►
From YouTube: Collaborative Annual Meeting 2019
Description
City of Chelsea Collaborative Event
A
In
the
trauma
unit,
are
you
the
man
who
yesterday
tournament
from
Vigo
calamari,
watch,
tell
cuando
el
de
compartir,
amo,
linear
deprecated
or
the
avocado
carpet
Arrowhead
official
and
different
projects
avocado
so
whenever
in
month,
so
my
name
is
Gladys?
Vega
I
am
the
executive
director.
The
chopstick
collaborative
I
am
honored
opinion
with
all
of
you
in
this
early
in
the
morning.
Sorry
ground
make
you
guys
coming
so
early
and
I
am
privileged
to
have
my
friend
in
kindly
mayor
Marty
watch.
We
are
in
forever,
while
you
were
before
you
were
the
mayor.
A
Chelsea's
facing
a
housing
crisis
are
Gabby
the
mattress,
especially
communities
of
colors,
and
every
time
that
we
have
a
growth
in
the
population.
Rpms
continue
to
be
this
place.
I
am
there's
their
surface
here.
That
I
have
found
coming
here
with
their
bags
because
they
have
no
place
to
live
and
they
came
with
luggage
here,
because
they
have
nowhere
to
live.
They
had
they
were
in
apartment
for
three
months.
There
are
no
funda,
they
were
there,
they
were
displaced
and
they
have
to
work.
Can
they
have
to
move?
A
B
A
In
creating
housing
and
housing
that
it
brings
both
tax
revenue
that
is
sustainable,
but
also
that
it
doesn't
displace
the
community
members
that
have
built
up
see
us
you
know,
Chelsea
was
the
place
that
nobody
wanted
to.
Let
hit
house
we
had.
You
know
we
had
a
Chelsea
that
and
no
no
relationship
with
the
police
or
anything
like
that.
A
Little
by
little,
the
Chelsea
collaborative
work
very
hard
to
build
that,
and
now
we
are
trust,
the
community
that
everyone
was
to
move
in
and
we
were
very
happy
about
their
newcomers,
but
we
also
don't
want
to
displace
the
people
that
work
sweeping
the
streets
30
years
ago
and
taking
pride
whyever
are,
are
you
know,
different
scandals
because
Chelsea
we,
you
know
we
were
to
stay
receivership.
We
went
through
different
things,
but
the
Cioffi
records
you
know,
build
Chelsea
and
now
they're
not
able
to
stay
here
because
they
are
not
able
to
control
her.
So.
A
Work
are
they
coming
here
in
Adira
Mikami?
No
in
there
they
can
look
at
us
in
the
water
bottle,
también
tiene
different
and
Rico's
Fiorina
sama
su
comunidad,
a
special
mental
persona,
ma
traffic
una
persona,
public,
abandoning
that
persona
without
their
Serena,
etc.
So
Canada
Makino
they
be
there.
They
locate,
capacitor,
kiss
terra,
alta,
draco,
no
sale.
Okay,
look
they're,
a
collaborative
approach,
agree
on
trabajo
que
siempre
a
thing,
but
company
a
review
over
adoring.
You
know
me
so
I'll.
A
A
Family
from
one
you
know,
porch
to
another
location,
etc.
So
so
I
love
hip
level,
then
I
pull
out
a
few,
just
guess:
the
School,
Committee
and
I'm,
just
up
with
the
Chelsea
collaborative
welcome
my
name's
Kelly
Garcia
who's.
Also,
a
teacher
Excel
Academy,
who
also
it
serves
of
this
book
committee
member
in
the
city
of
Chelsea,
any
other
elected
officials,
the
review
mr.
talmann
branzino,
either
you
manager
would
it
be
so
our
skinny
manager
talk
in
one
bag
up
in
terminal
app
organics
is
going
to
make
your
no
relationship
to
me.
C
C
Hunt
right
now,
honestly,
because
we
had
to
put
up
the
street
music.
So
if
you
get
a
chance
to
look
at
the
map,
see
where
you
live,
if
you
are
one
of
our
better
neighbors
or
if
you're
not
from
Tong,
come
look
at
the
little
buildings
and
some
of
the
stuff
that
Shelby
has
here
at
the
Chelsea
collaborative
as
I
just
mentioned,
we
see
several
cases
weekly.
C
C
That
means
we
hear
cases
of
harassment
and
we
need
to
partner
with
our
Police
Department
and
try
to
mediate.
That
means
there's
concerns
of
substance
abuse
in
these
buildings
right
and
we
also
get
a
lot
of
insight
to
what's
going
on
and
what
are
the
effects
of
housing
through
our
youth?
Are
you
telling
us
how
sometimes
they
are
comfortable
and
late
to
school,
we're
mediating
and
talking
to
the
schools
and
the
teachers
about
how
they're
making
lines
in
the
morning
in
order
to
take
a
shower?
C
Because
there
are
many
strangers
in
the
household
who
are
also
suffering
it's
it's
the
situation
that
you
find
in
yourself
in
where
you're
not
sure
how
many
times
you
should
be
opening
the
refrigerator
and
fear
of
the
other
strangers
who
are
subleasing
in
that
apartment.
Thinking
that
you
might
be
taking
their
food
right,
I'm
going
to
see
Cory
at
name.
C
C
I
hope
my
child
ate
breakfast
before
school.
I
can
go
on
and
on
about
the
stories
again
at
the
collaborative
Gladys
mentioned
where
the
core
friend,
where
the
moving
company,
where
the
shoulder
to
cry
on
we
are
the
mediators
we're
in
the
courts.
Jessenia
we're
working
with
our
partners,
GDLs
mass
lot
reform.
But
it's
not
enough.
It's
important
that
you
are
all
working
in
teams
that
were
supporting
one
another,
but
we
need
tangible,
long-term
policy
change.
C
E
F
E
E
B
E
Personal
well,
today,
92
year
old,
it's
gonna
on
the
street
right
is
the
housing.
There
is
all
shelter
other
that
people
want
to
put
them
in
nursing.
That's
where
we
have
find
databases,
villages
where
there
is
life
which
Paolina
struggling
to
paint
around,
because
different
Association
happy
housing
complex
her
renters,
who
increases
every
time
a
penny
increase.
E
E
There
was
other
than
the
great
apostle
you
know.
Services
will
be
coming
here
to
the
know,
your
rights
that
we
were
able
to
get
advice.
We
will
mother
and
there
from
MRI.
What
can
we
do
to
change
this
on
the
policies
in
the
combo,
because
I
trying
to
hear
all
shouldn't
be
worried
about
where
she's
going
to
sleep
to
me,
something
to
the
team
leaders
that
she
described
for
us,
it's
easy
because
we
have
a
place
to
sleep.
E
A
G
Chelsea
collaborative
I
met
the
collaborative
through
Geno
clarity
when
Geno
clarity
was
a
state
representative
in
1997.
We
both
got
elected
to
the
House
of
Representatives,
and
one
of
the
first
bills
that
we
filed
gene
was
the
sponsor
event.
I
was
the
co-sponsor:
was
the
driver's
license
bill
and
and
that
build
nearly
council?
It
was
1999,
it
was.
G
It
was
kind
of
a
time
before
immigrants
would
work
label
those
bad
people
for
some
reason
that
happened
up
in
2001,
but
we
fought
for
a
lot
of
different
pieces
of
legislation,
gene
with
the
collaborative
and
me
with
different
areas,
four
corners
in
in
Dorchester
and
other
organizations,
and
we
worked
on
on
Mia,
Rida
and
a
whole
bunch
of
the
different
issues
together
and
I
want
to
thank
Gladys
and
everyone
here
doing
this
work
for
three
decades,
not
unless
advance,
but
at
three
decades.
Thank
you
to
my
friend
to
our
embassy
know
the
city
manager.
G
Families
with
senior
citizens
with
kids
with
our
immigrant
population
I'm
live
in
community
I
want
to
thank
all
of
you
for
being
here
today.
Some
for
my
team.
We
have
the
bus
you,
we
have
Sheila
Dillon
chief
of
housing
in
the
city
of
Austin,
with
us,
Emily
Shea
from
our
eight
strong
Commission
is
with
us
today.
Yousefi.
G
A
new
director
of
immigrant
advancement
is
here
with
us
today.
We
have
some
other
folks
here
as
well,
because
the
relationship
between
Chelsea
and
Boston
is
very,
very
close,
and
we
need
to
continue
to
make
sure
people
lian,
disconnected
our
waterways
reconnected,
our
economies
affected,
Boston
and
Chelsea
rise
and
fall
together
in
both
of
our
city's
unemployment
below
3%.
G
If
we
would
ever
say
that
would
be
kind
of
what
he
mean
when
it's
gonna
be
under
3%
per
ton
of
3%,
we
are
working
to
help,
get
more
people
into
good-paying
jobs
with
good
benefits,
and
we
have
programs
in
the
city
of
Boston
as
well
as
here
that
we're
working
on
our
school
systems
have
struggled
in
the
past,
but
our
school
systems
are
honest,
ready,
steady
progress,
moving
forward
the
education
funding
bill
is
good.
It's
a
good
bill,
it's
a
good
bill
for
Boston
and
it's
good
for
Chelsea.
B
G
Have
high
needs
population
students
in
our
districts,
our
kids
face
poverty,
kids
have
language
barriers,
our
kids
have
disability
challenges,
I
want
to
give
a
shout
out
under
they're,
not
kids,
yet
I
thought
they'd
be
coming
this
point
to
Sal
and
Danny
for
supporting
the
legislation
to
lift
the
cap
on
kids.
Family
benefits
I
want
to
thank
them
for
that
legislation.
G
G
G
You
went
to
a
different
part
of
Ireland
to
do
work
in
the
fields
he
picked
potatoes
and
then
he
went
to
England
for
six
years
and
then
he
came
back
home
and
he
came
to
America
and
that's
nice
and
they
came
here,
but
my
father
was
one
of
13
and
again
the
kids
have
left
home.
They
left
home
because
Patrice
is
one
of
those
really
no
opportunity
there
and
choose
sent
money
back
to
support
the
family
at
home
because
they
had
nothing.
G
G
In
Chelsea,
that's
the
last
number
I
saw
the
biggest
growth
in
Boston
in
the
since
the
1980s
is,
let's
heal
endurance.
So
when
we
think
about
our
growth
in
Boston
and
we
celebrate
that
growth,
it's
because
of
predominantly
Latino
immigrants
that
have
come
into
the
city
of
Austin,
we
are
now
a
20
percent
Latino
city,
and
that
number
is
growing.
Chelsea
is
one
of
the
few
majority
Latino
cities
in
the
northeast
of
the
United
States
of
America
over
65%
of
the
population.
G
G
When
there's
something
wrong,
people
look
to
the
collaborative
the
Sheltie
collaborative
guidance
CDs
around
America,
looked
to
the
Chelsea
collaborative
the
guidance
and
oftentimes
at
the
Statehouse.
When
I
was
there
and
still
when
there's
a
bill,
that's
impacting
immigrants
for
something
negative,
it's
the
collaborative,
that's
always
front
and
center.
The
collaborative
is
one
of
our
key
partners
on
the
Greater
Boston
immigrant
defense
fund.
We
launched
it
two
years
ago
to
make
sure
people
have
access
to
legal
representation
and
deportation
and
other
proceedings.
G
We
are
wrapping
up
the
achoo.
The
funds
will
be
launched
in
303
in
November
at
the
we
are
Boston
gala.
We've
also
made
investments
on
our
city
budget
for
the
first
time
ever
put
money
into
the
fund.
Sidney
never
did
that.
I
have
to
talk
about
the
news
that
a
lot
of
people
were
seeing
this
weekend
in
Boston
with
the
relationship
between
the
Boston
Police
Department
in
the
federal
government.
B
G
Have
a
relationship
and
that's
an
important
relationship.
That
relationship
is
meant
to
make
sure
that
serious
criminals
on
preying
on
our
communities.
That
relationship
is
meant
to
go
after
drug
traffickers.
That
relationship
is
meant
to
go
after
their
sex
traffickers.
That
relationship
is
meant
to
go
out.
There.
People
saw
committing
serious
crime.
G
A
lot
of
what
you
read
about
in
the
newspaper,
the
emails
that
went
back
to
2013,
14
and
15
I
went
back
away,
but
that
doesn't
matter
because
in
2014
when
I
became
the
mayor
and
at
the
time
in
2014
was
a
little
different
kind
of
different
country,
we
were
because
we
had
an
administration
that
would
work
with
us.
Although
the
administration
was
difficult,
the
beginning
and
then
and
we
2016
when
this
president
got
elected,
the
attack
on
immigrants
and
stills
continues.
G
And
vocal,
against
what
federal
government
ice
threats
have
been
we're
gonna
continue
to
be.
We
have
the
trust
act
in
Boston.
The
trust
act
is
been
in
existence
since
2014
we're
strengthened
it
once
and
when
the
process
right
now
is
strengthening
a
second
time.
The
fact
that
we
have
a
document
that
I
signed,
supported
by
the
City
Council
that
I
signed.
That
document
is
our
Guiding
way
of
what
all
of
our
fed
all
of
our
police
agencies
in
the
city
of
Boston
need
to
follow.
This
isn't
a
suggestion.
This
isn't
an
opinion.
G
G
We
need
to
make
sure
that
we
count
every
vote.
They'll
become
every
person.
There
are
folks
that
won't
come
to
the
collaborative,
for
whatever
reason
there
are
folks
that
won't
come
to
the
city
off.
Whatever
reason
there
were
folks
that
won't
go
to
the
Irish
immigration
Center,
for
whatever
reason
we
need
to
make
sure
as
we
as
we
collaborate
together,
that
we
reach
out
to
let
people
know
that
they
come
that
they
might
be
undocumented,
but
they
come.
G
They
might
have
a
green
card
and
feel
that
they're
not
once
in
this
country,
but
they
count
they
I
want
to.
We
need
to
make
sure
that
we
go
up
there
and
work
hard,
because
the
impact
of
the
2020
census
run
deep.
The
Chelsea
plenty
for
Boston
in
a
whole
bunch
of
different
ways,
I
think,
potentially,
depending
on
the
population
growth
of
Massachusetts,
we
potentially
have
an
opportunity
to
look,
maybe
gain
the
congressional
seat,
the
last
three
census
or
watches
rated
in
the
state
legislature.
G
Chelsea
you
step
two
state
representatives,
you're
still
kind
of
to
then
accept
that
aborted
getting
another
legislator
or
two
in
the
Boston
Chelsea
Greater
Boston
area
would
be
important
for
all
of
us
to
have
more
representation
at
the
Statehouse.
Tell
more
senators
at
the
Statehouse
working
for
us
on
our
behalf
collectively
is
what.
B
C
G
Count
and
the
impacts
of
being
able
to
access
money
to
the
city
of
Chelsea.
It
is
really
really
important.
I
told
you
not
420
for
us
to
continue
to
move
all
the
ladders
just
have
to
kick
off.
She
spoke
she's
continuing
one
of
our
strong
partners,
just
I'll
go
to
this
quick
and
I
know
you
have
some
questions
for
me.
G
We
also
have
two
challenges
and
transportation
and
resilience
we're
working
on
those
issues
collectively
at
the
metro,
mass
coalition
and
we're
working
to
make
sure
the
investments
by
the
state
and
investors
by
the
cities
are
there
to
make
sure
that
we
have
a
safe
resilient
affect
the
way
the
transcript
renders
should
be
able
to
collectively
go
around
our
cities,
but
the
most
important,
but
what's
most
important
for
people,
is
across
the
housing.
It's
probably
number
one.
You
heard
it
today,
already
a
92
year
old,
senior
citizen
being
evicted
potentially
from
her
home.
G
H
B
G
G
Your
workforces,
ability
to
grow
developers
and
employers
have
to
be
part
of
the
solution.
The
root
cause
is
a
historic
housing
shortage.
Population
grew
but
homes
didn't
it's
not
just
the
Boston
and
Chelsea
issue.
It's
the
Commonwealth
of
Massachusetts
issue.
Quite
honestly,
so
when
I
took
office,
we
brought
the
stakeholders
to
the
table,
Jilla
delhomme
led
the
way
with
us.
We
turned
three
million
square
feet
of
city
land
into
five
hundred
own
home
ownership
opportunities
for
first-time
homebuyers
and
over
1,100
rental
units.
G
Though,
to
the
housing
market,
we
increase
our
inclusionary
development
and
linkage
collections,
which
meant
we
stack
the
developers
down
and
said
we
want
to
increase
our
payments.
We
want
you
to
increase
your
payments
because
we
need
to
build
more
housing,
we're
making
sure
the
building
room
produces
revenue
that
goes
to
affordable
housing.
We
currently
have
a
lot
of
formal
positions
at
the
State
House
to
allow
us
to
do
more
with
these
program.
One
of
those
formal
petitions
is
something
called
right
to
counsel.
G
G
G
B
B
G
So
that's
a
piece
of
legislation:
that's
at
the
Statehouse
that
we're
pushing
really
hard
in
the
city
of
Boston,
along
with
a
whole
host
of
other
piece
of
legislation
that
will
work,
we're
working
on
community
planning
and
transit,
oriented
development
in
the
city
of
Boston.
We're
working
on
this
accessory
dwelling
units
in
2015
I
sold,
something
called
the
Winthrop
Square
garage
was
somewhat
controversial
in
the
city.
G
It
was
a
garage
in
the
middle
of
the
city
that
was
that
what
that
was
abandoned
in
condemned
and
I
sold
it
and
people
rallied
around
saying
I
can't
believe
we're
doing
this
I'm.
What
we're
gonna
do
with
it
anyway.
Well,
we
have
150
trillion
dollars
a
garage
twenty-eight
million
dollars
going
into
Boston
Common
to
redo
Boston
Common
for
the
people.
Twenty
eight
million
dollars
going
to
Franklin
Park
25
million
dollars,
went
into
old
colony
housing
development
to
do
the
next
phase.
G
The
old
quality
housing
development,
ten
million
of
that
money,
when
it's
East
Boston
Orion
Heights
to
do
the
next
next
piece
of
work
nights
and
we'll
continuing
in
making
increases
of
payments
into
our
Housing
Authority.
Why?
Because
we
don't
have
a
federal
politics,
so
the
federal
government's
gonna
turn
that
back
on
housing.
We
need
to
come
up
with
the
money
and
we
need
to
be
creative
on
how
we're
gonna
do
it
and
that's
what
we're
doing
in
the
city
or
working
in
the
city.
G
Like
Chelsea,
we
passed
the
Community
Preservation
Act
in
2016,
New
York
State,
represent
of
states
in
a
teeny
teeny
Ryan
and
Southie
Dominico
increased
the
match
this
year
to
44
cents
on
the
dollar,
which
is
great
for
all
of
us.
So
I'm
like
that
I
like
it,
we
don't
love
it
take
another
66
cents
if
they
want
to
put
up
in
six
seven.
Okay,.
B
G
For
more
moment,
come
out
we're
also
using
for
the
first
step
we're
also
using
the
money
from
the
CPA
for
a
first
time,
home
ownership.
We
dedicated
3.8
million
all
the
CPA
funding,
so
low
interest
mortgage
payment
for
the
first
time
in
Boston
in
the
last
five
years.
Just
so
you
get
a
chance
for
what
we
did.
What
what's
happening,
we
created
over
31,000
new
homes
in
the
City
of
Austin
31,
thousands
of
new
homes
we
have
27,000
in
the
pipeline.
G
We
were
ahead
of
pace
to
meet
our
goal
of
69
thousand
new
loans
by
the
year
2030,
but
rents
remain
high,
would
stabilize
it
in
some
neighborhoods,
but
just
as
important.
Six
thousand
my
new
homes
are
affordable
subsidized.
That's
about
21
percent,
twenty
percent
in
America,
with
a
number
one
largest
in
America
and
for
income,
restricted
housing.
Think
about
that
statement
from
any
bother
with
a
number
one
city
in
the
United
States
of
America
for
income
restricted
housing.
But
when
you
go
to
our
community
to
go
to
our
organization,
you
would
never
know
that.
B
B
B
G
G
You
know
I
could
go,
keep
going
on
a
whole
bunch
of
different
things.
I
want
to
do
want
to
kind
of
do
some
positive
stuff.
The
last
the
last
couple
years
of
a
difficult
in
the
United
States
of
America,
we've
done
a
whole
bunch
of
other
stuff
in
housing
too.
So
what
we
like
to
do
is
work
with
you
on
housing,
I'm,
jumping
over
a
bunch
of
housing
things,
but
I
want
to
talk
real
briefly
about
our
memory
community.
G
Trade
members,
they
forgot
the
dip,
the
families
that
came
in
before
before
then
we
were
actually
immigrants
have
built
churches
and
hospitals
and
highways
and
roads
and
bridges
and
train
tracks,
and
they
did
all
that.
We
were
very
short
in
my
memory
about
the
immigrants
on
what
we
are.
The
United
States
of
America
does
not
survive
and
does
not
is
not
prosperous
without
evidence.
G
G
The
immigrant
community
has
fought
for
the
disadvantaged.
The
immigrant
community
has
gone
into
labor.
My
uncle
was
a
union
business
manager.
He
was
born
in
a
house
one
of
13,
with
no
shoes
walking
to
school
five
miles
a
day
here.
The
second
grade
third
grade
education.
He
came
to
America
and
became
the
head
of
the
second
largest
laborers
Union
in
Massachusetts.
G
G
We
love
you
here
in
America,
because
America
is
an
immigrant
country.
The
reason
why
countries,
if
you
look
at
great
empires
over
the
time,
the
reason
why
they
have
crumbled
is
because
they've
looked
in
worried.
They
didn't
look
out
where
they
look
inward,
they
built
walls
and
they
try
to
kill
off
their
enemies
and
they
didn't
work
with
people.
That's
not
who
we
are
as
a
country,
that's
what
who
we
are
as
our
state
and
that's,
certainly
not
who
we
are,
as
said
city
of
Boston
or
city
of
Chelsea.
G
So
the
reason
why
I'm
saying
this
today
is:
we
have
a
lot
of
work
to
do.
We
have
a
lot
of
work
to
do,
but
just
like
this
9200,
your
woman,
who's,
92
you're,
a
woman
here
who
is
being
evicted
we'd,
have
to
feel
bad
for
her
she's
been
to
more
struggles
in
our
life
than
anyone
enters
from
this
room
and
she'll
get
through
that.
Why?
Because
she
has
a
fighting
spirit
inside
of
her.
G
That's
what
lives
so
I
want
to
thank
all
of
you
in
this
room
for
your
advocacy,
there's
some
former
elected
officials
here
there's
some
current
elected
officials.
Here
there
is
some
future
elected
officials
here.
I
wanted
to
thank
you
for
being
here
today.
I
want
to
thank
you
for
what
you
do
every
day.
I
want
to
thank
you
for
fighting
the
good
fight.
I
want
to
thank
you
for
sticking
up
for
the
people
that
live
on
these
streets,
that
don't
have
anyone
to
fight
for
them
and
I.
A
D
D
G
G
Obviously,
most
of
those
low-income
housing
units
will
be
a
subsidized
right
here,
so
we
just
got
to
be
able
to
keep
pushing
the
governess
how's
your
choice
bill.
We
can't
let
it
right
now
the
way
the
housing
choice
bill
is
going.
Is
the
Senate
doesn't
want
to
pasture
that
it
is
don't
want
to
put
a
lot
of
other
things
in
the
bill
which
we'd
all
like
the
house
doesn't
want
to
do
that
the
house
might
pass
housing
choice
and
I've
been
up
there
long
enough
pup,
we
just
passed
healthy
choice.
G
I
would
just
agree
that
passing
housing
choice
and
that
we
will
fight
it
out
on
these
love.
Little
things
are
trying
to
get
some
runs
or
something,
but
if
we
get
caught
up
in
the
politics
of
the
Senate,
I'll
pass
it
unless
they
get
all
these
other
things.
Well,
house
indefinite
s
them.
So,
let's
be
quite
honest
and
try
and
get
housing
choice
number
one
number:
two:
we
have
a
project
right
now
would
shut
it
down
we're
working
on
the
Suffolk
Downs
project.
It's
gonna
be
I,
don't
the
number
is.
J
B
A
K
Answer
this
is
really
just
common
I
just
wanted
to
say
how
happy
I
am
to
have
such
a
collaborative
partner,
mayor,
Walsh,
he's
being
modest
as
to
how
much
he
has
pushed
for
all
of
the
things
that
are
so
important
to
this
organization,
none
more
so
than
in
the
housing
equity
room
where
he
has
been
Metro
mayor's
and
pushing
other
communities
in
that
group
to
do
more
in
the
affordable
housing
realm.
He
was
a
staunch
advocate
of
expansion
of
the
housing
quarters.
A
G
A
G
G
A
A
A
A
A
G
H
G
A
So,
first
of
all,
it
just
to
add
into
them
Helena's,
for
example,
dilemma
Evangelina.
We
have
known
Paquito
dynamically
before
yeah,
so
when
he
comes
in
two
children,
she
the
three-year-old
another
thing-
you
know
the
cuatro
yeah
she
brings
her
back.
She's
gets
a
victim
with
her
backs
and
it's
in
the
office.
Probably
two
weeks
ago
we
tried
finding
filters
both
of
her
kids
are
documented.
We
were
not
able
to
help
her
at
all.
A
We
just
found
her
by
now
in
a
room
in
a
location
that
she
may
be
displaced
three
months
from
now
and
in
that
and
the
problem
with
our
community
members
is
that
we
don't
have
a
shelter
when
we
call
Boston
shelters.
They
basically
tell
us,
there's,
maybe
no
room
in
answer
if
they
find
out
that
they're
undocumented,
even
a
family
of
three
like
her
I'm,
not
even
we're
not
able
to
help
so
look.
G
G
I
I
C
G
A
lot
of
our
waiting
list:
it's
not
Boston
people.
A
lot
of
our
homelessness
in
the
street
is
not
Boston.
People
and
people
come
to
our
city
for
services
and
we
try
to
help
anyone
we're
not
going
to
turn
them
away.
I
think
it's
gonna
take
leadership.
We
don't
have
a
federal
housing
partner
right
now.
We
don't
have
a
federal
money
coming
into
housing
time.
So
what
we're
doing
in
the
city
of
Boston
is
where
we
invest
it
for
the
first
time
ever,
I'm.
B
G
First
time
ever
we
invested
in
a
construction
project
for
the
first
time
ever
in
one
of
our
housing
developments
of
Charlestown.
We
made
a
20
million
dollar
investment
to
build
the
building.
We've
never
had
to
do
that
before.
That's
always
been
the
federal
government,
we're
making
investments
to
make
sure
the
bottom
line
of
our
Housing
Authority.
So
when
you
think
about
housing,
this,
our
public,
housing
and
I
think
I
think
it's
gonna
take
leadership
and
it's
not
popular.
Nobody
wants
its
construction.
Nobody
wants
development.
G
If
you
look,
you
mini-me,
ting
I'm,
assuming
the
same
thing
here
in
Chelsea
you're,
going
on
me
in
neighborhood
girl
mob,
and
you
know
that
we
won't
of
you.
Maybe
somebody
wants
until
1900
think
they're
gonna
fill
the
in
price
table
in
the
backyard.
We
don't
want
it,
we
don't
want
it.
We
need
to
go
house,
we
need
to
build
a
house
and
we
can't
say
no.
We
need
to
build
housing
and
if
we
don't
build
housing,
then.
B
G
I
G
G
G
They
want
to
find
it
out,
I
guess
a
you
know,
all
the
right
things
to
all
the
right
things.
It
was
all
fired
up.
Well,
it's
great!
You
can
do
that
now
stand
up
and
and
actually
make
it
happen.
I
mean
as
a
man
I
can
go
around
and
I
can
stand
with.
I
can
stand
with
the
Chelsea
collaborative
and
talk
how
bad
Donald
Trump
is
and
and
how
wrong
the
atrocities
are
and
no
housing.
G
A
I
G
That's
we've
got
a
program
when
I
was
my
own
man,
the
building
trades
in
2011
I
start
a
program
called
building
pathways,
which
is
a
pre
apprentice
program.
It
came
out
of
a
housing
authorities,
project
labor,
agreement
of
retrofitting
the
housing
units
and
we
were
able
to
get
people
into
the
building
trades.
G
People
are
calling
for
the
building
trades
that
otherwise
didn't
have
opportunity
to
get
in,
and
a
lot
of
them
lived
on
a
lease
with
their
parents
or
they're
gonna
lease
themselves,
and
that
was
one
of
the
issues
we
have
to
struggle
with
is,
as
you
start
to
go
through
the
parentheses
in
a
couple
years,
you're
gonna
be
from
a
journey
person
when
you
become
a
journey.
First
you're
gonna
start
making
money,
and
that
was
the
federal
building.
G
In
again
that
comes
presidential
elections
coming
up
right
now,
and
we
have
to
stop
thinking
about
that.
Some
of
a
change
on
the
president
clinton
some
good
some
bad
in
public
housing,
but
we
really
haven't
had
a
champion
in
public
housing,
usually
in
Castro
as
a
champion
when
he
is
director
of
hi,
but
we
need
it
that
that's
an
important
appointment,
whoever
whoever
wins
the
points
that
the
director
of
high
that
they
understand
the
challenge
that
people
have
and
what
people
have
hi
secretary
can
make
a
big
impact
there.
G
J
G
G
J
G
We
are,
we
are
working
and
I
think
that
I
think
that
there's
a
little
in
Boston
the
agency
for
Boston,
we
have
something
called
resilient:
Boston
Harbor,
which
is
gonna,
be
a
planet
learning
building
on
our
waterfront
to
have
resiliency
as
sea
level
rises.
It
won't
come
in
and
affect
the
community
Chelsea's
next
door.
We've
had
some
conversation
with
Chelsea
with
the
environment
folks
and
maybe
extending
the
plan
to
angèle
see
you've
already
done
some
of
it
yet
building
on
the
waterfront,
there's
actually
they've
actually
done
some
visiting
projects
on
the
waterfront.
G
L
We'll
team
up
with
them
later
I
just
want
to
say
thank
you
so
much
for
supporting
the
budget
for
schools.
It's
been
very
helpful
because
we
were
very
bad
in
Chelsea,
with
the
schools,
33
kids,
with
only
one
teacher,
especially
with
kids,
that
has
a
special
needs
mix.
So
I
really
thank
you.
So
much
and
I
hope
their
government
sign
that,
but.