Bay State Banner 10-5-2017

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inside this week

Developer’s grand ambition sparks neighbors’ ire pg 6

A&E

business news

ON STAGE: ‘THE ROYALE’ PAYS HOMAGE TO BLACK BOXER JACK JOHNSON pg 18

Hub Chamber opportunity director works to advance economic inclusion pg 14

plus ‘A Fine Line’ screens at GlobeDocs Film Fest pg 19 Berklee Beantown Jazz Festival pg 20 Thursday, October 5, 2017 • FREE • GREATER BOSTON’S URBAN NEWS SOURCE SINCE 1965 • CELEBRATING 50 YEARS

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Low turnout in municipal preliminary Walsh, Janey, Edwards among victors as candidate field narrows By YAWU MILLER

In a preliminary election that continued a trend of low voter turnout for municipal contests, Mayor Martin Walsh garnered 63 percent of the 55,373 votes cast last Tuesday, easily beating out his three challengers. Second-place finisher District 7 City Councilor Tito Jackson won 29 percent of the vote, while Robert Cappucci took 6 percent and Joseph A. Wiley received less than 1 percent. Walsh and Jackson will face off again in the Nov. 7 general election. In City Council District 7, centered in Roxbury and including parts of Dorchester, the South End, the Fenway and Jamaica Plain, Kim Janey bested a field of 13 candidates with 1,532 votes — 25 percent of the 6,129 voters who cast ballots in that race. Also advancing to the Nov. 7 general election to fill the seat vacated by Jackson will be Rufus Faulk, who

received 719 votes — 12 percent of the ballots cast. Deeqo Jibril took third place with 604 votes. In District 1, which includes the North End, East Boston and Charlestown, North End resident Stephen Passacantilli garnered 3,624 votes while East Boston resident Lydia Edwards trailed just 77 votes behind at 3,547. Eastie resident Margaret Farmer was a distant third with 522 votes. In District 2, which includes South Boston, Chinatown and part of the South End, Edward Flynn received 5,083 of the 9,011 votes cast, followed by Michael Kelley, who garnered 2,860 votes. Corey Dinopoulos received 504 votes. In each race, the top two candidates proceed to the final election. Just four of the nine City Council districts had contested preliminaries. The more than 22,000 voters who turned out in the three districts with races for open seats accounted for 41 percent of the 55,373 voters

See PRELIMINARY, page 8

PHOTO: COURTESY OF BOSTON RED SOX

State Sen. Linda Dorcena Forry and NAACP Boston Branch president Tanisha Sullivan spoke during the Take the Lead event. They have been meeting with Red Sox leadership in the months since Orioles’ player Adam Jones and an anthem singer were made targets of racial slurs at Fenway Park.

Boston sports teams aim to lead way against racism Take the Lead initiative opens dialogue on race By JULE PATTISON-GORDON

Boston wants to send a message against racism and leaders are turning to sports teams to do it. Representatives of Boston’s major teams gathered with community activists and elected officials at Fenway last week. There, they kicked off an initiative intended to encourage Bostonians to actively oppose any racism they encounter and spur the rest of the nation to do the same.

The event was the fruit of discussions launched after Red Sox fans directed racial slurs last May at Oriole’s player Adam Jones, as well as at a national anthem singer who is Kenyan. It comes at a time when national conversation rages over football player Colin Kaepernick’s kneeling protests against police brutality and other forms of oppression of people of color. Kaepernick’s protests have drawn admiration and ire — including a recent disparaging rebuke from the president.

Sports stadiums also became an arena of conversation when several white demonstrators on Sept. 13 at Fenway Park unveiled a banner calling out America’s history of racism. Last Thursday’s event, titled “Take the Lead,” was an opportunity to call attention to the history of racism in some of Boston’s teams, notably the Red Sox, which was the last major league team to integrate. Several players

See FENWAY, page 12

Questions swirl on disenrolled pupils Greater Egleston board gives its account By JULE PATTISON-GORDON

BANNER PHOTO

District 7 City Council candidate Kim Janey, celebrating victory at Darryl’s Corner Bar, received more than twice the votes of any other candidate in the race.

A number of students planning to attend Greater Egleston High School this fall turned up to school only to be informed they had been unenrolled. According to the Greater Egleston High School governing board, the striking of more than 100 students from its enrollment came as a surprise to school staff and administration as well. While

Boston Public Schools officials declined to answer questions, citing an ongoing investigation, the GEHS governing board spoke out last week, placing responsibility with BPS. In its public statement, issued on Sept. 27, the governing board asserted that the high school administration was not informed by BPS of the reason for the disenrollment and said that its headmaster’s efforts to re-enroll the students faced apparent

resistance from the district. “We are aware of recent events concerning the disenrollment of GEHS students, abrupt disruptions to school leadership, and the profoundly negative impact on the students,” governing board co-chairs wrote. After news broke of the disenrollment, BPS officials announced they were conducting an internal investigation of the school and that the longtime headmaster was being put on paid administrative leave.

See EGLESTON, page 3


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