on
healthy
women,
families
and
communities,
seeks
suspension
of
the
rules
and
passage
of
docket
1
6
7
1,
all
those
in
favor,
say
aye,
any
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes
have
a
duck
at
one
sixty.
Seventy
one
has
been
passed,
docket.
B
Number
one
672
message:
an
order
authorizing
the
city
of
Boston
to
accept
and
expend
an
amount
of
ten
thousand
dollars
in
the
form
of
a
grant
for
the
FY
18
national,
violent
death
reporting
system
awarded
by
the
mass
Department
of
Public
Health
to
be
administered
by
the
Boston
Police
Department.
The
grant
will
fund
data
collection
by
the
bureau
of
investigative
services
and
the
drug
control
unit.
I
C
K
Thank
you,
madam
president.
Normally
I
would
have
this
hearing,
but
they
need
a
quorum
for
the
last
meeting
of
the
year
I
sent
along
the
resumes
for
for
everybody's
review,
I
think
they're
impeccable
myself.
We
can
certainly
have
the
Audit
Committee
in
after
the
new
year
and
in
addition
to
that,
there's
very
little
room
to
hold
hearings
in
this
chamber
all
over
the
next
several
days
to
get
business
done
so
I'm
asking
your
indulgence
for
passage
of
these
two
dockets.
Thank
you.
B
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Docket
number
one
676
message
arrived
for
the
confirmation
of
the
appointment
of
Sammy.
No
no
bull,
see
to
the
Board
of
Directors
of
the
Boston
Industrial
Development
Finance
Authority
for
term
expiring,
April,
1st
2022
and
docket
number
1
677
message
and
order
for
the
confirmation
of
the
appointment
of
Jurado
s.
Benz
os10
ZOA
to
the
board
of
directors
to
the
industrial
Boston
Industrial
Development,
Finance
Authority
for
term
expires
April,
1st
2021.
C
B
B
C
B
The
communication
was
received
from
the
city
clerk
of
the
filing
by
the
Boston
Redevelopment
Authority
of
the
First
Amendment
to
the
report
and
decision
of
the
parcels.
1B
and
1c
chapter
121,
a
project
and
docket
number
1
687
notices
the
thief
in
the
mirror
of
the
appointment
of
David
ljus.
As
a
chief
information
officer,
effective
November,
26,
2018,
dockets,.
C
B
B
Thank
you.
Dock
at
161
order
that,
pursuant
to
chapter
40,
section
56,
the
residential
factor
in
the
city
of
Boston
for
FY
2019
shall
be.
The
minimum
residential
factor
is
determined
by
the
Commissioner
of
Revenue
pursuant
to
Mass
General
Laws
chapter
58,
section
1
a
and
B
further
that,
pursuant
to
chapter
59,
section
5c
as
amended
a
residential
exemption
in
the
amount
of
value
equal
to
35
percent
of
the
average
assessed
value
of
all
class
1
residential
parcels
in
the
city
of
Boston
B
and
hereby
is
approved
for
fiscal
year.
B
2019
docket
number
161
to
message
in
order
for
your
approval
of
an
order
authorizing
the
city
of
Boston
to
appropriate
six
million
five
hundred
thousand
dollars
from
the
city's
capital
grand
fund
to
address
the
impact
of
transportation,
network
services
on
municipal
roads,
bridges
and
other
transportation
infrastructure,
or
any
other
public
purpose,
substantially
related
to
the
operation
of
transportation,
network
services
in
the
city
and
docket
number
161
for
message.
In
order
for
your
approval,
a
declaration
of
trust
entitled
the
make
Boston
Shine
trust
fund.
B
C
K
You,
madam
president,
the
Committee
on
ways
and
means
held
these
three
hearing:
orders
on
Monday,
November,
26,
docket,
1,
6,
2
1,
is
an
order
for
the
city
council
to
adopt
classification
and
declare
a
residential
exemption
in
the
city
of
Boston
before
fiscal
year
2019.
This
is
an
annual
requirement
for
us
to
get
certified
by
the
state.
The
order
will
implement
the
minimum
residential
factor
in
residential
exemption
of
35
percent
determinations
that
must
be
made
by
the
council
and
approved
by
the
mayor
prior
to
certification
of
the
city's
tax
rate.
K
Assessing
Commissioner
Gale
will
let
testified
at
this
hearing
explaining
the
two
local
options
and
the
city's
history
of
opting
for
the
highest
savings
for
resident
tax
payers,
a
combined
average
of
4500
dollars
for
each
qualifying
homeowner.
Last
year,
public
testimony
was
taken
from
Sam
Tyler,
president
of
Boston
Municipal
Research
Bureau,
who
expressed
concerns
about
the
increased
tax
burden
that
classification
places
on
the
business
community,
but
also
understood
that
there
was
no
chance.
K
The
funds
of
the
city's
portion
of
per
ride
assessments
paid
by
the
TNCs
to
the
state
this
year
and
last,
which
was
the
first
year
of
the
program
and
our
earmarked
by
state
law
for
transportation
projects,
the
per
ride
assessment
is
20
cents
of
which
the
city
receives
10
cents
for
every
ride
originating
in
the
city
of
Boston
budget
director,
Justin
starett
and
chief,
the
streets
chief
Osgood
testified
at
this
hearing
explaining
the
funding
source
and
the
city's
planned
investments.
Mr.
K
K
Chief
Osgood
listed
the
planned
investments
for
the
appropriation,
including
sidewalk,
repair,
bike
infrastructure,
improvement
of
roadway
markings,
construction
of
temporary
plazas
and
grant
funded
positions.
These
investments
will
help
make
city
streets
safer
and
more
reliable,
while
planning
for
the
lasting
impact
of
TNCs
on
our
transportation,
traffic
and
infrastructure.
K
Finally,
docket
one
six,
one
four
establishes
the
make
Boston
Shine
trust
fund,
which
will
be
used
to
fundraise
in
Awards,
small
grants
to
residents
and
community
groups
involved
in
service
projects
to
beautify
Boston
and
keep
neighborhoods
clean
chief
of
the
civic
engagement,
Jerome,
Smith
and
senior
deputy
treasurer
drew
Smith
testified
at
this
hearing.
Treasurer
Smith
testified
about
the
structure
of
the
trust
which
we
comprised
of
five
mayoral
appointed
trustees
with
the
collector
treasurer,
serving
as
trust
manager
of
investments,
tax
filings
and
distributions.
K
The
trust
will
not
be
an
endowment,
but
rather
is
simply
a
transparent
vehicle
for
fundraising
and
distribution
and
it
and
is
anticipated
to
stay
under
$100,000
chief
Smith
explained
that
the
trust
continues
the
work
of
the
love
your
block
program,
but
allows
for
additional
flexibility
and
a
broader
range
of
projects.
The
trust
will
make
fundraising
and
awarding
grants
for
community
projects
simple,
flexible
and
transparent,
allowing
residents
to
be
supported
and
engaged
in
efforts
to
clean
and
beautify
their
neighborhoods
I
recommend
passage
of
all
three
dockets
Thank.
C
You
councillor
CMO
at
this
time,
councilor
CMO
who's,
a
chair
of
the
Committee
on
ways
and
means,
recommends
acceptance
of
the
committee
report
and
passage
of
docket,
one
six,
two
one
one,
six
one
two
and
one
six,
one
four
we'll
take
them
each
separately,
all
those
in
favor
of
passage
of
docket,
one
six,
two
one
I!
Thank
you
countess,
happy
George,
those
are
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes
have
it
take
it
one.
C
Six
two
one
has
been
passed,
all
those
in
favor
of
passage
of
docket,
one
six,
one
two
say
aye,
any
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes.
Have
it
docket
one
six
one
two
has
been
passed
and
all
those
in
favor
of
passage
of
docket,
one
six,
one
four
say
aye,
any
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes.
Have
it
docket
one
six
one
four
has
been
passed.
D
You,
madam
president,
this
past
Monday
evening,
I
chaired
a
four
hour
and
15
minute
hearing
on
docket
number
zero
265
regarding
vocational
education
in
the
city
of
Boston.
Thank
you.
The
councillor
Wu
and
councillor
Janey
for
your
partnership
in
this
work.
I'd
also
like
to
thank
all
of
my
colleagues
who
attended
and
for
their
engagement
interest
in
questions
on
this
issue.
I
started
off
the
hearing
by
giving
a
presentation
on
the
work
done
to
date.
D
This
included
information
about
the
scope
of
vocational
education
in
the
Commonwealth
of
Massachusetts
I
also
spoke
about
what
we
learned
from
visiting
other
vocational
technical
schools.
During
the
hearing
we
heard
from
Madison
Park
locational
Technical
High
School
community,
including
its
executive
director
Kevin
McCaskill,
miss
Brett
Dickens,
the
interim
headmaster
Greg
month,
mumford
deputy
director
of
youth
build
Boston,
a
partner
at
Madison
Park,
miss
Judith
Baker
from
the
Friends
of
Madison
Park,
and
to
students,
Jose
and
Melanie.
When
we
talk
about
improving
our
schools,
it's
always
important
to
hear
directly
from
our
students.
D
I
was
pleased
to
hear
the
phenomenal
opportunities
Melanie
a
cosmetology
student
in
Jose,
a
radio
and
television
broadcasting
student
have
had
because
of
Madison
Park.
Both
spoke
so
highly
about
their
school
experience.
Malian
Melanie
and
Jose
also
spoke
about
the
stigma
often
associated
with
Madison
Park
Melanie
Smoak
spoke
about
the
shame
she
felt
when
she
was
try.
Two
friends
about
where
she
attended.
High
school
Jose
spoke
about
how
he
intended
to
go
to
a
different
high
school
initially,
but
his
guidance
counselor
encouraged
him
to
attend.
D
Madison
both
have
pride
in
attending
their
school
and
do
not
regret
their
decisions.
We
have
to
ensure
that
negative
perceptions
are
not
getting
in
the
way
of
perspectives:
a
prospective
students,
education.
We
have
to
shine
a
light
on
the
amazing
opportunities,
Jose
Melanie
and
all
the
other
students
at
Madison,
Vocational,
Technical,
High
School
have
been
granted.
D
We
were
also
joined
by
the
Boston
Chamber
of
Commerce,
the
private
industry
Council,
including
the
career
specialists,
who
was
at
Madison
Park
college
partners
such
as
Roxbury
Community,
College,
Wentworth,
Institute
of
Technology
and
Ben
Franklin
Institute
of
Technology
during
public
testimony.
There
was
a
strong
feeling
of
disappointment,
especially
for
those
who
have
witnessed
the
decline
that
Madison
has
gone
through
over
the
years.
However,
there
was
one
word
that
was
repeated
and
shared
throughout
the
hearing.
D
Monday
night
hope
I
have
hope
to
hope
for
change
during
opening
statements
from
the
other
councillors
and
during
public
testimony,
we
heard
concern
that
there
has
been
a
lot
of
talk
about
improving
Madison,
but
no
action
from
the
outside.
Looking
in
I
understand
this
perception,
however,
improving
the
quality
and
resources
at
a
school
doesn't
happen
overnight.
This
is
why
we
myself,
especially
myself,
counsel,
Janey
and
councillor
Wu,
as
all
of
you
have
shown
interest,
we've
toured
top
performing
vocational
technical
high
schools
around
the
Commonwealth.
D
In
order
for
the
change,
we
have
to
understand
what
we
are
aiming
for
through
our
fieldwork
our
policy
briefing
in
September
and
this
hearing
on
Monday
evening.
We
now
know
what
we
should
be,
what
we
should
be
modeling,
our
vocational
education
off
of
this
work
doesn't
stop
here.
It
is
just
the
beginning
tonight.
I
will
be
attending
the
school
committee
meeting
to
testify
about
the
importance
of
investing
and
building
capacity.
D
At
Madison,
I
will
also
share
some
of
our
recommendations
from
Monday
evening
improving
the
budget
process
as
it
relates
to
chapter
74
funding
prioritizing
the
camp
for
a
build
BPS
investment,
creating
a
real
plan
for
partnership,
creating
a
real
admissions
and
application
process,
completing
a
program,
analysis
and
partnership
with
industry
leaders
and
considering
the
implementation
of
a
2012
innovation
school
plan.
This
budget
season
in
for
fiscal
year,
2008
informing
for
Madison
Park.
This
will
have
to
be
a
team
effort.
D
I
will
also
be
working
to
leverage
student
voices
like
Hosea
Melanie,
so
other
middle
school
students
understand
the
window
of
opportunity.
Madison
Park
offers
I
will
also
be
pushing
for
better
partnerships
with
industry
leaders
to
expand
curriculum
and
offer
internships
and
work
experiences
to
our
Madison
Park
students.
I.
Thank
all
of
you
who
attended
the
other
night
I
think
we
had
almost
the
full
council
I
do
ask
that
this.
This
order
remain
in
committee.
Thank
you.
L
Thank
you,
madam
president.
I've
just
wanted
to
thank
the
committee
chair
and
our
other
co-sponsor
councillor
Janey
for
a
very
comprehensive
and
really
informative
effort.
Over
almost
a
year
now,
at
Madison,
Park
and
even
beyond
Boston
thinking
about
the
potential
of
vocational
education
to
Phil
I
think
nearly
every
need
or
challenge
that
we're
looking
at
in
the
city
for
our
youth
and
for
that
next
generation.
L
One
piece
that
really
stuck
out
to
me
in
addition
to
the
need
for
action
and
everything
that
the
chair
woman
has
brought
up
was
that
on
all
sides
the
pieces
are
there
and
there's
a
fundamental
need
for
lifting
up
the
school
and
infusing
the
school
infusing
pride
into
the
school,
making
that
public,
meaning
that
the
programs
are
there.
The
student,
the
talented
students,
are
there,
the
hard-working
faculty
are
there.
The
partners
are
ready,
but
we
need
students
and
families
to
be
choosing
Madison
Park
in
the
admissions
process.
L
We
need
more
voices
calling
for
the
support
and
and
following
up
and
volunteering
and
spending
time
with
the
students,
and
we
need
more
businesses
and
companies
constantly
reminded
that
this
should
be
the
first
place.
They
go
to
when
they're
thinking
about
opportunities
or
expansion.
So
what
does
that
mean
for
us?
We,
we
have
to
see
more
elected
officials,
more
leaders
from
every
representing
every
sector
of
the
community
at
the
school,
engaging
with
the
student
so
I,
you
know.
F
You,
madam
president,
and
I'd
like
to
first
thank
and
appreciate
the
chair
of
Education
Anissa,
asabi
George
for
her
leadership
and
certainly
councillor
Wu
for
the
partnership
on
this
particular
hearing
order.
This
was
a
very
long
process
which
was
I
think
important,
because
we
learned
a
lot.
You
know
from
doing
tours
to
really
meeting
with
different
stakeholders,
including
students,
parents,
teachers,
administrators
at
Madison.
F
Doing
the
policy
briefing
very
important
I,
certainly
echo
everything
that
they've
already
said.
You
know,
I,
remember
you
know
Madison
when
it
was
built,
I
was
still
in
school
at
that
time.
You
know
there
was
a
lot
of
hope
placed
in
that
building
for
the
opportunities
for
young
people,
and
you
know
it's
been
heartbreaking
to
see
things
not
really
being
fulfilled
and
it's
our
young
people
who
we
have
to
keep
lift
it
up
as
we
push
forward
I.
F
Remember
someone
at
the
hearing
said
that
it
used
to
be
about
vocational
education,
but
now
it's
about
jobs
of
the
future,
which
is
so
true,
I.
Think
in
the
past,
many
people
looked
at
vocational
education
as
something
for
kids,
who
are
not
college
bound
for
kids,
who
perhaps
don't
have
the
wherewithal
to
think
about
college.
F
You
know
this
is
you're,
not
smart
enough
to
go
to
college,
so
you
should
go
ahead
and
get
a
trade,
but
what
is
very
clear
is
that
the
academics
at
Madison
are
very
important
to
the
Madison
community,
and
this
is
about
the
future.
This
is
not
you
know,
technical
education,
vocational
education
isn't
just
about
you
know,
learning
a
trade
so
that,
because
you
can't
go
to
college,
but
because
these
are
the
jobs
of
the
future
and
so
making
sure
that
we're
doing
all
we
can
to
promote
Madison
is
so
important.
F
F
You
know
near
Madison
and
the
missed
opportunities
in
terms
of
really
engaging
our
young
people
in
a
substantial
way,
I'm
glad
that
we
have
seen
some
of
the
building
trades
really
kind
of
step
up
to
the
plate
in
that
regard,
to
make
sure
that
that
partnership
was
happening
to
make
sure
that
those
relationships
are
happening
and
that
experience
for
our
young
people
is
happening.
So
I
certainly
support
the
committee
report
from
the
chair
and
asked
that
all
of
you
continue
to
think
about
Madison
as
council,
who
said
and
invest
in
Madison.
Thank
you.
C
C
M
Of
a
commander
president,
we
all
did
hearing
yesterday
November
27th
on
dark
at
1:00
five-four-three
sponsored
by
our
colleague
city
council,
Michelle
Wu.
The
ordinance
requires
city
of
Boston
covered
employees
to
provide
work
schedules
that
are
predictable,
providing
employees
with
advance
notice
of
work
schedules
and
requiring
that
employees
are
compensated
when
that,
when
their
employer
initiates
changes
to
their
schedules
that
occur
after
the
advance
notice
period.
M
So
we
heard
from
director
Trin
Wynn
from
the
city
of
Boston's
Workforce
Development
Department,
telling
us
who
would
be
covered,
who
wouldn't
be
covered,
which
vendors
the
current
the
city
currently
has
three
hundred
eighty
nine
vendors.
That
would
be
impacted.
We
heard
testimony
from
from
Bob
Blas
president
CEO
of
the
mass
Restaurant
Association
Brian
candy,
was
here
from
the
retailer's
association
amass
Stewart
Coleman
was
here
representing
the
staffing
Association,
along
with
Sam
Tyla
from
the
municipal
Research
Bureau
all
having
concerns
with
this
proposal.
M
We're
just
making
sure
that
there's
no
in
additional
exorbitant
cost
in
terms
of
monitoring
things
like
that,
but
it
was
well
attended.
Like
I
said
the
debate,
dialogue
was
very
productive
and
I
hope
is
again
working
with
the
lead
sponsor
to
try
to
have
something
turnaround
for
the
council
in
short
order
and
we'll
defer
through
the
lead
sponsor
through
the
chair.
Thank
you,
madam
president.
Thank.
L
80
to
90
percent
of
the
concerns
that
were
brought
up
were
not
about
the
city
ordinance,
but
were
about
the
larger
anxieties
that
their
trade
groups
had
with
statewide
legislation
passing
that
would
affect
every
restaurant
every
large
retailer.
The
reality
is
that
our
city
ordinance
would
do
what
we
jurisdictionally
could
do,
which
is
think
about
city
employees
as
well
as
the
employees
of
companies
directly
contracting
with
the
city.
L
The
language
is
written
to
mirror
the
living
wage
ordinances
coverage
now
I'm
Trin
said
yesterday
that
was
about
an
additional
3,500
to
4200
employees
that
are
covered
I.
Have
the
list
in
my
office
of
what
all
those
companies
would
be
and
I'll
circulate
that
so
people
can
see,
but
it
doesn't
include
the
restaurants
that
that
were
talked
about.
It
doesn't
include
the
retailers
that
the
folks
on
this
side
at
the
table
were
worried
about.
L
They
were
really
talking
about
being
afraid
that
Boston
passing
something
would
make
it
likely
that
the
state
would
pass
something
which
I'm
always
happy
to
take
on,
especially
with
some
of
our
environmental
issues.
So
that
was
one
thing.
The
other
point
that
I
wanted
to
make
is
that
everyone
who
had
concerns
also
acknowledged
that
scheduling
predictability
was
the
best
practice
in
the
industry.
L
L
It
specifically,
as
a
best
practice,
they're
worried
about
introducing
too
many
barriers
that
to
kind
of
lift
up
everyone
to
that
standard
that
would
affect
the
entire
industry,
but
one
I
think
that's
government's
role
to
make
sure
we
are
setting
the
parameters
of
what
the
floors
the
minimums
should
be
for,
and
particularly
those
with
less
leverage
and
less
bargaining
power,
of
what
their
fair
working
conditions
should
be
so
I
think
councillor,
Edwards
and
several
others
echoed
is
councillor
Flynn
and
Oh.
Janie
and
take'm
stated
that
city
jobs
should
set
the
standard.
L
We
are
already
doing
it
when
it
comes
to
fair
wages
with
the
living
wage
ordinance.
We
are
already
doing
it
when
it
comes
to
thinking
about
our
procurement
and
offering
opportunities
to
Boston
residents
to
businesses
owned
by
women
and
people
of
color.
We
should
be
adding
this
very
important
factor
of
whether
a
person
can
cobble
together
all
of
the
needed
hours
plus
their
childcare.
Plus
there
are
appointments
to
the
doctor
to
make
their
their
living
situation.
Their
family
situation
possible.
L
Taxpayer
dollars
should
only
be
funding
jobs
where
that
is
a
given
and
if
a
business
doesn't
want
to
do
that,
fine,
you
know.
Personally,
we
could
disagree,
but
policy
wise.
They
wouldn't
be
affected
by
this
ordinance
in
that
they're
not
being
forced
to
bid
for
the
city,
jobs
that
would
come
with
that
requirement.
Only
the
company
is
offering
the
highest
standards
of
working
conditions.
Fair
wages
and
safety
should
be,
should
have
access
to
those
city
city
jobs
that
our
taxpayers,
our
city
residents,
are
funding.
L
So
again,
thanks
to
the
chair,
we're
talking
about
amendments
and
and
tightening
up
the
language
to
address
some
of
the
concerns.
I,
do
you
know
the
composition
of
the
council
is
changing
and
there's
a
lot
happening,
I'm
holding
out
hope
that
there's
a
pathway
if
we
can
focus
on
really
what
the
ordinance
is
about
and
not
the
statewide
can
of
worms
conversation
to
see
action
before
the
end
of
the
year,
but
won't
it
be
transparent
about
that
and
we'll
follow
up
with
the
chair
about
what
that
could
look
like.
Thank
you
very
much.
Thank.
N
N
And
we
were
wondering
honestly,
if
bps
in
this
transportation,
transportation
system
and
busing
is
really
accounting
for
that.
The
challenges
include,
for
example,
going
to
be
LA
if
you
live
in
East
Boston
right
now,
taking
two
T's,
the
blue
to
the
orange
to
wait
for
bus
to
take
you
down
to
be
LA
and
that's
a
lot
for
middle
school
students.
N
While
when
we're
talking
about
East
Boston
in
Charlestown,
we
don't
have
access
to
the
same
thing.
This
is
a
conversation
to
talk
about
equity
and
also
making
sure
that,
as
we're
moving
kids
around,
we
also
acknowledge
that
some
exam
schools
are
maybe
all
the
only
exam
schools
seem
to
have
access
to
busing,
while
kids
coming
in
to
Charlestown
high
school.
N
Don't
there's
a
real
concern
about
how
we're
moving
or
allowing
kids
to
move
based
on
where
they're
going
to
school
and
where
they
live,
and
that's
an
equity
issue
and
there's
also
a
question
about
how
we
can
solve
this
together.
You
know
just
looking
how
how
much
a
bus
costs
I
confirmed
it's
about
a
hundred
thousand
dollars
for
a
school
bus
and
I.
Think
that
there's
room
for
some
public-private
partnerships
and
talking
about
mitigation.
Specifically
in
my
just
again,
we
have
the
North
Washington
Street
bridge.
We
have
a
massive
amount
of
development
in
East
Boston.
N
How
we're
moving
our
kids
around?
Are
we
exercising
back
best
practices
and
are
we're
getting
all
the
stakeholders
to
the
table
to
make
sure
that
we're
actually
getting
the
resources
necessary
to
make
sure
that
they
move?
This
is
the
one
stress
I
would
think
a
parent
having
a
bps
should
not
have
to
have
and
that's
how
their
kid
is
going
to
get
to
school
within
the
school's
the
quality
of
the
schools.
N
How
long
the
schools
are
all
of
those
things
I
understand
again
not
having
kids,
but
at
least
I
understand
those
those
are
questions
that
may
come
up
on
a
regular
basis,
but
that
you
should
be
able
to
know
your
kid
is
going
to
be
so
late
safely,
delivered
to
a
school
shouldn't
be
on
the
list
for
parents
to
have
to
deal
with
so
I'm
excited
to
kick
off
this
conversation.
I
look
forward
to
having
as
much
as
many
ideas
and
stakeholders
at
the
table.
I
don't
see
this
isn't
as
a
conversation
against
bps.
N
L
You
and
thank
you
so
much
to
the
lead,
sponsor
and
counselor
sabe
George
I
think
it's
a
powerful
combination
to
have
the
district
represented
where
there
have
been
some
recent,
very
stressful
situations
for
families
and
then
committees
representing
transportation,
education
thinking
about
it
holistically
I
just
wanted
to
note
that
some
of
the
work
that
had
happened
over
the
summer
in
my
office,
we
had
a
grad
student
fellow
looking
at
how
students
get
to
school
and
and
what
the
impacts
were
of
Transportation
on
their
lives
surveyed.
Almost
300
young
people
in
Boston.
L
It
is
compounding
it
when
they
are
not
sure
what
time
is
gonna
come
on
time.
Then
they're
late
to
school,
through
no
fault
of
their
own,
then
they
get
marked
tardy.
Then
they
have
a
detention.
Then
they
miss
that
job
or
after-school
program
and
it's
on
and
on
and
on
the
impacts.
So
this
is
a
way
bigger
issue
than
just
even
getting
to
particular
schools
from
particular
parts
of
the
city.
L
It's
really
about
an
economic
situation
that
is
exacerbated
into
now:
multiple
generations,
from
our
transportation
system,
being
unreliable,
our
public
transit
system
being
unreliable
and
the
city
needing
to
now
figure
out
how
to
plug
those
gaps.
There's
some
specific
policy
recommendations
coming
out
of
that
report.
Things
like
changing
the
m7
policy.
Things
like
advocating
for
the
MBTA
for
certain
changes,
so
looking
forward
to
looming
that.
L
All
in
last
thing,
I'll
say
is
that
connecting
this
back
to
the
Madison
Park
hearing
or
the
vocational
ed
hearing
we
were
just
talking
about
when
our
fabulous
student
Jose,
it
was
asked.
What
was
the
one
thing
he
would
change
by
next
school
year
about
Madison
Park
to
make
it
better.
He
said
transportation
that
it
was
hard
for
him
to
get
there
on
time
from
where
he
lives
and
I
think
we'd
find
that
at
every
school
across
the
district.
Thank
you
Thank.
M
But
also
in
brightening
hype
I
can
read
ville
seems
like
the
further
you
are
away
from
particularly
exam
schools.
These
kids
are
getting
up
for
thirty
quarter
five
in
the
morning,
just
to
try
to
be
able
to
get
to
school
on
time.
So
we've
heard
the
stories
if
this
could
be
a
more
comprehensive
and
cohesive
way
where
we
could
transport
kids-
and
I
know,
there's
also
issues
where
you
have
siblings,
where
the
older
sibling
is
not
able
to,
I
guess,
take
the
same
buses,
the
youngest
sibling
and
sort
of
vice
versa.
So
again
it's
not.
M
I
guess
it's,
it's
not
an
easy
process
to
sort
of
we
through
as
we're
looking
at
school
assignment
and
transportation
and
trying
to
find
ways
to
save
class,
but
there's
got
to
be
sort
of
a
more
predictable
and
practical
way
to
kind
of
figure
this
out.
So
please
have
my
name
and
look
forward
to
the
hearing
and
try
to
make
sense
of
this,
particularly
for
those
that
feel
like
they're,
an
outpost
where
the
schools
of
the
furthest
away
from
the
home,
but
also
to
the
dovetailing.
M
When
counsel
who
was
saying
about
you
know,
we
should
have
vocational
technical
school
that
rivals
the
best
one
of
the
state
which
is
out
of
worcester
and
probably
second
best,
is
down
at
Cape
Cod
Cape
Cod
Tech,
and
they
have
a
resource
like
that
in
the
city
and
then
to
recognize
that
we
have
kids
from
all
of
the
neighborhoods
of
Boston
that
won't
have
access
to
that.
We're
gonna
need
to
really
dive
in
and
find
out.
What's
the
best
transportation
mode
again
make
it
happen.
So
look
forward
to
the
hearing.
Thank
you.
I
You
very
much
Madam
President,
you
know.
If
I
could,
please
have
my
name
added
I
anytime,
I
hear
bps
transportation
I,
never
dodged
the
opportunity
to
take
a
shot
at
them.
I
love
those
hearings
dearly
because
I
get
all
fired
up.
When
you
talk
about
buses
going
from
these
Boston
and
to
East
Boston
they're
coming
from
Reed
Bell,
which
literally,
if
you
stand
in
the
backyard
of
the
Regal
bashad,
you
can
throw
a
baseball
into
Dedham.
I
It
still
makes
no
sense
to
me
why
300-plus
buses
roll
through
High
Park
roll
through
Razi
roll
through
Matapan
to
get
throughout
the
rest
of
the
system
as
a
person
who
used
to
run
operations,
it
makes
absolutely
no
sense.
I
still
haven't
gotten
a
great
answer
from
bps
on
why
all
of
the
buses
remain
in
the
furthest,
southern
tip
of
Boston
to
travel
throughout
I.
Think,
arguably,
as
a
district
city
councilor,
my
biggest
complaint
in
our
office
is
transportation.
I
It
takes
an
hour
and
a
half
to
get
here
takes
me
20
minutes
to
get
over
the
bridge
it
used
to
take
this
long.
You
used
to
take
that
long
in
my
particular
neighborhood
in
Utah
my
district,
my
district,
the
biggest
concern
with
with
us.
You
can't
even
run
you
can't
even
jog
the
neighborhood
without
the
diesel
fumes
that
are
emitted
from
from
our
by
Shaad
choking
you
as
you
run
by
so
I'm
looking
forward
to
a
hearing
because
anytime
I
can
get
them
in
front
of
me.
I
C
You
councillor
McCarthy,
madam
clerk,
if
you
could
add
councillor
McCarthy's
name
anyone
else
looking
to
speak
on
this
matter.
Madam
clerk,
if
you
could
add
councillor
co-moh
councillor
Flynn
councillor,
Janey
councillors,
a
come
as
well
as
the
chair,
docket
one.
Six,
eight
eight
will
be
assigned
to
the
camino
in
education,
moving
on
to
personnel
orders,
docket.
C
C
C
C
C
B
C
C
Chair
seek
suspension
of
the
rules
and
passage
of
docket,
one
six,
nine,
seven,
all
those
in
favor
say
aye,
any
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes
have
it
docket
one.
Six
nine
seven
has
been
passed:
docket
number
one:
six,
nine
eight
council
campbell
offered
the
chair
seek
suspension
of
the
rules
and
passage
of
docket,
one
six,
nine,
eight,
all
those
in
favor
of
passionate,
say
aye,
any
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes
habit,
one
sick,
the
docket
one,
six,
nine
eight
has
been
passed.
Docket.
C
The
chair
seek
suspension
of
the
rules
in
passage
of
docket,
one
six,
nine,
nine,
all
those
in
favor
say
aye,
any
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes
have
it
docket
one.
Six,
nine
nine
has
been
passed
moving
on
too
late
files,
I'm
informed
by
the
clerk
that
we
have
three
late
file
matters
which,
in
the
absence
of
a
of
an
objection,
will
be
added
to
the
today's
agenda
hearing
and
seeing
no
objection.
The
late
file
matters
are
so
added,
madam
clerk,
if
you
could
read
the
first
late
file
matter
into
the
record.
Thank
you,
madam.
B
President
councillor
Ayanna
Presley
Boston
City
Council
Lodge
November
28th
2018
dear
madam
clerk,
I
regret
that
being
can
I
previously
scheduled
new
member
of
Congress
orientation
in
Washington.
Dc
I
will
not
be
able
to
attend
today's
City
Council
meeting
I
look
forward
to
reviewing
and
record
and
record
the
recording
and
we'll
have
staff
present
all
the
best
Ayanna
Presley
Boston
City
Councilor.
C
C
C
C
Anyone
wishing
to
remove
a
matter
from
the
green
sheets,
great
moving
right
along
I,
am
informed
by
the
clerk
that
there
are
zero
late
file
matters
for
the
consent
agenda.
At
this
time.
The
chair
moves
for
adoption
of
the
consent
agenda.
All
those
in
favor
say
aye,
any
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
eyes
have
it.
The
consent
agenda
has
been
adopted,
just
a
friendly
reminder
that
councillor
siamo
has
his
lunch
immediately
following
our
meeting.
So
everyone
please
join
us.
Anyone
else
have
an
announcement.
D
You,
madam
president,
I
ask
unanimous
consent
to
make
a
statement
regarding
a
toy
drive
and
the
police
patches
that
are
at
your
desk.
Go
right
ahead.
Thank
thank
you.
At
first,
we
were
in
on
October
31st.
We
were
to
have
the
Boston
Police
Department
mass
art,
Police
Department
Suffolk
police
department.
D
A
number
of
others
were
gonna,
join
us
just
to
discuss
and
demonstrate
their
effort
over
the
month
of
October
regarding
breast
cancer
awareness
because
of
the
Red
Sox
World
Series
parade
they
weren't
able
to
attend,
but
I
did
purchase
for
the
Boston
Police
every
one,
a
patch
that
they
were
selling
as
a
fundraising
effort.
So
that
is
why
that's
on
your
desk
we've
already
reserved
next
October
to
bring
them
all
in
early
in
the
month.
D
Boston
Police
doesn't
wear
their
patches,
but
Suffolk
and
mass
art
does
to
really
promote
the
idea
over
the
whole
month
of
October
and
the
Suffolk
captain
that
I
met
had
sort
of
everything
was
in
pink
and
it
was
pretty
cool
and
really
a
great
effort
to
bring
awareness
to
breast
cancer
awareness.
So
it's
my
my
gift
to
you
and
council,
McCarthy
and
I
are
gonna
partner
next
year
to
get
them
here
before,
there's
an
opportunity
for
a
World
Series
parade.
D
M
To
make
a
brief
statement
on
the
USS
hudner,
both
the
council
fund
and
I
went
down
there
today
with
school
students
from
all
the
parochial
and
the
public
schools
in
South
Boston.
And
if
you
don't,
if
you
have
a
chance
over
the
next
couple
days,
you
really
should
get
down
there.
It's
it's
a
seven
hundred
million
dollar
destoroyah,
it's
the
latest
and
greatest
of
our
US
Navy
fleet.
M
Pretty
impressive
vessel,
steady
serving
obviously
is
a
Navy
veteran
for,
of
course,
225
years
so
I
know
is
a
thrill
for
him
to
be
down
there,
but
it's
also
a
thrill
for
the
kids
to
be
down
there
just
to
see
this,
this
beautiful
destroyer.
So
that
said,
just
a
little
back
know
for
those
that
don't
know
about
the
the
gentleman
that
the
boat
was
the
ship
is
named
after
Tom
hudner.
He
was
a
captain.
M
X
at
the
time
was
a
lieutenant
Navy,
a
v8
and
a
Navy
pilot,
and
his
wingman
at
the
time
was
the
very
first
black
Navy
fighter
pilot
and
the
wingman
got
shot
down
over
the
border
during
the
Korean
War
and
he
stayed
in
the
air
and
circled
around
coming
under
enemy
fire
and
despite
the
fact
that
he
was
told
to
leave
the
post,
he
didn't
leave
the
post.
In
fact,
he
he
landed
his
plane
basic
Rashed,
his
own
plane
on
the
belly
to
try
to
save
the
incent
at
the
time.
M
Who
was
this
wingman
and
goes
to
sort
of
bravery
and
coverage,
and
when
he
did
it,
he
fully
expected
to
be
court-martialed
and
in
fact
he
received
Medal
of
Honor
for
his
bravery
in
an
attempt
to
try
to
rescue
and
and
protect
his
wingman,
so
that
chip
was
is
named
after
him.
Thomas
idaho's
from
Massachusetts
I
was
born
and
raised
in
Fall
River.
M
C
You
councillor
Flaherty
for
sharing,
and
you
also
see
it
counselor-
see
almost
lunch
that
there
are
some
incredible
pies
for
the
counselors
courtesy
of
our
14th
counselor
Mike.
So
thank
you
at
this
time.
I
would
like
all
colleagues
and
guests
to
please
rise.
As
we
adjourn
today's
meeting
in
memory.
Oh
I
apologize.
Oh
sorry,
counsel!
Flynn!
Are
you
all
set
counseling?
C
Ok,
that's
as
we
adjourn
today's
meeting
in
memory
of
the
following
individuals
for
councillor
co-moh
Mary,
renew
Chi,
Walter
Holman
and
Lucy
Sanok
for
councillor
Edwards
Priska
Assunta
di
Pietro
for
counselors
Abby,
George,
Wayne,
Kanto
senior
for
counselor
Flaherty,
John,
perrilyn,
Lupe
Padilla
for
counselor
flirty
and
counselor
O'malley
Thomas,
Joseph
McIntyre
for
counselor
Janey,
George,
joy,
barrows,
Yvonne,
fuchsias
powers,
George
best
Corey
Warren
and
Parker
Franklin
Taylor
Kenton,
Healey,
marc
bolan
and
Thelma
ara
bowling
for
counselor
McCarthy,
Frederick,
Davis,
Katherine
Timlin
for
counsel,
O'malley,
Stanley,
Esau
white.
A
moment
of
silence.
Please.
C
Thank
you
at
this
time.
The
chair
moves
that
when
the
council
adjourns
today
it
does
so
in
memory
of
the
four
mentioned
individuals,
we
are
scheduled
to
meet
again
on
Wednesday
December
5th
and
in
this
chamber
at
Boston,
City
Hall,
all
those
in
favor
of
adjournment,
say
aye,
any
opposed,
say,
nay,
the
council,
the
eyes
have
it.
The
council's
adjourned.