Bay State Banner May 14, 2020

Page 1

inside this week

Creating opportunities for Mildred Hailey youth pg 2

INSIDE ARTS

business news

BLACK MASCULINITY AND IDENTITY TAKE CENTER STAGE IN ‘THE CYPHER’ pg 12

Mass. small business of the year pg 11

plus New Rep considers new frontier of theater pg 12 Alvin Ailey online pg 13 Vol. 55 No. 42 • Thursday, May 14, 2020 • FREE • GREATER BOSTON’S URBAN NEWS SOURCE SINCE 1965

www.baystatebanner.com

Congress seeking health center funds Warren, Pressley lead push for $7.6 billion in emergency funding By SARAYA WINTERSMITH

PHOTO: PHILLIP MARTIN

A couple walks across the Longfellow Bridge.

Developer selected for Boston State Hospital Advisory group picks proposal with 367 housing units By YAWU MILLER A group of Mattapan residents appointed to vet development proposals for the former Boston State Hospital land has selected a team to build a housing complex on the last open parcel of land on the site. Accordia/Toll Brothers, the development team selected by the state-appointed Boston State Hospital Citizens Advisory Committee (CAC), plans to build 367 units in

seven three-story buildings on the site. CAC member Royal L. Bolling Jr. said he hopes the new housing units will set a new standard for the neighborhood. “I think it will set a model for future development in Mattapan,” he said. The proposal was one of six submitted for the 10-acre parcel, which fronts Harvard Street and abuts the Mass Biologics Lab and Mass Audubon’s Boston Nature

Center. Five of the proposals were for housing developments; the sixth included an urban farming operation, food waste recycling cooperative and business incubator space. CAC members did not pick any of the developers in the first round and asked developers to modify their proposals to include elderly housing units, a day care facility and a shuttle from the

See BOSTON STATE, page 6

More than 100 Democratic members of Congress sent a letter to the top leaders of the House and Senate last Thursday seeking support for additional funding for the nation’s community health centers. The 139 senators and representatives, led by Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Rep. Ayanna Pressley, both of Massachusetts, along with Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, requested an immediate infusion of $7.6 billion in emergency funding and $77.3 billion to secure the long-term finances of community health centers. “Throughout this pandemic, CHCs have served as one our nation’s most critical frontline providers. Serving almost 30 million rural and urban low-income people across America, CHCs provide testing and medical care within the nation’s most vulnerable and hardest hit communities,” the letter reads. “Further, as the economic ramifications of this pandemic continue to grow CHCs have become increasingly relied upon. “Today, as many as 26 million people have lost their jobs and with it employer-sponsored health coverage, leaving millions of people without adequate access to health care,” it continues. “It is unfair and unsustainable for CHCs to meet an increased demand all while operating with limited funding and resources.”

The letter is addressed to the Senate’s Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Minority Leader Chuck Schumer as well as the House’s Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy. Nationwide, the federal government has poured billions of dollars into propping up cashstrapped health centers, bolstering their capacity to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic with expanded testing and telehealth capabilities. A coronavirus relief bill passed in March, for example, included $1.3 billion for the centers. In Massachusetts, where about 1-in-7 residents rely on health centers for care, the 38 federally-qualified organizations last month received $36.5 million under that legislation. The letter notes that “the East Boston Neighborhood Community Health Center has provided culturally-responsive and affordable care for more than 300 COVID-19 patients, many of whom are residents in Chelsea, MA — a majority Latinx community — in what is now the largest hot spot in the state.” The letter points to “disproportionate infection rates in black and brown communities,” a pattern seen in partial racial-ethnic data collected on COVID-19 cases in Mass. and other parts of the country. “As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to devastate communities across America, most

See HEALTH CENTERS, page 6

Fairmount Line gets card readers Riders will soon be able to use CharlieCards By YAWU MILLER Back in 2006, when new stations were being planned for Mattapan Square, Four Corners and Newmarket, state Department of Transportation officials embraced the idea of transforming the Fairmount commuter rail into a rapid transit line. Now, 14 years later, the stations are built, but the line runs at 40minute intervals during rush hour and one-hour intervals off peak

— hardly qualifying as rapid transit. During the COVID pandemic, trains have been running only at one-hour intervals, but the line will soon inch one step closer to functioning as a rapid transit line with the installation of CharlieCard readers on station platforms. “Ever since the T started the CharlieCard system, we’ve been working to get CharlieCard access on the Fairmount Line,” said Mela Miles, an organizer with the Greater Four Corners Action Coalition and

a member of the Fairmount Indigo Transit Coalition and the T Riders Union. “This is a long-awaited announcement.” The readers, due to come online May 18, will allow riders to tap their cards before boarding their trains, then make free transfers to buses along the route and trains at South Station. Until now, riders without monthly passes were required to pay cash to board the trains and were not allowed free transfers. “This is a great first step,” said 1st Suffolk District state Sen. Nick

See FAIRMOUNT, page 7

BANNER FILE PHOTO

A Fairmount Line train at the Four Corners stop.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.