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From YouTube: Redistricting Working Session on October 24, 2022
Description
Redistricting Working Session - Dockets #1186 #1215 #1216 #1273 #1275, amending City Council electoral districts
A
A
for
the
record.
My
name
is
Luke
Bryan
District
counselor
for
this
District
9.
I
am
the
chair
of
the
Boston
city
council
committee
on
redistricting
I
am
joined
by
my
colleagues,
councilman
Murphy
at
Large
council
president
Flynn
councilman
Park
District
8
Central
Louisiana
at
Large
and
cancer
Worrell
District
4.
A
The
subjects
of
the
working
session
are
docket
1186,
an
ordinance,
amended
city
council
electoral
districts,
stop
at
1215
an
ordinance
amending
city
council
electoral
districts
talk
at
one
two,
one:
six,
an
ordinance
amending
city
council
electoral
districts
start
with
one
two:
seven:
three:
an
ordinance
amending
City
Council
election
districts
and
Downton
1275,
an
ordinance
Amendment
city
council
districts
and
this
report
for
the
record
that
we've
been
joined
by
councilor
Baker
of
District.
Three.
A
Talk
at
1186
just
go
over
the
where
we
the
work
that
we've
done
so
far
and
that's
where
we've
arrived
at
this
point.
Docket
1186
was
sponsored
by
Congress
Ricardo,
Arroyo
and
Tony
Fernandez
Anderson
and
was
referred
to
the
committee
on
September
28
2022.
A
Target
one
two,
one
five
was
sponsored
by
councilor
Aaron
Murphy
and
referred
to
the
committee
on
October
5th
2022.
Target
one
one.
Two
one
six
was
sponsored
by
councilors
Liz,
Braden
and
councilor
Brian
Worrell
and
was
referred
to
the
committee
on
October
5th
2022
down
at
1273
was
sponsored
by
Council
Frank
Baker
and
was
referred
to.
The
committee
on
October
19
2022
and
Doug
at
1275
was
sponsored
by
councilors
Liz
Braden
and
regard
Ricardo
Arroyo
and
was
referred
to
the
committee
on
October
19
2022..
A
The
committee
held
a
work,
a
virtual
working
session
by
video
conference
on
September
16th,
a
working
session
in
the
Pia
Monte
room
on
September
20th,
a
virtual
working
session
on
September
23rd
working
sessions
in
the
Pia
Monte
room
and
September
on
September
26th
and
20
September
27th
public
hearing
on
September
29th
and
working
sessions
on
September,
30th
and
October
7th.
A
meeting
to
receive
public
testimony
was
held
on
October
12th,
a
working
session
on
October
17th,
an
off-site
public
Hearing
in
Phoenix
Corner
Dorchester
last
Thursday,
October
20th,
and
a
working
session
last
Friday
October
21st.
A
A
For
clarification.
The
chair
intends
to
recommend
a
committee
report
at
Wednesday's
city
council
meeting
under
the
matters
recently
heard.
Portion
of
the
agenda
does
my
intention
to
recommend
to
full
Council
the
passage
of
one
of
the
dockets
presented
before
the
committee,
and
these
working
sessions
are
to
discuss
potential
language.
That
may
appear
in
a
new
draft
presented
with
the
report.
A
Just
want
to
record
some
feedback
that
was
heard
on
the
12
12
75
1275
red
and
a
royal
map
has
filed
moving
six
three
from
six
two
to
six
three
splits:
the
west
from
Broadway
public
housing
community
shared
with
six
two
moving,
both
six
seven
five
and
seven,
six
from
Deep
from
District
2
to
District
three
splits,
the
Ann
Lynch
homes,
public
housing
community,
which
also
spans
7-4
across
three
precepts
total
the
pounds
at
Port,
Norfolk,
Precinct,
69
1610,
are
split
between
District
3
and
District.
4.
A
A
A
I've
also
reached
out
and
talked
to
the
district
councilor
and
at
first
district
2
comes
through
Flynn
and
at
large
counselor
from
South
Boston
Council
of
Liberty
to
ask
them
to
think
about
possible
alternatives
to
precincts
that
could
be
moved
rather
than
the
public
housing
precincts
and
also
the
neponsible
precinct,
16,
9
and
1610..
So
this
is
some
of
the
conversations
we've
had
and
we
will
continue
to
talk
about
today.
A
We
have
okay.
C
Murphy
you
had
a
comment:
oh
yeah
no
go
ahead.
Are
you
sure
I
was
just
questioning
when
you
said
there
was
discussion,
it
must
have
been
since
Friday's
working
session,
about
alternatives
to
69
and
1610
and
I
was
wondering.
A
E
A
A
Will
we
will
get
to
discussing
those
precincts,
hopefully
this
morning
in
our
working
session?
Thank
you,
council
president
president
Flynn.
G
I
had
the
opportunity
to
visit
several
of
the
public
housing
developments
in
South
Boston,
Mariana
McCormack,
which
is
which
is
not
in
the
district
2.
the
ambulance
homes,
which
is
in
District
Two
West
Broadway,
which
was
in
District
Two
several
senior
senior
locations
as
well
West,
9th
Street.
In
most
of
these
developments.
G
Well,
actually,
all
the
developments
I
mean
public
housing
developments,
Express
a
strong
desire
to
stay
in
District
2.,
most
of
the
public
housing
in
South
Boston
is
communities
of
color
and
persons
in
persons
with
disabilities
as
well,
but
they
they
want
to
stay
in
District
too,
because
we
have
that
historical
relationship
with
public
housing
residents
and
especially
during
the
pandemic.
G
I
also
wanted
to
I
also
wanted
to
highlight
that
the
opportunities
to
meet
with
the
South
Boston
Axiom,
which
is
a
large
group
of
latinx
residents
living
in
public
housing
developments,
and
they
want
to
stay
connected
to
District,
to
historical
reasons,
but
also
because
District
tourism
has
historically
advocated
and
represented
them
in
terms
of
helping
them
with
support
for
immigrant
rights.
Support
for
food
access,
related
issues
as
well
and
in
helping
them
on
language
and
communication
access.
I
have
two
women
on
my
staff
that
speak
Spanish.
G
I
have
two
women
on
my
scalp
that
speak
Spanish
and
a
lot
of
the
work
we
do
in
my
office
is
in
the
public
housing
developments.
That's
an
important
part
of
the
district.
2
job
is
working
with
other
immigrant
neighbors.
Many
of
them
don't
speak
English,
but
having
that
ability
to
communicate
with
them
is
incredible,
is
incredibly
important.
I
also
wanted
to
highlight
I
have
the
most
diverse
staff
of
any
District
of
any
of
any
Council
as
well.
In
short,
it's
critical
that
we
keep
public
housing
developments,
communities
of
color.
G
We
can't
divide
people
in
need.
We
can't
divide
communities
of
color
separate
them.
They
rely
on
services
and
support
from
city
government
in
the
district
2
City
councilor
that
has
historically
provided
that
level
of
support
and
compassion
to
to
our
residents.
So
just
wanted
to
highlight
some
of
those
issues.
Thank.
B
B
We
have
a
daughter
and
the
Waterfront
Waterfront
maps,
all
the
way
around
1713
I
would
I
would
I
would
suggest
that
transportation
and
the
environment
of
two
most
important
things
facing
the
city
of
Boston
right
now,
every
now
every
map
that
I've
seen
comes
in
after
my
communities
after
my
neighborhoods.
Why
do
my
neighborhoods
not
matter
in
this
equation
at
all,
and-
and
there
was
an
interesting
point
that
was
made
yesterday-
you're
looking
to
shift
the
fonts
are
over
into
District
4.,
the
woman
that
was
talking
about
God.
B
That
said,
don't
get
hung
up
on
numbers,
efficient
histories,
efficient
District,
so
I
would
ask
why.
Why
am
I
concerns
and
why
do
the
people
in
my
neighborhood
I'm
going
to
continue
to
bring
them
into
working
sessions
into
hearings
to
to
speak
on
the
record
over
and
over
and
over
multiple
multiple
letters
coming
from
this?
This
area
right
here
this.
B
B
Spots
on
Roxbury,
we
can't
type.
We
can't
touch
this.
We
can't
touch
that
so
why
we,
why
are
we
going
in
and
disrupting
entire
neighborhood,
when
we
don't
have
to
bear?
We
do
not?
Have
we
we're
just
totally
disregarding
the
tenant
so
of
you?
Are
we
districting
here,
neighborhoods
neighborhoods
need
to
remain
home.
This
neighborhood
wants
to
say:
hey
I,.
B
G
B
F
B
F
B
H
B
A
Moves
right
here,
yes,
thank
you,
Council,
Baker
and
councilor
Bach
has
asked
to
offer
some
remarks.
She's
been
doing
some
some
yesterday.
J
Thank
you,
madam
chair
I,
I
was
studying.
Basically,
all
I
did
over
the
weekend
was
look
at
numbers.
F
J
J
F
B
B
J
J
That's
worth
registering
is
that
the
question
of
how
to
divide
Dorchester
between
two
districts
was
a
question
in
the
original
redistricting
process
when
districts
were
first
created.
This
is
a
quote
from
the
chair
in
1982.
Thank
you
to
council
Braden
staff
for
including
the
committee
report
last
week.
You
know
Dorchester
shouldn't
be
divided
into
northern
and
southern
districts
or
Eastern
and
Western
sections.
It's
just
to.
J
You
split
the
very
large
neighborhood
like
you
know,
there
are
lots
of
choices
that
could
have
been
made
and
obviously
the
choice
that
was
made
was
in
eastern
western
one
you've
seen
some
people
suggesting
recently
what
if
we
split
it
north
south
primary
Consulting
kind
of
map,
I
did
just
a
test
version
sort
of
said
rep
that
included
some
more
other
things
in
the
council.
That
discussed,
but
but.
J
J
About
how
Dorchester
is
currently
divided
between
District
3
and
District
Four,
and
so
that's
just
a
close
end
of
the
Dorchester
section
of
District
3
and
district
four
in
the
current,
the
current
map,
so
to
look
at
that
a
little
bit,
I
decided
to
sort
of
run
some
numbers
on
voting
in
these
five
Wars
13
14,
15,
16
17..
J
Significant
neighborhood
pieces
outside
of
both,
but
these
five
boards
between
them
make
up
the
bulk
of
District,
three
and
District
Four,
and
really
what
precincts
you've
had
from
outside
those
words
really
depends
on
how
you're
orienting
things
plus
since
we're
all
operating
under
time
constraints
operating
analyzing
by
whole
warts
makes
things
a
little
bit
easier
and
just
as
a
point
of
reference
with
the
census
data
that
we
got
on
Friday,
the
those
five
boards
together
are
77
percent
black
indigenous
people
of
color
20
white,
three
percent
other.
J
The
77
includes
the
two
or
more
races
where
one
is
one
is.
Is
it
one
is
black
or
one
is
not
like?
Do
you
remember
yeah?
Whatever
that
the
last
category
is
so
when
you
do
that?
What
I
I
took
the
woo
Wasabi
George
final
from
last
last
November,
and
what
you
see
is
that
that,
in
that
overall,
five
Ward
district
we've
got
59.4
percent
of
those
and
The
Savvy
George
got
40.6
percent
of
the
vote
in
that
five-word
area,
but
our
two
districts
significantly
differentiate.
J
So
in
the
district
three
precincts
of
wards
13
through
17.
These
are
today's
districts.
Asabi
George
wins
51.8
to
48.2.
C
J
Is
an
11.2
swing
off
of
that
overall
average,
and
then,
conversely,
in
District,
4,
Wu
and
71.7
percent,
three
percent,
which
is
a
12.3
percent
swing
in
the
other
direction.
So
you
can
basically
see
that
what
what
we're
doing
in
terms
of
the
districts
is
we're
swinging
them
step.
One
goes
to
asabi
George
one
goes
to
Wu,
even
though
blue
on
the
whole
area
by
a
sizable
margin.
Overall.
J
This
is,
of
course,
like
just
a
demonstration
of
the
type
of
thing
that
the
math
professor
was
talking
about
last
working
session,
about
how
the
way
that
you
draw
the
lines
means
that
your
smaller
units
inside
of
a
larger
unit
won't
necessarily
near
the
larger
unit.
It
can
obviously
take
kind
of
different
proportions,
but.
F
J
Think
from
a
Voting
Rights
Act
perspective,
you
have
to
ask
whether
this
this
SKU
is
frustrating
the
effective
ability
of
communities
of
color
to
a
lot
of
candidates
and
their
choice,
and
that
would
depend
on
whether
voting
is
racially
polarized
in
this
area.
J
But
I
would
say
that
when
you
look
at
yeah,
this
race
fall
2021
in
in
those
five
Awards.
What
you
see
is
evidence
of
racial
polarization,
so
those
are
just
graphs
of
the
percent
of
white
total
18
plus
population
across
the
bottom
and
then
on
the
vertical
as
folks
for
an
e
syphilis
for
Michelle
and
each
point
is
a
priest
and
so-
and
these
are
obviously
kind
of
inverses
of
each
other.
The
other
side
is
black
population
plus
population.
J
So
what
it's
basically
just
showing
you
is
if
I
know,
the
percent
of
white
18
plus
population
in
one
of
the
precincts
in
this
War
I
can
make
like
pretty
good
trendline
guess
of
where
it's
going
to
fall
in
terms
of
Move
versus
zombies.
So
this
is
important
because
you
wouldn't
see
this
Everywhere
by
any
means,
but
you
do
see
it
here.
J
If
you
want
to
look
at
another
race
from
in
the
same
election,
I
did
a
pairwise
comparison
between
Council
Murphy
and
counselor
Halbert.
The
reason
I
picked,
the
two
of
them
is
because
incumbency
has
a
big
confounding
effect
and
so
I
didn't
want
to
use
counselor's,
Media
or
Flaherty.
F
J
J
They
have
run
previously,
they
finished
fourth
and
fifth
respectively
within
311,
most
of
each
other
city-wide,
when
you're
doing
kind
of
analysis
of
of
like
real
things
that
happen
in
the
field,
and
you
don't
get
to
set
up
your
own
experiment.
Then,
like
often
one
of
the
things
you
try
to
do,
are
these
pairwise
comparisons,
where
you
try
to
find
two
things
that
that
are
sort
of
like
a
good
pair
to
to
run
against
each
other?
E
J
J
Murphy
wins
overall
in
these
five,
these
five
Awards
33.7
to
24.2
percent.
Really
what
this
is
designed
to
show
is
that
you
see
in
the
in
that
comparison,
the
same
the
same
type
of
opposite
skew
right.
So
in
District
three,
you
have
Murphy
winning
that
outright
by
a
much
higher
number
compared
to
the
Halbert
votes,
whereas
for
despite
themseling
behind
it
or
all
outer
wins
in
the
district.
Four
precincts
of
police
Awards,
when,
when
you
split
them
up
so.
J
Like
these
are
Big
swings
that
we're
talking
about
and
I
think
that's
what
really
raises
the
question
of
whether
Dorchester
is
split
up
as
it
says
here.
Are
there
adjustments
that
can
be
made
to
District
three
and
four
to
better
ensure
that
the
five
o'clock
majorities
in
both
districts
have
the
ability
to
elect
the
candidates
of
their
choice
because
of
the
skew
that
we're
seeing
doctor
1275.
J
J
Race
makes
a
significant
like
significantly
cuts
that
kind
of
Swing,
so
so
you
see
like
it
goes
from.
It
goes
from
a
negative
to
less
point
to
a
12.3.
F
J
J
but
I
think
there's
an
argument
that
says
that
1275
overshoots,
as
you
can
see
it's
it's
it's
such
a
it's
such
a
swing
back
that
when
you
get
to
the
at-large
races,
it's
it's
making
it
so
that
you
wouldn't
see
like
you,
wouldn't
see
how
Brooklyn,
either
of
these
districts
now
In
fairness,
Council
Murphy
did
better
in
the
whole
area,
so
that
may
just
make
sense,
but
but
it's
worth
registering
that
as
people
think
about
electoral
analysis
and
what
makes
for
an
effective
District
that
if
you,
if
you
look
at
the
bottom
corner
of
this,
you
can
see
that
where
we
had
but
144
000
votes
in
November's
final,
the
numbers
over
previous
years
have
been
much
lower.
J
Obviously,
I
think
everyone
knows
they're
lower
in
city
council
only
years,
and
so,
for
instance-
and
this
was
the
other.
The
other
reason
that
I
had
to
take
Tyler
Murphy
is
because
they
both
ran
the
prior
race.
You
can
see
that
councilor
Murphy's
boats
track
the
same
as
the
total
increase
between
2019
and
2021..
So
overall
in
the
City
ballot
numbers
increased
from
2.2
factor
of
2.2,
not
2.2
percent
right,
like
five
times
2.2
as
state
councilman
Murphy's,
whereas
for
calverts
increased
by
3.3
because
of
the
originally
polarized
voting
numbers
that
we
saw
earlier.
J
What
that's?
What
that's
telling
you
is
that
you
saw
like
higher
turnout
amongst
voters
of
color
in
the
2021
Precinct
and
when
those
things
subside
in
an
Atlanta
off
cycle
election
you're
not
going
to
have
you're
not
going
to
have
the
same
comparisons.
J
Off
of
off
of
that
from
from
me,
so
obviously
I
think
the
overall
kind
of
That
Swing
situation
and
the
racial
polarization
vote
case
like
that
makes
me
feel
like
there
is
a
strong
argument
for
for
coming
across
that
line
into
D3
to
kind
of
like
change
the
way
the
thing
is
cut,
but
I
think
that
the
evidence
for
2019
suggests
that
that
the
took.
J
J
E
J
Return
72
and
176
to
D4
I
think
that
in
us
and
then
councilor.
J
Me
personally,
I
I
used
to
run
some
of
the
resident
organizing
support
that
the
BHA
has,
including
in
South,
Boston
and
I,
will
just
say
that
I,
don't
think
a
dynamic
where,
like
the
folks,
organizing
public
housing,
tenants
have
to
get
them
to
figure
out
which
side
of
the
building
they
live
on
to
determine
which
district
they're
in
is
a
great
one.
For
Resident.
J
You
know
my
take
again.
This
is
just
made
with
you
to
return
six
three,
seven,
five
and
seven
six
to
D2,
for
which
you
then
need
to
even
have
d2's
populations.
You
return
four
or
five
to
D7,
which
is
where
it
is
currently
and
move
315
into
D3.
J
Then
D3
needs
for
other
population
in
this
situation
to
strengthen
it
as
an
opportunity
District.
You
float
79
into
that,
and
you
also
I
think
flip
13
4,
which
is
right
on
the
Dorchester
border
and
all
those
moves
end
up
with
a
with
a
population
with
investment,
and
then
the
opportunity
to
this
is
just
a
side.
Note
that
I
said
before,
but
I
figured
we'll
always
put
writing
things
down.
I
would
write
this.
J
I
think
like
there
is
an
argument
that
we're
seeing
as
that,
seeing
as
it's
possible
that
United
Roslindale
living
21
and
28
into
D5
and
then
flipping
the
J
decreasing
the
1912-56.
Something
should
be
considered
when
you
look
at
the
2021
mayoral
results.
You
do
that
same
analysis
on
it,
with
the
suggestion,
the
amendment
that
I'm
suggesting
you
see
that
what
you
get
is
still
the
overall
impact
of
the
1275
plan.
J
But
the
swing
is
a
little
bit
is,
is
like
you
put
a
little
bit
of
the
swing
back,
but
not
a
lot
of
it
in
terms
of
how
the
how
they're.
Currently
the
two
districts
are
currently
split,
and
that
is.
J
I
J
J
Is
there
a
case
for
like
counselor
Baker,
it's
asking
about
making
this
more
significant
change,
as
opposed
to
just
nibbling
around
the
edges
and
I
think
there
is
and
then
also
this
question
that
counselor
Worrell
and
Elder
separated
of
whether
it
might
be
you
know
going
too
far
in
terms
of
generating
two
effective
districts
and
I
think
it
might
be,
and
so
that
that
would
be
my
set
of
suggestions.
But
thank
you,
madam
chair.
Thank.
A
B
B
The
major
changes
always
come
back
to
me
always
cut
up
my
English.
So
why
would
I
advocate
back?
Please
don't
put
words
in
my
in
my
mouth.
Major
changes
make
sure
to
help
the
way
should
that
go
child's
time.
When
is
that
going
to
go
so
so
then?
What
are
we
going
to?
What
are
we
going
to
do
there
if
we're
going
to
make
changes
or
big
changes
and
I
would
say
that
the
change
is
that
you're
proposing
nearly
everybody's
composing
to
come
into
my
neighborhood,
my
neighborhood's
up
yeah,
they
hurt
be.
F
B
To
me
and
I
I
still
can't
understand
how
and
why
District
councilors
would
would
be
okay
with
this
I
haven't
I
haven't
thought
so
why
that
would
be
okay
with,
but
why.
B
E
J
B
H
B
Ever
this
commonality
in
this
in
this
in
this
having
Neponset
than
the
Neponset
right
away
in
District
three
also
I've,
been
on
Police,
pull
thrown
up
and
down
that,
so
we
could
discuss
federal
grants
to
dredgement
to
dredging
upon
such
or
become
more
of
a
place
for
people
in
Quincy,
Milton
and
Dorchester
Mattapan
to
have
enjoy
I've
been
on
those.
Why?
Why
is
nobody
listening
to
me?
Why
is
my
neighborhood
consistently
and
everybody
throws
up
my
neighborhood,
the
one?
That's
still
that's,
that's
gonna
be
her
when
it
doesn't
need
to
be
that's.
A
Thank
you,
councilor
Baker
I
I'd,
also
like
to
remind
everyone
to
reference
the
number,
the
district
numbers
we
we
have
the
honor
of
representing
these
districts
right
now,
but
they're,
not
our
districts,
that
we,
those
districts,
those
people
whose
residents
will
be
there
long
after
we're
gone.
So
we
have
to
talk.
We
think
about
the
districts,
not
the
particular
people
who
happen
to
be
representing
those
districts
right
now
that
will
help
us.
We
have
to
not
personalize
this.
This
is
not
personal.
We
are
charged
with
a
with.
F
A
L
Take
a
chance
thank
you,
chair
Braden,
in
response
to
councilor,
Baker
I.
Think
the
the
data
that
Council
Rock
just
showed
shows
why
there
is
this
concern
for
district
three
I've
been
going
to
shows
that
there
is
a
degree
of
racially
polarized
voting
happening,
which
means
that
we
have
to
make
sure
that
communities
of
color,
which
form
the
majority,
are
able
to
elect
the
candidate,
a
big
choice
and
looking
at
past
selections,
especially
strong
data,
to
support
that
so
I
appreciate
looking
at
them.
L
Lateral
I
appreciate
the
fact
that
you
looked
at
the
large
range
to
really
determine
that.
What
one
thing
that
I
wanted
to
highlight
is
on
Friday
Professor
Lucian
when
she
presented
her
data
and
she
was
doing
the
analysis
and
showing
how
in
most
instances
who
won
the
the
Mayoral
race
in
particular
districts
didn't
change
under
the
unity
map,
except
for
in
District
Two
District
2
is
where
it
changed
under
Professor
motion's
map
where
it
changed
from
underneath
the
magic
change
from,
and
he
said,
George
winning
instead
of
Mayor
ruining.
L
J
Two
in
terms
of
the
Mayoral
race
in
2021
yeah,
so
the
it's
back,
it's
back.
Okay,
thank.
J
What
counselor
blue
John
is
asking
is
that
there
was
a
reference
to
the
fact
that
the
way
that
the
good
with
the
precincts
that
have
been
in
1275
equipped
into
District
3
meant
that
District
Two
flipped
from
being
a
blue
majority
vote
in
that
final
to
a
a
bias
sliver
is
close
right,
otherwise
Zombie
George
and
then,
when
you
made
the
Amendments
that.
G
L
I
mean
he
was
effectively
the
candidate
of
choice
for
communities
of
color
in
Richmond
too,
which
I
think
is
just
important
to
highlight
when
we
talk
about
what
is
the
effective
people
of
effective
ability
to
elect
the
candidate
of
their
choice?
I
think
that's
important
as
we've
analyze
enough.
C
Few
different
things
so
Council
work,
I
called
you
this
weekend
and
I
appreciate
Cher,
saying
that
we
should
not
make
this
personal
I
feel
like
you
could
have
said
and
I
buy
it
before.
You
could
have
said
white
counselor,
black
counselor,
race
numbers,
you
use
names
and
we
can
talk
if
you
want
to
take
that
time
after,
but
I
think
you're
saying
that
people
in
16
8,
69,
16,
10,
16,
11
and
12.
C
1713
voted
for
me
because
I'm
white
and
they
voted
more
for
Shades
and
Halbert,
because
he's
black
and
after
listening
and
talking
more
after
Friday
I
feel
like
my
campaign,
was
a
voting
right.
Tax
success
story
that
the
city
of
Boston
got
to
elect,
who
they
wanted.
Despite
a
lot
a
lot,
a
lot
of
very
powerful,
influential
people
working
against
me
in
many
sitting.
Counselors
many
but
I
worked
really
really
really
really
hard.
I've
lived
in
that
neighborhood
I
was
a
school
teacher
for
generations
of
students
in
this
neighborhood.
There.
F
C
Many
other
reasons,
and
we
tracked
our
numbers
you're
a
number
girl,
I'd
love
to
share
those
with
you,
and
it
shows
that
in
lots
of
districts
increasing
across
the
city,
many
people
were
assuming
that
I
won
and
it
was
only
based
where
in
Lisa
won.
It's
absolutely
isn't
true
and
the
numbers
show
that
there
were
law
in
it
to
Coalition.
It
was
I
worked
and
I
met.
People
and
I
showed
up
and
I
continued
to
do
that.
C
So
I
do
feel
like
it
just
became
personal
and
would
have
appreciated
a
heads
up,
especially
because
I
did
reach
out
as
her
colleague
a
few
times
this
weekend
to
talk
about
lots
of
things
but
didn't
know
you
were
doing
this
or
this
presentation
and
then
the
other
thing.
We
talked
about
1984
when
we
started
districts
and
it
was
then
decided
to
read,
split
Dorchester
and,
of
course,
Dorchester.
The
largest
Colorado
in
the
country
is
never
going
to
be
represented
by
one
counselor.
Do.
F
C
3
District
4
would
have
looked
differently
so
what
if
District
Seven,
but
because
we
did
that
and
now
we're
in
our
what
fourth
time
going
through
a
redistricting
map.
Why
change
it
now?
We
can
make
other
changes,
but
we
did
decide
at
that
point
that
we
were
going
to
cut
it
along.ad
we
were
going
to
make
District
4
wrap
mostly
around
people
out
unless
we
drilled
demographic
reasons.
Absolutely
we
need
to
make
changes
if
that's
the
case,
but
I
do
think,
because
we
did
why
we
now
say
well,
let's
try
it
the
other
way.
C
Another
thing
I
just
want
to
put
on
the
record,
because
I
heard
a
few
times
is,
you
know,
we're
operating
under
time
constraints
a
couple
of
times
already
this
morning
census
data
that
we
just
bought
on
Friday
we're
now
looking
at
information
and
I
have
also
data
that
I
did
for
every
Precinct
in
District,
so
maybe
at
the
next
working
session.
Share
I
could
share
so
that
people
can
see,
because
I
do
know
that
we
just
got
information
on
Friday
that
we
were
waiting
from
the
a
council.
C
Lebach
has
presented
us
with
I.
Think
a
bit
biased
because
it's
not
showing
everything.
That
is
what
brought
people
out
to
the
polls
and
got
those
numbers
where
they
are
so
I
do
think
hearing
a
lot
of
that.
Another
reason
why
why
are
we
rushing
this
book
on
Wednesday,
especially
when
you
see
the
information,
but
I
did
one
I
wasn't
going
to
say
until
I
heard
this
I
do
feel
like
I'm,
more
personal,
because
we
are
here
to
make
sure
now
in
that
large
counselor
I
represent
all
nine
districts.
I
showed
up
in
every
neighborhood.
C
C
This
is
the
best
I
I
mean
councilor
Arroyo,
you
know
Hyde
Park
and
no
matter
even
better
than
I
do
I
know,
there's
people
who
just
know
different
neighborhoods,
Council
of
Flaherty
and
Council
of
plan.
They
know
what
street
and
you
know
who
votes
on
which
street
and
which
Precinct
everyone
does.
But
I
just
hope
that
going
forward
in
this
meeting
that
certain
councils
are
continuing.
D
A
You
thank
you
councilman
Murphy
cancer
of
our
collector
Squad.
First
of
all,
I'd
also
like
to
acknowledge
cultural
Royal
country
Fernandez.
Anderson
have
joined
this
so
consider.
Let's
see,
transfer
Bach
cultural
Royal
to
do
just
a
quick
question.
J
Things
I'm
I'm,
very
sorry,
counselor
working
that
you
took
it
personally.
I
didn't
attend
it
that
way
and
I
just
I
actually
want
to
clarify
a
couple
things,
but
I
think
it's
really
important
for
a
voting
rightsound
perspective,
the
so
the
reason
I
compared
numbers
four
and
five
in
the
last
in
the
last
Council
election
is
because
they
were
so
close
and
neither
have
incumbency
effect
like
I
mentioned,
and
also
it's
actually
helpful
to
be
a
little
faculty.
J
2019
numbers
for
comparison,
but
I,
also
but
I,
just
really
want
to
stress
from
a
Boeing
Rights
Act
perspective
that
what
matters
is
not
the
race
of
the
candidates.
What
matters
is
that
communities
of
color
be
able
to
give
Electro
candidates
of
their
choice.
Well,
it's
true
that
your
wife
and
David
coward
is
black.
If
the
raises
were
reversed,
but
one
was
the
choice
of
the
of
the
residents
of
color
in
the
history
of
Romans
and
twice
the
white
residents.
We
use
that
to
establish
whether
or
not
there's
racial,
polarization
and.
J
Happen
in
two
candidates
of
color:
if
it
happened
with
two
white
candidates,
it
could.
The
point
is
not
the
candidates
and
it's
important
to
say
that
the
race
of
the
candidates
is
not
the
barometer
that
I'm
going
Rights
Act
uses.
The
question
is:
is
when
you
have
a
majority
of
color,
as
you
do
in
this
area.
Overall
are
those,
and
then
you
also
have
to
do
in
each
district?
Are
those?
J
Are
those
communities
of
color
able
to
effectively
select
hand,
is
their
choice
and
the
reason
to
use
the
at
large
races
as
a
barometer
is
because,
of
course,
we
can
never
protest
that
these
would
be
changing
district
lines
with
past
District
cases,
because
by
definition,
people
only
voted
for
the
district
council
candidates
who
they
who,
like
representative
of
Tom,
so
you
never
get
to
see
how
sliversity
three
would
have
voted
in
the
D4
race
or
vice
versa.
So
your
best
proxy
is
to
find
at
large
races.
We.
C
Couldn't
use
the
primary
for
the
state
election
if.
F
J
So
if
I
can
say
it,
so
the
reason
that
I
used
the
municipals
is
because
our
voting
turnout
patterns
are
so
different
in
the
odd
years
versus
even
years
and.
F
J
E
J
J
Address
one
of
the
counter
Murphy's
points
about
the
whole
disc,
about
the
whole
city,
because
I
think
it's
important
that
you
were
saying
like
you
know
your
city
council's
2021
results,
don't
like
reflect
this
kind
of
like
racial
skew
or
who
is
with
Anisa
Etc
overall,
and
that's
true,
it's
worth
noting
that
you
see
racial
polarization
across
these
five
wards
that
make
up
kind
of
the
greater
Dorchester
area.
You.
F
F
F
J
That,
like
this,
you
can
find
combined
with
these
Maps,
are
a
reason
why
we
I'm
not
sure
that
we
can
just
kind
of
live
with
the
way
that
things
got
divided
in
82.
A
Thank
you,
councilor,
well,
councilor,
Louisiana
and
then
constructed.
A
I
You
so
you
know,
I
think
it's
important
as
we're
talking
about
this
possible
and
I
really
do
appreciate
you
doing
the
analysis
and
spending
your
weekend.
Getting
your
hair
cut
and
digging
into
the
data
here,
but
I
think
it's
important
that
in
2019,
when.
F
I
Write
with
no
support
that
I
could
argue
that
my
campaign
was
a
success
story.
Right
I
mean
if
we
look
at
the
data
and
we
look
at
the
numbers.
I
think
councilor
box
analysis
in
terms
of
where
I
did
well
are,
are
pretty
common
to
the
narrative
that
you're
sharing
here
with
Council
Halbert
and
Murphy
and
as
an
incumbent
you
know,
I
was
only
a
few
votes
away.
A
few
hundred
miles
away
from
top
of
the
ticket
in
2021
I
know
you
like
to
see
the
top
book.
F
I
Was
I
was
actually
over
there
so,
but
but
nonetheless,
that's
not
the
point
that
I'm
trying
to
make.
If
you
look
at
the
data,
even
in
the
districts
and
and
the
presets
that
we're.
I
There
were
places
that
as
an
incumbent,
Council,
Murphy,
still
dominated,
and
so
there's
something
to
be
said
there
in
terms
of
data
right
and.
A
F
I
I
I
I
Personal
is
not
going
to
help
us
get
through
this
exercise,
because
it's
not
about
us
and
I
think
that
we
need
to
remove
ourselves
from
this
process
in
order
for
us
to
move
forward,
and
you
know
it
could
be
offensive,
sometimes
in
terms
of
kind
of
what
I
hear
my
colleagues
talk
about
and
what
they
do
support
folks
that
they
represent.
That's
our
jobs.
We
are
supposed
to
represent
people.
We
are
supposed
to
lean
in
when
there's
a
time
of
need.
That
is
what
we're
elected
to
do.
So,
regardless
of
you.
F
I
L
L
If
you
start
at
your
root
point
in
your
root
point
and
your
root
data
in
all
instances,
is
the
voter
and
so
we're
looking
at
we're
trying
to
see
what
voters
and
what
what
white
voters
are
doing,
what
blackbirds
are
doing
and
what
voters
of
color
are
doing
in
order
to
determine
what
districts
here
and
what
district
three,
where
communities
of
color
had
that
their
vote,
expression,
frustrated
and
so
I.
L
Think
if
we
remember
that
what
we're
looking
at
is
a
municipal
election,
where
you
know
we
don't
just
look
at
the
result
of
disagree.
We
look
at
other
elections
and
we
look
at
how
voters
in
District
3
voted
in
a
similar
election,
which
is
why
the
at-large
race
was
chosen
and
why
two
candidates
close
to
each
other
were
chosen
has
nothing
to
do
with
a
personal
attack.
L
It's
about
the
data
and
it's
about
seeing
how
voters
automation
lines
are
operating
and
whether
that
means
we
need
to
change
something
as
a
result
of
voting
pattern
and
the
frustration
and
and
the
voting
desires
of
certain
communities
being
blocked
as
a
result
of
racial.
N
For
running
these
numbers,
it
was
something
that
I've
been
looking
at
as
well
and
continuously
been
advocating
for
making
these
amendments
in
these
maps
and
I
do
agree
with
you
know,
majority
of
your
amendments,
but
you
know
before
I
proposed.
You
know
some
further
amendments
end
up
in
the
map.
Did
we
do
it?
Did
you
do
the
analysis
or
anything
like
off
years?.
N
F
J
N
And
then
for
me,
adding
into
proposal
members
that
I
would
like
to
see
from
District
3
to
District.
4
is
1706
going
back
to
District
Four,
which
is
these
are
all
areas
of
comet
Square,
so
17-6
has
common
square
inside
of
it
and
you
know
removing
that
from
District,
Four
I
believe.
N
But
definitely
you
know,
that's
that's
historical
part
of
the
district,
so
making
sure
that
stays
with
the
district
is
very
important
not
only
to
me,
but
also
to
a
lot
of
our
community
members
1603,
which
is
Dr
lesch,
Clark,
formerly
known
as
Wainwright
Park,
which
Dr
Reverend
Dr
Lesh
how
it
worked.
You
know
rename
improve
it's
where
we
have
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
banks:
the
Bold
teams,
Cynthia
lash
from
the
common
square,
neighborhood
Council
we've
been
headed
that
Council
actually
lived
officer.
N
So
that's
also
a
big
part
of
the
common
square
community
and
then
also
I,
believe
you
also
had
1702
in
here
right
and
that
that
is
also
part
of
Four
Corners.
So
we
want
to
make
sure
that
you
know
those
three
precincts.
Those
would
be
my
proposed
amendments
to
to
the
unity
map,
including
shedding
1609
and
I,
also
like
to
explore,
possibly
take
a
look
at
the
diamonds
in
the
voting
pattern.
1601.
F
N
B
B
Okay,
so
if
you
notice,
if
you
notice
what
council
Burrell
said
talking
about
cotton
Square
talking
about
it
too
short
here
same
with
Adam's
one,
no
different,
no
difference
at
all
and
my
voice,
my
voice,
not
even
not
even
listen
to
it
doesn't
matter
and
and
I
think
I.
Think
I,
think
and
exercises
we're
talking
about.
The
candidate
of
choice
is
totally
subjective
and
I
would
like
to
see
where
we're
at
a
violation
in
the
in
the
bowling
Rights
Act.
Do
we
get
any
Witnesses.
B
Here
are
we
out
of
compliance
and
then
let's
go
at?
Where
are
our
compliance
as
to
which
surgery
we're
not
doing
this
surgery
mountainship?
This
is
just
opinions.
Priscilla's
opinion
this
opinion
over
here
different
opinions
around.
It's
all
just
opinions,
political
political
aspirations
which
I,
which
I've
talked
about.
B
J
F
B
A
B
H
F
A
A
We
have
to
make
sure
that
communities
of
color
have
an
opportunity
to
elect
a
couple
days
of
their
choice
right
and
that
that's
that's
why
the
The
Advocates
are
coming
from
so
and
we
and
we
built
they,
took
our
map,
the
country
and
I
drew
and
proposed,
and
that
we
didn't
we
didn't
go
to
them.
They
did.
They
saw
it's.
F
B
A
A
B
F
A
Is
picked
up,
District
8
inspector
District,
the
district
seven
has
gone
back
and
forward
we'll
move
some
the
precincts
back
and
forward
on
that
line,
District
you're
under
a
district
and
then
as
an
alcohol
effect,
District
District
district
4..
So
we.
H
B
J
M
M
And
sort
of
maybe
play
with
some
of
the
numbers
that
we
just
are
in
from
our
colleagues
acronym
morale
and
Council
of
David.
Because
of
this
there
sort
of
the
most
impacted
and
that's
a
courtesy
to
them.
I
think
we
go
back
to
the
original
Arroyo
Anderson
that
if
you
want
some
things
like
that,
one
two
happy
to
open
I
can
actually
probably
write
a
book
on
why
people
vote
for
people
and
it
really
wouldn't
necessarily
be
on
on
racial
heads-
will
be.
M
Who
they're
aligned
with
politically
and
policy
wise
who'd
return
their
own
all
who
showed
up
at
their
civic
association
who
showed
up
at
their
block
party
who
they
went
to
school
with
if
they
went
to
your
mother's
wake,
etc,
etc,
etc?
So
there
are
a
lot
of
reasons
why
folks
will
vote
for
people
and
they
speak.
E
M
M
The
longevity
that
I've
had
here
on
the
council
and
so
again
happy
To,
Go,
Pine
and
maybe
at
some
point
on
writing
a
book.
But
in
the
meantime,
if
we
can
go
back
to
map
1186.
I,
just
I
want
to
see
a
graphic
of
1186
and
I
want
to
see
how
the
previous
two
speakers
Council
overall
Russell,
Baker
and
sort
of
their
suggestions
as
to
how
we
can
go
a
little
micro
on
the
original
map.
First
map
that
we
saw
and
see
from
that.
I
So
but
I
I
just
wanted
to
ask
ourselves
to
be
respectful
of
each
other,
especially
councilor
Flynn,
when
you
asked
us
to
show
up
with
the
quarrel.
But
what
I'm
seeing
is
that
we
are
interrupting
our
colleagues
and
we're
not
asked
what
counselor
for
all
of
us
to
be
super.
Mindful
that
we
need
to
really
listen
to
folks
and
allow
people
to
be
fully
expressed,
because
the
exchange
it
makes
it
difficult
for
people
to
be
able
to
speak
when
they're,
constantly
being
interrupted,
and
so
I'm
going
to
Advocate
on
where
we
have
chair
right.
I
That
is
the
woman
who's
running
this,
that
we
all
need
to
be
super
Mindful
and
respectful
of
your
leadership
and
I
need.
Counselor
Flynn,
as
the
president
asked
us
to
behave,
that
we
recognize
that
there
that
some
of
us
are
getting
online.
Okay,
just
because
I
feel
it's
important
for
me
to
name
it
and.
F
G
You
Madam
chair
over
the
weekend,
I
put
a
message
out
to
my
colleagues
asking
them.
For
example,
what
comes
from
here
referenced
I
asked
my
colleagues
if
they
would
treat
each
other
with
respect
and
listen
to
each
other.
It.
G
F
G
M
And
maybe
through
the
authors,
ask
them
based
on
Council
Morales
concern
based
on
Council.
Take
this
concern
previous
two
speakers.
If
looking
at
his
in
Council
Fernandez's,
Council,
Royal
Enfield
map,
I,
guess
with
that,
what
would
that
look
like
in
this
app
get
us
two
of
them
a
place
where
we're
sort
of
building
consensus.
E
A
B
Certainly
so
you
know,
I'm
I'm
I
would
appreciate
it
that
everybody
has
come
sort
of
a
different
perspectives
throughout
this
process
on
what
and
where
the
priority
should
be
for
your
Royal
scientific
map
remains
on
the
table
according
to
the
chair,
and
so
like
all
the
other
Maps
I
guess
it
is
a
map
that
we
can
work
off
of
the
folks
who
want
to
work
off
of
it.
But
I
think
that
it
would
require
this.
After
having
conversation
with
the
community,
there's
a
number
of
different
places
on
different
aspects
of
this
map.
B
B
Is
done,
that's
everything
from
essentially
eight
two,
eight
one,
nine,
two,
nine
one,
four
four
one:
five
horsing
all
of
that
stuff!
That's
not
south
end,
but
that
area.
There
was
a
lot
of
conversation
about
how
that
impacts.
District
three
I
think
on
all
of
the
maps
minus
the
Council
of
Murphy
map
and
the
Council
of
Baker
map.
It
did
the
least
amount
of
changes
to
the
bottom
portion
of
District
3,
because
it
was
picking
up
all
this
population
in
the
South
End
that
that
I
guess
could
go
in
different
areas.
B
Wasn't
on
the
list
of
things
that
councilor
council
president
Flint
had
suggested
were
sort
of
there
and
so
there's
a
number
of
places
where
I
think
we
would
need
significant
conversation,
but
I
think
it's
it's
a
template
just
like
a
real
map
in
the
Temple,
and
so
it's
just
figuring
out
what
people's
critiques
were
really
about
this
part
of
the
math
and
then
seeing
how
that
impacts,
sort
of
everything
else,
because
everything
else
rolls.
But.
F
B
B
Map
does
that
differently
because
it
goes
up
so
it
still
unites,
in
my
opinion,
more
of
that
BHA
housing,
because
they're
currently
split
between
seven
seven
I
think
seven,
six
is
where
the
animation
homes
are
and
then
seven
five,
six
three
eight
and
I
send
it
to
District
three,
but
you
could
on
the
other
map.
If
you
do
like
the
exact
inverse,
we
did
the
opposite,
which
would
be
just
through
seven,
seven
back
into
that
mix
and
then
all
of
a
sudden,
it's
all
in
District
Two
And.
B
So
you
could
do
that,
but
that'll
require
significant
changes
in
the
South
End
side
of
it,
and
so
I
think.
There's
a
lot
there
to
talk
about,
and
it's
essentially
a
few
counselors
at
the
table
that
will
have
to
really
talk
about
what
they
are
looking
at
and
what
they
were
thinking
about.
B
I,
don't
think
there
were
any
I'm
trying
I,
don't
know
that
there
were
any
outright
critiques
from
anybody
directly
representing
that
area
right
now,
Council
Bakers
were
about
to
look
like
the
length
of
it
and
all
that,
but
I
think
from
a
district
2
perspective.
There's
a
lot
of
conversations
that
we
have
about
aspects
of
that
map
and
I
think
what
we
try
to
do
here
me
and
Council
Fernandez
Anderson
with
that
area.
M
In
the
through
the
chair,
Council
room
councilworth
had
raised
a
couple
precincts
that
were
concerned,
obviously
Council
paper
and
then
Council
Frank
obviously
has
seated
some
precincts
through
the
working
session
on
Friday.
Taking
all
of
that
into
consideration
and
sort
of
plugging
and
playing
into
the
Arroyo
Fernandez
map.
Have
you
had
an
opportunity
to
kind.
B
Of
maybe
I
haven't
yet,
but
I
know
we
haven't
had
to
do
a
session,
and
so
there's
times
to
still
have
those
conversations
I
didn't
hear.
Although
I
asked
councilor
about
what
precincts
he
was
been
talking
about,
if
you
can
flip
back
to
the
right
now,
so
one
of
the
things,
if
you
go
down
here
to
be
clear,
that
17
6
is
the
common
square.
B
B
B
B
B
B
Goes
so
you
could
do
that
unite
Fields
Corner
and
then
unite
all
the
15s
in
District
3.
So
there's
a
number
of
ways
to
get
to
that.
If
we
were
trying
to
do
that
and
then
there's
a
number
of
ways
that
you
can
mess
with
those
numbers,
I
think
you
threw
out
17.
At
least
what
I
was
told.
Was
it
throughout?
F
B
That
there's
counselors,
who
deeply
oppose
that,
but
I
think
we
were
talking
about
unpacking
and
trying
to
do
all
those
things
and
trying
to
to
make
that
what
it
is
that
you
maybe
could
do
things
where
69
1612
I
think
there's
movement
spaces,
but
I
would
have
to
look
at
all
of
the
motor
things.
I
think
what
councilor
Bach
put
on
the
table
about
racial
voting
disparities
and
things
like
that.
We
should
look
at
all
of
that
and
I
haven't
had
a
chance
to
look
at
it.
But
to
your
question.
B
B
E
B
A
map
that,
if
we
went
back
to
the
royalty
I
say
not
because
this
was
the
first
draft.
This
was
the
first
map
out.
There
would
be
a
number
that
is
based
on
all
of
the
community.
This
was
before
we
had
all
of
the
community
listening
input
sessions,
which
was
so
there
would
be
a
lot
of
changes
on
that
map.
I
think
if
we
went
back
to.
B
The
Royal
that
we're
at
the
writing,
or
what
I'm
thinking
like
20
accounts,
the
priest
and
Royal
back
being
the
most
recent
map,
has
the
most
recent
feedback.
This
one
doesn't
have
all
of
that
feedback.
B
B
N
F
N
A
B
B
All
Heavy
black,
and
especially
17-4,
that
was
the
third
third
highest
performing
Precinct
in
2011.
B
H
B
H
B
In
jobs
in
in
in
in
the
same
struggles
day-to-day
life,
where
the
kids
going
to
go
clean
streets,
Safe,
Streets,
that's
where
your
opportunity
comes
from
right
there.
Those
are
strong
precincts,
strong
black
priesthoods.
So
instead
of
hurting
neighborhoods
and
I
and
I
can
respect,
you
want
to
get
seven
seven
back
into
into
selfie.
That
was
a
Precinct
that
was
was
giving
given
to
me
for
strictly
for
population,
but
I've
worked
on
it
for
10
years.
It
it
it.
It's.
B
Of
the
most
important
precincts
when
it
comes
to
resiliency
and
sea
rise,
probably
the
most
important
on
the
whole
map.
One
well
I
shouldn't
say
that
in
my
district,
it's
the
most
important
so
again
we're
not
supposed
to
look
at
issues.
We're
not
supposed
to
look
at
potential
growth
in
neighborhoods.
Before
we
can
look
at
who
might
potentially
be
a
candidate,
it
just
seems
it
seems
a
little.
It
seems
a
little
odd
to
me
if.
B
B
B
Thank
you
just
briefly,
because
I
think
I
heard
you
saying
so
you
believe
on
this
map.
Back
to
your
old
District
Lines,
that's
17,
4,
17,
14
zoom
in
1712
have.
F
B
And
then
heavy
voting
they're
heavy
voting
precincts.
There's
a
lot
of
union
members
up
there.
There's
crosses
firefighters,
up
there,
there's
city
workers
up
there
and
and
home
ownership,
and
so
1612
16
13,
16
11
and
7
4
17
2014
we're
in
the
same
sort
of
District.
It
would
be
they
were
in
District
three
and
it's
a
historical
line.
That's
Saint,
Greg's
Parish,
all
right,
I
know
we
don't
want
to
go
by
that,
but
what
that
was
the
neighborhood,
the
neighborhoods
grew
up.
B
F
B
B
B
And
I
thought
I
was
a
new
guy.
I
was
a
new
guy,
I
lost
16
1,
16
3
didn't
want
to
lose
16,
1
and
16
free,
because
the
commonality
in
dodm
and
I
thought
quite
frankly,
the
neighborhood
that
needed
help.
The
most
was
field
Corner
Academy
and
wanted
to
focus
on
fields
one
and
it
got
taken
from
me
after
two
years
and.
H
A
B
C
Yeah,
so
I
do
want
to
say
that
it's
great
that
we
did
have
a
couple
meetings
in
community
and
we
have
heard
and
individually.
We
are
talking
about
what
we
are
hearing
from
people
out
in
the
neighborhoods
but
Madam
chair.
Have
we
thought
about
the
fact
that
we
haven't
had
that
many
meetings
and
communities
we
haven't
been
in
Roslindale,
we
haven't
been
in
Michigan
consultant,
then
just
refuse.
A
I'm
we're
doing
the
best
we
can
I
made
a
commitment
at
the
start
of
this.
That
I
would
go
to
any
community
meeting
anywhere,
regardless
of
whether
they're
responsibility,
Council
or
not,
I've
been
I've,
been
out
in
the
community
I've
gone
to
meetings
I.
We
we
are
constrained
by
the
timetable
we
had
60
days
to
do
just
unfortunately-
and
it
is
that's
reality,
and
we
also
have
a
lot
of
information
on
online
in
ways
that
we
didn't
have
10
years
ago.
A
We
have
lots
of
opportunities
for
input
and
I
really
encourage
anyone
who's
listening
if
they're
concerned
call
your
counselor
and
write
to
us.
Let
us
know
what
you're
thinking
check
out
the
website.
There's
a
lot
of
material
on
there,
listen
to
the
listen
to
the
recordings
of
all
of
our
of
our
public
hearings
and
give
us
feedback
we
and
we
are
constrained.
We
are
responsible
to
get
this
job
done
and
we're
constrained
by
the
timeline
and
I'm
doing
we
are
doing
our
best
with
the
time
allowed
to
engage
with
Community
as
best
possible.
A
J
Can
you
pull
up
just
it
doesn't
really
matter,
it's
more,
so
I
do
think
it's
worth
just
registering
that,
like.
F
J
J
J
Suggesting
moving
into
Saint,
Greg's
and
down
here
and
and
that
could
definitely
work
right
for
in
terms
of
dealing
with
the
issue
we're
talking
about
about
where,
like
there's,
the
districts
being
split,
East
West,
given
the
racial
polarization
of
voting
and
the
racial
slips
is
problematic.
That
could
help.
But
the
thing
there
is
that
then
for
for
district
three
to
come
down.
J
It
also
has
to
come
down
when
it's
reference
from
prep
district
from
going
to
the
district
2
area,
which
means
that
someone
else
has
to
come
up
into
the
district
2
area,
which
has
to
be
District
Seven,
and
if
district
7
comes
up,
then
you
dilute
the
overall
black
population
in
District,
Seven
right
and
then.
Similarly,
if
you
and
then,
if
District
4
swings
over
to
pick
up
more
mad
men
to
make
up
the
population,
then
you
dilute
the
opportunity
District
in
District
Five.
J
I
Okay,
thank
you.
I
want
to
just
know
that
we
have
had
several
public
testimony
hearings
that
we've
heard
from
folks
from
Rosendale
we've
had
folks
come
in
from
different
parts
of
the
city
to
weigh
in
so
I.
Just
want
to
note
for
the
record
that,
in
terms
of
community
listening,
you
know,
I
know
I
have
heard
in
this
chamber
from
folks
across
the
city
around
some
of
their
thoughts.
I
just
want
to
go
back
for
the
rest
of
that
those
voices
have
been
allowed,
whether
it
be
through
emails
or
purchase.
I
I.
Do
believe
that
you
know
we
have
done
our
due
diligence
in
the
60
days
that
we've
had
to
do
this
exercise
because
we're
reading
that
I
I,
don't
work
I,
think
if
we
can
get
focused
and
continue
to
move
these
things
around
and
listen
to
what
caused
people
on
some
of
the
things
that
they
want
us
to.
Consider
that
I
think
we're
we're
moving
in
the
right
direction.
B
Thank
you,
madam
cheer.
You
you
keep
talking
about
how
we're,
under
pressure
to
pass
this,
it's
an
artificial.
It's
an
artificial
day.
We
do
not.
We
as
a
city
council
can
set
the
date.
We
could
take
a
vote
on
Wednesday
and
say
we
are
going
to
put
this
on
by
three
weeks
or
a
month
put
it
put
an
end
date
on
it.
We're
obviously
not
we're,
obviously
not
ready
here
in
Council
block
with
three
precincts
down
in
the
in
the
bottom.
There
probably.
F
B
Established
that
this
certain
increases
on
the
other
side
of
going
out
that
lead
up
to
Codman
Square.
So
we
can't
we
can't
can't
or
don't
want
to
touch
those
and
and
I
agree,
because
I,
quite
frankly,
would
rather
would
rather
be
and
I
think
if
you
really
want
to
call
it
an
opportunity
District.
If.
B
B
B
H
H
J
B
B
F
B
That
you
could
work
on
Transportation
on
going
out
resiliency
in
in
global
warming,
City.
F
B
B
K
I
guess
I
want
to
say
that
you
know
I
want
to
take
us
back
from
the
beginning
when
we
were
actually
doing
all
of
these.
You
know
meetings
with
counselor
Ricardo
and
then
all
the
politics
happen
and
then
his
committee
got
removed
and
then
we
all
some
of
us
came
out
and
supported
and
we
talked
that
stuff
and
then
it
was
the
Forum
issues
and
then
console
reading.
You
took
it
on
and
you've
been
said,
except
us.
K
We
holding
these
hearings
and
working
sessions
with
exceptions
to
the
fact
that
we're
back
in
this
room
I
think
we've
done
a
great
job.
I
mean
I
think
that
coming
back
it
was
wrong.
The
Seas
tight
we're
talking
about
access.
We
should
really
be
back
to
the
chamber,
but
there
were
argument
about.
You
know
how
to
point.
At
things,
I
went
back
and
I
listened
to
stuff,
I
missed
and
the
point
about
like
how
could
we
actually
see?
K
And
we
I
think
have
been
accommodating
in
terms
of
looking
at
these
changes,
and
these
back
and
forth
and
I'm
saying
we
the
terms
of
people
that
the
people
that
the
counselors
that
have
disagreed
with
the
decision
to
come
in
here
and
then
there's
like
when
we
point
out
the
the
Quorum
issues
and
I
don't
want
to
I,
don't
want
to
like
kick
the
dead
horse,
but
it
is
important
because,
as
possibly
have
mentioned
in
the
previous
working
session,
but
not
here,
it's
sort
of
like
you
know,
brushed
off
a
little
and
I
go
into
community
and
hearings
and
I'm
called
racist
to
my
face,
and
you
know
I
appreciate
the
couple
of
counselors
White
counselors
that
called
me
afterwards,
My
Clarity
Lynn,
who
said
you
know,
are
you
okay?
K
K
K
K
K
I'm,
a
District
counselor
as
soon
as
I
knew
better
I
held
a
community
meeting
and
then,
after
that,
we've
been
holding
Community
meetings
ever
since
I've
held
twice
two
in
my
community
one
remote
one
project,
one
actual
like
meeting
one
with
a
third
with
the
community
in
Mattapan,
a
fourth
in
Union
Square
and
then
I
think
so
possibility
one.
And
then
we
went
to
Dorchester.
It's.
A
K
Us
to
hold
those
meetings,
there
is
no
Professor
time
at
this
point.
Council
boarding
has
done
a
good
job
of
being
consistent
meetings
with
these
working
sessions
and
hearings.
Rather,
the
meetings
are
on
you
they're
on
us.
You
can
hold
them.
You
know
plain
and
simple.
All
this
talk,
and
back
and
forth
it
should
run,
is
great.
We've
all
looked
at
the
data,
every
single
one
of
us
thank
you,
councilor
Council
block
for
bringing
more
contacts,
still
we're
going
back
and
forth.
K
A
To
join
your
community
meeting
some
time
ago
and
to
listen
to
the
community,
anyone
else
right
now,
sorry.
K
I
would
be
like
hey
give
me
more
more
people
of
color
in
this
District
make
it
strong,
historically,
a
back
a
black
District
right
now,
technically,
it
kind
of
isn't
and
you
I'm
I'm,
not
not
fighting
for
more,
because
I
want
to
I'm,
not
fighting
for
more
people
of
color,
because
it's
the
right
thing
to
do,
and
so
to
share
that
to
share
that
responsibility
across
the
board.
I
think
is
what
we
should
be
doing
in
order
for
us
to
get
into
a
good
decision.
A
J
So
basically,
the
suggestions
and
like
I
said
these
are
just
suggestions,
but
up
here,
just
like
I
mentioned
six
three,
six,
seven,
five,
seven
six!
So
right
now
in
the
current
map,
the
current
1275
proposal-
these
are
all
these
are
only
G3,
so
I
was
proposing
to
them
back
in
the
ocean
that
can
change
the
process
yeah
putting
it
back
in
in
D2,
and
then
this
one
through
15
history
in
D2,
so
suggesting
I'm
grabbing
that
you.
J
I
will
say
that
you
know
this
whole,
this
whole
kind
of
area
around
where
the
highway
goes
and
you
can
access
off
in
the
South
Boston.
That's
interesting
infrastructure,
stuff
going
on
and
so
there's
some
can
actually
be
there.
J
J
At
the
current
District
ones
and
then.
J
And
then
proposing
to
proposing
to
because
basically
after,
like
getting
a
hold
of
this
population
from
D3
to
put
something
back
to
just
nibble
here
at
the
13th
floor.
This
is
something
you
look
at
our
neighborhood
lines.
The
door
of
us
are
aligned,
runs
right
through
13
4
and
13
too
P5
3231,
acert,
ainty.
J
F
J
So
this
is
so
yeah,
so
this
is
maybe
it'll
be
clear
if
I
actually
do
it
from
the
unity
map.
Would
that
be
easier.
F
J
E
J
J
If
you
do
that
now,
when
you
look
at
population,
you
see
that
District
Two
is
way
up
at
84
and
District
3
is
made
on.
It
is
not
made
up
of
10
on
68..
So
then,
in
order
to
get.
J
And
then
you
also
put
the
ink
block
into
District
three
and
then
you're
still
District
3
is
still
a
little
low.
You've
got
yourself
just
105
in
line
for
District
Two.
So
even
this
is
where
this
is,
where
I
still
won
thirteen
four
from
from
the
37
in
order
to
get
into
the
4.95
line.
So.
J
Right
suggestions,
because,
basically
the
problem
is
that
you
can
so
then
I
recommend
it
down
here
that
we
switch
districts
for
this
is
that
it
takes
72
and
76
back,
but
then
those
again
now
again,
you've
reduced
District
three,
so
you
have
to
so
you
can
dip
it
Seventeen,
nine,
but
the.
J
J
J
And
then,
and
then
well
I've
got
this
up
here.
It
is
flagging
and
again
it's
just
that
it's
just
a
flag
for
a
good
dancers
over
in
Rockville.
That
is.
J
A
We
go
into
evaluation
and
thank
you
councilor
Fernandez
Anderson.
Thank
you.
K
Still
love
you,
but
if
so
I
I,
you
know,
I
mean
like
look
at
the
evaluations.
K
Eight
yeah
C8
is
that
59.5
white-
yes,
sorry
I
can't
find
so
if
it's
already
59
right
and
it's
always
going
to
be
bothered,
someone
else
wait.
K
In
united
with
six.
B
K
H
J
And
and
that
it's
a
person
that
I
don't
use
but
I
am
very
proud
of
I'm,
actually
named
for
my
great
grandmother
for
solobach,
who
got
her
PhD
in
astronomy
95
years
before
I
got
mine
in
history.
E
Yeah,
which
I
like
to
say
is
it.
You
know
astronomy.
E
J
Crystal
abach,
who
I've
made
for
she
actually
has
a
30
kilometer
crater
on
the
moon
named
the
Priscilla
crater,
so
I'm,
but
but
I've
been
called
Ken
since
I
was
born.
So.
A
Can
I
get
things
back
a
little
I,
I
I
think
we'll
go
to
recess
shortly,
but
and
come
back
in
the
afternoon,
but
counselor
Fernandez,
Anderson,
you're
speaking
and
then
counselor
Baker
and
Castro
Flynn.
Thank
you
so
much.
K
Thank
you
so
I,
you
know
I
appreciate
this.
I
do
I
honestly
do
mean
that
this
is
helpful
because
as
we're
playing
with
maps
and
we're
doing
that,
that's
what
we
all
do
right.
We
realized.
If
we
took
out
the
Mission
Hill,
you
know:
okay,
we
try
to
keep
people's.
You
know
people's
feeling,
not
just
feeling
but
we're
trying
to
take
things
District
overall,
and
so
we
may,
at
least
for
me,
I
mean
conscious
decisions
not
to
be
in
touch
certain
areas,
because
I
said:
okay,
no,
not
here!
K
This
is
how
we
will
impact
this.
No,
not
here.
This
is
how
we
impact
this
and
so
immediately
when
I
propose
a
map.
I
knew
that
in
my
mind,
that
it
wasn't
going
to
be
my
map,
or
that
is
a
possibility
that
it
was
going
to
be
minor
right.
I
knew
that
from
the
day,
and
so
now
that
we've
all
played
with
the
map
sufficiently.
K
Some
of
us
are
not
happy
when
we
continue
to
make
suggestions,
but
you
are
we
keep
making
the
same
points
that
I
just
made
in
my
previous
comment
is
that
we
have
a
really
good
map.
K
E
K
J
K
No,
my
issue
is
as
you're
playing
with
moving
things
around
you're
kind
of
making
the
same
good.
Your
reiterating
the
point
so
I
just
don't
understand.
Why
take
it
from
certain
areas
so
that
certain
customer
I
don't
understand
so,
if
you're
making
the
same
points
by
probably
shifting
things
around
and
harming
these
seven
further,
because
you
just
brought
it
down
put
the
evaluation
in
please
so
look
at
beat
seven
what
happened
to
D7
and
the
numbers
were.
The
numbers
were
better
before
so,
if
you
put
it
back.
J
J
Just
the
thing
to
flag,
and
is
that
and
like.
J
J
F
K
Exactly
when
you
do
that
to
audition
so
you're
you're
trying
to
repair
something
here
that
is
going
to
decrease
the
numbers
as
an
opportunity
map,
maybe
seven
yet
D4
D3
D4,
is
a
way
better
situation
than
D7.
So
why
would
you
go
in
to
try
to
help
out
these
three
or
before
and
further
and
decreasing
the
color
when
we,
by
the
way,
have
lost
a
third
of
black
population
in
eastern
seven
in
the
last
weekend
of
last
year?
K
J
K
F
A
So
folks,
I'm
really
I
have
something
else.
I
need
to
read
into
the
record
and
pastor
Baker
concert,
flowery
concert
and
Hunter
Flynn
and
then
oh
and
sorry
I
can't
make
it
harder.
Yeah.
A
Am
I
here
you
know:
okay,
okay,
yes
and
before
I
am
doing
this
I
I
made
an
executive
decision
here.
I
think
I'm
going
to
bring
this
document
into
the
record
and
we'll
pick
this
up
again.
Hold
your
questions.
We've
had
a
two-hour
session.
I
want
to
just
read
this
into
the
record,
and
can
we
pick
up
hold
your
questions,
bring
it
all
back
in
in
at
2
o'clock,
all
right,
and
so
there
was
some
questions.
B
A
B
A
F
A
A
We
did
we
had
a
start
time.
We
didn't
have
an
end
time,
so
we
can
continue
working
I
want
to
read.
I
want
to
read
this.
The
it
was
some
question
about
the
demographic
data
methodology
on
esri,
redistricting
versus
redistrictor
and
I'd.
Just
like
to
put
this
into
the
record.
It
is
important
to
note
that
the
methodology
used
by
the
U.S
Department
of
Justice
to
cold
race
and
ethnicity,
demographic
data
for
civil
rights
enforcement
and
redistricting
purpose
differs
from
how
most
demographers
would
categorize
data
for
other
purposes.
A
This
Victor
is
an
online
mapping
tool
which
allows
for
convenient
sharing
of
online
Maps.
As
we've
noticed
this
morning,
it's
instant,
we
can
move
things
around.
You
can
look
at
the
data,
but
there
are
racial.
Demographic
breakdowns
should
be
referred
to
as
a
rough
estimate.
Only
official
demographic
breakdowns
for
redistricting
purposes
shall
rely
on
the
data
presented
through
the
esri
redistricting,
using
the
District
of
Department
of
Justice
criteria,
so
I
just
wanted.
A
A
A
E
A
E
You
left
off
absolutely.
This
was
just
in
response
to
council
boxes.
Proposal
is
Wayne
conference,
so
I
could
just
put
on
the
screen,
but
it's
as
I
mentioned
before.
N
N
Part
of
door
checks
and
there's
a
lot
of
organizing
I'm
going
on
there,
they've
been
playing
instrumental
parts
and
making
improvements
to
Mother,
West
Park
and
it's
the
whole
golden
Geneva
Action
Program,
which
is
which
has
been
an
investment.
So
it's
supposed
to
be
hitting
the
community
in
the
near
future
and
then
also
going
back
to
like
1709
I,
believe
if
you
zoom
in
when
I
see
common
Square
Apartments
but
right
next
to
Commerce,
Square
Apartments
at
the
Dorchester
YMCA
I'm
in
the
Dorchester
YMCA
is
something
that
I
receive
awkward
dollars
up
for.
N
To
do
a
to
do
a
housing
study
to
see
if
we
can
get
home
ownership
opportunities
in
and
around
in
and
around
the
YMCA
I
believe
received
a
couple
hundred
thousands
of
dollars
for
that
and
I've
been
deep
communication
would
not
only
the
daughter
sex
alive
but
mayor's
office
of
housing
in
the
George
centralized
Partners
on
trying
to
make
that
a
a
possibility.
I
A
I
think
that's
the
the
the
senses
that
you
know
in
common
counselors
have
been
working
on
projects
in
the
neighborhoods
where
the
lines
might
change.
So
that's
that's
part
of
the
unique
conversation
requirements
so
I
think
it
comes
from
morale
is
just
like
you
know.
You
know
the
issues
that
answered
certain
questions.
Excuse
me
so
because.
I
N
And
that's
why
it's
awesome.
Hey
like
I
looked
at
analysis.
You
know
not
only
the
employee
image
population,
past
elections
and
I'm
happy
to
you
know
take
a
look
at
that
when
it
comes
to
not
only
advocating,
for
you
know
or
letting
the
body
know
about
ongoing
projects,
but
having
a
dive
into
how
Community
exchanges
impact
election
results.
A
Thank
you,
Island.
Thank
you.
G
Thank
you,
madam
chair
I.
Just
wanted
to
well
actually
I
wanted
to
ask
Amanda
share,
asked
Wayne,
Wayne,
I
I,
didn't
notice
when
we
were
looking
at
the
demographics
of
the
breakdown
by
ethnicity,
I
didn't
see
the
Asian
Community
included.
That's
that's
one.
One
question
I,
okay,.
G
Okay,
it's
just
it's
just
helpful
to
me
when
we,
when
we
do
this,
if
we
can
also
include
the
Asian
community
at
least
go
back
and
forth.
Thank
you,
Wayne
and
the
second.
The
second
point
I
wanted
to
make
I
wanted
to
run
it
to
council
also
fired
his
attention
as
well.
G
Their
argument
is
they
play
a
critical
role
in
in
the
community
in
the
neighborhood
and
most
of
the
diversity
in
in
our
you
know,
neighborhood
is
included
in
the
public
housing
developments
and
we
don't
want
to.
G
We
don't
want
to
lose
any
of
the
diversity
in
our
neighborhood,
that
was
from
the
Andrew
Square
civic
association,
the
city
Side
neighborhood
association
of
the
city,
Point
neighborhood
association,
the
Fort
Point,
neighborhood
association,
okay,
to
have
been
able,
Association,
West,
Broadway,
neighborhood
association
in
South,
Boston
and
Axion
and
they're
they're,
a
group
that
is
represents
the
latinx
community,
especially
in
the
public
housing
development.
So
just
wanted
to
just
wanted
to
highlight
God
as
an
FYI
to
to
my
colleagues.
B
It's
concerning
that
all
the
maps
that
we've
seen
so
far
that
we're
going
in
we're
talking
about
changing
precincts
around
another
one
right
now,
every
one
of
them
has
a
split
in
the
low
of
recessive
of
16,
for
whatever
reason
and
again
I
State
this
again,
and
there
is
no
violation
of
Voting
Rights
Act
he's
a
political
aspirations.
We're
trying
to
apply
in
this.
This
map
making
exercise
we
have
here.
I,
would
like
to
throw
mine
up
my
map
up,
Fairway
and
and
and
I.
B
Of
moves
it
keeps
the
most
communities
together
and
again,
I.
Don't
think
that
we've
done
a
great
process.
I
know
people
have
talked
to
different
organizations
or
neighborhoods
on
their
own.
That's
it
that's
an
exercise.
We
are
supposed
to
be
doing
as
the
committee,
even
though
I'm
not
on
the
committee
I.
B
See
especially
what
the
people
in
District
4
have
to
say
about
some
of
these
Maps,
so
so
this
year
it
keeps
me
whole
keep
it
in
ads.
Briefings
ad
free
things
here
to
get
the
population
right,
I
take
back
16,
3
I,
take
back
16-1,
which
I
lost
10
years
ago,
and
just
and
and
that
gets
me
at
the
right,
the
right
population
I,
don't
know
my
speaking
points
in
front
of
but
I
know
one
thing
it
does.
We
we
have
Eddie
Sheck
day
Village
and
they
go
into
District
8.
B
Has
very
very
minimal
changes
the
District
three
District
Two
round
that
keeps
eight
and
one
together,
which
was
really
the
only
consistent
thing
that
I've
heard
even
the
call
for
the
Vietnamese
community
I.
B
Like
one
person
from
the
Vietnamese
Community,
if
you
have
I'd
like
to
see
communication,
stating
that
saying
that
see
where,
where
is
coming
from.
B
My
opinion
that
that
continuity
along
where
I
am,
is
16
3
and
16.
One.
B
Sorry,
sorry
about
that
Wayne
yeah,
so
I'd.
B
Is
this?
Why
is
this
one
so
bad
we're
trying
to
we're
trying
to
keep
communities
in
place?
We
do
the
right
thing
by
the
by
the
the
population.
District
3
is
63
percent
non-white
people
yeah,
except
populations.
There.
B
Yeah,
so
63
non-life
and
I
would
argue
with
it
and
again
back
to
the
argument
that
happened
earlier.
If,
if
you
wanted
to
shave
something
off
there
and
give
me
those
little
precincts
which
are
high
voting
black
precincts,
I,
don't
have
a
problem
with
that
I'm
trying
to
protect
my
boundary
now
you
know
I
and
I
and
I
want
my
district
to
have
some
cohesion.
I
think
you
guys
are
focused
on
political
aspirations
and
you're
cutting
my
district
up.
So
the
person
that
comes
behind
is
going
to
have
a
disjointed,
District
and
I.
M
Because
they
want
to
sort
of
take
a
peek
through
the
chair,
I
want
to
take
Pete
at
both
those
maps
and
counting
it
back
to
the
Crux
of
council,
or
else
comments
on
the
first
part
of
this
working
session
and
then
as
well
as
Council
Davis.
F
M
B
M
Can
take
that
so
those
questions
and
again
this
is
what
council
Worrell
really
has
been
the
first
part
of
it
and
just
followed
by
Pennsylvania
their
initial
concerns
about
their
respected
districts
and
whether
you
do
a
say,
a
push
and
pull.
If
you
will
in
either
Council
Vegas
map
or
push
and
pull
the
Council
of
a
royal
councilor
Fernandez.
We
have
to
me
get
you
closer,
so
potential
consensus.
M
A
F
B
B
B
B
B
B
To
live
together,
I
think
we
we
would
elect
I
think
we
would
elect
good
candidates
if
we're
allowed
and
again
I'm
not
saying
take
me
out
of
the
south,
then
take
me
here,
but
if
but
if
I
got
my
original
District
I
think
it
I
think
it
speaks
to
a
lot
of
what
we're
trying
and
what
we're
trying
to
in
our
political
aspirations.
What
we're
trying
to
do
are
you
think,
sending.
H
B
H
B
B
M
A
No
I
think
I.
Think
to
the
the
in
compactness
is
a
is
a
consideration
and
a
a
I
did
notice
that.
L
The
you
know
yeah
so,
for
me,
like
everyone,
would
just
repeat
like
the
data
is
what
matters
and
what
the
data
supports,
and
so
I'm,
not
speaking
particularly
to
like
a
map
but
I'm
here.
It's
at
the
Rogue
score
is
the
score
that
I'm
most
familiar
with
when
it
comes
to
compactness,
is
a
check.
Mark
makes
all
so
like
I
understand
that
certain
districts
may
look
odd,
but
in
terms
of
like
what
the
actual
test
is
for
continuity
and
for
compactness.
L
Every
map
passes
that
and
also
just
going
to
Point
again
to
problems
with
that.
Fourth
column
there
when
we're
talking
about
making
sure
that
communities
are
able
to
allow
the
kind
of
their
choice
and
what
happens
and
just
we
need
to
be
careful
with
the
mayoral
primary
column.
Both
under
the
grade
of
the
royal
map
enter
the
bigger
map
for
what
happens
to
District
Two,
which
is
I.
Don't
think
a
result
that
anybody
actually
is
trying
to
create
in
District
2.
J
J
So,
just
in
in
terms
of
like
feedback
on
this
map,
can
you
can
you
show
the
demographics
so
like
I,
think
and
maybe
zoom
out
a
little
bit
just
easy,
so,
like
I
I,
think
that
if
you-
and
this
is
kind
of
what
I
was
trying
to
speak
to
earlier,
like
if
you
think
that
we
that
there's
nothing
that
needs
to
be
like
we're
dressed
and
I've,
heard
that
I've
heard
that
from
you
loud
and
clear,
I
think
that,
in
terms
of
when
they're
like
at
the
Edge's
back
like
this,
is
it's
like
Well
Done
Right,
like
you're,
trying
to
just
think
about
how
to
equalize
population
from
our
current
districts.
J
Obviously
everyone
knows
I'd
love
to
represent
the
village
I'm,
the
only
politician
ever
in
the
city
of
Boston.
We
were
up
there,
I
think,
but
and
although
my
parents
are
split,
my
dad
would
love
it.
My
mom
thinks
it
won't
make
her
at
the
fall
neighborhood
liaison
so
good.
J
J
J
So
that
would
be
the
kind
of
District
counselor
comment
on
that
back
out,
but
I
think
like
the
fundamental
issue,
if
you
go
to
the
demographics
again,
I
mean
we
keep
coming
back
to
the
same
question
right,
which
is
like
this
map
still
has
a
white
population
of
District,
Four
and
disabled
digits
and,
like
fundamentally
like
I,
said
earlier
today,
you
know
if
you
think
about
the
whole
Dorchester
area
as
one
where,
in
that
Louis
Army.
F
J
Grace
there's
like
a
comfortable
with
Martin.
In
theory,
we
divided
the
thing
in
a
way
where
the
that
notorious
reflected
in
both
some
districts.
You
would
divide
it
differently
with
it's
divided
today
and
again
George.
So
that
was
what
I
was
trying
to
speak.
To
is
the
fact
that,
like
if
it's.
J
There
racially
polarized
vote
in
Dorchester
based
on
the
evidence
of
recent
elections,
and
it's
because
it's
because
of
that,
but
there's
a
reason
to
ask
whether
the
way
that
we've
historically
divided
Dorchester
is
meets
the
Voting
Rights
Act
test
of
allowing
the
majority
communities
of
color
in
both
districts
to
a
left-handed.
And
it's
a
good
choice.
Like.
D
Thank
you.
Thank
you
for
that
reminder,
I
think.
For
me,
the
priority
outside
of
my
district
is
just
ensuring
that
and
I
did
hear,
that
councilor
Flynn
wanted
to
prioritize
that,
and
so
I
have
been
writing
down
the
precincts
that
we're
in
and
I
just
I'd
love
to
know
where
they
reside
about
this.
D
G
Also
in
next
to
build,
Victoria
is
West
Adams
Street,
which
is
a
BHA
development.
It's
a
it's.
A
senior
development,
Steve
Johnson.
D
G
F
M
M
A
D
A
Do
you
remember
the
country
who
hears
you
know
customer
here,
I
keep
saying
for
your
chair?
Would
you
like
the
chair?
You
have
the
floor.
Sorry.
I
I
I
think
you
mentioned
that
the
housing
developments
is
that
the
only
neighborhood
is
that
are
those
the
only
places
where
you're
drawing
people
of
colorful.
G
I
Do
and
then
I'm
just
curious
as
to
how
have
you
seen
that
Community
build
power?
What
does
that
look
like.
I
G
M
If
I
may,
just
added
to
the
share
all
the
same
money
was
the
Saint
Vincent's
have
masses
in
Spanish,
then
we
have
the
laboratory,
which
is
an
immigration
and
Refugee
Center.
Along
with
me,
some
of
us
enabled
house
social
service
and
Civic
organizations
constantly
reaching
out
and
constantly
working
with
folks
in
the
development
of
all
Races.
C
Louisiana
here,
I
think
also
the
South
Boston
non-profits,
who
are
closing
in
the
capital.
Africa
spoke
on
it.
My
answer
to
kids
now
I
know:
we've
got
a
4
a.m
where
they
really
work
closely
and
Empower.
Those
community.
G
If
the
South
Boston
Waterfront,
in
my
opinion,
doesn't
work
for
communities
of
immigrants,
it's
not
working
and
I'm
trying
to
tie
in
residents
of
public
housing
with
the
South
Boston
Waterfront,
especially
on
Life
Sciences
I,
want
to
make
sure
my
constituents
in
public
housing
have
equal
access
in
internships
in
the
South
Boston
Waterfront.
That's
a
priority
of
life.
I
Because,
when
I
look
at
the
South,
what
is
it
called
Seaport?
That's
the
problem
here.
Right
so
I
mean
there's
a
lesson
here
to
be
learned
how,
before
the
color
can't
afford
to
or
they're
not
allowed
to
live
there
right,
you
can't
afford
to
live
there.
We
have
the
way
it
was
developed
was
intentionally
to
you
know,
segregate
people
put
you
know,
poor
backgrounds,
so
I
just
I
just
want
to
name
that
right.
F
I
And
where
they
don't
and
I
think
that
communities
who
have
been
organizing
and
trying
to
build
I'm
just
curious
if
the
outcome
of
the
sequel
would
have
been
very
different.
If
there
was
no
power
there,
yeah
and.
A
And
let's
keep
going
counselor
in
Louisiana.
F
L
I
E
L
L
But
then
there
are
things
that
we
sure
and
I
think
that
again,
the
data
that
was
presented
by
councilor
block
evaluation,
polarized
voting
means
that
we
need
to
do
more
and
that's
why
Professor
duchin's
presentation
was
really
important
because
we
talked
about
how
sometimes
the
idea
of
poor
attention,
which
is
the
idea
of
just
all
you
got
to
do-
is
nibble
around
the
edges
and
the
core.
Basically
Remains.
The
Same
sometimes
gives
way
to
other
industry
principles
and
sometimes
gives
away
at
the
compliance
with
the
Voting
Rights
Act.
L
In
order
to
so
that
communities
can
acceler
can
unlock
the
candidate
of
their
choice.
If,
if
voting
really
were
just
about
foreign
success
was
really
just
about
all
like
a
few
black
people
vote
for
a
white
candidate
or
if
Rhodey
was
all
about
just
about
relationships
and
there
would
be
no
need
for
Voting
Rights
Act,
and
so
we
have
it
in
place,
because
there
are
all
the
other
mechanisms
and
biases
that
seep
in
to
help
people
vote
and
how
the
preferred
candidate
Fred
candidate
of
communities
of
color
how
they
perform.
J
Thank
you,
master
I
just
wanted
to
speak
to
South,
Boston
and
maxillon,
and
the
Latino,
organizing
and
the
developments,
because,
because
again
it
was
something
that
I
was.
J
Think
it's
fair
to
would
due
respect
to
councilor
Mejia
to
blame
the
lack
of
organizing
there
for
what
happened
in
the
seaport.
I
think
there's
been
a
significant
demographic
shift
in
Maryland,
McCormick
and
and
Old
Colony,
especially
you've
seen
the
Latino
Community
there
build
in
just
the
last
10
years
and
actually
and
then
be.
J
J
Frustrated
I
was
working
at
the
housing
authority
and
Sam
was
the
head
of
South
Boston
and
asean
and
Anna
was
his
deputy
and
then
a
new
crop.
Counselors
got
elected
and
councilor
Janie
made
Sam
her
follow
her
chief
of
staff
and
councilor
Flynn
stole
Anna
and
I.
Think
my
point
in
making.
That
is
that
they
were
both
already
like
political
actors
who
were
very
actively
organizing
this
political
latinx
Community
across
the
developments,
and
then
they
both
got.
E
F
J
J
I
You
so
much
so
I
I
want
to
be
really
clear
right
in
terms
of
my
question
was
about
political
power
and
that
responses
where,
in
terms
of
services
that
are
provided
to
folks,
so
I'm
I'm,
still
hoping
to
hear
a
little
bit
more
about
how
real
political
power
is
being
built.
Have
you
worked
with
some
thoughts
on
the
election
before
I
came
onto
this
console
as
a
parent,
organizer
they're,
one
of
the
few
groups
in
South
Boston
that
are
leading
efforts
for
the
Latino
community
and
oftentimes?
G
People,
no
that's
a
that's
a
good
point,
just
after
after
the
break
that
we
have
this
afternoon,
South
Boston
and
Axiom
informed
me
that
there
was
a
rally
up
in
front
of
City
Hall,
not
in
support
of
immigrant
rates.
G
That's
one
of
the
events
I
I
attended
with
some
of
my
colleagues,
but
it's
supporting
it's
supporting
rights
of
immigrants
across
across
the
city,
including
including
those
in
public
housing
developments.
I,
think
that's
that's
important.
When
I
get
Anna
who
was
who
was
referenced
here
started
with
me,
she
was
a
high
school.
She
was
in
high
school
she's
from
the
Dominican
Republic.
G
I
think
it's
important
to
have
a
white
election
official
that
supports
that
does
a
lot
of
work
on
immigrant
rights
and
I'm
not
going
to
apologize
there,
some
people,
some
people
may
not
like
it,
but
I
I
represent
an
immigrant
community
in
the
South
Boston
I
especially
represent
an
immigrant
community
in
in
Chinatown,
and
and
that's
why
it's
important
to
me
to
be
involved
in
federal
immigration
issues
which
I
have
been
over
the
last
five
years.
G
It
probably
hasn't
been
an
immigration
rally
that
I
have
not
been
to
whether
it's
in
whether
it's
Haiti
or
El,
Salvador
I,
know
the
critical
role
in
the
news
playing
on
the
city,
whether
the
people
around
documented
they
have.
They
have
a
strong
leader
in
me.
That's
that's!
That's
what
I'm
all
about.
A
B
Political
power
again
we're
talking
about
all
these
abstract
things
here,
I
think
the
district
a
council
was
talking
about
Sammy
and
Anna.
Sammy
went
on
to
become
the
the
president
of
the
council's
chief
of
staff,
then
went
over
and
had
a
high
rank
with
the
mayor.
I,
don't
think,
there's
any
more
political
who,
where
can
you
do
more
for
your
community,
whatever
that
Community
is
or
looks
like
and
straight
out
of
the
mayor's
office?
B
F
B
Again,
all
the
talk
around
needs
needs
and
wants.
What
do
we
need
to
do?
What
do
we
want
to
do
but
wants
a
political
aspirations
and
that
have
all
started
kind
of
been
dropped
on
us
here?
We
don't
need.
We
don't
need
to
hurt
neighborhoods,
which
every
map
that
we've
been
into
so
far,
with
the
exception.
F
H
B
C
Cheers
thank
you
for
asking
that
question
to.
Let
him
send
you.
Our
office
also
wanted
to
know
exactly
where
these
housing
projects
live
in
the
big
PHA
map,
which
I
have
can
I
email
it
to
you,
because
the
VR
rate
has
a
map
that
I'm,
just
if
you
could
put
it
up
and
it
shows
all
of
the
housing
projects
across
the
city.
So
we
can
whatever
comes.
C
K
A
C
I
If
we
talk
about
how
did
development
or
we're
talking,
also
Boston
voucher
holders,
I
mean,
because
you
know
my
mom
was
on
Section
8..
She
could
have
to
give
you
certified
through
Boston
Housing
Authority
are.
A
Murphy
asked.
Did
we
look
at
the
public
license.
C
A
F
M
B
M
B
F
H
B
Doing
good
work
and-
and
why
why
we
need
to
go
into
that
and
cut
behind
a
pot
because
of
people's
political
wants
political
aspirations?
We
don't
need
to
cut
out
a
community
you're
cutting
a
community
out
of
District
3.
They
want
to
be
in
District,
3
and
I
brought
multiple
people
in
here
and
you've
had
multiple
emails
about
politics,
stating.
M
Through
the
chair,
so
I
think
one
of
our
most
productive
sessions
was
the
first
working
session
with
a
baseline
map
with
District
colleagues
who
know
their
districts
better
than
anybody
and
I
am
at
DMI
supporting
them.
Knowing
sessions,
it
seemed
like
we
were
moving
in
a
direction
of
buckets
and
then
since
then,
four
or
five
Maps
a
hash
absolutely
made
some
sense
that
dialed
back
to
me,
Baseline
that
fine
or
to
the
first
method,
trying
to
find
the
last.
M
D
B
N
B
Cuts
cuts
my
distance.
How
much
do
I
have
to
save
it?
What
do
I
need
to
do
to
get
to
get
16
May
hold?
We
dropped
from
16,
1
and
3
coming
in,
but
then
we're
going
to
cut
11
12,
8
9
out
of
it
I
just
I,
just
don't
want
to
I
I
can't
put
a
life
off
of
comprehend.
You
want
the
district
that
has
that
has
something
to
work
on.
We
have
something
that
we're
working
on
here.
B
F
F
B
After
him,
after
a
field,
monster
was
gonna
that
was
going
to
give
to
the
entire
city
and
give
to
Dorchester
information,
leave
Dorchester
alone
we're
a
community
of
Interest
bring
me
out
of
the
South
End
put
me
down
on
further
into
the
South.
That's
what
I
wanted
that
that's
Dorchester
as
a
community
interest,
we're
we're
a
vast
we're
a
vast
Community
there's
a
lot
of
different
parts
of
it,
but
I
would
argue
that
we
work
well
together,
don't
come
and
hear
about
itself.
This
is
device.
This
is
device
we
should
find.
B
K
B
B
Voted
for
who,
because
Eddie
and
Clarity
works,
that's
why
they
that's
why
they
voted
for
war.
That's
why
she
won
the
district
if
any,
if
any
and
Clarity
worked
for
an
Eastern
was
hobby
George
that
would
have
been
separate
and
that's
that's
a
reality,
but
to
go
back
to
a
to
a
to
a
a
man's
race
like
that
and.
E
B
B
H
B
To
you
who
won
District
Two,
because
any
entirety
worked
for
us,
we
switch
the
numbers
around.
Oh
George
won
this
guess
what
George
won
a
horrible
cheat.
She
she
ran
a
horrible
campaign.
That's
why
she
lost.
She
should
have
won
District
or
two
without
Eddie
and
without
Clarity.
If
she
were
about
again.
A
Boundaries
on
this
is
crazy.
We've
looked
at
several
lifted
several
reasons
that
would
indicate
some
patterns
there,
because
you'll
be.
I
Here
yeah,
so
I
would
say
if
we
want
to
look
at
my
race,
because
I
didn't
have
anyone
working
for
me.
None
of
my
Council
colleagues
were
on
my
side
in
2019
I
mean
maybe
some
of
y'all
came
along
in
2021,
but
I
think
my
race
is
a
real,
clear
indication
of
you
know
if
we
really
want
to
look
at
that,
because
nobody
works
for
me,
but
the
people
so
I
think
that
that's
something
to
be
said
in
terms
of
kind
of
like
so.
C
So
unclear
what
you
have
just
said.
Are
you
saying
that
Council
of
dogs
slides
from
earlier
are
being
used?
No.
F
C
C
Have
a
hearing
tonight
or
tomorrow
with
other
people
on
the
council,
presenting
their
with
data
to
back
it
before,
like
this
Rush
gold
Wednesday,
because
I
think
every
question
that
comes
up
a
great
question,
I
think
district,
one
Council
of
diving
deeper
into
where
in
these
streets
cutting
all
the
questions
that
we've
had
in
his
comments
about
her
race
in
19.
When
she
was
out
there
working
hard
to
get
elected
on
her
I
could
think
all
of
this
matters,
but
I
think
I
just
heard
you
is.
C
A
I
C
C
We
need
to
make
the
right
choice
for
you
for
the
community,
for
the
neighborhoods,
all
of
them
I
represent
the
whole
city,
I
want
to
Advocate
and
make
sure
that
there
aren't
neighborhoods
in
any
path
the
precinct
or
District
around
the
city
being
cut
up
for
no
good
reason
or
for
reasons
that
we
could
do
better
for
each
that
lives.
There.
C
C
F
L
D
A
F
A
From
looking
at
data
looking
at
inter
different
sources
of
data,
that
can
help
us
make
an
informed
decision
to
try
and
get
to
a
place
where
communities
of
color
have
a
more
effective
opportunity
to
elect
candidates
of
their
choice.
That's
what
we're
about
and
District
Dorchester
as
a
whole.
It
takes
off
as
the
largest
neighborhood
in
the
whole
city.
It's
about
100,
130,
000
people,
if
you,
if
you
and
it's
majority
minority
the
whole
the
whole
neighborhood
is
what
we
end
up
with
this.
A
Apart
from
taking
timeline
to
get
her
haircut
like
she
worked
on
this
all
weekend,
so
I
think
you
know
she
she's
done
a
young
piece
of
work
to
try
and
help
us
as
a
body
and
form
our
decision
making.
Given
the
given
the
time
to
timeline,
and
also
you
know
just
to
be
trying
to
take
the
personalities
out
of
this
and
trying
to
work
with
some
data,
so
Patrick
and
cultural
park
would
would
like
to
and
comment
on
this
question.
Okay,.
A
Have
the
data
is
all
there
just
we
just
have
to
try-
and
you
know,
work
with
it
this
evening
to
see
what
there
is
this
it's
data,
it's.
A
G
G
G
I
sent
a
message
out
over
the
weekend,
I'm
going
to
say
again:
can
we
as
a
boy
please
treat
each
other
with
respect.
We
represent
the
people
of
the
city.
This
is
on
television,
this
meteor
in
the
home,
because
we're
embarrassing
we
have
to.
We
have
to
stop
it.
We
have
to
work
work
together,
as
as
colleagues
so
I'm
going
to
ask
once
again.
If
we
can,
we
can
have
healthy,
we
can
have
disagreements
and
we
can.
G
We
can
give
different
data,
but
we
we
have
to
be
respectful
to
each
other
and
when
the
chair
and
when
the
chair
has
to
call
on
somebody
just
can't
develop
something.
We
just
can't
yell
something
up,
but
GA
has
to
be
the
one
that
lets
us
know
when
we
can
speak.
So
as
a
city
council
president
I'm
going
to
say
it
again,
can
we
try
to
be
respectful
to
each
other,
almost
myself
included
and
we
try
to
be
respectful
to
each
other.
J
Of
all
kinds
of
Calamity,
thank
you,
madam
chair
and
I,
would
certainly
say
that
if
I
think
anybody
bringing
any
analysis
to
our
working
session
tomorrow
morning,
right
could
also
be
helpful.
I
think
for
me,
I
will
just
say
I.
Think
I
said
on
the
record
on
Friday
in
our
meeting
I
said:
well,
it's
definitely
I'm
going
to
try
to
do
some
Homespun
analysis
over
the
weekend.
I
think
I
advertise
that
for
everybody
and
I
did
hear
the
chair
say
that
you
know.
We've
asked
the
Law
Department
to
do
that.
J
I
agree
that
it
is
frustrating.
We
don't
have
a
lot
of
Department's
assessment
back
I
intentionally
bid
off
something
that
I
thought
was
chewable
early
weekend,
which
was
this
question
of
door
truster
specifically
and.
E
J
This
is-
and
this
is
what
I
keep
trying
to
say:
counselor
Baker
to
your
point,
I,
where
I
agree
with
you
is
that
because
we,
you
know
as
District
counselors,
we
all
identify
strong
with
our
districts
and
don't
see
a
reason
to
break
up
neighborhoods
to
break
lines
without
a
without
a
good
reason
to
do
it.
So,
honestly,
the
way
I
went
into
the
weekend
was
thinking
about
for
me
to
back
a
map
that
does
that
there
has
to
be
an
above
and
beyond
justification,
and
so
that
was
what
made
me
ask
the
question
of.
J
Is
there
evidence
of
racially
polarized
voting
here?
That
then
makes
the
skew
that
we've
established
between
sort
of
wider
Dorchester
and
a
black
or
Dorchester
District,
problematic
from
the
Voting
Rights
Act
perspective
and.
J
J
J
A
place
of
like
the
more
substantial
that
changes
to
council
clarity's
point
about.
Why
don't
we
just
you
know,
do
minimum
change,
there's
a
kind
of
article
here
if
you
make
a
more
substantial
change
and
one
of
the
bars
that
like
makes
it
worthwhile
to
make
a
substantial
change,
is
if
you
have
racially
polarized
Dynamics
in
the
sense
that,
because
of
those
majority
of
colors
being
frustrated
and
interacting
candidates
of
its
choice,
so.
J
Tell
something
real
because
you're
not
projecting
the
future
you're
literally
saying
if
these
people
voted
exactly
as
they
did,
but
they
lived
in
just
a
different
artificial
boundary.
How
would
their
votes
add
up
so
I
actually
think
it's
like
one
of
the
better.
It's
it's
one
of
the
best
ways
that
you
can
test
it.
E
J
Also
why
I
went
to
the
large
race
because,
like
I
said
earlier,
it's
the
only
place
that
you
can
run
didn't
actually
happen.
District
race
right
is
to
take
two
at
large
candidates
and
imagine,
and
and
I
and
I
regret
the
fact
that
in
front
of
my
colleague,
I
picked
again
four
and
five
in
the
last
at
large
race,
because
they
were
so
close
together
in
quotes
and
when
you're
trying
to
do
a
pairwise
comparison,
and
they
were
both,
they
could
go
from
before.
I
wanted
to
see
the
21
versus
19
comparison.
J
It
was
just
like
the
right
now
right,
so
I
just
want
to
stress
that,
like
all
of
that
is
just
a
it's
a
good
thing,
that's
around
my
part.
F
J
J
M
M
Don't
always
work
in
our
best
interest
percent
to
us
and
the
administration
I
think
the
skills
intend
to
tip
on
the
other
side
of
the
fifth
floor.
So
just
for
an
experience
we
may
want
to
sort
of
dive
a
little
bit
more
on
a
lot
of
evidence.
Analysis
get
our
own
analysis
from
our
own
Council.
Sadly,.