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From YouTube: ROCA Breakfast 2023
Description
City of Chelsea
A
B
Good
morning,
people
of
Chelsea
we
are
at
the
Intercontinental
Hotel
in
Boston
for
a
very
special
event,
we're
here
on
behalf
of
Chelsea
cable,
Community,
cable,
television,
executive,
director,
Paula,
Bradley,
Bachelor,
the
man
behind
the
camera,
with
the
expertise,
Ricky
Velez,
and
we
have
the
distinguished
CEO
and
founder
of
Roca
Molly
Baldwin
Molly,
it's
been
a
great
year.
We
know
the
Prince,
William
and
Princess
Kate
were
here
this
year
to
Showcase
what
an
outstanding
organization
that
you
oversee
tell
us
about
Roker
and
tell
us
how
exciting
it
was
to
welcome
our
Royal
guests.
C
First
of
all,
good
morning
to
everyone
and
we're
so
honored
to
have
been
working
with
young
people
and
partners
for
35
years
and
no
matter
where
we
go
no
matter
what
we
do,
our
home
is
in
Chelsea.
So
that
is
awesome.
So
great
I
mean
it's
been
extraordinary
year
with
young
people,
very
courageous
staff.
The
honor
of
having
the
prince
and
princess
come
with
just
remarkable,
and
we
look
forward
to
another
35
years
and
we
need
your
help.
B
C
No
because
I'm,
like
oh
you
know
those
of
you
who
know
me
the
best
and
the
longest
I'm,
really
a
a
youth
Outreach
worker
at
heart
and
so
I
never
could
have
imagined
it.
We've
had
an
extraordinary
team,
we're
so
honored
to
work
with
the
young
people
and
all
our
supporters
are
just
invaluable.
We
cannot
do
this
without
you.
B
C
Have
a
quick
program,
as
always:
the
MC
is
Eric
Rodriguez
who's,
a
founding
broker,
youth
member
and
grew
up
in
Chelsea,
and
is
now
a
minister
we're
giving
out
several
Awards
the
commissioner
of
the
police
department
in
Baltimore,
where
we've
been
you're
going
to
meet
several
wonderful
young
people,
and
we
get
to
say
thank
you
to
everyone.
B
Thank
you
so
much
for
what
you've
done
for
our
city.
Thank
you
we'll
be
back
with
more
from
The
Breakfast.
Okay.
We
have
two
very
distinguished
guests
here
we
have
the
president
of
the
Chelsea
city,
council,
Leo
Robinson,
and
the
district,
a
counselor
Calvin
T
brown.
Gentlemen.
Great
to
see
you,
let's
talk
about
Roca,
their
contributions
to
the
community
and
what
a
great
breakfast
this
is.
D
Yes,
actually
it's
good
to
be
here.
Actually,
the
city
of
Chelsea
supports
Roca.
We
come
out
to
the
event:
every
a.m,
they're
doing
some
very
good
work
in
our
city
and
we're
happy
that
they're
here
doing
the.
D
B
E
Yes,
they
have
it's
honor
to
be
here
this
morning
on
their
35th
Anniversary
I'm
rokadu,
an
outstanding
job
with
our
youth
in
the
city
of
Chelsea,
at
Rick,
use
at
risk
use
and
I'm
just
honored
to
be
a
part
of
it.
The
Watson
grow
over
to
35
years
and
wisdom
well
success.
Okay,.
B
F
It's
certainly
an
honor
to
be
able
to
to
participate
today.
I
was
happy
to
be
invited
and
it's
amazing
to
watch
an
organization
grow
in
this
way.
The
impact
that
they've
had
in
not
only
the
four
corners
of
Chelsea,
certainly-
and
you
know
much
more
beyond
that-
but
we're
up
here
to
celebrate
and
congratulate
Roca
in
this
anniversary
and.
F
Things
you
know
we're
moving
along,
we've
moved
through
the
transition.
Our
office
is
going
through
a
pretty
significant
change,
it'll
be
a
new
Secretary
of
Housing
named
soon
and
and
then
so
yeah.
So
the
work
continues.
B
G
It's
a
class
we
started
about
a
year
ago.
It's
for
police
officers
and
correction
offices
just
to
help
them
with
emotional
regulation
on
the
job
and
off
the
job,
and
so
far
it's
worked
out.
Well,
we've
got
a
lot
of
good
feedback.
We
do
a
lot
of
data,
analysis
and
evaluations
and
so
far
the
officers
like
it.
So
it's
working
out
pretty
good.
G
G
Between
the
history
of
Chelsea,
it
was
just
easy,
so
I
caught
the
ball
and
Lamar
was
in
front
of
me
and
I
just
followed
him.
He
knocked
down
like
three
or
four
people
and
I
just
followed
him
into
the
end
zone,
but
unfortunately
we
lost
the
game
right.
It
was
at
Everett,
Memorial
Stadium
that
was
probably
77
I,
think
yeah
yeah
it
was.
It
was
fun.
The.
B
78
we
beat
Medford,
we
handed
Medford.
No,
we
tied
Medford
Medford
went
on
to
win
the
Super
Bowl
with
we
were
six
three
and
one
that
year.
But
imagine
we
tied
remember
all
that
the
division,
one
Super
Bowl
champions
yeah.
G
B
G
B
B
H
August
2.-
and
here
we
are
at
Roca,
yes
annual
breakfast
we're
so
happy
that
Chelsea
cable
could
be
here.
You
guys
never
miss
anything.
This
is
our
annual
breakfast,
the
first
time
we
are
back
in
person
since
covid
Roca
is
celebrating
35
years
and
now
we're
we
have
sites
in
five
five
sites
in
Massachusetts,
we're
in
Baltimore
Maryland
and
we're
also
in
Connecticut
and
so
and
it
all
started
in
Chelsea,
and
we
want
to
thank
the
city
of
Chelsea
for
being
our
hometown.
B
I
Awesome
yeah,
you
know
my
very
first
day
in
Chelsea,
first
person,
I
met
was
some
pointing
because
she's
right
there
was
Molly
and
I
had
a
great
relationship.
Ever
since
and
Molly
care,
she's
committed,
she's
made
a
difference,
she's
thoughtful
and,
like
I,
most
importantly
she's
thoughtful,
and
she
cares.
So
it's
been
great,
getting
to
know
her
and
be
a
friend
of
hers
for
many
years.
J
It's
super
exciting
I've
met
many
wonderful
people.
This
is
exciting
for
Roca
they've
done
amazing
things
over
the
years
and
I
just
can't
wait.
What's
next
for
them,
they
have
beautiful,
beautiful
things
happening
as.
B
J
Does
she
does
she
does
an
amazing
work?
I
truly,
don't
know
how
she
does
it
and
to
have
opened
so
many
other
rokas
she's
doing
this
in
other
cities
other
than
Chelsea,
but
Chelsea
was
a
Pioneer
City
and
that
to
me,
is
beautiful.
J
K
B
K
And
Medford
is
doing
well
we're
get
we're
moving
forward
and
making
things
happen
and
the
governor
is
doing
a
terrific
job,
she's
she's,
making
sure
that
all
of
the
programs
that
she
said
during
her
campaign
are
on
the
Forefront
and
she's
going
to
make
the
legislature
work
with
her
and
get
things
done.
Okay,
thank
you.
Mr
donate.
B
L
They
do
they
do
great
work
everywhere.
We
have,
we
have.
We
have
them
in
Revere
as
well.
Yes,
we
work
really
well
with
Kathy
reinstein,
who
sets
them
up
and
we
have.
We
have
a
good
crew,
we
get
it,
we
get,
we
get
them
doing
all
sorts
of
different
tasks
and
great
people,
great
services.
B
L
B
It's
great
to
see
you
here
representing
the
city
of
Revere.
Thank
you
Kerry.
Thank
you
very
much.
Thank
you
very
much,
mayor
Patrick,
we'll
be
back
with
more
from
The
Breakfast
Mr
Cabeza,
the
sheriff
of
Essex
County
great,
to
see
you
here
tell
us
about
Roker
and
its
its
impact
on
the
on
the
judicial
system,
the
criminal
justice
system
in
Massachusetts.
It's
phenomenal,
isn't.
M
It
Wilco
is
it's
phenomenal.
You
just
mentioned
it.
It's
tremendous
and
especially
Us
in
the
in
the
corrections
world.
When
you
know,
obviously,
individuals
come
to
jail,
but
we
want
them
to
leave
in
better
shape
than
when
they
arrived,
and
the
key
is
re-entry
services
and
Roker
provides
that
with
us.
They
come
into
the
jail.
They
meet
the
inmates
during
their
incarcerated
period,
Then
they
work
with
the
inmates
to
prepare
them
with
us.
So
when
they
leave
us,
they
don't
come
back
to
see
us
at
the
jail
and
then
they
take
the
ball
even
further.
M
So
when
they,
when
the
individuals
are
back
into
the
community,
they
help
them,
they
train
them.
They
work
with
them.
They
try
to
make
sure
they
got
a
roof
over
their
head
and
they
educate
them.
They
take
everything
we
do
in
the
jail
until
the
next
step
to
keep
it
going.
This
success
rate
is
tremendous.
Just
look
around
here.
Look
at
the
people
that
support
broker
it's
a
great
help
to
the
whole
criminal
justice
system
and
society
as
a
whole.
Now.
B
M
M
Yeah,
absolutely
you
know:
I've
been
in
the
criminal
justice
system
almost
40
years.
It's
evolved
quite
a
bit.
We
all
know
that
we
watch
what's
happened
over
the
last
decade,
so
even
shorter,
but
it's
organizations
like
this,
you
know
and
I
think
we
all
really
agree.
We
need
to
keep
people
out
of
jail
that
belong
out
of
jail.
We
need
to
keep
people
in
jail
that
belong
in
jail
and
there
is
a
healthy
balance
and
we
have
to
maintain
that
balance
in
between
the
criminal
justice
system
like
Corrections.
M
B
N
Great
to
see
you
too,
it's
such
a
great
event
today
and
I'm
excited
to
be
here.
Roca
is
a
wonderful
organization,
it's
at
the
heart
of
Chelsea
and
now
it's
expanding
and
it's
growing
and
it's
a
beautiful
morning
to
be
surrounded
by
so
many
leaders.
So
many
supporters
who
believe
in
this
cause-
and
hopefully
we
keep
growing
and
expanding.
Let's.
N
So
these
are
the
kids
that
are
giving
a
lot
to
supporting
our
young
mothers
and,
as
you
may
have
heard,
from
Mr
Paul
Donato,
who
spoke
a
few
moments
ago.
We
were
able
to
find
a
lot
of
money
for
them
and
that's
great
so
hopefully
they'll
be
starting
a
pilot
program
from
our
young
mothers
and
we
continue
to
Advocate
and
thanks
to
Paul
Donato's
leadership.
Okay,.
N
I
feel
incredibly
blessed.
It's
a
new
new
crew
of
leaders
I.
Actually
we
just
finished
budget
season,
so
the
house
budget,
just
passed
and
I,
was
able
to
secure
funding
for
both
Everett
and
Chelsea.
I
got
all
of
my
priorities
in
terms
of
rental
assistance,
environmental
justice,
food
insecurity
and
and
obviously
we
we
were
able
to
get
opportunities
for
Rapid
employment.
We
know
that
our
residents
need
employment
opportunities,
but
they
also
need
to
address
food
insecurity
and
rental
assistance,
so
I'm,
so
so
proud
of
that
as
a
freshman.
It's
a
huge
accomplishment.
Okay,.
B
O
Thank
you.
Well,
they
do
an
important
Mission
and
you
know
we're
here
to
support
them
and-
and
you
know
it's
really
important-
that
somebody
does
this
job.
So
you
know
we're
here
to
support
Roca
and.
B
It
should
be
an
exciting
breakfast.
You
got
it
okay,
good
nice,
to
see
you
councilor
Taylor!
Thank
you!
Yeah.
We
have
a
very
powerful
leader
representing
Revere.
She
is
state
representative,
Jessica,
janino
she's
done
a
great
job
for
Revere,
sagas
and
Chelsea.
What's
it
like
to
be
here
today,
representative
janino
Carrie.
P
How
lucky
am
I
I'm,
surrounded
by
some
of
my
favorite
people,
like
you
and
our
leaders
in
Revere
and
Chelsea
and
our
surrounding
communities?
You
know
it's
always
great
to
be
in
a
room
full
of
friends
and
full
of
people
that
care
so
deeply
for
our
community,
we're
so
lucky
to
have
programs
like
Roca
working
with
our
youth
and
really
doing
so
many
great
things
for
Revere
and
Chelsea,
and
the
North
Shore.
P
Beacon
Hill
is
beautiful.
It's
the
best
time
of
year,
the
weather's
warming
up.
So
it's
not
as
cold
just
got
out
of
the
house
budget.
It's
in
Santa
Tans
now
and
it's
been
a
very
busy
few
weeks.
P
No
thank
you
all
have
fun
be
safe
and
thank
you
Roca
for
everything
that
you
do
we're
so
grateful
to
have
you,
okay,
how.
B
Q
Well,
I've
been
in
Chelsea
for
a
long
time
and
I've
known
Molly,
Baldwin
and
Roca,
almost
in
the
first
three
or
four
five
years
that
they
were
working
here
and
began
working
in
Chelsea.
So
it's
a
pleasure
to
be
here
the
really
achieved
a
extraordinary
program
and
with
consistency
and
impactfulness,
and
so
that
focus
on
being
impactful
I
think
is
their
sort
of
watchword.
So
it's
a
pleasure
to
be
here:
I'm
really
pleased
to
celebrate
with
them
their
successes.
R
A
R
R
A
A
R
R
R
A
R
R
R
A
A
R
R
So
let
me
introduce
myself
from
Massachusetts.
R
And
what
I
want
to
do
is
take
you
through,
because
the
person
who's
going
to
be
doing
the
kills
speech
today
is
a
master
Storyteller
than
inspired
me
and
understanding
the
power
of
stories
and
I
want
to
share
my
story
with
today.
Really
again,
I
want
to
share
a
really
three
landmarks
in
my
personal
story,
and
it
started
with
getting
involved
in
World
game
and
really
I
was
on
the
street
of
all
the
Molly
and
Company
kind
of
really
reached
out
to
me.
R
Relentless
some
are
y'all
know
what
I
mean
people
like
I'm
talking
about
a
blacklist
AKA
annoying
it
was.
It
was
so
powerful.
One
day,
A
friend
of
mine
got
shot
time
for
douche
and
I
was
plenty
of
Revenge
I.
R
Without
a
good
idea
and
I
was
so
angry,
I
was
like
I,
don't
care
what
you
mean.
This
is,
and
she
said
no
stuff
and
she
sent
me
away.
She
lives
the
in
a
car
and
not
cool
your
jealous
comedy
right,
the
thinking
of
it,
the
stopping
them
right.
This
is
before
a
romance
would
come
over.
There
was
today
this
is
kind
of
enchantism
and
she
says,
make
it
go
away
and
you
just
I
came
back
and
and
off
the
ledge.
It's
like
the
first
landmark
I
was
an
Angry
Kid
with
Paramount.
A
R
Now
I'm
mad
I'm,
like
okay,
this
kid's
gonna
get
it,
and
so
many
of
my
boss.
R
I
can't
be
how
you
Solutions
and
somehow
that
situation
turned
into
a
sit
down
with
this
young
man
and
I.
Forgive
you
I'm
trying
to
tell
you
that
the
only
way
I
got
to
replace
where
I
was
able
to
sit
with
somebody
and
hurt
me
and
forgave
them
was
a
consistent,
Relentless
relationship.
Building
that
affected
the
way.
I.
Think
that's
what
we're
doing
here
today.
That's
what
broker
is
about
so
I
said
there
was
three-day,
alarms
right.
R
And
for
some
reason,
I
cannot
remember
what
anybody
else
said
to
me,
except
for
in
my
in
her
office
did
I
just
remember,
I'm
coaching
before
that
Darkness
and
realizing
that
I
did
not
have
to
take
destructive
ways
or
find
destructive
ways
to
cope
with
my
grief,
grief
and
anger
that
change
that
effect.
That
relationship
those
conversations
acting
into
who
I
am
today
to
them.
Pastor
but
I'm,
trying
to
tell
you
that
the
message
I
carried
is
very
broad
century.
R
R
R
U
Going
there,
four
years
in
my
time
in
Africa,
probably
from
20
2020
to
2021
I
ain't
got
a
lot
now.
Where
hang
on
person
like
four
months
later
and
I
came
home,
I
was
shot
13
times
when.
V
W
On
the
door,
I
actually
got
incarcerated,
foreign
person
and
I
want
to
say
you're
less
than
six
hours.
I
was
home,
Brooklyn
was
there
for
me
and
he
knocked
on
the
door
come
and
checked,
make
sure
I
was
okay,
see
how
court
leads
was
doing.
When
was
my
court
date?
How
could
he
arrange
different
things?
For
me?
That's.
U
W
He
came
to
his
body
like
walking
straight
out
the
front
door
just
to
somebody
that
I
don't
know
it
was
hard.
It
was
hard
to
just
say
I'm
going
to
give
you
all
my
all
I
don't
know
from
having
to
eat
so
once
I
got
a
little
bit
to
know
y'all
and
know
what
the
worth
was
behind
broker
I
started.
Sticking
around
I
started
to
play.
My
partner
working
out
became
the
mainland
today.
U
W
The
other
things
I
did
in
the
past
without
me,
with
CBT
CBT
played
a
big
part
of
my
life.
Knowing
that
I
can
do
this
and
the
consequence
behind
this
might
lead
to
back
in
jail
with
him.
It
was
a
time
when
I
was
arguing
and
I
knew
that
my
life
was
changing.
I
argued
about
being
at
work,
I
actually
broke
a
window
and
I
was
crying
I
cried
I,
yelled,
I,
scream
I
did
the
most
to
see
if
I
can
still
be
a
part
of
something
that
I
knew
was
volatile.
V
W
Push
I
want
to
see
Ruger
keep
knocking
I
want
to
see,
broker,
have
people
front
doors
more
than
what
they
used
to
be
I
want
local
to
help
the
young
man
that
I
see
on
the
corn
daily.
It's
not
really
nothing.
I
can
sit
here
and
say
that
I
want
more
for
real,
because
they
have
fulfilled
a
lot
of
dreams
that
overcame
a
lot
of
steps
for
people
that
never
thought
there'd
be
anything
in
life.
R
You
know
many
people
support
Loretta,
but
really
the
people
who
are
the
trenches
and
the
people
who
who
are
influencers
man,
we're
just
so
thankful
to
have
them
as
a
part
of
the
team,
and
we
have
today
with
us
joining
us
going
to
share
with
us
from
the
great
state
of
Massachusetts
the
Commonwealth,
the
Attorney
General
Andrea
Andrea
Campbell
foreign.
R
A
S
S
For
the
invitation
to
speak
to
you
all
this
morning
and
to
welcome
you,
I
also
want
to,
of
course,
acknowledge
the
staff,
the
team,
the
board
members,
everyone
who
has
assisted
in
creating
this
event.
It's
never
easy
to
pull
this
many
people
into
a
room
and.
C
S
A
S
S
Thank
you
over
the
years
that
I've
come
to
know,
Roca
quite
well
and
actually
partnered
with
them
in
the
work,
including
in
my
former
role
of
the
city
councilor
in
Boston,
and
visited
many
of
their
sites
met
with
their
team
members
and
board
members
and
clients,
and
what
I
love
about
this
organization
is.
They
have
always
remained
true
to
their
mission
to
disrupt
cycles
of
violence.
Poverty
incarceration
racism,
particularly
amongst
young
adults,
the
16
to
24
range,
who
have
experienced
trauma.
It
may
have
been
primary
victims
of
violence
and
or
drivers
of
violence.
S
They
do
like
what
I
think
is
the
tough
stuff.
The
hard
work,
often
filling
in
the
gaps
to
work
with
the
population
in
an
age
group
where
all
maintenance,
municipalities
or
the
state
or
other
community-based
organizations
just
have
not
been
able
to
tap
into
just
have
not
been
able
to
wrap
their
hands
around
Rosa
gets
in
and
does
the
work
they
understand.
S
S
S
S
That
afford
our
young
people
a
second,
a
third
or
maybe
even
a
fourth
opportunity-
to
reach
their
god-given
attention
for
always
seeing
the
humanity
in
them
that
someone
and
Eric
talk
about
my
story
a
little
bit
who
has
lost
and
lost
significant
family
members
to
the
prison
and
Castle
system
and
I
still
have
relatives
that
are
behind
the
wall.
This.
X
S
My
father
was
incarcerated.
He
was
at
Walpole
at
the
time
my
father
was
incarcerated
for
the
first
eight
years
of
my
life.
When
he
got
out
of
prison
he
did
the
best
he
could.
He
always
stressed
the
importance
of
education,
education,
education,
but
he
would
not
have
been
able
to
do
that
well
with
work
with
Organization
for
supporting
individuals
that
were
frequency
incarcerated,
like
welcome
and
but.
S
We
often
talk
about
systems,
reform
and
I
think
sometimes
that
language
is
thrown
around.
What
does
that
mean?
There
are
many
who
would
say
that
the
reason
people
are
behind
the
wall
is
simply
because
of
personal
choice
and
responsibility.
Yes,
there
is
some
personal
choice
that
is
wrapped
in
it,
but
that
doesn't
explain
at
all.
S
To
create
these
circumstances,
to
create
the
conditions
in
which
we
find
ourselves,
so
we
in
government
and
positions
of
power
have
a
unique
responsibilities
to
focus
on
the
systemic
stuff
to
really
roll
back
those
policies
that
are
creating
these
conditions,
in
which
young
people
find
themselves
frankly
living
in
poverty
and
sometimes
with
no
hope,
because
the
circumstances
and
conditions
in
which
they
find
themselves
frankly
is
hopeless.
So.
A
S
Exist,
of
course,
in
every
system,
but
most
important
is
very
good
existence
and
our
prison
system
and
our
economic
system.
The
significant.
E
X
No
problem
there,
but
thank
you
for
the
great
comments,
Ag
and
I'm
very
happy
to
be
with
you
this
morning.
My
name
is
mihal
Chamberlain
I'm,
the
president
of
Massachusetts
for
Bank
of
America
on
behalf
of
Bank
of
America.
It
was
a
deep
and
long-standing
partnership
with
Roca
I
want
to
congratulate
you
on
35
years
of
outstanding
work
that
uses
a
trauma
conform
approach
and
the
current.
X
Our
employees
care
too,
like
Jim
Mountaineer,
former
public
policy
executive
for
Bank
of
America,
who
passed
away
a
few
years
ago.
Jim
was
a
tireless
Advocate
inside
our
company
and
in
the
broader
Community
for
efforts
like
that
of
Brokers
that
break
the
cyclic
prison,
recidivism
and
intergenerational
poverty.
It's
because
of
Jim's
lifelong
commitment
to
run
up
the
broken
Navy.
Their
National
reward.
Y
Thank
you
to
talk
about,
but
it's
hard
to
think
and
we've
been
blessed
to
have
a
visitor
that
has
been
able
to
not
only
show
what
it
looks
like,
but
I
actually
walk
the
walk
with
a
group
of
organization
or
Community
Partners
that
are
really
willing
to
do
the
work.
This
is
very
difficult
for
Baltimore,
but
the
city
is
fortunate
to
have
attracted
this
national
leader
and
Progressive
law
enforcement
and
policing
reform
to
lead
our
Police
Department
after
leaving
two
large
departments
to
be
private
facilities.
Commissioner
Michael
Harrison
was
sworn
in.
Y
The
Baltimore
Police
Commissioner
in
March
of
2019..
The
commissioner
has
done
an
outstanding
job.
He
has
been
after
our
grandfather
at
work.
Here's
the
biggest
one.
How.
Y
Y
Z
Y
The
ultimately
to
really
turn
around
and
culture
about,
is
to
change
the
life
conditions
of
why
people
even
make
bad
choices
in
the
first
place.
Yes,
it
happened
in
traditional
places,
but
we
have
to
do
the
heavy
weapon
in
the
hard
work
of
river
changing
money,
especially
this
young
demographic
of
people,
16
to
24.,
and
so
advocacy
Advocates
that
for
my
first
day
so
much
so
that
when
I
built,
my
100-day
fine
plan
for
the
department
and
I
did
a
five-year
primer
in
the
department
of
transformation
plan.
Y
I
actually
built
the
world
up
into
the
comprehension
strategy,
and
so
I
now
I
know
that
I
believe
in
an
apology,
because
I
did
that
for
our
information,
but
I
forced
the
city
into
using
this.
Instead
of
the
total
Reliance
of
enforcement
law
that
we
actually
have
to
change
people's
life
conditions
and
change,
how
they
make
our
behavioral
decisions
and
why
they
delivered
about
the
first
place.
Y
If
we
can
do
that,
we
not
only
change
the
crime
problem
at
the
cultural
Hospital,
the
person
the
family
was
including,
and
so
many
more
ways
so
I
am
proud
to
receive
this.
This
honor.
Thank
you
for
thinking
of
Reinventing,
the
Alabama
Department
of
Europe,
and
now
that
we
are
doing
the
work
the
Baltimore
Police
Department
has
been
appointed.
Y
They're,
also
giving
testimony
of
their
testimony
on
how
they're
going
home
and
upon
it
in
their
personal
lives
and
at
home.
And
so
it
is
not
only
changing
the
culture
of
knowledge
and
the
Baltimore
Community.
But
it's
changing
your
work
environment
in
the
Baltimore
Police
Department.
It's
changing
the
way
officers
feel
about
the
work
they
do
and
how
they
are
better
prepared
and
how
they
are
better
persons
and
people
and
family
members
at
home
and.
Z
So
with
that,
commissioner,.
A
A
R
Oh
really
flipper
to
me
is
somebody
who's
flipped,
his
trajectory
and
man.
If
you
met
Vijay
well,
you
use
an
Angry
Young
Man,
and
then
he
just
became
this
warm
person
who
has
smiled
the
kind
of
person
that,
when
he
smiles
your
smile,
you
don't
even
realize
him
and
he's
just
that
kind
of
warm
person
and
I.
R
Remember
one
time
that
we
won
a
basketball
court
and
he
loved
to
play
basketball
and
we
were
playing
after
me,
the
JCC
in
in
Revere
and
a
fight
almost
broke
up
and,
to
my
surprise,
the
person
in
the
little
saying
peace
was
reaching
so
man
to
see
the
transition.
It
makes
me
proud
to
have
a
broken
track
dying
tragically
and
construction.
I
want
you
to
Universal.
He
died
tragically
in
a
construction
accident.
R
Z
AA
How
you
guys
are
doing
this
morning
not
only
use
this
and
bear
with
me.
You
just
got
gonna
be
transparently
everything
so
I
want
to
say,
like
I
haven't
been
upbringing
and
it's
funny
because
in
Springfield
Mass
it's
like
you
know
the
bad
neighborhood
right
next
to
the
good
neighborhoods.
So
it's
like
all
together.
You
know,
but
I
started
out.
You
know
working
I
had
a
good
job.
I
was
actually
someone
who's
already
really
motivated
me,
Temptations
everything
around
me
but
I
always
kept.
AA
AA
If
you
guys
don't
know
what
each
chord
is,
it's
kind
of
running
late
broker,
it's
actually
the
first
thing,
that's
common,
where
it's
like
your
first
offense,
your
first
value
into
getting
young
men
and
young
woman
a
chance,
a
chance
to
change
their
life
in
a
matter
of
one
year.
It's
not
regular
permission.
It's
actually
really
hard.
AA
Everybody
could
attest
to
you,
Anthony
balloon,
a
probation
officer
back
then
I
used
to
come,
and
course
shaking
like
even
just
for
little
things
you
get
in
trouble.
You
know
if
you
get
like
what
you
call
that
long,
you
used
to
have
to
go
on
Saturday
and
you
just
have
to
go.
Do
community
service
I
never
like
in
research
that
I
wanted
to
imagine
waking
up
at
eight
o'clock
you're
outside
it's
raining
and
you
gotta
get
the
trash
in
the
highway.
You
don't
want
to
do
that,
but
I
always
had
a
fear
of
you
know.
AA
AA
It's
she's,
the
father
and
she
actually
was
the
one
that
was
driving
me
to
work
when
I
first
joined
each
to
try
to
help
me.
But
really
my
early
struggling
was
just
my
emotions.
You
know
like
that
was
the
biggest
part
I
didn't
like
the
situation.
I
was
in
I
didn't,
like
you
know,
go
into
court.
Every
Thursday
I
didn't
like
having
a
cause
drug
test,
I'd
just
be
the
one
so
he's
bigger
and
just
argue
with
everybody,
and
you
know
this
comes
a
point
in
life.
AA
If
you
just
have
to
accept
things
and
using
CBT
as
well,
which
I'm
part
of
this,
you
can
see
I'm
a
horrible
remembering
all
of
them
I
only
remember
the
ones
that
like
benefited
me,
the
most,
which
would
be
like
stay
present
and
I'm
a
person
that
had
you
know
today,
dream
I,
look
awesome
to
space,
so
they
actually
really
helped
me
to
keep
me
working.
Keeping
me
in
the
moment.
You
know:
stay
present
flex
your
thinking
and
work
on
your
values,
I
value,
my
son,
I
value,
my
freedom.
AA
Just
because
it's
just
like
you
know,
I
really
really
wanted
to
show
everybody
that
you
know.
I've
done
this
before
I've
had
a
job
and
kept
the
job,
but
that
was
like
when
I
really
waking
up
again
and
you
know,
I
went
down
very
a
lot
of
paths,
a
lot
of
bad
guys
along
each.
You
know
where
it's
like
substance
abuse
and
just
it's
crazy,
just
sitting
here
right
now,
just
looking
at
all
these
guys,
I
think
I'm
not
even
finished
each
program.
AA
I
didn't
think
I
would
actually
get
my
freedom
back
and
that's
like
really
important
to
me
and
I'm
really
happy
to
share
the
story
with
you,
but
I
just
want
to
thank
just
want
to
thank
everybody.
I
just
want
to
thank
Martha
what
a
Big
Mac
my
name,
Damien
who's,
actually
gotten
his
reward
before
he
was
with
me
early
on
I
wouldn't
have
done
it
without
any
of
these
people
met
these
people
I
actually
now
I
work
at
VHS
being
a
real
Health
Network.
AA
So
it's
been
really
good.
You
know
I'm
just
learning,
they're
teaching
different
trainings
coming
facilities
versus
I'm,
the
one
that
comes
to
fix
all
the
problems
broken
boards,
yeah
people
like
the
kid
closing
along
patching
them
I.
Just
you
know,
I'm
just
blessed
with
how
I'm
living
now,
because
I'm
telling
you
when
I
say
I
used
to
shaking
Court
I
used
to
shaking
Court
like
I
used
to
be
scared
and
I'm
just
happy
that
now
I
can,
just
you
know,
have
my
freedom
back
in
order
to
sleep.
AA
I
could
wake
up,
and
it's
just
I
also
want
like
the
each
program
to
expand.
I
want
people
to
get
a
chance.
Like
I
got
a
chance.
We
don't
always
get
a
chance.
There's
people
that,
when
I
actually
was
in
jail,
have
been
you
know,
since
they
were
18,
19
and
they're
like
in
their
20s
in
their
30s.
You
know
so.
AA
I
really
just
want
people
to
see
that
over
time,
once
you
accept
the
people
that
are
around
you
and
the
love
that
you
get
from
these
people
from
Roca,
especially
because
I
could
walk
into
early
any
day
and
it's
my
family,
it's
like
you
know.
They
know
me
it's
like
they
know
me
all
my
life,
so
I
just
want
to
thank
everybody.
That's
been
there
for
me
enough
I'm,
proud
to
have
won
this
award.
I'm
proud
to
be
honoring.
You
guys.
Thank
you.
AA
R
This
might
be
the
most
important
breakfast
of
some
young
people's
lives,
because
people
in
this
world
were
looking
to
help
us
support
and
fund
all
this
work
that
we
do.
This
is
effective,
it's
making
change,
but
it's
not
changing.
It
takes
resources,
it
takes
people
and
so
we're
counting
on
you
to
dictate.
Now,
sometimes
we
go
to
organizations
that
do
good
today,
we're
asking
you
to
partner
with
and
give
to
an
organization
that
does
change,
doesn't
just
do
good.
Does
change
affects
permanently
at
most
illustrating
Channel
I
might
be
you.
R
Pastor
she's
talking
about
eternity
I'm
talking
about
young
people's
lives
matter
and
the
fact
that
they
Echo
your
change
with
your
employment.
Important
to
them
when
you
give
to
them,
makes
them
make
some
difference
and
who
you
partnered
with
us.
We
need
you
to
financially
be
invested
in
this,
and
so
we're
going
to
bring
up.
We
don't
have
much
time,
we'll
run
it
out
of
time.
I
talk
a
lot,
so
they
keep
flashing
visits
so
and
that
will
help
further
Ado
we're
going
to
have
our
keynote
speaker
and
come
up
here.
R
I'm
going
to
let
him
share
his
own
story
of
Ryan
is
a
powerful
man.
He's
the
people
only
talking
for
a
few
minutes
and
I
was
like
whoa
he's
the
whole
school
of
Storytelling
I
mean
he's
worked
with
all
the
big
wins.
Disney
Pixar
I
mean
you
name
it
all.
The
big
guys
so
I'm
gonna
have
to
come
up
here
a
little
further
to
just
share
his
his
team.
Y
Y
Z
Y
Writing
was
the
outpouring
of
the
community
of
empathy.
Y
He
taught
our
kids
building
in
Seattle
and
surrender's
virtual
strangers.
People
I
know
would
walk
up
to
me
and
they
would
you
know
they
would
say
I'm.
Thinking
about
the
record
like
a
brother,
that's
awful
I
heard
about
the
brother
I'm
thinking
about
you,
I'm
praying
for
you,
those
kinds
of
things.
Y
And
then
there
was
another
group
and
they
would
say
something
else
now.
This
was
just
a
sincere
language
and
just
as
well
we're
just
as
healing
to
hear,
but
what
they
would
say
was
on
the
rentals
to
those
of
everything.
I
can't
imagine
we're
out
of
touching
the
chest.
I
can't
imagine
the
bubble
shot
in
the
street.
I
can't
imagine
the
thought
you
can't,
because
I
can't
the
whole
month,
my
old
wife,
you
can't
be
a
person
of
color
in
this
country
and
not
imagine
at
maybe
you
or
something
enough.
Y
Y
Y
Second
email
was
coming
from
and
I
think
some
people
might
have
read
it
as
a
certain
numbness
and
maybe
didn't
know
that,
but
also
my
mother
had
imaginative
right.
She
had
two
glassons
and
other
times
when
we
were
teenagers,
we'd
go
outside
or
we'd
go
out
somewhere.
I'm
sure
she'd
have
to
make
sure.
Y
In
that
stuff,
and
so
black
mothers
have
thought
about
this
a
lot
and
then
after
slavery,
there
was
of
course
Jim
Crow
and
Miranda
mentioned
my
life.
Y
Y
What's
that
weird
and
when
we
were
supposed
to
ask
her
Injustice
this
addictive,
that's
the
judge
for
justice.
They
take
these
land
here
seriously.
Y
Y
Y
So
we
know
basically,
in
this
level
forgiving
men
anymore,
my
brother.
Y
And
people
same
kind
of
thing
people
would
come
to
me
and
they'd
say:
there's
a
game
because
we
can't
call
them
became
complicated.
I
didn't
know
that
I
thought
well,
I'm
writing
for
the
Judgment.
That
I
was
adjustment
between
me
and
the
Judgment
public
event.
So
I,
just
speaking
about
a
little
bit
and
people
wrote
about
it,.
Y
Y
She's
gonna
know
Richard
was
born
in
South
Central
Illinois.
Y
So
he's
in
Aluma
violence
he's
in
a
world
of
poverty
and
you
live
at
One
neighborhood.
You
go
to
a
high
school
right,
so
poor
education,
Anyway
Richard.
Y
Y
Y
Y
So
here's
the
thing
I
have
a
memory
of
a
vivid
memory.
It
was
a
very
numb
enjoy
time
and
I
was
the
oldest,
so
my
brother
and
sister
were
even
youngest
and
I.
Wish.
I
could
remember
how
old
that's
yeah,
I,
just
remember,
being
very
young,
how
we
were
sitting
on
the
couch
and
my
father
was
beating
the
out.
Y
Y
Y
I
could
talk
about
all
of
the
races
of
my
experience
in
my
school
career,
but
I'll
just
tell
you
one
story,
probably
the
most
important
one
and
I'm
going
to
accomplish
something
that
I
can.
Y
Y
I've
been
thinking
about
loving
that,
because
it
was
an
awful
place,
I
was
always
in
trouble.
I
didn't
do
anything
by
the
way
I
was
just
always
suspected,
because
I
was
a
blessed
to
a
screen
for
the
administration.
This
is
1989
for
the
administration
and
and
the
faculty
really
didn't
want
us
black
kids
there
and
they
panelists,
so
I
was
always
attended
out
of
this
place.
It's
making
me
crazy.
Y
When
you
experience
racism
on
a
regular
basis,
you
know
what
it
looks
like
you
know.
Writing.
Y
Y
There
are
people
who
say
I
want
to
think
that's
people
in
the
world
at
what
I
do
I
have
fans
from
all
over
the
world.
I
get.
AA
Y
Y
I
work
with
digital
news
from
Pixar
Disney
feature
animation,
I
work
with
a
Circus
Olay
to
help
them
in
the
story
that
then
for
showing
invisible,
Amazon
Microsoft
work
with
that
all
teaching
a
long
story,
something
that
I
teach
myself
about.
Y
Y
Y
A
T
For
anything
to
prepare
with
us
we're
running
a
little
bit
late,
but
I
promise
we'll
take
you
out
of
here
soon.
I
just
have
a
couple
of
quick
things
left.
My
name
is
the
president
of
women
and
children.
A
growing
part
of
Roman's
work
is
with
young
mothers
at
the
center
of
urban
violence
across
Massachusetts.
T
AB
AB
Y
AB
Little
support
in
the
shelter
I
felt
even
more
alone.
I
turned
into
alcohol
thinking.
I
would
feel
better.
I
wasn't
sure
what
Roka
was,
but
I
had
nothing
else
going
on
soon
after
starting
I
drank
too
much
and
broke,
his
staff
had
to
get
me
to
the
hospital.
That's
when
I
lost,
my
kids
I
was
angry,
but
this
time
I
had
support
or.
A
C
A
AB
Until
she
got
there,
I
was
over
in
the
hospital,
but
I
still
had
a
long
road
ahead
of
me.
I
had
many
incidents
of
abuse,
while
under
the
influence
and
in
the
Survivor
of
domestic
violence,
I
didn't
know
how
to
handle
my
emotions
and
was
still
using
alcohol
to
cope.
I
had
many
incidents
of
abuse,
while
Under
the
Influence
I'm.
Sorry
for
myself
in.
AB
AB
S
AB
Label
my
feelings
and
make
better
choices
that
I'm
just
reacting
I,
actually
recognize
red
flags
and
navigate
me
on
healthy
relationships
as
well.
I,
even
remember
at
one
time,
I
thought
parenting
classes
were
kind
of
pointless,
but
now
that
I've
done
them,
I
have
a
completely
different
perspective
on
why
my
kids
do
what
they
do.
Another
barrier
to
getting
my
kids
that
was
getting
an
apartment
and
a
barrier
to
that
is
having
that
credit
taking
their
financial
literacy
classes
and
literally
helped
me
get
out
of
that
and
fix
my
credit.
At
the
same
time,.
AB
AB
Hand
that
ropa
is
offering
you
may
not
have
the
courage
to
ask
for
it
and
it
feels
very
scary
taking
it
when
you've
been
let
down
so
many
times.
You
might
take
them
for
nothing
on
your
door,
but
you
need
to
love
them
I'm,
so
proud
to
be
where
I
am
and
who
I
am.
Today.
I
want
to
thank
my
recovery,
coach,
Jamie,
my
DCF
worker
Doreen
and
my
partner
Brian,
my
best
friend.
A
C
C
This
nation
is
rightfully
called
for
Social
Justice,
Reform,
Criminal,
Justice,
Reform
police
reform
to
support
and
help
our
most
vulnerable
and
disenfranchised
people.
Those
calls
can
never
be
allowed
with
enough.
We
witness
racism
and
inequity
every
day
and
the
impact
is
nothing
short
of
a
criminal.
So
here
we
are.
The
question
is:
what
can
we
do
as
an
individual
as
organizations
as
coalitions
to
address
these
injustices
and
continue
to
progress
towards
equity
and
fairness
and
compassion?
It
is
not
easy.
Change
cannot
just
be
spoken
into
existence.
C
Someone
and
then
lots
of
someone
have
to
do
hard
work.
We
have
to
figure
out
where
the
system
is
failing:
young
people
and
others.
We
have
to
build
a
road
map
to
a
fairer
and
Kinder
and
dare
I,
say
more
hopeful.
Future
systems
are
made
of
people,
so
we
must
approach
the
system
change
by
person
by
person
Group
by
group
and
change
takes
all
of
us.
We
must
engage
leadership
and
those
working
on
the
front
line
to
support
our
most
vulnerable
Among
Us.
C
Today,
you
can
learn
how
Brokers
pursued
Justice
and
reform
for
35
years
producing
incarceration
and
violence
and
racism
and
saving
and
changing
thousands
of
young
people
with
all
of
you,
but
we
are
far
from
alone.
I
want
to
tell
you
about
one
more
special
person,
a
public
servant
who
has
spent
years
tackling
one
system
after
another,
enabling
people
to
do
good
in
those
systems
and
to
bring
fairness
to
address
this
barriers
and
to
be
helpful
to
those
in
desperate
need
of
support.
C
On
behalf
of
the
voter
team,
I
am
so
proud
to
recognize
a
friend
and
colleague,
who
also
was
from
Chelsea,
who
actually
has
no
idea
he's
being
honored.
Today
he
was
at
the
Forefront
of
the
national
Juvenile
Detention
Alternatives
he's
helped
his
team
prepare
for
raise
the
age
in
advance.
He
improved
educational
programming
and
promoted
Youth
Development
in
the
Department
of
Youth
Services.
He
revealed
classification
in
several
State
institutions
and
led
his
team
in
the
past
few
years
to
address
up
to
5
000
Quarry
matters
a
month
with
a
paper
system.
C
He
figured
out
the
needs
and
the
challenges
faced
by
people
on
probation
and
implemented
case
management
and
Social
Services
to
better
serve
them.
He
worked
to
increase
housing,
treatment
and
employment
for
people
under
probation.
His
leadership
in
the
Massachusetts
Probation
Services
reduce
recidivism
due
to
producing
revocation
to
technical
violations,
which
has
played
no
small
part
in
the
Commonwealth
having
the
lowest
prison
count
in
the
country
he's
a
sole
Prophet
behind
the
scenes
person.
It's
also
really
funny,
but
this
quiet
Legacy
is
nothing
short
of
extraordinary.
C
C
AC
Field,
it's
Baltimore
and
through
the
impact
Institute
it's
worldwide,
so
that
gives
sort
of
a
new
definition
to
showing
up
important
work
and
it's
a
really
remarkable
economy.
So.
AC
AC
You
know
Models
Behavior
data
skills
to
navigate
the
world
and
provided
that
safety
net
when
I
I
didn't
get
it
right
and
I
had
lots
of
friends
growing
up
in
Chelsea
who
are
no
longer
with
us
who
did
a
lot
of
damage
to
themselves
and
a
lot
of
harm
to
other
people,
because
they
didn't
have
a
Roca.
They
didn't
have
caring
adult
in
their
lives
and,
as
our
keynote
said,
that
you
know
really
can
make
all
the
difference
in
the
world.
AC
C
R
Everybody
here
has
participated
in
how
setting
them
up.
We
can't
do
without
you.
Thank
you
and
we
hope
to
see
you
very
soon.