►
From YouTube: Chamber Government Breakfast - September 2019
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
B
B
A
A
We
have
a
number
of
dignitaries
and
elected
officials
in
the
room,
so
I
am
going
to
mention
them.
Please
we
will
hold
your
applause
to
to
the
yen
so
that
we
can
recognize
everybody.
We
have
Tommy
and
briceƱo
the
city
manager,
Lenny
Albin,
east
of
Chelsea
fire
chief
brian
ties,
the
Chelsea
police
chief,
Dianne
Cary,
the
Director
of
Human
Resources,
Dylan
cook,
the
chief
procurement
officer,
Sarah
J
Jackson,
the
director
of
the
public
library,
Mike
McAteer,
director
of
inspectional
service,
patrice
pontiff,
usko
city,
treasurer,
alex
train,
the
assistant
director
of
planning
and
development,
dr.
A
Mary
Burke,
the
Superintendent
of
Schools
Superintendent,
elect
almy,
Abeyta,
Monica,
Liam,
the
Director
of
Finance
and
Administration
for
the
Chelsea
public
schools.
We
have
rosemary
Carlisle
with
us,
a
member
of
the
Chelsea
School
Committee,
as
well
as
Jeanette
Siletz.
We
have
Paul
casino,
the
city
council,
clerk
I,
think
Lori,
Evelyn,
deep,
double
and
Ella
is
his
counsel
at
Leo,
Robinson,
City,
Council
and
Louis
Tejada
city,
councilor,
tamale,
Vito
city
council,
president
and
councilor.
A
C
C
And
surrounding
communities
and
hundreds
from
Chelsea
itself
and
for
anyone
who's
been
over
at
the
resort.
As
you
look
around,
you
will
see
the
most
engaged
and
wonderful
team
members
and
we're
so
proud
that
you're,
our
neighbor
you're
here
and
the
business
community
has
been
with
us
all
the
way
through.
We
look
forward
to
continuing
that
relationship.
We've
been
talking
to
the
chamber
about
upcoming
events,
where
you
can
connect,
hopefully
with
small
businesses
where
our
employees
shop.
C
We
have
a
program
called
we
save,
which
offers
our
large
group
of
the
team
members
discount
so
that
they
hopefully
will
stay
local
and
shop
local
and
that's
one
way
that
we
feel
we
can
help
give
back
to
the
community.
And
so,
if
you
get
a
chance,
please
stop
by
we're
happy
to
serve
you
over
an
encore
and
we're
so
pleased
and
honored
to
be
the
presenting
sponsor
this
morning.
Thank
you.
Everyone.
A
In
November
2014
Lauren
Hill
II
was
elected
as
the
59th
Attorney
General
of
the
Commonwealth
of
Massachusetts.
Now,
in
her
second
term,
miss
Healy
has
continued
to
build
on
her
pledge
to
lead
the
peoples
law
firm
over
the
last
four
plus
years.
She
has
tackled
issues
touching
lives
of
residents
across
across
Massachusetts,
including
the
heroin
and
prescription
use,
epidemic,
assimilating
health
care
cost
workers,
rights
and
student
loan
crisis
to
name
of
human.
A
She
was
the
architect
of
the
state's
successful
challenge
to
the
federal
defense
and
has
advocated
for
marriage,
equality
and
in
support
of
legislation
to
fight
discrimination
against
transgender
people.
Miss
hailey
is
the
oldest
of
five
brothers
and
sisters
and
grew
up
just
over
the
border
in
New
Hampshire.
She
considers
her
family
to
be
the
foundation
upon
which
he
learned
values
of
hard
work,
discipline
and
the
importance
of
taking
care
of
others.
Miss
Healy.
A
From
Harvard
College
and
was
the
captain
of
the
women's
basketball,
she
spent
time
playing
professional
basketball
in
Europe
before
returning
to
Massachusetts
to
pursue
a
law
degree
at
Northeastern,
University,
School
of
Law
prior
to
her
election.
She
clerked
for
Judge
David
Mazzone
in
the
United
States
District
Court
of
Massachusetts
and
was
a
partner
at
the
international
law,
firm
Wilmer
Hale.
She
was
also
a
former
special
assistant
district
attorney
in
those
sex
comedy.
We
will
all
please
join
me
and
welcome
the
Attorney
General.
F
F
We
always
talked
about
it,
but
now
we
saw
Steven
and
better
things
and
he's
done
such
a
great
job,
not
just
here
in
Chelsea,
but
certainly
across
our
state
the
last
few
years,
and
it
was
great
to
get
to
work
with
him
and
we're
often
asked
the
question:
if
we
ever
ever
went
one-on-one,
I
I
could
say
I'm
so
happy
to
be
here
this
morning,
I
just
as
you
know,
I
live
right
across
the
bridge
in
Charleston,
but
I
spent
a
lot
of
time
here.
Both.
E
E
F
The
aisles
quite
a
party
in
there,
but
but
I,
really
love
this
place.
There's
something
really
really
special
about
this
place
and
the
fabric
of
this
community.
The
richness,
the
diversity,
the
history
and
I've
had
some
really
really
great
partners.
So
I
want
to
thank
Bob
I,
want
to
thank
Joe,
rich,
the
entire
chamber
staff
for
having
me
here
this
morning.
I
want
to
thank
all
the
wonderful
people
who
work
in
city
government,
in
particular,
nice
to
see
some
familiar
faces,
Tom
and
members
of
the
City
Council.
F
Thank
you
for
everything
that
you
do,
and
your
partnership,
superintendent
Burke
your
work,
our
work
in
the
school.
This
is
just
so
so
imperative
here
and
all
across
this
Commonwealth
and
I.
Thank
you
for
serving
this
community
and
it's
young
people
so
well,
I'm,
really
tickled
to
be
two
days
in
a
row
with
Brian
Kai's
brian
has
been
my
go-to
in
the
office
over
the
years
from
the
first
trip
I
took
with
him.
Maybe
over
two
wrote
many
years
ago.
E
F
Is
president
right
now
at
the
mass
major
City
Chiefs
and
doing
a
great
job
so
always
great
to
be
with
you
Brian.
Thank
you
for
everything.
You
do
also
to
see
our
friends
from
the
FBI
that
beautiful
building
now
I
Drive
past
I've
been
over
there
a
few
times.
I
want
to
thank
Special
Agent
in
Charge
job
on
mulatto
and
assistant
Special
Agent
in
Charge
Kevin
white,
who
tells
me
that
your
mom
lives
across
the
street
from
me
interesting
so
I
guess
I
have
ice
on
me.
E
F
They
make
great
great
partners
on
a
lot
of
fronts.
We
do
a
lot
of
work
around
human
trafficking.
Obviously
you
know
money
laundering,
financial
fraud
and
certainly
on
the
opioid
crisis
and
I
want
to
thank
them
for
being
so
supportive
and
also
I
want
to
thank
Steve.
Tompkins
who's
been
a
friend
to
many
of
us.
He
is
out
there
promoting
and
making
sure
that
there
is
justice
in
the
criminal
justice
system,
because
a
great
work
for
our
community
and
I
really
really
think
you
stood
for
what
you
do.
F
F
I
was
running
and
Gladys
will
help
out
I'm
going
to
talk
about
Gladys
a
minute,
but
nobody
actually
had
a
clue
with
the
Attorney
General.
Did
they
sort
of
have
the
image
that
the
Attorney
General
is
about
locking
people
up,
and
you
know
they
which
is
part
of
what
we
have
to
do?
But
it's
just
a
piece
of
what
we
have
to
do
and
so
I
said:
I
decided
that
we're
going
to
set
up
a
division
that
was
really.
D
F
Being
out
of
the
community,
you
know
and
trying
to
meet
communities
where
they
are
to
talk
about
their
rights,
to
talk
about
and
train
seniors
on
how
to
not
get
scammed,
to
talk
to
students
about
how
to
deal
with
owners.
Crushing
student
loan
debt
to
talk
to
workers
about
their
rights
in
the
workplace
to
talk
to
immigrant
communities
about
you,
know
their
rights
as
well
and
I.
Think
it's
been
really
helpful
to
our
office
because
we're
better
informed
as
we
think
about
the
work
we
need
to
do.
And
hopefully
people
are.
F
As
an
example,
she'll
be
giving
her
monthly,
my
agent
is
a
monthly
presentation
on
landlord
tenant
rights
right
here
at
the
Chelsea
collaborative
Gladys
Vega.
Thank
you
so
much
for
everything
you
do.
You're
such
of
course-
and
you
have
been
so
so
good
to
us
as
a
partner
Gladys,
serves
on
by
new
Americans
Advisory
Committee
I
set
up
when
I
started
in
office,
and
it's
just
doing
a
fantastic
job
in
partnership.
F
So
Jer,
ladies
will
be
over
there
this
afternoon,
so
I've
talked
a
little
bit
and,
most
importantly,
you
know
I
want
to
take
your
questions
and
comments.
I
love
what
I
do
I
run
an
operation,
that's
about
five
to
six
hundred
people.
That
budget
is
about
fifty
million
dollars.
Just
so
you
know
we
are
a
better
revenue
generator
for
the
state.
D
E
F
Of
some
of
you
are
probably
quite
familiar
with
Alesia
rubella
Alethea
rubella
Pradas
is
here
and
she
lived
here.
Sadly,
I
just
had
to
move
she's
still
recovering
she's
in
Stoneham.
Now
she's
back
really
be
back
this
morning,
but
I
know
it's
hard
for
you,
like
yeah,
yeah
Lidia
runs
our
policy
and
government
division,
providing
a
lot
of
leaves
on
work
between
our
office
and
cities
and
towns
and
the
legislature,
but
I
just
wanted
you
to
know
that,
because
you
know
there's
a
lot
of
stuff,
that's
in
the
headlines
about
what
we
do.
F
With
a
health
insurer
who
is
refusing
to
pay
a
bill
or
you
have
trouble
with
an
auto
insurer
who's
not
covering
what
you
think
they
should
or
you've
got
a
complaint
against
a
business
or
a
landlord,
or
you
know
you
name,
it
call
our
office.
We
have
people
live
on.
The
line
right
now
are
helping
students
renegotiate
right
now
with
loan
servicers,
their
student
loans,
and
you
know
this
is
how
we
do
the
work
every
week.
I
get
a
report
of
what's
happening,
and
actually
what
gives
me
some?
F
Something
happened,
okay,
that
that
actually
gives
me
the
greatest
satisfaction
being
able
to
to
help
people
like
that.
So
make
sure
that
that
folks,
you
know
out
there
know
that
they
can
call
our
office
and
we
can
help,
or
we
can
at
least
try
to
I'm,
going
to
just
take
a
couple
minutes
to
talk
about
the
call
at
the
opioid
epidemic,
but,
more
broadly
speaking,
it
relates
to
mental
health.
F
It
relates
to
substance,
use
disorder
and
certainly
it's
affected
every
community
here
in
the
Commonwealth
a
couple
of
things
years
ago,
I
worked
with
Chief
Kai's
and
helping
to
set
up
a
narcan
fund.
We
wanted
to
make
sure
that
narcan
was
available
to
all
first
responders
I.
Think
we've
done
a
good
job
with
that
I
went
after
the
supplier.
We
got
him
to
lower
the
rate,
and
that
was
the
first
thing
we
had
to
do.
F
But
the
next
thing
we
had
to
do
is
to
really
get
out
there
and
crackdown
on
illegal
prescribing
and
dispensing
practices,
which
we
also
work
to
do,
but
unfortunately,
through
this
whole
epidemic,
starting
with
pills-
and
you
know-
we
saw
the
move
to
heroin
and
fentanyl-
we
needed
help.
So
I
was
grateful.
F
I
reached
out
to
our
US
Department
of
Justice
and
I
secured
four
million
dollars
over
the
last
couple
of
years
from
the
federal
government
that
we
are
using
right
now
here
in
Chelsea
and
elsewhere
across
the
state
to
help
support
police
overtime,
in
particular
for
our
drug
investigations
and
we've
been
able
to
have
a
number
of
successful
takedowns
over
the
last
year.
More
and
a
lot
of
that
work
has
been
enabled
through
that
Grant
and
through
the
partnership
and
for
all
of
what
you
read
about
know
that
I
think
from
a
law
enforcement
perspective.
F
F
Also
got
my
a
little
bit
of
a
fight
with
Purdue
Pharma.
We
were
the
first
state
to
sue
Purdue
and
the
sacrament
was
really
important
to
me.
We
named
names
and
hold
accountable
those
who
really
orchestrated
this
illegal
scheme
that
is
devastated
and
ravaged
so
many
communities,
so
we're
down
the
line
on
that.
We
also
have
ongoing
investigations
against
the
other
five
opioid
manufacturers
and
distributors
and
we're
looking
for
changes
in
practices.
Changes
in
policies.
F
Obviously
we're
looking
for
money
damages
to
help
abate
and
mitigate
some
of
the
harm
that
caused
to
so
many
but
Purdue
and
the
staff
there
is
there
a
particular
case
Purdue,
as
you
saw
filed
for
bankruptcy,
that
was
not
unexpected.
The
Sadler's
basically
drained
billions
and
millions
of
dollars
from
them
over
the
last
decade
and
having
basically
absconded
with
billions
and
billions
from
the
profits
from
the
sales
of
opioids.
The
sackers
have
basically
left
that
company
in
the
position
that
it
is
which
it
doesn't
have
much
tell
so
they
filed
for
bankruptcy.
F
F
F
Future
sales
of
this
deadly
and
addictive
drug,
which
is
what
the
proposal
is
to
do,
they
want
to
have
their
out
so
their
their
foreign
companies
continue
to
sell
oxy
and
then
they're
going
to
use
the
money
from
those
sales
to
pay
the
money
here
to
the
states.
Well,
I'm,
not
interested
in
being
a
drug
dealer
or
being
in
that
business.
That's
not
why
I
got
into
this
I
do
think
the
people
who
should
be
paying
or
the
sackers.
So
that's
where
I
am
on
this
issue.
F
By
the
way,
the
purported
figure
of
10
to
billion
billion
dollars
is
totally
off
to
the
company
and
settlement
is
worth
nowhere
near
that,
in
fact,
it
may
be
worth
its
little
as
four
billion
dollars.
So
that's
I
just
wanted
to
clarify
my
comments
this
week
and
make
sure
you
knew
where
I
was
coming
from.
Fundamentally
it's
about
justice
I
think
our
families
deserve
to
have
the
story.
F
Told
documents
should
be
available
online
and
everything
should
be
out
there,
so
there's
no
more
hiding
the
ball
or
covering
up,
which
is
exactly
what
happened
back
in
2007
with
Perdue.
So
that's
that's
where
we
are
on
that.
I've
also
talked
to
in
the
past
about
ooh
the
emphasis
that
I
place
on
education
and
prevention
right.
This
is
where
we're
at
we
deal
with
so
many
problems.
F
You
know
I,
think
all
of
us
share
of
you
that
is
so
important
that
we
invest
in
the
front
end
and
I
think
you're
super
important
investment
is
investing
in
our
schools
and
our
young
people
instead
of
a
program
a
few
years
ago
that
was
funded
through
the
GE
foundation,
where
he
came
up
with
this
great
program
called
project.
Here,
it's
now
in
hundreds
of
middle
schools
across
the
state
that's
available
for
free
to
every
middle
school
in
the
state
and
we're
teaching
kids
about
how
to
make
healthy
decisions.
F
F
I
also
later
today,
you'll
see
some
social
media
out
of
my
office,
promoting
a
program
that
we
work
with
Sandy
Hook
promise
on,
and
it's
really
about
violence
in
schools,
identifying
the
signs
of
violence
among
kids,
and
they
have
a
wonderful
program
that
we
were
happy
to
help
them
bring
here
to
Massachusetts.
That
really,
you
know,
will
help
I
think
those
students
and
educators
recognize
the
signs
and
then
know
what
to
do
so.
That's
a
little
bit
of
where
we
are
on
these
issues.
F
F
Our
kids
need
that
and
I
really
think
that
that's
something
that
collectively,
as
a
Commonwealth
we've
gotta
do
a
better
job
of
supporting
and
promoting
I
want
to
take
a
minute
talk
about
something
that
has
become
was
always
important
to
me,
but
I
think
really
crystallized
the
last
couple
of
years,
and
that
is
the
issue
of
immigration
and
I.
Think
there's,
no
better!
Representative
of
you
know
how
important
empowering
speak.
F
Representative
Dan
Ryan
hi
there
I
could
have
given
you
a
ride.
Dan
does
a
great
job
for
us
for
all
of
us
so
like
this
has
just
been
such
a
heart
heartbreaking
issue.
The
last
couple
of
years,
I
think
the
hardest
week
ahead
in
the
office
was
when
I
met
a
mother
who
had
been
separated
from
her
daughter
at
the
border,
and
she
was
in
her
office
because
she
was
filling
out
an
affidavit
to
file
in
her
court
case,
challenging
family
separation
at
the
border
and
I
then
later
met
with
with
kids.
F
Who've
been
separated,
many
of
them,
and
it
will
keep
her
here.
That's
actually
how
we
had
the
jurisdiction
they've
been
sent
here
after
after
release,
and
you
know
to
look
into
this
mother's
eye
and
eyes
and
just
sort
of
watch
her
sob
and
cry
about
what
had
happened.
You
know
it's
just
it's
just
so
real
I
don't
need
to
recount
the
stories.
You
guys
live
the
stories
you
know
the
stories,
but
my
comment
to
her
that
day
was.
F
F
Impact
that
the
scare
tactics
have
on
our
population
I
got
the
reports
of
kids
being
afraid,
parents
being
afraid
to
take
their
kids
to
school,
show
up
at
community
health.
Centers
I
know
right
now
that
our
businesses,
including
businesses
here
in
Chelsea,
are
suffering
because
people
are
too
scared
to
go
shopping.
That's
not
right
and
I
believe
strongly
that,
as
a
matter
of
law
enforcement
and
keeping
community
safe,
we
of
course
share
interests
in
keeping
dangerous
criminals
off
the
streets
right,
those
who
are
a
danger
to
to
others
off
the
streets.
F
We
work
really
hard
day
in
and
day
out,
but
that
is
not.
That
does
not
mean
that
we
need
to
take
down
or
tear
down
or
take
apart
whole
immigrant
communities
that
have
proudly
built
not
just
Chelsea
but
Boston
in
our
entire
state
I
give
people
the
statistics
that
statistic
and
I
think
it
blows
their
mind
that
right.
F
If
you
don't
think
we
have
an
economic
imperative
to
do
everything
we
can
to
support
successful
immigration
and
constructive
immigration
policies,
I
think
you're,
missing
the
boat
and,
unfortunately
we're
in
a
place
where,
as
has
long
been
the
case,
immigration
has
been
you
this
way
to
divide
us
and
exacerbate
tensions
for
political
gains
as
political
football,
and
it's
a
shame
because
actually
our
economy
and
the
fabric
I
think
of
our
communities
deserve
so
much
so
much
better.
So
we're
going
to
continue
guaranteed
to
be
there
doing.
What
we
need
to
do.
F
I
want
to
give
a
shout
out,
for
example,
to
Lambeth
Thailand
pegye
CEO,
kettle
cuisine,
an
employer
in
Lynn
I
know
he's
got
25
employees
just
by
way
of
example,
who
have
TPS
status,
and
many
of
them
have
been
here
for
over
20
years
are
now
managers
and
supervisors
and
raising
families
and
paying
taxes
and
doing
everything
right
and
you
know,
according
to
him,
losing
these
and
losing
these
employees
would
be
devastating
to
business.
So
I
think
the
voice
of
community
the
voice
of
business.
F
Another
issue
of
mine
that
anybody
of
kids
in
school
or
anybody
have
students
without
this
through
the
loan
debt
I
mean
people
Bobby
hilled
right
this
year,
we've
worked
with
him
a
lot
in
my
student
loan
task
force
student
loan
debt,
it's
the
largest
segment
of
death
in
our
country,
the
largest
fastest
growing
segment
of
debt
and
our
country
huge
issue.
Obviously,
because
people
can't
afford
to
go
to
buy
a
home,
buy
a
car
go
shopping
in
the
light,
but
the
amount
of
debt,
people's
necks
is
just
awful.
D
E
F
Set
up
a
student
loan
assistance
unit
when
I
started,
please
call
my
office
we've
gone
after
a
lot
of
unsavory
characters
and
then
Loan
Servicing
space,
including
some
like
Everest
Institute,
which
had
a
location
here
in
Chelsea
I
heard
from
students
how
they've
been
cheated
by
this
for-profit
school.
They
didn't
know
where
to
turn.
Fortunately,
we
were
able
to
help
them.
F
We
of
course
many
of
these
students
are
veterans
person,
their
family
to
go
to
college
single,
moms
and
really
really
taken
advantage
of,
and
you
know
I
know
that
over
the
last
few
years
we
have
returned
more
than
six
hundred
thousand
dollars
in
student
loan
debt.
So
we
got
discharges
on
six
hundred
thousand
dollars
worth
of
student
loans
for
Chelsea
residents
alone.
Oh.
F
And
it's
also
a
way
you
know,
I
think
that
investing
in
in
our
public
schools
I'm,
you
know
in
Charlestown,
Bunker
Hill,
but
you've
got
a
location
right
here
in
Chelsea
that
that
becomes
so
important
as
well.
I
also
wanted
to
mention
that
we
recovered
more
than
two
hundred
thousand
dollars
for
dozens
of
families
in
Chelsea
who
were
duped
by
subprime
auto
loans.
In
the
same.
F
The
big
banks
and
the
mortgage
companies
tried
to
rip
people
off
years
ago.
You
know
in
the
subprime
mess.
We
see
a
replication
of
the
same
practices
when
it
comes
to
the
auto
industry,
so
people
are
getting.
You
know,
used
cars
at
super
super
high
interest
rates
and
locked
in
deals
that
they
can't
afford
often
sold
cars
that
are
not,
you
know,
actually
functioning
and
working
and
broken
down,
and
that's
kind
of
the
thread,
cutter
work
and
as
I
say
that
doesn't
folks.
F
We
recently
helped
here
in
Chelsea
with
that
very
issue,
so
know
that
we'll
continue
to
do
that.
Also
we'll
continue
to
go
after
those
who
are
engaged
in
preying
upon
people
who
are
looking
for
immigration
attorneys,
because
people
continue
to
get
ripped
off
in
that
space.
And,
finally,
just
to
note
about
clean
energy.
I
think
that
I
was
in
the
episodes
debate
in
Houston
last
week
and
it's
clear,
clean
energy
is
you
know
right
and
the
climate
crisis
or
at
the
top
of
a
national
agenda
right
now,
and
the
top
discussion
actually.
F
Of
the
aisle,
as
I
talked
to
to
my
colleagues,
I'll
be
hosting
a
bunch
of
AG's
next
week
for
clean
energy
conference
here
in
Massachusetts,
and
we
know
what
we
need
to
go
on
all
this
stuff.
Clean
energy
is
a
job
creator.
Massachusetts
has
over
a
hundred
thousand
clean
hundreds
of
jobs
in
the
state.
It's
a
thirteen
billion
dollar
industry
and
it's
growing.
There
are
more
clean
energy
jobs,
a
message
he's
just
in
total
coal
jobs
in
the
entire
country
and
I'm.
F
Making
sure
that
Massachusetts
really
is
in
the
lead
and
taking
advantage
of
those
opportunities,
and
so
we're
going
to
continue
to
work
with
with
all
of
you
on
this
on
this
issue,
because
I
think
it's
it's
critically
important,
particularly
as
we
think
about
to
tell
you.
I
live
in
Charlestown
you're
here
in
Chelsea,
our
focus
on
sustainability
and
resilience
is
absolutely
imperative.
So
look
there's
a
lot
to
talk
about
I
want
to
thank
you
for
your
commitment
and
involvement
here
in
the
chamber.
F
I
want
to
thank
you
for
your
partnership
with
my
office,
but
with
one
another
I
think
that
you
know
truly,
as
if
as
a
country
we're
going
to
deal
with
some
of
the
really
seemingly
intractable
problems
that
are
that
are
facing
us.
The
only
way
to
do
that
is
through
partnership,
business,
community
government,
NGOs,
all
working
together
and
I
think
about
the
dynamics
here
in
Chelsea
that's
happening
day
in
and
day
no.
B
B
F
I
hope
so
in
my
federal
partners
know
that
this
presents
a
challenge.
I
mean
the
fact
of
the
matter.
Is
the
secular
family
sucks
four
billion
dollars
out
of
this
company
over
the
last
several
years?
A
lot
of
that
money
has
been
sent
overseas.
We
know
from
reports
and
from
some
of
the
work
we've
done.
I
mean
they
set
up
trusts
in
the
Cayman
Islands
and
in
other
places-
and
you
know
that's
all
about
shielding
assets
and
trying
to
keep
people
like
us
from
accessing
them.
F
I
can
promise
you
we're
going
to
do
everything
we
can
to
get
to
those
assets.
We
believe
they're
assets
here
in
this
country
as
well,
but
that's
exactly
the
problem,
and
it's
exactly
why
to
me.
It's
so
galling
than
a
bunch
of
billionaires
and
they
are
billionaires
in
multiple
billions
somewhere
between
13
and
35
billion
dollars.
Is
the
sacraments?
F
That's
why
it's
so
galling
to
me
that
they
would
seek
to
use
a
bankruptcy
process
to
further
shield
their
assets
and
liability,
and
you
know
I
talked
to
my
AG
colleagues,
most
the
big
states,
a
lot
of
us.
You
know
we're
all
on
the
same
page
about
this.
Unfortunately,
there
are
some
who
aren't
and
they
want
to
take
the
money.
F
D
D
F
Which
stuff?
This
is
a
huge
issue.
You
know
fifty
billion
dollars
a
year,
I
think
is
stolen
out
of
the
pockets
of
workers
and
I
think
that
there
are
two
things
with
wage
theft,
one
it's
wrong
for
those
workers
who
work
hard
and
deserve
the
pay,
but
it's
also
really
unfair
to
all
the
other
businesses
that
are
playing
by
the
rules
that
are
paying
their
workers
that
are
abiding
by
our
wage
and
hour,
laws
that
are
paying
workers
comp
right
unemployment.
You
know,
and
unfortunately,
you
got
people
who
cut
corners.
F
We
see
it
a
lot
of
times
my
fairly
rare
division
and
we
did
300
job
sites
last
year.
Certainly,
the
construction
industry
is
probably
where
it's
most
prevalent,
but
it's
across
the
board.
We're
going
to
continue
to
be
aggressive,
I
think
we
know
that
in
this
time,
immigrant
workers
are
particularly
vulnerable.
In
fact,
we
a
case
recently
where.
E
F
E
F
D
F
I
appreciate
that
and
I
think
we've
got
a
great
story
to
tell
here
in
Massachusetts
about
the
work
of
immigrants
and
immigrants.
You
know
really
built
and
further
this
nation
and
its
ideals
its
promises.
Those
are
some
of
the
most
inspiring
stories
and
encounters
that
I
have
in
office
and
and
we
got
a,
we
got
to
recognize
and
celebrate
that
and
really
stand
firm
and
what
it
will
be
an
ugly
year
ahead.
No
doubt
but
I
think
it's
really
important
that
we
stay
steady
here
in
Massachusetts
and
continue
to
work
together.
D
D
F
B
Fact
that
the
Hispanic
American
Institute
in
the
end
of
October
at
the
Whale
school
is
going
to
have
a
topic
on
how
to
grow
healthy
businesses,
so
be
aware
of
that.
The
other
thing
I'd
ask
you
to
do
and
I
realize
you
get
a
lot
of
emails
every
day,
but
when
you
get
something
from
the
chamber
written
copy,
just
please
read
it.
Don't
pass
it
on
to
your
spam
account
whatever
or
your
assistant,
but
please
read
it
we'll
try
to
limit
them.
The
other
thing,
too,
is
there
on
the
new
website.
B
A
A
Tunnel
is
a
raffle
I
just
wanted
to
mention
that
next
month
is
our
pot
of
gold
October
23rd
at
Anthony's.
It
is
the
Chamber's,
essentially
the
fundraiser
of
the
year,
so
gallant
and
our
community
working
very
hard.
As
always,
only
250
tickets
will
be
sold
for
the
grand
prize
of
$10,000.
What
people
have
verified
that
those
were
great
odds,
one
out
of
200
deca,
so
we
posted
to
a
lot
make
an
effort
to
be
there.