►
From YouTube: COVID-19 Media Availability 7/10/20
Description
Mayor Walsh hosts a media availability to discuss updates relating to COVID-19.
A
Thank
you,
everyone
hi,
is
this
one
yeah.
Thank
you.
Everyone
thank
you
for
being
here
today.
The
latest
numbers
that
we
have
from
yesterday
in
Massachusetts
for
coronavirus,
total
case
110
thousand
eight
hundred
ninety
seven
cases.
It
was
an
increase
of
two
hundred
and
ninety
five.
From
the
previous
day,
statewide
deaths,
eight
thousand
two
hundred
sixty
eight.
That
was
up
twenty
five
from
the
previous
day.
Those
numbers
combined
both
the
confirmed
and
probable
cases
recorded
by
the
state
Boston's
numbers,
as
of
yesterday,
were
recorded
thirteen
thousand
six
hundred
and
fifty
cases
an
increase
of
26.
A
To
this
illness
phase
three
in
Boston
begins
on
Monday
July
thirteenth
I'm
gonna
provide
some
updates
on
how
we're
going
to
move
forward
in
public
health
and
city
services
and
in
our
guidelines
for
public
sector
organizations
and
individuals,
probably
should
be
private
sector
organization.
Individuals,
I'll
start
with
the
public
health
strategy,
we're
going
to
continue
to
follow
the
science
and
monitor
the
data.
A
As
we've
said
from
the
very
beginning,
we're
gonna
make
sure
that
we
are
moving
in
the
right
direction
as
we
think
about
reopening
and
opening
in
different
phases
to
make
any
adjustments
that
are
needed
as
we
move
forward
here.
We're
gonna
continue
to
track
any
new
cases
which
we've
been
going
down,
which
we've
been
seeing
going
down
over
the
last
14
day
period,
which
is
a
good
sign
here
in
Boston
and
in
Massachusetts
we're
going
to
continue
to
be
in
daily
contact
with
our
hospitals
to
check
their
capacity.
As
of
this
week.
A
Our
ICU
usage
in
Boston
hospitals
is
that
seventy
five
percent
of
normal
capacity,
which
is
well
below
in
each
surge
level,
we're
going
to
also
continue
to
monitor
the
testing
data
very
closely.
The
overall
positive
rate
since
the
start
of
the
pandemic
is
now
down
across
from
the
first
date
till
today
is
down
to
15.5%
from
a
starting
point
of
over
35%
in
the
week
leading
up
to
July
4th.
Only
1.8
percent
of
Cova
tests
came
back
positive.
A
We're
gonna
continue
working
to
make
tests
widely
available
working
continually
through
our
community
health
centers,
and
anyone
interested
should
contact
the
community
health
centers
in
your
neighborhoods.
We're
partnering,
with
a
number
of
health
centers
on
temporary
mobile
sites
that
offer
free
walk
up
testing,
whether
you
have
a
symptom
or
not
we'll
be
bringing
the
mobile
sites
to
neighborhoods
all
across
the
city,
but
in
particularly
where
inequities
are
evident
in
the
case
numbers
well,
where
fewer
people
are
getting
tested
and
we're
monitoring.
A
The
testing
by
neighborhood
so
were
able
to
see
in
certain
neighborhoods
that
have
had
lots
of
tests
and
neighborhoods
that
haven't
had
the
ability
for
lots
of
tests.
As
always,
anyone
interested
can
call
3-1-1
to
connect
to
the
mayor's
helpline
for
the
latest
on
mobile
testing
in
your
neighborhood,
all
quite
honestly,
anywhere
in
the
city
of
Boston,
and
our
map
of
regularly
testing
sites
will
be
kept
up
to
date.
A
It's
a
good
example
of
where
leading
with
equity
makes
a
whole
system
stronger,
and
the
contract
chasing
allows
us
the
opportunity
to
literally
stop
the
spread
of
a
virus
for
people
that
have
had
tested
positive
coronavirus.
All
of
the
work
that's
going
on
along
is
allowing
us
to
enter
Phase
three
with
both
caution
and
confidence.
A
We
took
an
extra
week
here
in
Boston,
as
most
people
know,
to
take
extra
steps
due
to
our
unique
concerns
here
in
the
city,
and
this
conscious
approach
also
informs
the
reopening
of
our
city
facilities.
We
remain
open
here
in
City,
Hall,
on
to
open
on
Tuesday
and
Friday
scheduled
for
services.
By
appointment,
only
we
are
formulating
a
plan
to
increase
access
to
services,
both
here
in
City,
Hall
and
other
municipal
buildings
throughout
the
city
of
Boston.
A
But
despite
the
state
guidelines
allowing
larger
gatherings,
we
will
not
be
hosting
public
or
private
meetings
in
City,
Hall
or
any
other
city
building.
At
this
point,
we've
had
success
with
online
meetings
and
we're
going
to
continue
that
way.
For
the
time
being.
A
great
example
of
our
community
planning
on
the
future
is
our
plans
of
Franklin
Park
Franklin
Park
is
Boston's
biggest
open
space.
It's
one
of
the
great
public
parks
in
America.
It's
a
it's
in
the
heart
of
our
communities
of
color,
touching
Roxbury,
Georgia
store,
Matapan
and
Jamaica
Plain.
A
It's
a
place
to
experience
nature,
it's
a
place
for
health
and
recreation
and
it's
a
place
to
gather
community.
As
we've
seen
in
the
recent
demonstrations.
The
city
is
investing
twenty
eight
million
dollars
to
preserve
and
improve
Franklin
Park.
That
includes
five
million
dollars
from
maintenance
and
endowments
to
make
sure
that
it's
always
kept
in
good
shape,
despite
the
economic
setback
caused
by
the
pandemic.
A
This
investments
and
many
others
are
moving
forward
to
support
healthy
equity
and
quality
of
life
in
our
city,
and
it's
critical
that
local
voices
continue
to
lead
in
this
way
to
shape
our
future.
So,
on
Tuesday
of
next
week,
July
14th
we're
hosting
an
online
community
workshop
at
noon.
In
6:00
p.m.
6:30
p.m.
you
can
find
out
where
the
planning
process
is
and
how
you
can
have
your
voices
heard
in
this
process.
You
can
learn
more
about
joining
the
workshop.
A
This
summer,
playgrounds
and
splash
pads
reopen
in
Phase
two
with
appropriate
safety
and
signage
and
on
Monday,
permitting
starts
back
up
for
low
and
moderate
contact,
sports
and
other
events,
hi
contact
sports,
like
basketball,
football
lacrosse
and
not
permitted
until
step
two
of
phase
3,
but
skilled
practices
in
those
sports
are
allowed.
So
you'll
not
be
able
to
play
a
game
but
you're
definitely
able
to
get
out
there
and
stop
practicing
with
with
the
young
people
for
outdoor
events,
we're
limiting
attendance
to
50
people
in
the
city
of
Boston.
A
This
is
less
than
the
statewide
limit
of
a
hundred
and
people.
Organizing
or
participating
in
these
events
will
be
required
to
follow
all
of
the
guidelines
around
face
coverings
and
physical
distancing
and
again
it's
about
being
careful
and
cautious
as
we
move
forward
here
in
the
city,
I
want
to
take
the
parks,
department
and
special
events
for
kicking
off
eye.
A
Since
our
buildings
were
closed
and
our
libraries
were
closed,
we've
had
1.4
million
online
items
checked
out
of
our
system.
We've
had
31
thousand
new
library
card
signups
and
we
have
an
average
of
9,000
patrons
using
our
library
services
every
single
day
here
in
Boston.
That's
a
testament
to
how
residents
rely
on
them
in
Phase
three.
We
are
not
opening
our
physical
libraries
yet
out
of
an
abundance
of
caution,
but
we
will
continue
online
borrowing
as
well
as
I
knew
BL
BPL
to
go
program
in
just
a
couple
of
weeks.
Bpl
to
go.
A
We've
already
had
28,000
physical
items
put
on
hold,
people
have
called
in
and
asked
for
books
and
other
items,
and
twenty-eight
thousand
to
put
on
home.
As
of
this
coming
Monday
BPL
to
go
will
be
available
at
sixteen
branches,
all
across
the
city
of
Austin,
with
more
branches
coming
soon,
you
can
use
the
BPL
dog
website
or
you
can
call
six
one.
Seven
five,
three
six,
fifty
four
hundred
I'll
go
to
BPL
dot
go
to
have
items
held
for
you.
A
I
also
have
an
update
on
our
blossom
Center
for
youth
and
families
on
our
summer
programming
and
our
community
centers,
our
community
centers
have
been
closed
since
March
for
everything,
except
for
the
free
meal
distributions
that
we've
been
doing
throughout
the
city,
but
many
of
my
families
depend
on
these
centers
for
the
summer
and
we'll
be
working
hard
to
make
sure
the
programming
is
available.
Teen
programs
started
this
week
virtually
and
today
our
online
registration
is
open
for
day
programs,
both
virtually
and
in-person
for
children,
seven
years
old
or
older.
A
They
include
arts,
computer
activities,
recreation,
virtual
field
trips,
workshops
and
many
other
different
activities
that
we
have
as
more
programs
are
finalized.
We're
going
to
be
adding
these
programs
making
sure,
as
we
do
them,
that
they
can
be
provided
safely.
All
the
all
these
programs
will
be
operated
in
accordance
with
Public
Health
guidelines
and
to
learn
more
about
that.
You
go
to
our
BC
YF
website
at
Boston,
gov
slash
bcy
after
summer.
A
A
healthy
and
equitable
reopening
also
depends
on
actions
taken
by
private
sector
organizations,
so
we're
going
to
continue
providing
resources
and
helping
workplaces
manage
the
risk,
as
they
move
forward
safely.
For
Phase
two,
we
published
a
guideline
for
construction
for
office,
space
houses
of
worship
and
outdoor
and
indoor
dining
phase.
Three.
We
have
new
sector
guidelines
available
for
indoor
fitness
and
health
clubs,
outdoor
events,
museums
and
cultural
and
historic
facilities
and
guided
tours.
A
These
are
detailed
operational
guidelines
that
build
on
the
state
requirements
to
answer
questions
we'll
continue
on
our
webinar
series
for
various
industries,
and
yesterday
we
covered
indoor
and
outdoor
fitness,
and
this
afternoon
at
3:00
we'll
be
launching
museum
and
cultural
facilities
plan.
You
can
find
all
of
the
resources
and
most
of
these
resources
there
for
the
public,
but
they're
also
for
the
for
the
for
the
operators
of
these
different
places.
You
can
find
all
these
resources
by
visiting,
Boston
gob,
slash.
A
Reopening
I
can
want
to
urge
all
employers
to
communicate
clearly
with
your
workers
in
both
planning
execution,
use,
translation
services
and
language
access
to
comply
with
all
a
DEA
regulations.
This
pandemic
has
made
it
clear
that
an
inclusive,
equitable
plan
means
a
stronger,
safer
system
in
Phase.
Three
will
also
be
continuing
to
support
the
residents
and
small
businesses
who
are
suffering
economically
from
this
crisis.
I
have
some
updates
today
on
housing,
employment,
transportation.
I
can
start
with
some
good
news
that
many
people
have
read
this
morning.
A
Two
more
at
this
morning's
paper
we
expended
we
extended
the
moratorium
on
non-essential
evictions
at
the
Boston
Housing
Authority
properties
to
the
end
of
2020,
taking
steps
to
protect
tens
of
thousands
of
low-income
residents
all
across
the
city
of
Boston.
These
are
certainly
extraordinary
times
and
we
need
to
come
together
to
protect
residents
and
stabilize
all
of
our
communities.
So
I
want
to
give
a
shout-out
and
a
thank
you
to
the
wind
companies
for
also
extending
the
moratorium
through
2020
for
folks
who
have
lost
income
due
to
the
pandemic.
A
When
is
our
largest
provider
of
a
large
private
operator
of
affordable
housing
in
the
Commonwealth
of
Massachusetts
I,
encourage
all
landlords
to
take
and
follow
their
lead
note.
Nobody
should
be
losing
their
homes
at
times
like
this.
I
also
want
to
encourage
tenants
to
contact
your
landlord,
a
building
manager
as
soon
as
possible.
If
you
are
having
difficulty
making
payments,
they
should
be
flexible
and
willing
to
work
with
you,
but
it
takes
clear
communication
from
both
sides
to
make
that
happen.
A
We're
going
to
continue
to
make
our
8
million
dollar
rental
relief
funds
available
for
those
without
access
to
benefits.
I
want
to
thank
the
governor
for
adding
to
the
state's
rental
relief
fund
as
well
and
I,
continue
and
I
want
to
say,
I
continue
to
support
the
extension
of
the
statewide
moratorium
on
fiction's
there's
been
widespread
issues
of
economic
disruption
that
we
still
need
to
address
as
we
continue
to
move
forward
here.
A
A
We
are
closely
monitoring
the
economic
situation
here
in
Boston,
but
having
partners
is
really
important
for
us
as
we
move
forward
here,
in
addition
to
our
relief
funds,
we're
drawing
on
our
resource
and
expertise
in
our
office
of
Workforce
Development
to
help
those
who
are
out
of
work
to
the
covin,
we
have
a
new
program
called
project
opportunity
in
partnership
with
our
Office
of
Public
Safety.
It's
a
set
of
legal
supports,
job
training
and
job
access
opportunities
to
help
residents
with
career
reports.
A
Second
chances
are
at
the
core
of
what
we
believe
in
in
my
administration
in
our
city.
Everyone
is
doing
the
right
thing.
Everyone
that's
doing.
The
right
thing
should
deserves
a
job
and
a
path
of
financial
security,
and
that's
especially
true
during
the
times
like
this
transportation
is
also
another
major
issue
for
access
for
jobs
and
quality
of
life
and
environmental
justice.
We
took
the
opportunity
this
spring
to
create
healthy,
the
healthy
Street
initiative
to
accelerate
our
work
on
new
bus
lanes
and
bike
lanes
and
improve
pedestrian
space.
A
This
week
we
completed
completed
the
bus
only
lane
on
Washington
Street
through
Chinatown
in
downtown
and
added
separate
bike
lanes
as
part
of
this
route.
I
want
to
thank
our
transit
team
here
at
the
city
we
created
in
Boston
the
Transportation
Department
to
advance
these
these
kinds
of
projects,
as
they
move
forward.
I
also
want
to
thank
the
MBTA
for
their
partnership
and
the
work
that's
been
done
here
for
24,000
daily
riders.
A
This
bus
land
is
going
to
take
12
minutes
off
the
commute
from
Nubians
Square
and
Roxbury
to
jobs
and
amenities
in
downtown
Boston,
and
it's
going
to
create
a
much
safer
biker
infrastructure
here
in
the
city.
I
can
also
share
that.
To
help
with
the
safe
reopening,
the
blue
bike
program
is
offering
a
free
90
day
pass
to
all
workers
and
grocery
stores,
pharmacies,
rest
and
local
retail
shops
that
builds
on
their
free
passes
that
they've
already
done
for
the
medical
and
frontline
workers.
A
I've
covered
I
think
I've
covered
a
lot
of
ground
today
and
it'll
be
some
questions
here
in
a
minute,
but
overall
message
the
message
about
Phase
three
is
we
can
move
forward
because
we've
been
doing
the
right
things
here
in
Boston,
so
we
have
to
continue
to
do
the
right
things
for
our
businesses
and
nonprofits.
That
means
carefully
planning
and
implementing
Public
Health
guidelines
for
individuals.
It
means
wearing
a
face
covering
whenever
you're
out
in
the
public
keeping
six
feet.
A
Distance
from
other
people,
avoiding
large
crowds
washing
hands
is
often
is
with
with
soap
and
warm
water
clean.
Your
surfaces
that
are
frequently
touched
we're
moving
forward
with
caution
because
seeing
what's
happening
in
other
states
when
they
rush
these
cases,
it
seems
like
every
day
in
California
or
Texas
or
Florida,
there's
a
new
high
in
the
country.
Those
highs
are
because
the
residents
and
the
people
that
didn't
take
the
precautions
that
we
have
in
Boston
in
Massachusetts,
so
we
want
to
continue
to
move
forward.
A
We
need
to
continue
supporting
needs
of
the
communities
and
investing
in
our
communities,
advancing
equity
in
the
quality
of
life
in
our
city
and
throughout
this
pandemic.
I
just
want
to
end.
I've
talked
a
lot
about
the
health
and
quality
of
life
today,
so
I
want
to
close
with
an
ongoing
concern
in
our
city,
and
that's
fireworks.
A
I've
been
talking
now
for
the
last
month
up
here
at
this
podium
about
the
danger
of
fireworks.
July
4th
is
behind
us,
but
I'm
still
hearing
them
go
off
in
many
of
our
neighborhoods.
They
continue
to
be
a
safety
and
a
quality
of
life,
concern
and
neighborhood,
and,
as
we've
heard
and
I've
said,
this
is
causing
trucks,
trauma,
stress
and
cela
sleeplessness.
A
It's
a
fire
hazard
and
a
very
dangerous
safety
risk,
and
now
we
have
an
eleven-year-old
little
boy
in
the
hospital
with
serious
injuries
to
his
hands
into
his
body,
a
situation
that
was
entirely
preventable.
Yesterday
I
spoke
to
the
young,
boy's
mom
and
what
she
said
to
me.
She
sounded
crying.
He
said:
I
just
need
you
to
tell
people
how
dangerous
this
is
and
I
told
her
I
had
a
press
conference
today
and
she
said.
Would
you
please
talk
about
that,
because
she
was
crying
about
her
boy?
A
A
I've
heard
that
I
heard
the
pain
in
this
woman's
voice
yesterday
and
I
hope
that
people
can
understand
the
frustration
that
I
have
in
the
fear
that
I
have
over
fireworks
can
do
to
our
young
people
in
our
city.
We've
had
enough
of
this.
It's
time
to
stop.
We
don't
need
another
crisis
to
deal
with
this.
A
We
created
a
task
force
on
ways
to
address
this
I
want
to
thank
the
members
of
the
task
force
but,
and
they
began
meeting
and
reaching
out
to
the
community,
and
they
came
up
with
some
ideas
on
what
we
should
do
on
how
to
stop
the
fireworks.
It's
incumbent
upon
all
of
us,
as
residents
in
the
city,
to
let
the
people
know
in
the
neighborhoods
that
are
fighting
the
fireworks
off.
Tell
them
it's
time
to
stop
fighter
works
are
illegal
in
Massachusetts.
A
They
can't
be
carried
over
state
line
for
people
out
there
watching.
If
you
know
anyone,
that's
buying
them
or
selling
fireworks,
they're
illegal,
you
can
anonymously
call
the
Crime
Stoppers
Crime
Stoppers
Hotline
at
one
eight
hundred
four,
nine
four
tips.
That's
one,
eight
hundred
four
nine
four
tips
or
you
can
text
the
word
tips
to
two
seven.
Four,
six:
three.
B
A
Yeah,
the
question
is
on
how
do
I
feel
about
the
plan.
The
plan
there's
no
phone
open
well
I'll,
explain
that
in
a
second
on
reopening
schools
right
now
we're
in
the
midst
of
working
on
different
models
of
what
schools
could
look
like
coming
back
in
September.
You
know
that
a
lot
of
people
have
a
lot
of
concerns.
There's
a
portion
of
people
that
don't
think
we
should
open
in
September
there's
a
bigger
part
of
the
community.
A
A
So
as
we
get
forward
here
in
the
next
in
the
next
week,
or
so
I'd
say
the
next
week
to
ten
days,
we'll
be
announcing
plans
and
what
we're
gonna
do
in
the
school
was
still
taking
ideas
and
input
the
school
departments,
doing
a
survey
with
teachers
and
with
parents
and
getting
their
opinion
and
quite
honestly,
we're
watching
the
news
and
watching
what
you
are
reporting
and
what
people
are
saying
out
there.
So
I'm,
not
here
I'm,
not
gonna,
announce
any
any
definite
plan
for
September.
A
12Th
I
will
say
this:
when
September
12th
comes
around
our
kids
in
our
school
de
parar,
kids
in
our
district
in
Boston
will
have
been
out
of
school
out
of
a
physical
building
for
six
months,
and
if
something
doesn't
happen,
will
we
get
our
kids
back
into
a
classroom?
That's
going
to
have
effects
potentially
long-term
effects
of
Education,
but
again
I'll
talk
more
about
that
as
we
move
forward
again
the
money
piece.
A
Certainly
we
made
an
investment
in
the
budget
this
year,
eighty
million
dollar
investment
in
new
spending
in
the
city
that
new
spending
isn't
about
reopening
the
school
that
new
spending
is
about
improving
the
quality
of
education
in
the
classroom.
That's
that's
something
that
we
talked
about
today,
true
and
looking
at
the
plans
and
see
what
the
cost
would
be
in
the
different
cost.
A
I
mean:
there's
no
question
about
it:
that
opening
school
this
year
is
going
to
cost
more
than
then
the
bottom
line
is,
and
we've
seen
it
in
other
districts
around
the
Commonwealth
they've
already
laid
teachers
off
I.
Think
there's.
It
was
the
story
in
the
paper
cut
the
other
day.
2,000
teachers
have
been
laid
off
in
the
Commonwealth
of
Massachusetts
from
school
districts
Boston.
A
We
have
not
laid
anyone
off
and
I,
don't
I,
don't
want
to
lay
anyone
off
and
I
have
no
intention
of
laying
anyone
off,
but
in
saying
that
you
know
having
support
from
the
federal
government
will
be
helpful
again.
There's
no
dedicated
I
think
Mitch
McConnell
has
done
a
foot
flop
back
and
forth.
Here
he
was
against
the
bill
that
was
sent
over
it
from
the
United
States
that
Congress
and
now
I
think
he
might
before
the
bill
all
of
a
sudden,
because
the
cases
in
his
say
they're
going
up
so
we'll
see
what
happens.
A
Yeah,
so
the
question
is
on
the
reopening
of
phase
three
three
year:
is
healthcare
gymnasiums
outdoor
sports?
What's
the
third
one
enjoy
dining
I
think
that
the
biggest
one,
the
biggest
concern
I
have
and
I
think
the
biggest
the
operators
have
is
the
indoor
space
stuff
I?
Think
that
you
know
you
know
gyms
are
gonna,
have
to
put
more
people
onto
the
more
cleaning.
Restaurants
got
to
do
a
lot
more
cleaning
as
well
and
I.
A
Think
that,
as
long
as
we
follow
the
protocol
in
in
those
different
areas
and
in
protocol
means,
you
know
wearing
a
mask,
you
know
washing
down
surfaces,
no
physical
contact.
All
of
that.
It's
incumbent
upon
not
just
the
the
establishment
owner,
but
it's
also
I'm
coming
upon
the
individual.
So
as
long
as
we
do
was
supposed
to
do
will
be,
we
should
be
okay,
but
in
the
end
or
stuff
I
think
is
it's
gonna,
be
the
hottest
one
even
for
those
areas,
but
I
think
a
lot
of
our
gyms
in
Boston.
A
B
C
A
The
question
is
on
moratorium
for
BHA.
How
do
we
imagine
people
paying
later
when
it's
over
I
mean
I?
Think
that
we
extending
the
moratorium
right
now,
because
the
concern
of
the
next
several
months
I
think
that
suddenly
we're
not
going
to
be
making
people
pay
lump
sums
like
January's,
hey,
okay,
everyone
pay
up
your
money
in
one
day.
So
we'll
be
that's.
Why
we're
going
to
be
asking
people
to
work
with
the
Boston
Housing
Authority,
just
like
people,
regular
banks,
okay,
just
attention
chuffing!
Sorry,
do
me.
A
D
Yeah
I
think
thanks.
Mary
no
I
mean
I
think,
as
the
mayor
mentioned,
we're
monitoring
not
only
the
number
of
cases,
but
we're
also
monitoring
the
positive
percentage
right,
so
cases
are
going
to
fluctuate
depending
on
how
many
folks
or
tested
each
day,
but
we
monitor
the
overall
percentages.
We
monitor
the
seven-day
averages.
We
also
look
at
the
hospitalizations
and
all
that's
really
important
to
see
if
we
see
any
increased
kovat
activity.
C
A
Yeah,
the
question
is
on
their
mentor:
Relief
Fund.
How
many
people
have
applied,
how
many
people
have
been
accepted
and
I'll
just
add?
Is
there
anybody
waiting
for
it?
I'll
get
you
the
information
on
that
I
know
that
we've
given
out
a
million
dollars,
we
have
eight
million
dollars
in
the
fund.
I
want
to
say
it's
roughly
200
applications
that
apply
for
it,
but
I'll
get
you
the
proper
answer.
If
you
graph
this.
C
A
I,
don't
think
the
question
is
about
calling
the
police
how
many
people
have
been
prosecuted
charged
with
setting
off
fireworks.
I,
don't
think
anyone
has
been
arrested
or
charged
with
lighting
on
fireworks.
What
what
the
police
have
done
is
confiscate
them
when
they
get
a
chance
to
we're,
not
gonna
arrest,
somebody
shooting
off
fireworks,
we
will
arrest
somebody,
that's
trafficking
fireworks
and
there
has
been
several
I
think
several
opportunities
where
the
police
have
confiscated
a
large
amounts
of
fireworks,
but
I
mean
that
we're
not
gonna
arrest.
A
Somebody
shooting
off
the
bottle
rocket,
but
we
are
gonna
confiscate
the
fireworks
from
them
because
we're
not
going
there
we're
not
gonna,
go
there.
I
think
that
you
know
again
it's
about
education,
some
of
the
kids
shooting
off
the
kids,
and
why
would
the
police
department
arrest
the
14
year
old
have
something
on
their
record
when
when
they
could
have
a
conversation
with
them
about
the
dangers
of
them
and
explain
that,
so
let
me
confiscate
them
again,
but
if
we
pull
over
a
V&O
to
a
fireworks,
you
can
arrest.
B
A
We've
asked
it's
been
a
suggestion
to
this
point
and
a
lot
of
people
are
wearing
them.
The
issue
is
on
enforcement.
You
know
we
just
had.
We've
just
had
protests
in
the
country
over
the
last
six
weeks
about
about
having
less
police
involvement
and,
if
we're
going
to
have
mass
on
a
police,
involve
it
whether
they're
arresting
people
for
fireworks
are
enforcing
mass
rolls.
A
A
Something
has
to
be
said
that
people
really
aren't
following
guidelines
in
there
keeping
physical
distance
social
distance
and
I
would
I
don't
have
the
answer
that
maybe
Marty
does,
but
when
we
do
the
Contra
tracing
the
people
that
get
tests
positive
coronavirus,
there's
probably
a
good
chance
that
person
wasn't
wearing
a
mask
or
doesn't
wear
a
mask
I.
Don't
you
want?
If
you
want
to
jump
into
that,
a
little
bit.
D
Yeah
I
mean
I
think
to
the
mayor's
point.
That's
true,
I
mean
I,
think
you've
seen
widespread
facial
coverings
used
across
the
city
and
I
think
in
those
places
where
you've
seen
spikes
and
cities.
What
our
colleagues
across
the
country
have
talked
a
lot
about.
Is
businesses
reopening
bars,
restaurants,
things
that
where
people
don't
have
facial
coverings,
where
people
are
not
keeping
social
distancing,
so
I
think
the
Bostonians
have
done
a
really
good
job
with
it
can
get
more
people
where
him
absolutely,
but
we've
seen
a
lot
of
progress
with
it.
B
A
I
think
it's
definitely
a
good
idea.
I
mean
I
think
that,
right
now
the
hotel
industry
in
Boston
is,
is
it's
hurting
quite
honestly
that
they
haven't
had
guests
in
four
months
and
I
think
that
you
know
for
the
foreseeable
future.
They
I
mean
I,
think
they're,
hoping
to
get
back
to
25%
percent
capacity.
At
some
point,
people
aren't
traveling
I
mean
when
you
think
about
just
local
American
travel.
You
know
people
aren't
flying
from
Florida
and
Texas
and
different
plate.
A
A
So
if
they
could
assist,
they
call
the
the
hotels
and
rent
them
and
lease
them
absolutely
and
I
know
some
other
colleges
are
trying
to
keep
a
dorm
free
for
film
for
individuals
that
test
positive,
a
kovat,
so
they
can
be
self
isolated
and
kind
of
continue
to
learn.
So
I
think
it's
a
good
idea.
I
support
it
and
I'm
sure
some
people
will
be
mad.
They
said
that
but
I
think
it's
a
win-win.
I
think
he
allows
the
colleges
to
come
back
and
have
safe
social
physical
distancing
in
the
in
the
dorms.
A
It
allows
the
hotels
to
earn
some
revenue.
Quite
honestly,
I
mean
the
housekeeper's
in
the
hotels
right
now.
There's
these
issues
that
freak
Ovid,
if
you
say
it
at
a
hotel,
when
you
left
of
the
day
your
room
got
cleaned
every
day.
Now
you
have
to
request
a
room
being
cleaned
I
mean
that
has
implications
on
housekeepers
and
not
having
enough
housekeepers
having
to
bring
back
the
full
allotment,
housekeepers
and
and
again
that
hurts
our
economy.
A
Because
now
you
have
people
that
should
be
working
in
the
hotels
that
aren't
working
in
the
hotels
but
in
fairness
to
the
owner,
the
hotel,
it's
not
full,
so
I
think
the
more
we
can
get
activity
in
some
of
these
places
safely.
It's
the
right
way
to
go
any
other
questions,
hi
everybody
just
one
last
thing
on
one
of
the
questions
on
the
masks.
One
thing
that
I
would
suggest
that
you
do
is
you
know
when
I
go
home,
throw
some
shorts
on
I
have
a
mask
there
for
that
I
have
this
one.