Boston, MA
Irish Travel To Boston For Thanksgiving Games
NOTRE DAME, Ind. – The College of Notre Dame ships as much as Boston for a pair of contests at Boston College and Boston Faculty over the vacation week.
The No. 19 Irish are set to face off towards the Eleventh-ranked Terriers Wednesday night on ESPNU. Puck drop inside Agganis Enviornment is ready for five p.m.
Notre Dame returns to the ice Friday afternoon for a 4 p.m. matchup at Conte Discussion board towards the BC Eagles (ESPN+).
QUICK HITS
- Notre Dame continues its highway stretch with a pair of video games on the East Coast, following a weekend sequence in Columbus, Ohio.
- After dropping recreation one of many sequence with the Buckeyes, the Irish bounced again to a 1-0 win Saturday night time.
- Jack Adams and Fin Williams each scored their first objectives of the season at OSU, together with the primary collegiate level for J. Williams.
- On Friday night time, Trevor Janicke tied the competition with lower than a minute remaining within the opening interval earlier than J. Williams lit the lamp for his first collegiate objective to interrupt the stalemate early within the second interval.
- Chase Blackmun led the Irish in factors on the weekend, selecting up an help in each contests to enhance his season whole to 4 factors (1-3-4).
- The Irish have confronted off towards top-12 groups for 3 consecutive weeks.
NOTRE DAME vs. BOSTON UNIVERSITY
- All-time, the Irish are 8-5-2 towards the Terriers with their final assembly coming at Agganis Enviornment in 2016.
- The Irish maintain the slim 3-2-1 report on the highway at BU, having cut up their final sequence with the Terriers.
- BU is at present 7-4-0 in 2022-23, having most not too long ago cut up a sequence with the Huskies of Northeastern.
NOTRE DAME vs. BOSTON COLLEGE
- Final season the Irish and Eagles met with Notre Dame taking the 8-2 determination at residence.
- That contest noticed eight present Irish skaters spotlight the field rating, together with Grant Silianoff with a career-best 4 factors (1-3-4). Ryder Rolston additionally tallied his first profession hat trick towards the Eagles, scoring the eventual game-winner at 11:33 of the second interval en path to a three-point night time.
- Together with Silianoff, Rolston and Jesse Lansdell additionally recorded career-high nights with Rolstons three objectives and factors and Lansdell’s objective and help make for a career-best two factors for the senior.
- In 10 video games performed this season, the Eagles are 4-4-2 this season. together with a 3 recreation unbeaten streak (2-0-1).
TEAM LEADERS
- Ryder Rolston’s 4 objectives and 5 assists, and Chayse Primeau’s three objectives and 7 assists, leads the Irish in factors (10).
- Rolston and Nick Leivermann every have 4 objectives for a crew greatest whereas Primeau’s seven assists leads the Irish.
- Trevor Janicke’s powerplay objective in recreation one towards the Wildcats became the game-winner and was his second on the man-advantage this season. Justin Janicke, Jesse Lansdell, Grant Silianoff and Leivermann additionally maintain game-winners.
- At all times prepared to leap in entrance of a shot, Jake Boltmann’s 32 blocks leads the crew and is fifth nationally.
Boston, MA
East Boston highway sees 1 southbound lane reopen on Tuesday, 1 day after bus crash
One lane has reopened on Route 1A South in East Boston on Tuesday, over a day after a bus crash took down two transformers and three light poles, Boston police said in a post on X.
While one lane reopened on the highway, also known as the McClellan Highway, work is still being done and travelers should expect delays, Boston police spokesperson Sgt. John Boyle told MassLive.
The southbound side of the highway was closed after a crash around 5:39 a.m., according to Boston police.
The closure caused heavy traffic delays in and around Boston Logan International Airport and reopened to allow for traffic to leave Boston on Monday afternoon.
Several people were aboard the bus when it crashed and caused two transformers and at least three light poles to come down by 175 William F. McClellan Hwy, police said. Two people were hospitalized with non-life-threatening injuries.
MassLive reporter Charlie McKenna contributed to the reporting of this story.
Boston, MA
It’s time for Boston to demolish the stigma of public housing – The Boston Globe
In Vienna, well-maintained public housing complexes are distributed across the city’s neighborhoods and come with amenities like gyms, schools, and even shopping centers. Far from being places to avoid, these complexes housed more than 60 percent of the city’s 1.8 million residents in 2022.
The Viennese call such housing “social,” to reflect its broad usage — nearly 75 percent of the city’s residents qualify for it. This means that a supermarket cashier and a software developer can be neighbors, with each paying less than 30 percent of their income in rent. In Boston, only households making 80 percent or less of the city’s median income are eligible for Boston’s scant 17 percent of subsidized housing.
Vienna-style housing in America: Dream or delusion?
When I returned home and breathlessly told my friends and colleagues about Vienna’s successful approach to public housing, I saw apprehension in their faces and got tepid responses. They seemed concerned, the way you might be for someone who’d clearly gone down a rabbit hole of delusion. On a couple of occasions, people expressed their skepticism. “Yeah, that all sounds really nice,” they’d begin. “But dude, that’s never gonna happen in America. Come on.”
Recent history is on their side. Greater Boston rent prices shot even higher into the stratosphere during the second year of the pandemic. The idea of bringing Vienna-style social housing here just seemed increasingly fanciful. But around that time, I noticed something that gave me hope. More journalists than ever were going to Vienna to write about its excellent public housing system, and US policy makers were taking note, too.
These Vienna stories heralded optimism. “Lessons From a Renters’ Utopia,” a headline in The New York Times offered. “How Vienna became the world’s most livable city,” the Guardian gushed. And as an explainer for Shelterforce, a nonprofit publication dedicated to reporting on affordable housing, Hawaii state Senator Stanley Chang and San Francisco assembly member Alex Lee published “How We Can Bring Vienna’s Housing Model to the US.”
Now, after years of affordable housing scarcity and a pessimistic outlook on what solutions are possible, it seems that more lawmakers are willing to think big about housing policy.
In September, Mayor Michelle Wu announced that the city would commit $100 million to a Housing Accelerator Fund, a reserve for kickstarting new housing projects that have run into financing obstacles. The housing accelerator will make it possible for the city to start acting like a real estate investor and directly subsidize public and private housing developments with infusions of cash.
The fund also presents an opportunity for Boston to finance modern, mixed-income public housing like the kind I saw in Vienna. One outspoken supporter of the idea is Boston City Councilor at Large Henry Santana, who spent his childhood in the Boston Housing Authority’s Alice Taylor Apartments in Mission Hill.
“Public housing gave my family a foundation with which to thrive,” Santana said on Oct. 17 at a working group session at Boston City Hall where councilors discussed mixed-income social housing. “I’m passionate about this kind of housing because it can help break down racial and social divides which have shaped our neighborhoods,” Santana added.
But as I took my seat on the sidelines of the meeting room beneath a portrait of James Michael Curley — whose last mayoral term coincided with the start of the “urban renewal” era that saw millions of public housing units razed in Boston — the guests I was most interested in hearing from were officials from Maryland’s Montgomery County. Thanks to them, we no longer have to talk about mixed-income social housing solely as a Viennese import.
Maryland is leading the way on social housing
In Montgomery County, modern, dignified social housing for a wide spectrum of incomes is becoming part of a new normal.
With its own fund, the Housing Opportunities Commission of Montgomery County (HOC) hired developers to build The Laureate, a 268-unit complex in Rockville with public transit access, a pool, and a gym. A quarter of the apartments are set aside for households making less than 50 percent of the area’s median income — about $76,450 or less for a family of four.
The building is fully owned by the city, setting it apart from most affordable housing projects, in which a fixed number of below-market apartments are baked into a building plan with the help of low-income housing tax credits. In Montgomery County, it’s as if policymakers asked, “What if we got into the business of housing development ourselves?”
The HOC works because it is a revolving fund, meaning the HOC lends developers housing accelerator money to fund the construction of a building, with substantially lower interest rates than they would get from private lenders. Once the building’s units have been leased to tenants, the HOC refinances the project, takes a majority stake in the project to establish municipal ownership, and pays itself back for the initial loan. With the housing funds replenished and the HOC having collected interest from the developers, the HOC is better able to fund more mixed-income public housing. Montgomery County Council member Andrew Friedson says, “The Montgomery County housing fund started with $50 million and now it’s $100 million. This is one of the most cost-effective ways to create housing.”
With that formula for financing mixed-income social housing, more cities and states are warming to the idea. City officials in Atlanta and state officials in Rhode Island have announced plans to form their own public development bodies, and Boston’s housing accelerator fund is a step in the same direction.
On Nov. 19, Mayor Wu announced that the first local project to receive housing accelerator financing will be Bunker Hill Housing, the Boston Housing Authority housing complex in Charlestown. A public-private partnership between the BHA and Bunker Hill Redevelopment Company, the project will result in 15 new residential buildings with a total of 2,699 apartments. More than 1,000 of these apartments — about the same number that made up the original complex at Bunker Hill — will remain deeply affordable, meaning their occupants will spend no more than 30 percent of their income on housing regardless of their income. But apartments in the old complex were exclusively available to low-income renters, while the new buildings will have a mix of rents, including for market-rate units.
Santana thinks this approach will yield dividends for the community. “In the United States, public housing has been traditionally viewed as this last resort for low-income families,” Santana says. “The stigma of public housing is tied to disinvestment and neglect. When you drive across the city and you pass a public housing structure, you know it’s public housing.”
Does Santana see a substantive difference between the terms “public housing” and “social housing”? “I think that ‘social housing’ reflects the philosophy that housing really should be a collective responsibility,” Santana says. “The term helps us reposition housing as a public good, rather than a commodity.”
Although that may be a tough sales pitch, Santana believes people are becoming more open to bolder interventions. “What I’m hearing constituents asking for, in all Boston neighborhoods, are options that provide stability; not just temporary fixes,” Santana says.
Today, when you arrive at 55 Bunker Hill Street — where the old BHA complex still exists, waiting to be knocked down, reimagined, and rebuilt — you’ll see a bunch of two- and three-story brick buildings that have clearly seen better days. They are weathered, their design dated and dour. The demarcation is clear: This is public housing, and that — the freshly painted buildings across the street — is private housing. But now, with the housing accelerator fund catalyzing an overdue renovation and expansion of the BHA property, that line is about to blur.
If Boston’s housing accelerator makes more projects like the Bunker Hill redevelopment possible, we might have a tougher time spotting the difference.
Miles Howard is a freelance writer in Boston and the founder of the Walking City Trail. He publishes the weekly hiking newsletter Mind the Moss.
Boston, MA
Mayor Wu plans to return to City Hall Tuesday for cabinet meeting, with baby Mira in tow – The Boston Globe
“I’ve had the support system to be able to keep plugging in and plugging away at the city’s issues,” Wu said on GBH. “My daily check ins with staff now happen over Zoom, and the doctor said to try to stay off my feet for about two weeks, so I’m right at that point as well.”
Wu gave birth to her daughter on Jan. 14, exactly two weeks ago Monday, and is taking the baby to her two week check-up later today, she said.
Mira will join her at City Hall on Tuesday “because I can’t be away from her for too long, with the nursing at this point,” Wu added.
In the interview, Wu also answered questions about her revived property tax home rule petition, as well as her mayoral challenger Josh Kraft. But she particularly doubled down on her commitment to upholding Boston’s law that bans local law enforcement from cooperating with requests from federal immigration authorities to detain people suspected of being undocumented immigrants, unless they are also wanted for a serious crime.
“We don’t enforce federal immigration law — our police department takes care of criminal activity, and they focus on local issues, and whenever someone breaks the law, we hold them accountable here, regardless of their immigration status, which we do not ask about and interact with,” Wu said.
Wu’s comments drew a harsh rebuke from President Trump’s border czar Tom Homan last year, and last week, ICE Boston made some highly publicized arrests of people they said were in the country illegally.
A FOX News team embedded with ICE officials to document the operation, which Wu pointed to as evidence of authorities trying to “sensationalize and stoke greater fear about it.”
On GBH Monday, Wu also responded to the president’s threat of prosecuting local officials who “interfere” with his administration’s efforts to deport undocumented residents.
“There’s been a lot of bluster so far and a lot of [intentionally] trying to create drama and fear and sort of perception of fulfilling pretty draconian campaign promises,” Wu said.
“The federal government will continue to do what they do on the federal side,” she continued. “We will continue to do what we do on the city side, which is keeping everyone safe here, and we don’t have the authority to, let’s say, stop or overrule what they’re doing in their domain, but neither do they in our domain, either.”
She said her administration has instructed school leaders to not allow any unauthorized adults in school buildings, including federal immigration authorities.
“Those spaces will continue to be spaces where we don’t ask about immigration status, and everyone is guaranteed to have access to a quality education,” she said. “We are going to be there to provide services for our residents, no matter what part of the city and no matter what background.”
“It doesn’t help anyone from a public safety impact when law-abiding residents and members of our community are forced into the shadows because of fear,” she added.
However, when asked whether she would go as far as former Mayor Martin J. Walsh, and offer City Hall as a refuge to undocumented residents, Wu stopped short.
“I’m not one for performative actions that could theoretically put our residents at even greater risk,” said Wu. “We are going to do everything that we can to make sure we are implementing and providing the supports that are needed for our residents, but that has not been something that has come up as a helpful step.”
Niki Griswold can be reached at niki.griswold@globe.com. Follow her @nikigriswold.
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