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From YouTube: Chamber Luncheon - May 2019
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C
B
Work
with
hybrid
schools
in
the
city
of
Chelsea
on
Chelsea
site
currently
serves
12
cities
and
towns,
so
that
17
to
24
year
old
bales
that
are
currently
justice-involved
has
a
mental
health
issue
of
substance,
use
issues
aging
out
of
dys
and
some
of
them
coming
out
of
the
criminal
justice
system.
So
our
goal
is
to
work
them.
Every
single
individual
in
India
that
comes
from
our
program
actually
gets
four
years
of
services
that
world
the
first.
We
is
a
very
intensive.
The
second
two
years
are
falling
from
falling
on
hard
work.
B
We
Joe
had
the
pleasure
of
some
district
courts
me
sometimes
about
to
advocate
for
an
alternative
sentencing
law,
and
we
have
great
opportunities
for
all
the
city
of
childs,
about
strongest
being
the
Chelsea
Police
Department
cheek
eyes
and
second
beat
of
the
courts.
They've
been
unbelievably
gracious
with
us
to
help
a
young
man
stay
out
of
harm's
way
in
poverty.
We
also
sure
like
if
you
have
currently
212
young
moms
on
a
case
law
school.
So
if
you
add
their
kids,
that's
probably
upwards
around
500.
B
B
We're
an
organization
that's
been
in
this
city
for
thirty
years,
we've
been
on
the
run
for
30
years
and
it's
an
organization
that
I've
been
working
at
for
13
I,
absolutely
love
my
job
love.
What
I'm
doing,
even
though
I
come
from
the
other
side
of
the
bridge,
I've
made
Chelsea
my
home
and
I.
Guess
that's
two
minutes.
Anyone
has
any
other
questions.
I
begin,
I'd
love
to
give
you
a
cot.
You
can
come
by
the
building.
A
The
chamber
will
promote
strong
relations
and
communications
between
businesses,
government
nonprofits
in
the
community
to
enhance
the
economic,
commercial,
cultural,
industrial
and
educational
interest
of
the
area
with
these
purpose.
With
this
purpose,
what
I
plan
to
do
is
reach
out
to
all
of
our
members
to
become
a
little
more
active?
We
need
a
lot
of
help,
so
maybe
you
might
have
someone
that
would
like
to
be
on
readers
committee
I
always
find
it
helpful
when
I
go
into
a
room
where
I
don't
know
anybody
know
a
few
people
to
be
introduced.
A
That
would
be
beneficial
and
some
of
our
stand
by
committees,
cyka,
mind
and
Renee
have
been
very
extremely
helpful
in
the
pot
of
gold,
but
we'll
be
looking
for
more
volunteers,
so
that
again,
if
you
can
be
helpful
in
this
occasion,
it
would
be
extremely
helpful.
The
other
thing
interesting
is
the
fact
that
one
of
our
members
got
the
knowledge
I'd
like
to
just.
A
A
Dream
Brookes
landscape:
the
organ
is
it
that
company
is
relatively
new
to
our
membership.
There
have
been
in
business
for
a
number
of
years
and
tankers,
it
just
relocated
to
Chelsea,
but
in
the
Boston
home
magazine
titled
the
face
of
women
in
design
edition.
This
week
she
received
the
woman
in
design
award
so
again.
A
A
A
Now
I
have
a
scripted
and
I'll
be
very
brief
from
the
DA's
office
and
yes,
Suffolk
County
District
Attorney
Rachel
Rawlins
is
the
chief
law
enforcement
officer
for
Boston,
Chelsea,
Revere
and
Winthrop.
She
is
the
first
woman
elected
to
that
position
and
the
first
woman
of
color
to
ever
serve
as
a
Massachusetts.
Mr.
attorney
for
20
years
she
has
worked
in
the
field
with
the
National
Labor
Relations
Board,
an
attorney
with
bigger
culture
and
as
a
federal
prosecutor
at
the
United
States
Attorney's
Office
in
Boston.
A
She
has
served
as
general
counsel
for
the
mass
Department
of
Transportation
and
the
Mass
Bay
Transit
Authority,
and
also
chief
legal
counsel
for
the
Massachusetts
Board
of
arms.
She
was
appointed
by
Governor
Deval
Patrick
to
the
Judicial
Nominating
Commission,
a
past
president
of
the
Massachusetts
black
Lawyers
Association,
and
served
a
three-year
term
on
the
Boston
Bar
Association
concept.
She
is
a
proud
resident
of
Roxbury
and
she
lives
with
her
daughter,
two
nieces
and
a
French.
F
We
did
sue
the
University
of
Massachusetts,
but
it
was
because
they
touch
three
women's
teams
and
our
men's
football
team.
That
hadn't
won
a
game
in
several
years
and
had
75
full
scholarships
didn't
lose
a
single
scholarship.
So
we
did
get
a
lawyer
and
threatened
in
title
nine
lawsuit
and
in
fact
our
women's
teams
real
estate.
It
wasn't
an
award,
but.
F
Thank
you
for
inviting
me
Chelsea
and
my
campaign
had
a
very
special
place
in
my
heart.
I
know
you
guys
recognize
that
in
Suffolk
County,
everyone
believes
Boston
is
just
something
kind
and
I'd
love
to
remind
them
that
there
are
three
other
wonderful
places
that
are
also
part
of
something
coming
as
well,
and
they
keep
referring
to
just
a
Boston.
So.
D
F
Guys
were
very
good
to
me.
I
have
friends
that
I
worked
with
before
a
mass
department
of
transportation
I
in
deep
respect
for
chief
ties.
Having
heard
about
all
the
wonderful
work
you
guys
do
with
the
hub
here,
I
had
heard
about
the
urban
legend
and
then
actually
got
to
sit
down
and
see
the
great
work
you
do.
Boston
is
now
trying
to
pilot
what
you
do
in
two
locations
and
you
made
the
plane
in
Goose
Boston.
F
We
need
to
look
at
the
fact
that
many
of
these
laws
that
we
put
into
place
were
put
into
place
to
not
benefit
poor
people
and
I.
Want
you
see
my
graphic
face,
saying
out
loud
to
you,
people
that
are
most
impacted
negatively
by
the
criminal
justice
system.
It
has
nothing
to
do
with
race
and
almost
everything
to
do
with
poverty
right.
If
you
can't
afford
somebody
who
can
fluently
through
the
criminal
justice
system,
you
are
at
a
significant
disadvantage:
I,
don't
care
what
hue
your
skin
is.
F
If
you
have
no
money,
the
system
does
not
work
well.
For
you
period,
end
of
story
now
I
need
to
make
sure
I
say
that
next
group
of
people
is
overwhelmingly
black
and
brown
people
and
they
are
overwhelmingly
more,
but
I
need
you
to
to
hear
my
voice
say
out
loud
that
I
recognize
the
first
and
first
and
foremost,
the
biggest
moves
have
nothing
to
do
with
race,
ethnicity,
background
and
everything
to
do
with
access.
F
So
I
am
so
excited
that
this
is
the
place
that
recognizes
that
and
in
one
room
puts
all
of
the
people
that
have
all
of
the
skill
set
to
help
individuals
think
about.
If
we
take
one
criminal
defendant
from
Chelsea
district
court
and
pull
them
out
and
did
a
study
on
them,
it
is
likely
not
not
necessarily
proven,
but
likely
that
they
will
have
either
their
family
will
have
either
DCF
in
their
life.
They
have
touched
the
dyf
system.
F
It's
a
federal
case
they
might
have
federal
probation
or
they
might
have
something
in
another
jurisdiction
because
they
got
in
trouble.
What's
beautiful
about
the
hub,
is
you
bring
all
of
those
people
around?
Have
wraparound
services
and
literally
walk
up
to
those
families?
Not
understand
say
how
can
we
help
you
and
I
just
came
back
I?
Will
you
know
drove
from
a
which
is
what
I
was
told
for
two
weeks,
20
of
the
progressive
DA's
in
the
United
States?
F
F
With
a
different
model
that
we
are
and
and
obviously
they
don't
have,
the
gun
balance
that
we
have
so
I
fully
start
with
that
piece.
But
there
is
a
human.
There
is
a
humanization
they
have
of
the
people
of
their
country
and
there's
a
national
nationalism
that
they
have
about.
If
you
are
German,
we
will
take
care
of
you
and
that
doesn't
mean
to
the
detriment
of
other
people
coming
into
the.
F
A
D
A
F
Are
it's
unbelievable?
They
have
an
open
prison
system
and
they
recognize
that
the
overwhelming
majority
of
people
that
we
send
away
come
back
to
us
and
if
we
are
treating
them
poorly
or
not
getting
them
the
services
of
their
mental
health
issues,
of
which
there
are
significant
mental
health
issues,
substance
used
and
sometimes
a
dual
diagnosis
of
both
or
just
poverty.
F
We
are
sending
them
to
a
place
where
they
are
usually
surrounded
by
people
that
are
more
violent
than
them
getting
no
treatment
whatsoever
and
then
coming
back
into
our
communities
and
we're
surprised
when
we
have
a
67
percent
recidivism
rate.
So
those
are
some
of
the
things
that
you
know,
I
think
about
as
the
DA
who's
been
in
this
role
for
five
months.
F
It
is
part
of
why
this
is
what
I'd
like
to
sort
of
talk
to
you
guys
a
little
bit
about
today.
Why
I
proposed
some
new
thinking
regarding
the
way
we
are
going
to
approach
crime
and
what
I
can
tell
you
is
the
metal
that
I
that
I
sort
of
wrote
and
presented
and
I
need
you
to
hear
me
say,
had
hand
delivered
on
you
about
75
stakeholders,
including
Chief
PI's,
on
the
day
that
it
was
presented
to
my
staff?
F
This
is
aspirational.
This
is
what
I
would
like
my
administration
and
what
I
believe
the
criminal
justice
system
can
look
like.
None
of
this
is
written
in
stone
and
if
it
is,
I
wrote
it
so
the
stone
can
be
broken
or
amended,
and
what
I
can
tell
you
is
these
are
guidelines
for
my
300
employees
to
live
by
right.
F
What
what
are
we
doing
when
we
see
somebody
who
has
one
of
the
three
ailments
that
I
spoke
about
poverty,
mental
illness
or
substance
use
disorder
if
they
fall
into
those
three
categories
and
they
commit
these
15
crimes
that
I?
You
know,
after
many
discussions
with
police
officers,
judges
prosecutors,
criminal
attorneys
in
individuals
returning
to
our
community,
so
people
with
criminal
justice
high
risk
individuals
that
have
touched
the
criminal
justice
system.
What
are
the
things
that
are
clogging
up
our
municipal
and
district
courts
and
it
was
overwhelmingly
these
15
crimes
and
please.
F
I
say
this
is
not
a
get-out-of-jail-free
card.
If
you
actually
read
my
memo,
it
is
just
in
the
first
second
or
maybe
even
third
instance.
You've
never
been
in
trouble
before
and
you're
caught
shoplifting.
I
can
assure
you
you're,
probably
not
going
to
even
get
maybe
not
even
get
arrested
the
first
time.
If
you
speak
to
commissioner
Ross,
if
you
speak
to
the
other
Chiefs
in
Suffolk
County,
their
policy
is
cuffs
or
hand
cuffs
as
a
last
resort.
I'm
simply
saying
the
same
thing
and
we
can
hold
people
accountable.
F
Accountability
is
not
have
to
equal
jail
right.
What
I'm
saying
is
if
we
haven't
tried
a
civil
stay
away
order
and
I
get
it.
You
might
say:
oh,
they
don't
work
or
let's
try
that
and
see
whether
we
can
get
this
person
some
services
and
if
they
show
back
up
a
week
later,
we're
going
to
know
that
and
we're
going
to
make
sure
that
this
person
is
clearly
not
listening
to
what
it
is.
We're
saying
and
we're
going
to
up
the
energy
to
the
next
level
of
what
we
do.
F
But
what
I
can
promise
you,
as
small
business
owners,
is
spending
fifty
five
thousand
dollars
a
year
to
send
that
person
to
Nashua,
Street
or
South
Bay
is
not
fiscally
responsible.
I
promise
you
that
and
they
are
just
going
to
come
out
more
hardened,
more
addicted,
more
mentally
ill
and
come
back
and
escalate
whatever
crying.
F
Potentially
they
may
do
so
what
I
want
and
with
limited
resources
as
the
district
terney
I
need
you
to
hear
me
say
we
have
a
15
to
20
percent,
solve
rate
on
non-fatal
shootings,
so
I'm
not
good
at
math,
but
I
promise
you.
That
is
not
good
right.
We
should
be
in
the
I
would
like
to
be
in
the
70
to
80%
solve
rate
of
non-fatal
shootings
because
of
course,
non-fatal
shootings
are
what
a
precursor
to
fatal
shootings.
Last
night
I
received
a
phone
call.
We
had
our
15th
homicide
and
Suffolk
County.
Since
January
1st.
F
F
F
I
do
something
we
don't
Dido
and
on
chief
Bravo,
commissioner
Ross
I'm
speaking
often
to
them,
as
well
as
the
unions,
to
say
where
your
pain
points.
Two
days
ago,
we
were
just
in
Chelsea
district
court
and
met
with
the
sheriff.
We
met
with
the
Raj,
who
is
Judge
Brennan,
and
we
also
met
with
judge
Dahle
who's,
the
chief
of
all
of
the
district
courts
in
Massachusetts
to.
F
Only
did
I
go
into
the
first
section
and
sit
and
watch
and
your
beautiful
courthouse
just
my
my
staff
working
and
went
up
to
the
second
floor
walked
into
our
office,
but
I
also
sat
down
and
said
what
what
is
annoying
you
above
my
aspirational
document,
what
is
making
your
job
harder,
because
that
was
not
my
intention
right.
What
do
you
see?
D
F
Listen
and
adapt
appropriately
because
it
was
certainly
not
my
intent
to
propose
something
that
was
going
to
make
small
business
owners
feel
like
they
were
not
want
to
appreciate
it
or
consider
what
I
made
my
decision,
but
I
want
to
make
sure
that
I
open
it
up
to
to.
Let
you
guys
ask
me
some
questions
about
some
of
the
things
I
said.
D
B
F
So
if
you
didn't
hear
in
the
back
the
two
places
you
went
for
Germany
and
Portugal
Germany,
we
looked
at
their
entire
system.
That
overwhelmingly
were
there
just
to
look
at
how
they,
how
they
envisioned
prisons,
there's
open,
enclosed
prisons,
Portugal
we
saw
their
entire
criminal
justice
system,
the
focused
on
they
have
decriminalize
drugs,
and
so
what
I
think
the
misconception
was
when
I
went
was,
will
no
one's
in
jail
for
drugs?
You
are
still
there,
they're
arresting
traffickers
and
distributors.
F
If
you're
operating
with
this
contraband
at
that
sort
of
level,
but
what's
really
wonderful,
is
they
recognize
that
it's
a
health
issue
they're
not
having
that
conversation
any
longer
and
I
was
in
it?
I
was
in
a
room
over
a
year
ago,
just
about
a
year
ago,
where
we
had
a
sheriff
and
the
then
Secretary
of
the
ops
at
the
time
sort
of
battling
back
and
forth
about
whether
it
was
a
health
issue
or
whether
it
was
a
criminal
issue.
F
And
if
we
can't
even
start
on
the
basis
of
understanding
that
it
is
obviously
you
know
that
needs
to
be
a
health
issue
and
there's
a
and
self-disclosure
I
am
the
mother
of
a
15
year
old
daughter
and
the
guardian
of
two
of
my
nieces,
one
of
which
is
the
result
of
the
opioid
crisis.
And
so
my
family
is
section.
F
My
younger
sister
I
know
well
what
it
feels
like
to
have
a
loved
one
that
you
are
looking
in
their
face
and
they
are
no
longer
the
person
that
you
are
looking
at
and
it's
really
hard
to
believe.
But
I've
also
been
the
person
that
knows
that
this
individual
is
stealing
from.
Like
I
mean
they
engage
in
behavior
that
you
can't
there's.
No
one
way
to
react
to
that
and
and
different
family
members
have
different
reactions
to
it.
F
And
there
are
many
that
believe
this
is
intentional,
because
they're
still
looking
at
the
person
as
who
they
were,
but
what
I
can
tell
you
is
they
look
at
it,
no
different
than
cancer?
They
look
at
it,
no
different
than
depression
right.
They
look.
They
look
at
it
as
a
dsm-5
diagnosed
issue
that
we
need.
We
need
doctors
and
mental
health
professionals
assisting
with
and
it
is.
It
is
actually
beautiful
to
see
how
well
they
treat
these
people.
F
There
are
medical
bands
that
go
around
everywhere
that
administer
methadone
and
assist
them
with
you
know
in
the
lifestyle
that
they
lead.
There
are
you
know
any
number
of
bumps
and
bruises
are
what
they're
having
the
assistant
with
getting
counseling.
There's
a
group
called
housing
first,
where,
if
they
come
in
contact
with
the
criminal
justice
system
in
their
homeless,
there's
an
organization
that
gets
them
housing
I
know
we
have
a
lot
of
different
nonprofits
and
organizations.
F
But
you
know
I,
don't
know
what
the
equivalent
in
Chelsea
is
to
massive
and
ugly
a
cast
in
Boston,
or
we
literally,
it
is
use
just
hundreds
of
people
that
are
hurting
that
you
drive
by
every
single
day,
I
hope
an
Oakland
location.
But
it's
heart-wrenching
to
drive
past
that
and
to
know
that
there
are
30
nonprofits
that
are
saying
that
they're
working
on
this
problem
and
not
seeing
any
person
out
there
working
on
this
problem,
so
I
think
what
they
do
differently.
F
A
F
You
know
whoever
his
equivalent
is
to
the
head
of
our
Department
of
Corrections.
You
know,
I,
think
we're
doing
one
of
the
things
that
I
will
admit
that
I,
don't
think
I
think
I,
understood
it,
but
really
didn't.
And
of
course
the
chief
knows
this
as
the
chief
of
police.
But
a
lot
of
people
don't
understand.
Sheriff's
are
elected
right,
so
sheriff
Thompkins
is
elected
for
six
years.
F
F
District
court
here
in
Chelsea
the
municipal
courts,
we
have
eight
units
of
importance
under
the
Boston
Municipal
Court
you
go
to
South,
Bay
or
Nashua
Street
to
serve
usually
up
to
two
or
two-and-a-half
years,
but
overwhelmingly
it's
smaller.
You
know
three
months,
six
months,
eight
months,
whatever
everyone
else
is
the
Department
of
Corrections,
which
is
an
appointed
position
from
the
governor
and
they
run
MCI
Concord
and
you
know,
mca
mca
incident,
and
so
what
we
have
to
look
at
is
the
conversation
as
usually
was
sheriff
Tompkins
about
for
us,
the
great
things
he's
doing
there.
F
He
has
the
peace
unit.
He's
done
a
lot
of
really.
He
has
programs
where
people
can
go
in
for
addiction
and
get
treatment
for
28
days
and
leave
he's
doing
wonderful
things.
We
need
to
make
sure
we're
talking
to
our
governor
about
what
is
the
Department
of
Corrections
doing
right
and
maybe
because
those
overwhelmingly,
of
course,
guys
know
more
serious
crimes.
Those
are
the
ones
where
I've
ignited
that
up
from
municipal
or
district
court
up
to
Superior
Court,
and
these
are
people
that
need
more
time
but
overwhelmingly
are
presenting.
F
With
you
know,
mental
health
issues,
which
I
want
to
say
out
loud
as
well,
it's
trauma
rightly
shook
childhoods
parents
and
abandonment
issues
that
you
couldn't
even
comprehend
right.
So
I,
look
at
that
and
and
recognize.
There
are
significant
differences
between
Germany
and
here
overwhelmingly
gun
guns
and
violence.
But
I
will
say
chief
that
I
still
think
there
are
some
things
we
could
take
away
from
them
and
with
Portugal
you're
right
they're,
not
dealing
with
the
volume
that
we
are.
G
G
F
D
F
F
F
D
F
Ever
I'm,
okay,
with
that
conversation,
if
it's
pre-arraignment
diversion
which
is
different
right,
that's
still
me
holding
them
away
from
the
court
system,
because
probation
is
responsible
for
diversion
and
under
the
new
crime
bill.
They
should
actually
be
reviewing
that
intake
to
see
whether
we
can
divert
people
over,
but
if
I'm
going
to
send
them
to
a
program
we
have
to
as
well
we're
just
not
doing
a
good
job
talking
to
people
or
explaining
to
them
what
their
government
does,
and
so
I
can
tell
you
whether
you
think
that's
my
role
or
not.
F
It's
not
helping
homelessness,
but
if
I
know
of
all
of
the
nonprofit's
or
the
Department
of
Mental
Health
programs
that
are
available
and
there's
someone
who
I'm
not
a
psychiatrist
or
a
psychologist,
but
everyone
in
this
room
would
acknowledge.
There
is
some
issue,
cognitively
or
otherwise,
with
this
individual.
Why
wouldn't
I
instruct
my
either
either
a
DA's
or
Victim
Witness
advocate
or
whoever's
in
that
courthouse
to
at
least
try
to
give
them
some
information
right?
And
so
what
I
can't
do,
sir,
is
be
the
person
that
says
it's
not
my
job,
because
this
has
happened.
F
H
F
D
F
F
There
are
things
that
happened.
This
is
not
and
let's,
let's
not
even
start
the
discussion
about
children,
Raymond
chief
Pisces
Miwako
and
hand
a
case
of
beer
to
a
12
year
old.
You
know
he
hopefully
thinks
I'm
36,
but
he
knows
I'm
older
than
21
and
that
12
year
old
is
a
total,
and
this
is
an
obvious
case
of
beer.
But
if
it's
me
shaking
your
hand
and.
A
F
F
You
know
our
law
enforcement,
including
me
in
my
80s
about
how
are
we
going
to
keep
the
community
safe
because
we
had
a
situation
in
Revere
where
somebody
who
was
impaired
significantly
not
just
with
alcohol,
but
we
believe
also
possibly
marijuana
or
opioids,
killed
two
children
and
we
are,
you,
know
we're
struggling
with
that.
So
do
you
mind
just
explaining
if
something,
if
you
pulled
me
over
and
not
like
a
Cheech
and
Chong.
E
F
That's
the
marijuana
piece
and
then
the
other
part.
Thank
you.
The
other
part
is
with
respect
to
with
respect
to
the
casinos
and,
let's
not
even
talk
a
little
traffic
right,
but
we're
also
talking
about
all
of
the
other
elements
of
you
know
non-stop
drinking
like
no
windows,
so
you
don't
even
know
four
o'clock
right
so
we're
you
know
and
I
know.
Mayor
Walsh
is
sort
of
pushing
back
a
little
bit
on
that,
but
we're
going
to
have
an
uptick
in
that
and
how
are
we
going
to
manage?
F
You
know
you
are
impacted,
even
though
this
casinos
in
Everett,
right
and
they're
claiming
is
that
it's
every
single
sort
of
surrounding
community
is
dealing
with
those
collateral
consequences.
I
think
what
we
need
to
do
is
start
meeting
and
figuring
out.
If,
if
it's
going
to
be
an
uptick,
do
I
need
to
make
sure
that
we
have
not
only
more
staff
in
Chelsea
but,
more
importantly,
if
we're
doing
more
educational
work
above
these
are
the
crimes
that
we're
going
to
be
charging
people
with
and
then
warning
people
of
what.
What
is
to
come.
F
Back
to
your
point,
sir
I
think
my
job
is
really
far
more
outward
facing
now
than
it
has
been
in
the
past,
where
I
have
to
educate
people
about
what
is
coming
or
what
they
could
potentially
be
charged
with
as
a
result
of
certain
behaviors,
and
we
can
do
that
with
adults.
But
I
also
think
it's
really
important
that
we
start
going
into
schools
and
talk.
F
F
What
I
can
do
is
we're
having
on
June
19th.
One
of
the
things
I
ran
on
sir,
was
there's
no
State
of
the
Union
for
the
DEA
and
probably
because
no
one
would
want
to
really
listen,
but
because
it's
different
now
I've
said
quarterly
I'm
going
to
go
out
into
the
community
and
talk
about
what
it
is
that
the
office
does.
But
specifically
when
I
go
into
different
communities,
it's
not
just
general.
F
A
F
C
F
F
A
F
Of
the
people
that
are
incarcerated,
we
have
to
look
at
those
disparities,
but
what
I
will
say
is
you
hit
the
nail
on
the
head
prisons?
Don't
get
to
like
transform
off
an
arm
when
they
start
having
less
prisoners
in
them?
They
still
have
to
run
that
entire
prison,
even
with
the
empty
beds
that
they
have
in
there.
So
we
are
looking.
You
know.
F
I
know
that
there
are
some
sheriffs
that,
for
example,
we'll
get
ice
detainees
and
they
get
paid
by
the
federal
government
heard
the
day
to
hold
somebody
there,
but
we
are
not
at
full
capacity
and
we
have
to
start
thinking
about
that
again
if
it's
a
Sheriff
House
of
Corrections
or
Nashua
Street
that
share
of
Thompkins.
But
if
we're
talking
about
surely
fair
enough,
you
know
the
shirley
max.
We
would
have
to
talk
to
the
governor
and
the
the
chief
of
a
ops,
the
Executive
Office
of
Public
Safety.
To
talk
about.
F
Are
we
going
to
start
trying
to
shut
down
one
or
two
of
the
facilities?
The
other
thing
you
should
know
is:
there's
only
one
facility
where
women
can
go
right,
so
it's
really
tough.
It's
great
that
the
number
women
prisoners
is
going
in
Massachusetts
at
least
they're,
not
as
many
but
sadly,
women
nationwide
are
the
height
like
the
fastest
growing
group
of
individuals
that
are
being
incarcerated
and
then,
with
all
the
other
impacts
of
that
overwhelmingly
they're,
the
primary
caretaker
or
the
custodial
parent
of
children.
F
So
we're
looking
at
a
lot
of
different
things
there,
but
it's
a
big
problem
and
then
we
have
great-
and
we
do
have
great
corrections,
officers
that
do
an
incredibly
hard
job,
just
like
our
police
officers.
But
when
we
look
at
the
ratio
of
five
prisoners
to
one
corrections,
officer,
I
say
back
to
people.
F
What's
the
ratio
of
teachers
to
students
in
your
school
right,
one
to
like
28,
right
or
25
I
want
that
flipped
right
I,
don't
like
all
the
money
going
in
the
back
end
when
people
are
already
quote-unquote
failed
I
want
us
to
start
thinking
about.
How
are
we
going
to
be
fiscally
responsible
and
putting
money
into
hope
and
dreams
and
and
possibilities
instead
of
probation
and
incarceration
and
recidivism.