inside this week
Contenders for District 7’s council seat outline stances pg 6
A&E
business news
SPEAKEASY STAGE REWRITES HISTORY WITH GENDERBENDING SHOW pg 20
1st Armor security firm emphasizes local hiring, community relations pg 16
plus Haitian artist discusses her work pg 21 Kalimah Muhammad’s sculptures follow the path of self-discovery pg 22 Thursday, September 21, 2017 • FREE • GREATER BOSTON’S URBAN NEWS SOURCE SINCE 1965 • CELEBRATING 50 YEARS
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Bill aims for equity in access to solar Financial incentives for solar energy less available to low-income residents By JULE PATTISON-GORDON
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District 7 City Councilor Tito Jackson and Mayor Martin Walsh prepare to cut the ribbon on the newly-renovated Freedom House building in Grove Hall. Behind are state Rep. Chynah Tyler, at-large Councilor Anissa Essaibi George and state Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz.
Walsh, Jackson focus on mobilizing supporters Issues take a back seat to campaigns’ ground game By YAWU MILLER
At 11 a.m. last Saturday, Mayor Martin Walsh and District 7 City Councilor Tito Jackson crossed paths at the ribbon-cutting for the newly renovated Freedom House. Walsh thanked Jackson for his advocacy on behalf of the reconstruction of the Grove Hall youth services agency. The two danced
along with a New Orleans-style second line band to the front of the building, where the mayor performed the ceremonial cut of the ribbon. The cordial atmosphere at the event belied the fierce election campaigns Jackson and Walsh are both waging. A Walsh campaign full-court press in the heart of Jackson’s city council district underscores what many see as the
mayor’s push to beat Jackson on his home turf. An hour earlier, near the corner of Martin Luther King Boulevard and Warren Street, several dozen volunteers with the Walsh campaign gathered to pick up clipboards. Donning red T-shirts that read “Labor for Marty Walsh,” groups of volunteers fanned out
See MAYORAL RACE, page 10
Black and Latino lawmakers have teamed up with environmental advocates to tackle a piece of 2016 legislation that they say created a barrier for on low-income renters who seek cheaper, cleaner energy. To fix this, the Black and Latino Legislative Caucus and the Green Justice Coalition are pushing for solar equity bills. The senate version of the bill is sponsored by Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz, the house version by Rep. Russell Holmes and Rep. Michelle DuBois.
Solar incentives
In 2016, the state Legislature passed a compromise law, attempting to balance the needs of utility companies with the needs of solar advocates. Many solar projects rely on incentives to offset start-up costs or make the switch to solar appealing. One piece of this is a policy known as “Solar Renewable Energy Credits” or “SREC,” under which those who produce their own renewable energy can receive payment from the utility company in exchange for the company counting the green energy the consumers produced as their own. Under “net metering,” customers who produce renewable energy get a credit off their energy bill if they produce more than they use. But there is a cap on how many large-scale projects utility companies will reimburse — and that cap was reached in 2015. As such, many groups were due to lose a major financial incentive
for installing solar panels, which sent legislators back to the drawing board. The new April 2016 law raised the cap, but at the same time reduced the reimbursement rate for many projects by 40 percent. Exemptions were granted, letting government-owned projects and small residential projects keep the original reimbursement rate. But those who saw their compensation drop include community projects and renters who aimed to buy into a system and receive renewable energy they did not personally produce.
Unintended damages
That legislative policy change nearly killed an attempt by three churches in Dorchester, the South End and Jamaica Plain to team up and generate solar energy for local residents. Five years ago, leaders of churches that are near high-poverty level census tracts came together and created a plan to make use of their large roofs to generate renewable energy, and then provide the surplus to the community for a low price. “We have the space that some do not,” said Pastor Victor Price of Second Church in Dorchester. “Such a large roof that can produce so much, yet so many in our community are unable to meet their monthly payments for electricity.” But by the time the church leaders were at the point of installing solar panels, policy around it changed, threatening
See SOLAR, page 14
Students unenrolled from Egleston No explanation as enrollment drops by 104 By YAWU MILLER
When Andrew Martinez arrived at Greater Egleston High School Monday, he wasn’t prepared for the news he received . “You’re not enrolled here,” an administrator reportedly told him. Although Martinez was planning to finish high school there this year, the 19-year-old is one of 104 students who were un-enrolled from the alternative high
school this fall apparently without notification or explanation. “I’ve been here three years already,” he said, standing in front of the School Street entrance to the building. “How can I be dropped?” Nearby, also contemplating her educational future was Yokasta Baez, a 21-year-old Roxbury resident. “I got a letter informing me I was enrolled,” she said. “I didn’t find out until the first day of school when I went to get my bus pass
that I wasn’t in the system.” Martinez, Baez and other students interviewed by the Banner said Greater Egleston staff members were equally in the dark about the sudden drop in enrollment at the school, which specializes in helping students who have fallen behind. “They’re very supportive,” Martinez said of the staff. “They help you a lot,” Baez added. “If you don’t come to school, they call you. They want to see you graduate.”
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See EGLESTON, page 18
Yocasta Baez and Andrew Martinez say they discovered they were no longer enrolled at Greater Egleston High School after showing up for classes there.