inside this week
State school intervention sparks pushback pg 3
INSIDE ARTS
business news
CITY WALLS REPLACE GALLERY WALLS DURING PANDEMIC pg 11
Small business loans now available pg 9
plus Q&A with Porsha Olayiwola, Boston’s Poet Laureate pg 11 Boston theaters take their productions online pg 12 Vol. 55 No. 37 • Thursday, April 9, 2020 • FREE • GREATER BOSTON’S URBAN NEWS SOURCE SINCE 1965
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Walsh calls for face masks, curfew Mayor announces new measures as city prepares for spike in COVID cases By KENNEAL PATTERSON
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The Civil Service Commission ordered the Boston Police Department to place a black applicant at the top of the list after finding he was wrongfully bypassed for employment.
Civil Service raps BPD for bypass of black applicant Lawyer says case fits pattern of inequitable hiring By YAWU MILLER The state’s Civil Service Commission has ordered the Boston Police Department to place a black applicant at the top of its list for hires after a department investigator bypassed him for consideration over a criminal case 16 years earlier for which he was not convicted. The commission made its judgement after an attorney for Malik Morgan argued that three
white officers were hired in the same year Morgan applied, despite having records of criminal convictions similar to or more serious than the charges for which Morgan was not convicted. The case marks the second time in two years the department has been ordered by a superior court judge to re-instate a black applicant. Eddie Crispin, president of the Massachusetts Association of Minority Law Enforcement Officers, said black applicants are routinely
bypassed for BPD positions for minor infractions, such as driving offenses, for which white applicants are given a pass. “What’s unusual about this case is that this guy was already in law enforcement,” he said. “Everything in his record spoke to the fact that he could do a good job.” Morgan took the civil service exam to join the BPD after serving as a police officer for five years
See BPD, page 14
As the number of COVID-19 cases in Boston reached 1,877 Sunday, Mayor Martin Walsh recommended that Bostonians wear face masks outside their homes and announced a 9 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew for the next six weeks in the city. Walsh said the measures are in keeping with recommendations of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as cases in Boston and Massachusetts approach what public health experts expect will be a peak in April. “In the last 48 hours, we’ve had an increase of 511 new cases,” Walsh told reporters during his daily press briefing on City Hall Plaza. “That’s 27% of our overall coronavirus cases in the City of Boston. That’s what a surge looks like, and we are at the beginning of this surge.” Walsh emphasized that face masks will not necessarily protect those who wear them from contracting the coronavirus, but that they can prevent those who carry the virus from spreading it to others. He urged Bostonians who are required to work outside their home to maintain safe distancing of at least six feet from others. “We are at the beginning of the surge,” Walsh said. “Every step we take to limit the number of people working together will make a difference.” He added, “What the data continues to show is that right
now, every single day is critical to saving lives in our city. What the model continues to show is that distance and distancing will make that difference.” The mayor also said the city will take more aggressive steps to close down basketball courts and other outdoor sports facilities, noting that some people are still using them in violation of social distancing guidelines. Walsh said police officers will be monitoring parks and playgrounds to ensure sports facilities are not in use. “No group activities should be happening anywhere,” he said. Additionally, Walsh advised all senior citizens to stay home and refrain from going outside their homes for any reason. But he also emphasized that young people are not at all immune to COVID-19, noting that 45 percent of all positive tests are for people under the age of 40. “We are now seeing more cases of severe illness in young people,” he said. “Whether you get sick or not, you have to follow these guidelines.” Response by local elected officials to the COVID-19 outbreak continues at a rapid pace. Besides the mayor, Boston’s city councilors and U.S. and state legislators have been working to create policies and share updates with constituents. Here are some of the most recent developments.
Rental assistance
Twelve Boston City Councilors
See COVID, page 7
Health centers face financial strain Leaders cite pressure from the pandemic By SARAYA WINTERSMITH Community health centers in Massachusetts are feeling financial pressure from the COVID-19 pandemic, so much so that advocates say the centers need more state and federal assistance to stay open. The small nonprofits deliver care to many underserved patients on MassHealth, Medicare or without health insurance. In Massachusetts, where the first
community health center in the country was established more than five decades ago, 52 centers serve about one million people, about a seventh of the state’s population. In the best of times, community health centers operate on tight margins financed mostly by revenue from patient services and grants. But the coronavirus outbreak is forcing health centers to shift from primary care, dentistry, optometric and chronic illness management services to urgent
care. The subsequent decrease in patient service revenue, advocates say, makes their ability to withstand the outbreak tenuous. “We’re trying to make sure that we stay in the fight to combat the spread of this disease, especially for this vulnerable population, and it’s having a dramatic effect on us,” said Stan McClaren, chief executive officer of Dorchester’s Harvard Street Neighborhood Health Center. The coronavirus outbreak is forcing health centers like his to
See HEALTH CENTERS, page 6
PHOTO: JOHN WILCOX, MAYOR’S OFFICE
Mayor Martin Walsh dons a face mask during a press conference at City Hall.