►
From YouTube: COVID-19 Media Availability 9-23-20
Description
Mayor Walsh hosts a media availability to discuss updates relating to COVID-19.
A
Thank
you
very
much
for
being
here
today.
I
want
to
stop
by
acknowledging
the
news
from
kentucky
and
the
police
officers
who
shot
and
killed
brianna
taylor
were
not
indicted
by
the
grand
jury.
Briana
taylor
was
a
young
woman
with
an
entire
life
ahead
of
her
that
her
life
was
taken
far
too
early.
I
stand
with
those
who
demand
justice
for
brianna.
A
We
must
demand
justice
for
every
precious
black
life
cut
short
by
systemic
racism
all
across
our
country.
My
thoughts
are,
prayers
are
with
brianna's
family,
the
people
of
kentucky
and
every
person
across
our
country,
and
obviously
right
here
in
the
city
of
boston,
who
is
experiencing
pain
right
now.
A
I
also
want
to
recognize
we're
still
mourning
the
loss
of
justice,
ruth
bader
ginsburg.
We
offered
our
city's
respect
as
justice
ginberg
lies
and
was
proposed
at
the
supreme
court.
Today
she
was
a
champion
of
equality
in
boston.
We
are
devoted
to
upholding
her
legacy,
we
fight
for
the
rights
she
fought
for
and
we
will
have
more
to
say
about
her
incredible
life
in
the
coming
days.
A
I
want
to
transform
transition
over
to
the
covent
numbers
right
now
in
massachusetts.
As
of
yesterday,
we
had
143
new
confirmed
cases
bringing
our
total
of
confirmed
cases
in
the
commonwealth
to
125
866
cases.
There
were
11
debts
yesterday,
bringing
a
total
debts
in
massachusetts
to
9
118.
A
A
Our
thoughts
and
prayers
with
all
those
families
who
lost,
who
lost
a
loved
one
and
has
lost
a
loved
one,
all
throughout
the
united
states
of
america
and
this
country
during
the
covet
crisis
for
the
week
ending
saturday
september
19th,
the
boston
positive
rate
test
rate
was
2.7
percent
roughly
level
with
the
week
before
previous
week.
Our
cumulative
rate
since
march
is
now
at
7.3
percent.
A
We
have
seen
a
slight
increase
in
hospitalization
numbers,
so
there
is
an
uptick
in
covert
activity
that
we're
experiencing
here
in
the
city.
It
has
not
crossed
our
threshold
for
real
major
concern
yet,
but
we
are
monitoring
the
situation
extremely
closely:
we're
bringing
resources
to
the
neighborhoods
where
it's
needed
and
we're
urging
everyone
to
take
this
virus
as
seriously
as
ever
as
far
as
the
state
metrics
go.
We
are
very
close
to
moving
into
the
red
category
on
the
map
that
could
happen
either
later
today
or
next
week.
A
B
Thank
you
mayor.
You
know
when
we
look
at
the
state,
metrics
cheryl
marty,
martinez,
the
chief
of
health
and
human
services
for
the
city
of
boston
mayor
when
we
look
at
the
metrics,
obviously
on
the
state
level,
when
we
look
at
the
categories
of
red,
yellow
and
green.
B
Those
metrics,
as
the
mayor
mentioned,
are
really
focused
on
number
of
cases
per
100
000
per
day
on
average,
and
so
as
we
get
close
to
that
to
the
mayor's
point,
it
forces
us
to
really
make
sure
that
we're
continuing
to
look
at
our
daily
positivity
rate
we're
continuing
to
look
at
our
hospitalization
emergency
room
visits
and
we're
continuing
to
look
at
our
daily
cases
as
well,
and
that's
an
important
part
that
we
look
at
boston,
specific
measures
that
go
into
neighborhoods
that
look
at
the
inequities
based
on
race
to
really
make
sure
we're
understanding.
B
What's
in
front
of
us
in
terms
of
that
work,
and
it's
a
really
important
piece.
For
example,
we've
seen
more
cases,
we've
seen
a
lot
more
testing
happening
over
the
past
several
months.
So
that's
been
a
really
important
part
of
this.
So
as
we
look
at
the
state
metrics
and
we
look
at
the
city
metrics
all
in
place
to
make
sure
we're
monitoring,
covid
and
trying
to
work
to
contain
it
as
we
all
live
with
covet
until
we
have
a
vaccine
thanks.
A
And
I'm
sure
you
have
many
questions
about
about
potentially
red.
So
what
we'll
do
I'll
finish?
The
press
conference
and
then
I'll
open
up
for
questions
I'll
bring
money
back
any
questions
you
have
specifically:
okay,
that's
okay!
So
as
far
as
as
far
as
our
approach,
the
the
new
state
guidelines
on
restaurants
and
special
events,
I
want
to
address
that
on
seating
guidelines.
Yesterday,
the
governor
announced
that
the
maximum
per
table
could
go
to
10..
A
We
are
keeping
the
maximum
table
in
the
city
of
boston
at
6.,
other
new
steps
bar
seating,
menus
and
self-serve
drink
stations.
We
will
ex
we
will
be
accepting
those
recommendations
and
moving
forward
on
those
recommendations,
but
the
one
change
is
our
restaurant.
Maximum
capacity
at
a
seat
will
remain
at
six
for
the
foreseeable
future.
We
want
to
make
sure
that
we
do
everything
we
can
to
keep
these
numbers
down.
A
Many
other
towns
and
cities
in
massachusetts
are
in
a
lot
different
position
than
we
are
here
in
the
city
and
what
we
don't
want
to
see
is
the
spike
in
cases
we're
going
to
continue
to
support
our
restaurants,
as
we
have
from
the
very
beginning,
the
relief
fund
and
reopening
funds,
we're
also
working
on
streamlining
and
working
with
our
restaurants
and
outdoor
seating.
Customer
engagement,
resources
like
online
directories
and
free
signage,
technical
assistance
for
delivery
services.
A
We
want
to
continue
getting
your
feedback
and
hearing
your
needs.
We're
also
going
to
continue
to
work
with
our
restaurants
as
they
want
to
open
later
into
the
year,
which
we've
expanded,
that
date
already
and
working
on
heating
systems,
so
that
they
can
keep
outdoor
dining
going
and
any
questions
that
you
might
have
on
restaurants.
A
East
boston
rate
was
at
six
percent
where
it's
been
for
a
couple
of
weeks
now
it
was
at
one
point
eleven
point:
five
eleven
point:
four
we've
made
strong
progress
and
we're
working
with
our
communities
to
bring
down
these
rates
all
across
the
city,
hyde
park
and
roslindale
are
just
over
four
percent.
A
In
the
last
couple
weeks,
they've
gone
a
little
above
and
a
little
over
four
percent
dorchester
is
also
hovering
around
five
percent
and
we're
focusing
on
in
these
particular
neighborhoods,
like
we
did
in
east
boston
about
a
month
ago
to
work
to
bring
these
numbers
down
this
week.
Our
mobile
testing
team
is
in
grove
hall
in
dorchester,
it's
at
40
geneva
avenue
across
from
the
grove
hall
branch
library.
A
A
A
I'm
not
we're
not
going
to
set
a
panic
off
right
now
with
the
increase
in
numbers,
but
we
are
seeing
a
little
bit
of
trend
going
up.
It
is
within
our
control,
so
I'm
asking
people
to
continue
the
six
feet:
distance
from
other
people.
That's
really
really
important.
We're
asking
people
to
wear
a
mask
when
you
leave
your
house
make
sure
you
have
a
mask
on
if
you're
walking
down
the
street
and
you
and
you
don't
have
the
mascara
and
no
one's
around
you
holding
your
hand.
A
If
you
see
somebody
coming
towards
you,
we're
asking
you
to
put
the
mask
back
on
we're
asking
people
to
keep
washing
your
hands
and
cleaning
surfaces
washing
hands
with
soap
and
warm
water
as
often
as
possible
and
cleaning
down
surfaces,
and
we're
asking
you
to
avoid
large
gatherings,
and
one
of
the
our
rationales
behind
the
restaurant
is
quite
honest.
We
want
people
to
avoid
large
gatherings,
so
we're
asking
you
that
those
are
the
things
that
we
can
do.
A
A
A
I
know
that
you
care
about
your
community
and
you
care
about
helping
our
city
move
forward
in
this
recovery,
so
we're
asking
you
as
well
in
that
particular
case,
particularly
young
people.
We
need
you
to
be
our
messengers
here
in
the
city
of
boston,
so
asking
if
you
could
do
that.
That
would
be
helpful.
A
There
is
good
news
that
the
boston
public
schools
opened
this
year
remotely
and
very
successfully.
It
was
a
positive
experience
by
many
accounts
and
people
I've
spoken
to.
I
want
to
thank
and
congratulate
everyone
involved.
I
want
to
thank
the
teachers
and
the
principals
and
the
parents
and
the
guardians
and,
of
course,
our
courageous
resilient
students
in
boston
public
schools.
A
I
also
want
to
thank
the
boston,
public
school
leadership
team
for
their
incredible
ongoing
hard
work
and
continue
to
work
every
day.
Teachers
and
school
leaders
and
families
are
reopening
strong,
are
reporting
strong
advances
in
remote
learning
since
the
spring.
So
we've
come
a
long
way.
We've
learned
a
lot
since
we
shut
the
school
district
down
in
march
and
then
kind
of
re-evaluated
and
change
the
system
a
bit
in
may
so
I
want
to
thank
you.
I
want
to
thank
all
the
extensive
preparation
by
our
school
districts,
teachers
and
principals.
A
I
know
that
many
of
our
principals
and
school
leaders
have
been
working
in
their
buildings
for
the
last
six
weeks.
I
want
to
thank
you
for
your
incredible
work.
I
want
to
thank
the
custodians.
I
want
to
thank
the
lunch
monitors.
I
want
to
thank
all
the
folks
that
had
anything
to
do
with
helping
us
getting
our
schools
prepared.
I
want
to
thank
our
teachers
and
our
parents
and
all
the
folks
I
missed
you.
I
don't
mean
to
miss
you,
but
I
think
it's
important
for
us
to
acknowledge
the
incredible
work.
A
That's
been
going
on
behind
the
scenes,
quite
honestly,
with
the
boston
public
school
system,
we're
continuing
to
distribute,
we
distribute
over
40
000
chromebooks
to
students
and
that
work
continues
here
in
the
city.
We
continue
to
expand
access
to
the
internet,
for
families
that
don't
have
the
internet
and
we're
committed
to
supporting
students
in
whatever
they
need
and
the
supports
that
they
need
just
to
remind
everyone
on
the
hybrid
phase-in
plan
that
we
have
the
highest
need.
Students
will
begin
in-person
learning
no
sooner
than
october.
A
1St,
then
starting
with
kindergarten
in
each
successive
age
group
will
begin
two
days
prior
will
be
two
days
per
week
in
schools,
no
sooner
than
october,
15
october,
22
november
5th
and
november
16th
moving
forward.
These
dates
depends
on
public
health
data
and
public
health
guidance.
So
if
there's
a
reason
for
us
to
push
these
dates
back,
we
would
push
these
dates
back.
A
In
the
meantime,
we
continue
comprehensive
safety.
Preparation
in
our
school
buildings
operations
and
custodial
staffs
are
working
hard
with
supports
from
the
city
city
hall
in
all
125
schools,
we're
going
to
be
providing
dividers
and
distancing
material
in
all
of
our
schools,
tools
and
strategy
for
ventilation
and
airflow
in
all
our
schools,
sanitation
stations
and
hygiene
materials
in
all
our
schools
daily
cleaning,
and
also
we
have
the
electronic
foggers
in
all
of
our
schools.
A
A
Testing
programs
will
begin
at
a
location
near
fenway
park
and
later
move
into
other
neighborhoods.
Starting
this
week,
we're
expecting
five
percent
of
our
boston
teachers.
Teacher
union
members
will
be
randomly
tested.
Each
week
a
random
sampling
of
teachers
will
be
tested
from
across
the
city
weighed
towards
teachers
working
in
neighborhoods
with
higher
positivity
rates
of
covet.
A
Students
who,
when
they
return
for
in-person
learning,
will
receive
a
mask
when
they
return
to
school.
This
fall
just
a
couple
quick
reminders:
one
is
the
2020
census
right
now,
your
chance
to
respond
ends
on
september
30th,
we're
still
urging
the
federal
courts
to
change
the
timeline
back
to
what
they
originally
talked
about,
but
we
need
every
bostonian
to
assume.
They
only
have
seven
days
left
to
help
us
determine
our
city's
future.
We've
been
working
with
every
single
community
in
our
city
to
get
the
message
out
in
every
single
language.
A
It
tells
you
what
you
need
to
know
and
I'm
asking
you
today
to
share
the
message.
Since
the
passing
of
justice,
ginsburg
we've
seen
how
important
representation
is,
it's
our
voice
in
democracy,
it's
how
we
fight
for
our
rights.
So
it's
really
important
for
all
of
us
that
we
make
sure
we
fill
out
the
census
again
in
the
next
seven
days.
A
With
that,
I'm
going
to
open
up
the
questions.
I
have
one
question
submitted
from
gbh:
when
will
the
police
task
force
recommendations
be
available
to
the
public?
The
task
force
had
their
final
session
public
session
yesterday,
over
125
bostonians
attended
the
session
and
provided
thorough
feedback.
A
That's
a
great
response
to
our
our
process.
I
want
to
thank
every
single
person
who
took
the
time
to
give
their
input
yesterday.
The
task
force
is
preparing
final
recommendations
and
I
look
forward
to
receiving
them.
I
want
to
thank
former
us
attorney
wayne
budd
and
all
the
members
of
the
task
force
for
their
incredible
work.
I
am
committed
to
taking
action
that
responds
to
the
community's
concerns
and
strengthens
our
national
leadership
and
police
community
relations.
A
We
believe
in
lifting
people
up
not
locking
people
up,
and
I
think
that
that's
the
questions
on
this
I
have
for
you,
so
I'm
gonna
open
up
for
you
and
you
can
ask
me
a
question
about
tamari.
A
Preparing
the
question
is:
is
he
preparing
for
any
possible
protests
there
or
the
next
few
days?
You
know
I.
I
definitely
think
there'll
be
there'll,
be
some
demonstrations
and
you
know
I
think
people
are
still
trying
to
understand
what
the
attorney
general
in
kentucky
did
and
what
they.
Quite
honestly,
I
can't
understand
what
the
attorney
general
kentucky
said
and
that's
why,
when
I
talked
to
the
very
beginning
about
greater
transparency,
there
needs
to
be
greater
transparency
in
the
process.
A
You
know,
I
think,
that
the
president
of
the
naacp
boston,
team,
sullivan
tweeted
out
earlier
there's
a
need
for
national
police
reform,
and
I
think
here
in
boston.
I
just
mentioned
about
the
task
force.
You
know
we
acted
quickly
here
in
boston,
we're
going
to
continue
we're
going
to
act
quickly
when
the
recommendations
come
in
and
continue
to
build
that
trust.
But
I
think
that
you
know.
As
far
as
the
question
I
think
there
are
some
demonstrations
planned
for
today.
A
I
think
it's
important
that
I
don't
need
to
give
people
a
message.
I
think
that,
after
the
I
think
it
was
the
first
protest
here
in
boston
when
downtown
where
we
had
some.
You
know
destruction
of
property.
Things
like
that.
That
didn't
happen
again.
A
People
marched
around
the
city,
people
run
around
and
let
their
voices
be
heard,
and
I
think
it's
really
important
for
people
to
have
their
voices
heard,
and
I
think
it's
really
important
for
people
to
hear
what
what
people
are
saying-
and
I
think
that
that's
that's
the
beauty
about
free
speech
and
that's
the
beauty
about
being
able
to.
I
wish
we
didn't
have
to
have
this
today.
I
wish
this
press
conference
was
about
something
else.
A
A
I
stood
at
this
podium
a
few
months
ago
now
and
talked
about
what
we
can
do
in
boston.
I
wish
I
could
do
something
greater
on
on
a
global
scale
or
a
nationwide
scale,
but
we
can't
what
we
can
do
is
have
our
voices
heard,
and
I
think
that
that's
really.
A
C
B
So
the
question
was,
with
some
of
the
uptick
we're
seeing.
Are
there
new
things
the
city
should
take
on,
and
I
think
it's
it's
doubling
down
on
some
of
the
efforts
that
we
put
in
place
and
part
of
that
is
looking
at
the
data
to
understand
where
we
see
neighborhoods,
that
need
increased,
supports
and
resources,
which
is
why
we,
as
the
mayor
mentioned,
we
are
taking
the
mobile
testing
to
grove
hall
starting
yesterday
for
two
weeks.
B
It's
also
why
we're
doubling
down
on
our
prevention
messaging
in
neighborhoods,
where
the
public
health
commission
is
working
in
collaboration
to
strengthen
outreach
around
getting
tested,
but
also
the
measures
that
we
put
in
place
to
make
sure
people
know
social
distancing,
not
in
groups
and
really
trying
to
make
sure
we're
being
as
conservative
as
we
can
be.
So
I
think
we're
trying
to
double
down
on
those
efforts.
B
Yeah,
the
question
is
double
down,
meaning
more
resources.
It
always
means
more
resources.
I
mean
we've
been
putting
more
resources
right
now,
we're
having
conversations
with
health
centers
about
providing
more
funding
to
them,
so
they
can
increase
testing
access
in
the
neighborhoods.
It's
all
we've.
All
we've
also
been
working
with
trying
to
do
a
multilingual
campaign
which
actually
will
start
tomorrow
in
east
boston
related
to
some
of
the
outreach,
that's
necessary.
B
Sure,
yeah
there's!
No!
The
question
is:
how
much
uptick
can
we
contribute
to
colleges
and
universities?
There's
no
question
that
colleges
have
done
what
we've
asked
them
to
do,
which
is
test.
So
it's
really
really
important
that
they're
testing
students
and
they're
testing
the
regular
basis
and
they
are
finding
cases
right.
So
some
of
there
is
a
piece
of
the
uptick
that
we're
seeing,
that
is
college
students,
but,
to
be
to
be
frank,
I'm
glad
they're
testing
college
students.
We
want
them
to
test,
that's
how
we
contain
that's,
how
we
trace.
B
So
that's
an
important
part
of
it
to
the
mayor's
point.
That's
why
boston
is
more
unique
than
some
of
the
other
cities
and
towns
across
the
state.
We
have
many
college
students
here
so
that
testing
is
an
important
part
for
us
to
contain
the
virus.
But
that
is
a
part
of.
B
It
yeah
so
the
question
about
transmission
to
the
larger
community.
You
know
we
always
are
concerned
when
there's
cases,
but
that's
why
the
tracing's
so
important.
So
we
work
in
collaboration
with
the
universities
with
the
state
to
make
sure
we're
tracing
for
contacts
and
the
universities
are
working
hard
to
do
that.
There's
no
question:
we
want
them
to
keep
working
containing
off-campus
things
containing
things
that
are,
you
know,
parties
and
other
things
that
we
don't
want
folks
to
have.
But
it's
really
really
important
that
we
have
that
testing
happening.
B
Yeah,
so
the
question
is
that
we
move
to
the
red
zone.
What
kind
of
implications
does
it
have
I
mean
again,
the
red
zone,
which
is
the
state
category,
is
really
counting
number
of
cases
only
per
100
000
people
it's
an
important
measure,
but
for
the
city
we
look
at
a
broader
set
of
measures,
so
we're
looking
at
positive
percentage
rate,
which
you
have
to
match
cases
versus
how
many
people
are
getting
tested
as
well
as
looking
at
our
hospitals.
B
B
So
if
we
go
into
the
red
zone
which
we're
close
to
to
have
happen,
we're
going
to
continue
to
do
that
and
double
down
on
the
efforts
that
we
already
talked
about
and
make
sure
we're
monitoring
our
own
data
so
that
we
can
see
that
just
to
give
you
a
sense,
we've
been
climbing
in
our
number
of
cases
per
hundred
thousand,
even
though
our
positive
rate
is
still
pretty
low,
relatively
low
at
2.7
percent.
B
So
again,
we
want
to
test
more
people,
which
means
we're
going
to
see
more
cases,
which
is
an
important
part
of
containing
covet.
What
is.
B
I
mean
it's
a
combination
of
everything
I
mean
the
question
is:
what's
driving
the
uptick?
It's
a
combination
of
things.
I
mean
when
the
weather's
nice,
more
people
gather
more
people
go
out
to
eat
more
people
do
things
that
put
them
in
different
settings.
We
also
have
a
lot
more
college
students
back,
I
mean
there's
a
combination
of
factors,
we're
not
seeing
just
one
thing.
We
of
course
have
seen
gatherings
in
places.
We
don't
want
to
see.
We've
seen
you
know,
people
come
together
in
parks
and
things
that
we're
trying
to
prevent,
but
again
bostonians.
B
From
my
perspective,
they've
done,
you
know
a
huge
amount
of
work
to
make
sure
we've
keep
to
keep
kovid
low
in
the
community
and
I'm
so
appreciative
of
that,
as
is
the
mayor,
but
we
just
got
to
keep
up
that
due
diligence
and
make
sure
that
we
stay
on
top
of
all
the
messaging
that
we
need
and
the
precautions
that
are
necessary.
A
Sometime
today
through
tomorrow,
and
if
it's
not
this
week,
it
potentially
could
be
next
week,
so
we're
just
letting
people
know
just
to
go
back
to
sean's
sean's
question.
You
know
the
red
zone
for
me
does
not
make
us
think
that
we
have
to
shut
down
the
city
of
boston,
we're
not
at
that
point
we're
looking
at
the
the
the
average
daily
testing
rate
in
the
seven
day
period.
A
A
We're
taking
the
precautions
on
the
restaurants
today
is
because
we
are
seeing
that
small
uptick
and
what
we
want
to
do
is
make
sure
that
customers
of
restaurants
are
safe,
making
sure
that
staff
at
restaurants
are
safe
and
making
sure
that
we're
not
adding
to
increasing
that
number
of
particularly
potentially
infected
covert
patients.
So
we
want
to
do
that
and
we're
also
monitoring.
If
you
remember
back
in
you
know,
in
the
midst
of
covid
our
emergency
room
capacity,
wasn't
there
I
mean
we,
our
emergency
rooms
are
packed.
That's
another.
A
Another
monitoring
point
that
we're
looking
at
to
see-
that's
really
the
indicators
for
us
is
is
how,
where
we
are
in
this,
so
we're
not
looking
at
shutting
everything
down.
That's
not
where
we
are
today,
but
we
are
saying
to
people.
We
need
to
be
a
little
more
careful,
really,
probably
the
first
time
that
we
putting
a
little
red
flag
up,
ironically
in
the
last
14
weeks
and
again
in
some
cases
in
within
all
our
control.
That's
why
today
I
talked
about
young
people.
A
If
you
could
use
your
networks
to
get
information
out
there
to
people
asking
people
to
continue
to
wear
the
mask,
monitor
where
you're
walking,
washing
hands,
doing
cleaning
down
surfaces
all
that
stuff,
you
can
see,
there's
a
little
more
activity
happening
in
the
city,
so
there's
more
people
out
and
about
I've
noticed
more
people
walking
around
even
today,
there's
more
people
here
than
in
the
last
couple
days,
so
that's
great
to
see,
but
we
need
to
wear
masks.
You
need
to
keep
social
distancing.
D
D
A
I
can't
answer
the
question.
All
the
questions
you've
asked
is
the
first
time
brought
up.
I
know
that
we're
doing
everything
everything
we
can
to
make
sure
that
we
get
internet
access
to
to
our
poor
families,
and
that
includes
families
in
shelter,
kids
in
shelter.
I'd
have
I'll
get
back
to
you
on
that
answer.
I
don't
have
it.
The
question
was,
and
we're
only
with
two
days
into
school,
so
I
don't
know
where
that
came
from
so,
but
I
will
look
into
it.
A
The
question
was
the
concern
of
families
that
living
in
shelter,
families
that
are
homeless,
that
don't
have
access
to
proper
internet,
don't
have
access
to
proper
equipment
and
families
that
mothers
and
fathers
that
have
to
go
to
work
and
bring
their
children
with
them,
where
they
don't
have
adequate
child
care.
Don't
have
child
care
or
schools
to
send
them
to
I'll
get
that
question.
I
don't
have
a
full
answer
on
that.
A
I
think
I'm
going
to
be
announcing
all
those
tomorrow
we're
trying
to
finalize
we're
trying
to
finalize
logistically
where
we're
going
to
be
doing
early
voting
dropbox
all
that
stuff.
I
think
it's
tomorrow.
We
try
to
do
it
for
today,
but
we
couldn't
get
it.
C
A
You
know
I
want
to
just
make
sure
that
you
know
we'll
raise
awareness
of
of
the
situation
we're
in
covet.
I
think
it's
really
important.
You
know
it's
not
time
to
panic,
but
it's
certainly
time
for
us
to.
We
don't
want
to
go
back
to
a
situation
where
we're
shutting
everything
down.
That's
not
where
we
want
to
go.
I've
seen
too
many
cities
around
the
world
in
cities.
Quite
honestly,
united
states
and
states
that
have
shut
down
opened
up
and
now
they're
all
shut
down
again
and
the
numbers
went
through
the
roof.
A
That's
not
what
we
want
to
do
here
in
boston.
We
don't
want
to
go
into
that
situation.
I
think
that
for
the
most
part
that
won't
happen
here,
but
again
the
virus
is
unpredictable
and
we're
taking
this
a
day
at
a
time,
hi
everyone.
Thank
you
I'll,
get
back
to
you
on
that.
On
that
question,.
A
Yeah,
so
the
question
is
yeah,
so
so
the
quite
the
question
was
a
general
question.
I
misunderstood
was
about
homeless
kids
around
the
commonwealth
of
massachusetts,
maybe
in
the
country
and
and
obviously
a
lot
of
some
of
those
kids
will
be
able
to
start
in
hybrid
school
next
week,
they're
in
a
high
risk
category.
A
A
I
don't
think
it's
really
that
high,
but
we
are
still
delivering
chromebooks
to
some
students,
we're
still
delivering
hotspots
to
some
families,
we're
still
delivering
some
equipment,
and
I
can
get
you
more
I'll
make
sure
tomorrow,
when
I,
when
I
do
the
press
conference,
that
I'll
get
more
specific
on
that
population.
Thank
you
for
bringing
that.