Bay State Banner 1-19-2017

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Mass. residents cry out against loss of Affordable Care Act pg 6

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‘THURGOOD’ PAINTS STUNNING PORTRAIT OF LEGAL GIANT pg 16

Entrepreneur takes high-fashion clothing line to next level pg 10

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Secret stadium plans rile electeds Local officials say they, abutters left out of Columbia Point talks By JULE PATTISON-GORDON

BANNER PHOTO

Tito Jackson announces his candidacy for mayor of Boston outside the Haley House Bakery Café in Dudley Square.

Jackson announces bid for mayor’s office Stresses income inequality, educational investment By JULE PATTISON-GORDON and YAWU MILLER

Pledging to fight against income inequality and to increase support for public education, District 7 City Councilor Tito Jackson launched his mayoral campaign last Thursday from the parking lot of Dudley Square’s Haley House Café. “Boston is at a crossroads,” he said to the crowd of about 200 people gathered outside Haley

House. “We’re at a fork in the road. A decision point. The middle class in the beloved community, the neighborhood that I grew up in stands in the balance.” Citing studies that show Boston ranking number one in income inequality in the U.S., Jackson criticized incumbent Mayor Martin Walsh for prioritizing development of luxury housing and the multi-million dollar deal to secure a new Fort Point Channel

headquarters for General Electric. Jackson said his campaign would bring attention back to the pressing needs of ordinary Bostonians. “We have lost our way,” Jackson told supporters. “We are not focusing on the right things in our city. We are not focusing on the right people. I am focused on education for all young people in the city of Boston and funding that

See JACKSON, page 8

Mayor Martin Walsh’s administration and the University of Massachusetts appear to have secretively negotiated with the New England Revolution’s owner, Bob Kraft, to plan a soccer stadium for Columbia Point in Dorchester. The revelation sparked outcry from the elected officials representing the affected communities, who said they and abutters were largely left out of the decisions. In a fiercely-worded statement, Sen. Linda Dorcena Forry blasted the process as secretive and exclusive, and one that denied local stakeholders a say in what happens in their neighborhood. While she and several local officials were aware the stadium idea was being floated, many only learned through a recent newspaper story how far plans had advanced. “Acting in secret and without bringing members of the community and their elected representatives to the table, until backroom deals come to light through stories in the media, is wholly unacceptable,” Forry wrote. City Councilor Annissa Essaibi-George was part of the Columbia Point Task Force, which, years ago, engaged the community in a four-year process of preparing plans for the site. The final vision was for a vibrant community. A stadium matches none of the things people wanted, she said. “[The plans] did not include a soccer stadium. It was housing, mixed-use commercial-residential,

walking ways, bikeways, eyesight lines to the harbor,” Essaibi-George said in a Banner phone interview. Unlike the vibrant community envisioned, a stadium would only be active intermittently, and when in use, would force high traffic on the area, she said.

“Backroom deals”

New England Revolution owner Kraft seeks to build a soccer stadium on the Dorchester site, which includes the former Bayside Exposition center and a slice of land currently home to the Boston Teachers Union’s headquarters. BTU has been open to relocating, if given sufficient compensation, including a new headquarters. A Boston Globe article last week stated that the Walsh administration had shown several sites to the BTU, with one meeting approval, and that the BTU currently is negotiating over monetary compensation. Many elected officials from the community were taken by surprise that the plans had progressed this far. “State agencies acting with impunity, handpicking a singular entity to develop a public site, is wrong,” Forry said. The former exposition center, which represents the majority of the land Kraft seeks, is state-held: It is owned by University of Massachusetts. UMass is exempt from the state’s open bidding law, local zoning and municipal approvals and tax payments for their land, Forry notes. As such, plans have been allowed to proceed with seemingly only one bidder

See COLUMBIA POINT, page 20

City to file anti-displacement bills Bills aimed at stemming tide of evictions By YAWU MILLER

Tax credits for landlords who maintain below-market rents, free legal representation for indigent tenants facing eviction and the right of first refusal for tenants living in properties subject to foreclosure or short sale are among the legislative bills Mayor Martin Walsh’s administration is backing to combat

displacement of moderate- and low-income Boston residents. The five new measures administration officials announced last Friday include the Jim Brooks Community Stabilization Act, which would require owners of large buildings to notify the city of eviction notices and extend the city’s Inclusionary Development Policy to all developments of ten or more units, not just those

requiring a zoning variance. “This legislation is extremely important to make sure displacement is reduced in Boston,” said Sheila Dillon, the city’s housing chief and director of the Department of Neighborhood Development.

Jim Brooks Act

In addition to requiring landlords to notify the city prior to evictions, the Jim Brooks bill would

See DISPLACEMENT, page 3

BANNER PHOTO

Chief of Policy Joyce Linehan, Assistant Corporation Counsel Sammy Nabulsi and Chief of Housing Sheila Dillon discuss the city’s housing bills.


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