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From YouTube: Seniority Magazine 40th Anniversary Celebration
Description
Mayor Walsh celebrates the 40th Anniversary of Seniority Magazine during a reception at the Parkman House in Beacon Hill. The magazine provides news and entertainment for the city's elderly residents, often created by the residents themselves.
A
A
B
A
A
We
do
if
you
come
up
to
Elder
affairs
over
an
expert
in
place.
You
would
find
when
you
walk
in
right
on
the
front
counter.
You
would
always
see
the
current
issue
of
Boston
seniority,
because
our
office
is
here
and
it
is
such
a
great
way
for
people
to
learn
about
the
resources
and
the
programs
and
services
that
are
available
throughout
the
state,
and
we
have
similar
publications
in
other
parts
of
the
state,
but
we're
very
pleased
to
be
supporting
this.
A
B
B
A
Is
not
something
that's
just
about
people
over
60
or
55,
it's
about
all
of
us
and
it's
about
our
families
and
our
communities,
so
we
must
figure
out
together.
This
is
why
Emily
and
I
have
so
much
work
together,
how
in
the
Commonwealth
and
how
the
city
of
Boston
are
we
going
to
create
as
communities
that
are
welcoming
and
inclusive
and
have
access
to
all
people
for
programs
and
services
that
all
of
us
are
going
to
need?
As
we
get
older,
we
cannot
have
cities
and
towns
that
argue
over
things
like.
A
Should
we
build
a
new
Senior
Center?
We
have
to
do
all
of
these
things
together.
We
have
to
figure
out
how
to
prioritize
and
come
together
as
one
community
and
make
these
decisions,
so
the
voice
of
older
people
is
really
important.
I
go
around
to
a
lot
of
cities
and
towns
and
a
lot
of
them
say
to
me
we'd
love
to
have
a
new
Senior
Center.
Our
Senior
Center
is
too
small
or
you
know
we
want
a
new
man
to
be
able
to
go
to
doctors,
appointments
and
a
lot
other
things.
A
We
need
older
people
and
people
of
all
ages
to
come
together
and
have
these
conversations
about
how
to
support
aging
in
every
single
community.
So
I,
don't
know
if
you
heard
governor
Baker
when
he
gave
his
State
of
the
Commonwealth
address,
but
back
in
January
he
announced
that
Massachusetts
is
only
the
second
state
in
the
country
to
be
designated
by
AARP
as
an
age-friendly
slinked,
and
that
means
we've
been
approved
to
move
forward
and
again,
as
with
a
lot
of
work
with
Emily's
team
that
they've
been
doing
over
several
years.
C
B
A
A
Have
dementia
or
Tigers
disease
or
other
forms
of
dementia
people
with
memory
problems
it's
much
more
common
when
people
are
older
and
individuals
with
dementia
and
people
who
care
for
them
are
all
around
us
all
the
time
a
little
bit
invisible,
they
might
not
leave
their
home,
they
might
not
anyone
who
doesn't
have
that
condition,
but
you
know
they
are
in
our
communities.
One
out
of
eight
people
over
age
65
has
been
diagnosed
with
Alzheimer's
or
dementia,
so
the
numbers
are
not
small,
they're
very
significant
and
they
are
growing.
A
A
A
A
That
you
know,
people
who
live
in
communities,
wanna,
stay
active,
get
exercise,
be
able
to
get
good
food
and
good
nutrition
and
eat
well,
and
all
the
things
we
need
to
stay
healthy
have
streets
that
are
easy
to
walk
on.
Even
if
you
have
a
walker
or
you
use
a
wheelchair.
You
know
cobblestones
out
here
not
so
easy
to
navigate
and
things
like
that,
so
we're
working
in
hearts
and
recreation
we're
working
with
faith-based
leaders
to
make
sure
everyone
can
get
to
their.
A
Emily
did
a
lot
here
in
Boston,
so
we
didn't
do
more.
In
Boston
we
went
to
Fitz
filled
and
to
the
cave,
Worcester
and
Gloucester,
and
we
heard
from
over
500
older
adults
and
lots
of
other
people.
They
wrote
into
our
website
and
they
even
talked
to
us
and
when
we
were
listening,
what
we
heard
a
lot
was
you
know
the
challenges,
such
as
economic
insecurity,
people
worrying
that
they
might
not
have
enough
money
to
retire
and
to
live
I,
especially
if
they're
going
to
live
to
be
90
or
100,
which
many
of
us
are.
B
A
Medications
being
a
caregiver
and
getting
support
and
you'll
be
able
to
keep
working.
People
said:
I'm,
70,
I'm,
75,
I,
like
working
or
I,
need
to
work
and
I
want
to
be
able
to
find
a
job
and
be
respected,
and
you
know
considered
for
a
job
opportunity,
and
then
people
talked
about
technology
in
innovation.
How
do
Massachusetts
the
theme
place
that
companies
want
to
come
to
when
they
want
to
build
around
aging
services
and
technologies?
We
want
people
to
say
you
know.
Massachusetts
is
the
Silicon
Alley
you.
B
A
Innovation
and
aging,
so
we
want
to
be
Eastern,
you
don't
think
so.
These
are
all
things
that
we're
doing
through
age,
friendly
and
also
through
the
Governor's
Council.
The
website
the
website
is
still
up,
so
you
can
still
email
ideas,
questions,
comments
and
love
to
hear
from
all
of
you
very
very
much
so
I
do
before
we
take
questions
want
to
say
that
we
had
a
certificate
here,
recognizing
the
40
years
of
Boston
seniority
and
it's
to
the
City
of
Boston
to
the
Commission
on
the
affairs
of
the
elderly,
recognizing
that
wonderful.
B
B
A
Going
to
repeat
the
question,
so
the
gentleman
asked
if
a
sister
has
died
of
Alzheimer's.
Is
that
something
for
a
brother
to
be
concerned?
But
the
answer
is
depends
because
there
are
different
forms
of
Alzheimer's,
and
so
there
are
some
families
where
there's
a
much
stronger
likelihood
that
a
sibling
might
also
have
Alzheimer's,
but
in
other
families
is
less
so
so.
B
C
A
D
A
That's
not
necessarily
that's
not
necessarily
a
sign
of
a
memory
problem,
but
you
know
it's
truly
because
you
know
you
could
always
tracted
when
you
were
reading
before
or
you
read
so
many
books,
some
of
them.
You
know
the
plots
are
not
all
that
dissimilar
and
you
know
I
think
you
could
happen
with
movies
or
books
by
itself.
That
would
not
be
something
to
be
concerned
about
and
I
have
to
applaud
you
that
you
could
enjoy
the
book.
B
E
B
A
The
question
was:
how
do
you
differentiate
dimension
from
Alzheimer's?
Dementia
is
actually
a
more
general
term
or
if
you
want
to
say,
like
an
umbrella
term,
it's
like
the
category.
So
it
means
that
there's
a
syndrome,
a
series
of
symptoms
that
happens,
memory,
loss,
personality,
changes,
less
ability
to
plan
and
sequence
things
like
getting
dressed
or
taking
a
bag,
there's
a
whole
series
of
things
that
are
part
of
that
general
syndrome
of
dementia.
Within
dementia.
There
are
different
types,
and
so
Alzheimer's
is
a
type
of
dementia.
A
F
E
A
A
great
point
and
I
would
say
you
know
all
of
us
when
we're
over
60,
it's
very
important
when
you
go
to
your
primary
care
doctor
or
a
nurse
practitioner
to
go
over
all
of
your
medications
every
time
let
the
person
know
how
you're
taking
them,
because
your
point
is
is
absolutely
true.
Medications
can
call
off
cause.
B
A
Kinds
of
mischief-
some
have
been
very
serious,
so
it's
a
good
idea
to
have
those
medications
checked
and
a
lot
of
doctors
nowadays
are
doing
something
called
deep,
prescribing
they're
trying
to
prescribe
less,
and
that
makes
a
lot
of
sense.
Medications
are
expensive,
a
lot
of
people
don't
even
take
them
the
way
they're
supposed
to,
and
some
of
them
again
interact
with
one
another,
and
it
can
cause
a
lot
of
problems.
So
talking
to
your
primary
care,
person
about
your
medications
is
really
good
advice,
and
thank
you
for
that.
A
D
C
C
Basically,
we
scoured
our
office,
we
catalogued
every
issue
we
had
and
then
we
called
the
city
archives
and
we
hoped
that
maybe
they'd
have
a
few
things
for
us
and
we
were
excited
to
take
a
look,
but
we
were
not
prepared
for
what
we
saw,
which
was
they
didn't
just
have
the
first
issue.
They
had
every
issue
and
it
was
just
such
an
amazing
experience,
all
the
way
dating
back
to
November
1977.
C
So
everything
from
the
smell
and
the
feel
of
the
old
pages
to
the
different
formats
over
the
years
really
reminded
us
that
we
were
inheriting
something
special
and
something
that
people
counted
on.
So
it
felt
like
finding
lost
treasure
and
I
just
want
to
thank
the
city
archives
for
preserving,
so
many
wonderful
treasures.
C
And
if
you
haven't
already
I
hope
you
check
out
some
of
the
vintage
coffees
and
and
get
a
feel
for
some
of
that
magic
that
we
felt
when
we
went
on
our
our
adventure.
I
also
want
to
thank
our
editor,
Martha
Rios
who's,
taking
pictures
right.
There
see
she
has
been
producing
the
magazine
for
10
years,
and
many
of
you
know
her
she's
formed
amazing
relationships
with
our
readers
and
I
just
want
to
say
that
we
all
really
benefit
from
her
warmth,
her
compassion
and
her
creativity.
So
thank
you.
Martha.
C
We
are
so
thankful
to
all
of
those
who
came
before
us
whose
work
made
today's
milestone
possible,
and
our
goal
is
to
really
tell
stories
that
show
that
aging
is
full
of
possibilities
and
we've
we've
started
that
process
by
redesigning
our
magazine.
So
it
looks
a
little
bit
different
now,
but
we
hope
you
like
it,
and
our
hope
is
that,
just
like
our
readers,
the
magazine
will
only
get
better
with
age.
So
thank
you
all
and
now
I
want
to
introduce
someone
I'm
very
grateful
to
work
with
and
to
know
Commissioner
Emily
Shay.
B
F
Especially
you
may
so
I
am
excited
to
be
here,
I
think
it's
really
a
it's
an
important
day
for
us
right.
It's
important
to
take
a
pause
after
40
years
and
really
celebrate
all
that
we've
done
with
this
magazine.
We
have
over
300
issues
that
we've
had
of
the
magazine,
countless
voices
of
Bostonians
that
are
out
there.
F
It's
a
part
of
our
lives
and
it's
a
part
of
your
lives,
and
we
want
to
thank
you
for
all
that
you've
done
to
contribute
to
the
magazine
and
can
contribute
to
that
story
that
we've
been
telling
over
the
past
40
years,
I
see
a
few
familiar
faces
in
the
room.
I
just
want
to
give
a
shout
out
to
Gerry
wives.
Gerry
has
been
writing
for
the
magazine
for
35
years,
Gerry.
F
Healthy
wealthy
and
wise
I
help
column,
and
also
we
have
one
of
our
first
editors
here,
Pat
Kelleher
where's
is
Pat
still
here.
Oh
there,
she
is
in
the
back,
so
I,
so
Pat
was
writing
stories
for
the
magazine
back
in
the
1970s
and
as
a
reporter
and
one
of
our
very
first
magazine
editors.
So
it's
people
like
Gerry
and
Pat
that
really
have
made
the
magazine
what
it
is.
F
There
are
a
lot
of
new
faces
in
the
room
too,
a
lot
of
people
who
maybe
have
been
just
started,
reading
our
magazine
or
started
contributing
or
giving
us
feedback
on
how
we
can
change
the
magazine
and
make
it
better
for
our
readers.
So
I
want
to
thank
you
for
that.
It
really
shows
I
kind
of
that,
the
power
of
the
magazine,
the
engagement
of
our
audience
and
and
the
reach
that
the
magazine
can
have
so
so.
Thank
you.
F
I
know
we
have
a
number
of
folks
in
the
room
who
helped
us
actually,
with
our
redesign
help
fill
out
surveys
to
let
us
know
how
we
could
change
things
to
make
them
better.
I
go
to
a
lot
of
events
across
the
city
and
I
know:
I
see
a
lot
of
folks
in
this
room
out
at
events
and
one
of
the
most
common
things
people
say
to
me:
is
they
come
up
and
they
talk
to
me
about
the
magazine
and
I
love
that
right,
because
we
print
15,000
copies
of
this
magazine.
F
I
want
to
I
I
had
my
a
job
today,
that's
not
really
a
job
right,
because
it's
one
of
my
favorite
things
to
do.
We
could
not
do
the
work
we
do
with
the
elderly
Commission
without
a
mayor.
That's
passionate
about
our
work,
that's
passionate
about
making
sure
that
older
I
live
with
dignity
in
our
community,
making
sure
that
we
take
advantage
of
all
you
have
to
offer
and
making
sure
that
we're
there
to
support
folks
when
they
need
our
support.
So
please
join
me
in
a
very
warm
welcome
for
mayor
wash.
G
Thank
you
very
much.
Emily
and
I
want
to
thank
Emily
and
her
team
at
the
elderly,
Affairs
Office,
who
do
an
incredible
job
every
single
day
and
they're
done
it
for
a
long
long
time
now
and
I
want
to
thank
her
and
her
staff.
They
do
great
stuff.
You
know
when
we
have
events
and
they
deal
with
what
the
older
Bostonians
I
don't
have
to
worry
about
it
because
Emily
does
it
great
and
we've
had
a
chance
to
add
on
events
and
things
like
that.
So
thank
you.
G
G
The
last
time
this
piano
was
played,
you
know,
wasn't
Sam
with
Alex
Alex
played
the
piano,
someone
think
you're
drunk
cause
it
doesn't
you
play
that
often
and
I
want
to
thank
you
for
playing
beautifully
today.
I
wanted
that
guy
city
archives,
who
has
that
the
history
of
this
magazine,
and
so
many
other
things
in
our
city?
They
do
an
incredible
job.
Preserving
the
past
and
I.
Think
it's
important
for
us
to
understand
the
past
of
our
city
and
protect
that
past
and
preserve
that
pass.
So
thank
the
archives.
I
want
to
thank
everyone.
G
Who's
contributed
this
magazine
over
the
years.
I
mean
many
of
you
have
been
in
it
or
you've
written
in
it
or
you've
published
it
or
you've
edited
or
you've
taken
a
picture
for
it
or
your
pictures
been
in
it
whatever.
Whatever
the
case
might
be.
I
wanted
to
thank
you
to
the
people
who
aren't
here
today,
they're
going
to
be
watching
this
on
TV
tomorrow
in
the
next
few
days.
I
want
to
thank
all
of
the
Bostonians
in
this.
G
When
this
magazine
sided
in
1977
a
lot
of
people,
weren't
weren't
seniors,
they
weren't
older
Bostonians,
and
it
was
understanding
we
did.
It
then,
was
to
preserve
and
educate
the
people
at
that
point,
but
it's
done
that
for
for
a
long
time,
so
I
want
to
thank
all
of
the
people
in
Boston
who
are
watching
this
show
tonight
and
the
people
that
are
in
the
show
today.
So
thank
you
as
well
connecting
Boston
seniors
to
what
we
do
at
City
Hall
and
the
entire
team
is
extremely
important.
G
It's
important
for
a
whole
bunch
of
reasons
and
in
most
of
the
reasons,
you're
going
to
think.
Well,
it's
important
because
we
want
to
connect
to
our
seniors
cassini
as
though
that's
not
the
first
thought
process.
The
first
thought
process
is
that
you
know
our
neighborhoods
better
than
anybody,
and
you
know
the
history
of
those
neighborhoods
and
to
be
able
to
help
people
that
work
at
City
Hall
with
understanding
that
and
not
forgetting
that
that's
key
to
for
us
to
do
a
better
job.
G
It's
also,
you
know
the
experience
and
the
wisdom
that
we
need
to
make
sure
that
our
city
is
going
in
the
right
direction
and
then
our
programs
are
going
in
the
right
direction
because
all
the
programs
we
do
in
the
city
of
Boston
I'm
here
towards
one
age
group
or
one
demographic
or
one
ethnic
group
or
one
anything.
It's
grew
again
for
everyone
in
the
city
of
Boston.
G
So
as
we
make
decisions
in
different
departments,
you
help
us
with
that
understanding
and
make
sure
that
we're
heading
in
the
right
direction,
you're
also
committed
to
making
sure
that
we
meet
the
needs
of
the
people
in
our
city,
whether
it's
health
resources,
something
that's
really
important
for
housing,
programs
or
social
service
programs,
or
so
many
other
ideas
and
programs.
So
that's
really
what
what
our
team
is.
Ism
has
an
important
connection
with
all
of
you.
This
magazine
started
in
1977.
G
This
magazine
had
all
of
those
ideas
that
stay
at
play
when
they
signed
the
magazine.
The
mayor
at
the
time
was
Kevin
white.
It
was
two
years
after
his
election,
so
I'm
sure
he
was
thinking
I
gotta
launches
magazine,
but
I
can't
do
a
1975
because
they'll
criticize
me
of
using
in
the
election,
so
he
launched
in
1977
I'm,
assuming
he
launched
it-
maybe
right
here
at
the
apartment
house,
because
he
loved
this
building.
He
loved
this
house
when
he
passed
away
a
few
years
ago.
G
In
the
very
first
edition,
1977
talked
about
access
to
transportation
in
the
challenges
seniors
face
in
the
workplace.
Think
about
that
for
a
minute,
fast-forward
30
years
later.
Well,
four
years
later,
actually,
what's
the
challenge,
we
talk
about
access
to
transportation,
and
somebody
told
me
that
you
two,
ladies
down
the
back,
told
me
get
dropped
off
at
the
park
minute.
Park
Parker
House,
not
Department
I
was
gone
so.
G
Have
some
access
to
transportation?
You
should
get
to
work
on
and
the
workforce
is
still
an
issue
and
it's
going
to
continue
to
be
an
issue
because,
as
as
we
start
to
see
defined
benefit,
pension
plans
be
eliminated,
people
are
gonna
have
to
work
later
in
their
life
to
be
able
to
afford
because
they
might
not
have
the
savings
of
the
pension
they
they
had
that
you
might
have
on.
My
mother
has
my
generation
it's
not
to
get
away
from
pensions,
the
generation
behind
us,
Cassidy's
generation,
don't
even
think
about
pensions
and
I.
G
G
G
I
talked
a
lot
about
what
the
city
was
going
to
look
like
in
the
future,
and
we
just
finished
a
imagine,
Boston
2030
plan
last
year.
Actually,
what
our
city
should
look
like
in
the
2030
and
what
we
have
to
do
to
keep
up
with
making
sure
that
our
city's
affordable,
that
people
can
live
here
and
stay
here,
buy
a
home
here,
raise
a
family
here
and
so
many
other
things.
So
the
magazine's
hasn't
changed
that
much
in
that
way.
G
Seniors
in
every
neighborhood
have
told
us
they
look
forward
to
getting
the
magazine
every
month,
and
we
talked
about
that.
Our
circulation
is
about
three
fifteen
thousand
magazines
every
month
and
300
different
locations.
Like
your
weekly
newspaper,
probably
the
only
thing
that
you're
more
passionate
about
is
the
magazine,
because
you
want
to
see
what's
in
the
magazine,
because
the
magazine
is
about
real
real
news.
It's
not
it's
not
news
that
that
is
inaccurate.
G
It's
it
stops
that
affects
your
life
every
single
day,
there's
stories
and
there's
good
stories
and
there's
cover
stories
in
there
and
there's
a
lot
of
opportunity
about
how
we
move
forward.
We
also
have
a
connection
our
fastest
growing
population.
In
Boston
we
have
two
growing
populations.
One
is
P
of
young
people
between
the
ages
of
18
and
30,
the
Millennials
and
that's
a
very
fast
growing
population.
The
other
fast
growing
population
is
our
seniors
over
55,
and
that's
that's
our
two
largest
populations
that
we
have
in
the
city.
G
So
we
want
to
make
sure
people
stay
connected
and
buy
the
magazine
and
as
we
as
we
explore
and
change
our
fortunes,
the
magazine,
we're
gonna,
make
sure
we
keep
people
connected.
That's
something
that's
important
to
us.
More
than
ever
has
been
many
of
you
have
been
involved
over
the
years
with
this
magazine,
whether
whether
you've
been
a
writer,
a
contributor
sponsor,
or
you
share
the
magazine,
you
can
community
I
hope
that,
as
we
continue
to
move
on
to
the
next
40
years,
you
stay
plugged
in
you
continue
to
do
it.
G
You've
done
because
you're,
the
ones
that
know
how
to
do
it
and
again
it's
it's
exciting,
exciting
opportunity,
exciting
day
we're
gonna,
be
offering
more
opportunities
to
help
keep
Boston,
honored
citizens
informed,
engaged
and
active.
So
we're
gonna
start
looking
at
the
magazine
to
see
what
else
could
we
do
to
be
creative
and
any
ideas?
You
might
have
we
want
to
hear
it.
We
want
to
make
sure
we
hear
from
all
of
you
again.
I
want
to
I
want
to
thank
Commissioner
Shea
for
making
this
magazine.
That's
best.
That's
ever
been
I.
G
G
I'm
excited
that
we're
going
to
continue
to
do
it
into
the
next
40
years
and
last
thing
I
was
saying
then
I
think
some
individuals
Briana
before
he
did
that
so
this
year
I
turned
50
in
April
and
certainly
a
clapping
moment
and
I'll
be
51.
Next
April
actually
I'll
be
51.
This
April
has
50
election
and
I'm
right
around
my
50th
birthday.
G
I
was
getting
the
meal
and
I
looked
at
the
meal
in
those
little
magazine,
fold
in
half
and
I
opened
it
up
and
it
had
four
letters
on
it
AARP
so
I
said,
oh,
my
god,
but,
ironically
enough,
when
you
read
AFP,
we
read
Boston
seniority
magazine,
you
find
information
al.
You
find
important
information
on
about
what's
happening
in
Washington
with
AFP.
You
find
out
what's
happening
here
in
the
state
with
our
magazine
what's
happening
in
the
city,
so
it's
it's
a
valuable
resource.
G
So
I
want
to
again
thank
all
the
people
who
have
something
to
put
in
the
magazine
together,
because
the
people
you
know
you're,
educating
and
you're
helping
other
people
who
are
the
backbone
of
our
city,
our
older
Bostonians,
are
the
backbone
of
our
city.
I
might
say
that
it
could
be
the
city
of
the
City
Council's.
They
represented
us
on
us,
so
people
that
we
hear
that
fought
through,
in
some
cases
very
difficult
times.
People
in
this
room
lots
of
civil
rights,
so
Voting
Rights
Act,
the
Voting
Rights.
G
G
G
The
first
one
is
to
Mildred
and
Ronald
Ronald,
assuming
who
you
might
not
know
them,
but
if
you're
looking
at
magazine,
you
see
them
I
want
to
congratulate
you
too,
making
this
very
historic
cover.
It's
exciting.
It's
a
beautiful
picture,
literally
right
into
my
office,
looking
at
a
finial
Hall
on
a
rainy
day
kind
of
like
today
in
the
magazine
or
this
month,
yeah
the
cover
has
the
heart
of
health
and
city
love
and
how
appropriate
for
both
of
you.
So
thank
you
very
much.
G
G
Want
to
thank
Morris
and
many
of
you,
we
started
in
2014
when
I
took
over
as
mayor
of
the
city.
I
think
it
was
already
there
before
me,
but
one
of
the
things
about
the
building
that
it's
it
sometimes
a
dreary
building
and
not
a
friendly
building,
and
we
brought
in
a
bunch
of
older
Bostonians
that
be
greeters
in
our
building
and
I.
Remember
the
first
day
she
loved
Dylan,
who
was
the
head
of
our
housing
in
the
city
she
came
in.
She
was
my
god,
I
wanted
people
smiling
and
they
were
gonna.
G
Go
and
I
want
to.
Thank
you
for
that,
and
they
sparked
a
conversation
up
in
the
fifth
floor
to
change
the
entrance
of
City
Hall,
where
it
was
kind
of
a
you
had
the
metal
detectors,
it
was
very
little
place
and
there
was
no
real
information
booth
yet
to
go
through
the
metal
detectors.
So
now
people
can
come
to
the
information
booth
and
get
their
information,
so
if
they're
in
the
wrong
building
they're
not
to
go
to
all
that
stuff
to
find
out
they're
in
the
wrong
building.
G
G
G
You
know
when
you
get
something
that
usually
when
you
start
something,
and
it
doesn't
last
for
40
years,
you
there's
always
a
change
or
something
changes,
and
what
this
magazine
is
a
magazine
has
evolved
into
an
important
document.
That's
produced
every
month
in
the
city
of
Boston.
So
thank
you
very
much
and
I'm
going
to
turn
the
microphone
back
over
to
Emily.