Sunday, September 30, 2007

BRA Board to Vote on Harvard Science Complex

BRA Board Meeting
Wednesday, October 3
2:00 pm
City Hall, 9th floor conference room

Agenda:
BRA Board to vote on approval of Harvard's Science Complex on Western Avenue

Harry Mattison has posted a series of comments of residents from the DPIR phase of public comments.

Attendance is encouraged by members of the public concerned about this expansion project. There are two issues that many people in North Allston want the BRA Board to consider:
  1. The BRA should require Harvard to complete a Final Project Impact Report; and
  2. The BRA should not waive further review of the project.
Official information on the Science Complex can be found at Harvard's Allston website. More extensive information, including public comments and analysis, can be found at Mattison's HarvardInAllston website.

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Beat The Press Beating Up Boston College Athletics

I watch very little television, but rarely miss catching "Beat the Press" -- the Friday edition of WGBH's "Greater Boston" -- at some point over the weekend via Comcast On Demand. During one of the segments of the September 28, 2007 broadcast, the panel slid back-and-forth between Oklahoma State football... and Boston College football. Host: Emily Rooney. Guests: Dan Kennedy (Northeastern University), Eileen McNamara (Brandeis University, formerly of Boston Globe), John Carroll (Boston University and Greater Boston), Joe Sciacca (Boston Herald). The video of the segment can be viewed online here.

The show was doing a segment on the press conference by Mike Gundy, coach of the Oklahmoma State University football team, who was complaining about a column by sportswriter Jenni Carlson. Her column was critical of OSU quarterback Bobby Reid, whom Gundy sidelined recently.

The gist of the discussion was that the column was journalistically not well-written -- if not even "toxic" in Carroll's mind -- but also that Gundy's outburst went off the deep end. There was some degree of disagreement amongst the host and guests about whether or not sportswriters should treat college athletes at big-time football programs differently from professional athletes: the segment had an on-air interview by Boston Globe sports columnist Dan Shaunessy who said that they should be treated differently, while acknowedging, however, that it was a bit of a gray area; Joe Sciacca made the point, and Dan Kennedy agreed, that these college athletes are part of a big-time money-making machine, receive big scholarships and premium housing, and are one-step away from professional sports, and hence should be treated with a scrutiny similar to professional athletes. Apparently, Reid's mother is considering a lawsuit against Carlson.

The discussion continued [unofficial transcript produced by myself]:
MCNAMARA: A kid who is playing hockey for Williams College is not the same as somebody who is playing Big 10 or Big 12 football. I know absolutely nothing about sports, but I am married to a sportswriter, and he says this is big-time athletics... We don't comprehend it, really, here in New England, what real big-time college sports is.

KENNEDY [overlapping with Carroll]: It's as big as professional sports in much of the country.

CARROLL [overlapping with Kennedy]: We're going to get a lot of email from BC fans out there... sorry, Dan.

ROONEY: That's a good example: there's a tremendous amount of attention paid to BC and all of its games. Do they get that kind of scrutiny from the local press? I'm asking that rhetorically because I don't read enough...

CARROLL [overlapping with Kennedy and Rooney]: Well, if you read the police blotter, they do. And that's happened quite often...

KENNEDY [inaudible]

ROONEY: I'm talking about the game itself.

KENNEDY: You don't get it here, because we have major professional sports in every sport you can think of. But if you go out into fly-over country like Oklahoma, this is it, this is what life revolves around, their big-time college sports program. And these guys, it's one degree of separation between that and the NFL.
I have a prediction: they are about to receive a lot of letters and/or email from BC fans.

Comments? Direct them to greaterboston@wgbh.org . Once again, comments or complaints about the WGBH broadcast should be directed to greaterboston@wgbh.org, not here.


Legal and/or Behavioral Troubles for BC Athletes

I suspect that Carroll was making a reference to Boston College athletes who have had some legal (and behavioral) problems both recently and in the more distant past. He gave no specifics, particularly since his comments were in passing, but a little bit of research provides some details.

BC's student newspaper, The Heights, published an editorial back in January motivated by two basketball players being kicked off of the team. A previous basketball player had problems: "Ryan Sidney, who was a promising raw talent, peaked as a freshman because he couldn't keep his personal issues under control and was constantly in the news for drug problems and behavioral indiscretions." The problems date back to 2000-1 "when Kenny Harley was busted for getting in a bar fight at Mary Ann's." The Heights continues:
"Teammate Andrew Bryant was subsequently dismissed from the university after news broke of his involvement in a robbery during which he pistol-whipped somebody. The next year, a bizarre story broke concerning Jermaine Watson jumping out a window, rumored to be armed and escaping cops. He jeopardized his playing ability to escape legal authorities."
Hockey isn't immune: "Captain and assistant captain Joe Rooney and Brian Boyle were stripped of their respective C and A jersey patches." [See note below for clarification: punishment stopped there.] Woman's hockey coach Tom Mutch "stepped down [in April] in the wake of allegations of improper behavior with one of his players" (Boston Globe) -- sexually explicit text messages to Mutch were found on one of his player's cell phone, according to The Heights. Mutch is married, by the way, to a woman who isn't on the team.

This summer, two BC football players, Gosder Cherilus and DeJuan Tribble, were involved in a bar scuffle that has led to charges filed against both. I believe that both are currently playing for BC football this fall. And former linebacker Raymond Henderson was recently, allegedly caught with three different drugs and trafficking paraphernalia in his Cleveland Circle apartment, and has been indicted.

Boston College is a Jesuit-led university that focuses on "student formation," i.e., in teaching their students how to be moral and upstanding in every aspect of their life. It is a fair question to ask: why does this focus on "student formation" appear to be finding difficulty gaining traction amongst a few of their student athletes -- and even one of their coaches?


Note: comments to the Brighton Centered Blog are encouraged, but moderated. Vitriolic comments will not be published.


EDIT (10/2/07):  The case of BC football players Tribble and Cherilus just got more complicated:  the man injured in the bar fight, Sean Maney of Watertown, has now also been charged with assault and battery.  This means that pretty much everyone involved in the scuffle (except Maney's brother's girlfriend) has been criminally charged -- Tribble, Cherilus, off-duty state police officer Joseph Boike, and now Maney.

Friday, September 28, 2007

Analysis of the 9/25/07 Election Results: Why Schofield Lost

Reports of the after-election event for the Tim Schofield campaign were that, as the returns started coming in, the mood turned to "dejected", stunned, or somber. His supporters were expecting a much better result than a distant third in Tuesday's preliminary municipal election.

It is fairly clear that Mark Ciommo campaign had an effective get-out-the-vote effort on election day, resulting in a first-place finish.

Inspection of the results for Greg Glennon show that a strong majority of the Russian Jewish senior bloc voted for him -- as did the more general senior vote in the neighboring precinct -- leading to his second-place showing.

But what led to the defeat of Schofield's effort in which he missed second place by nearly 300 votes? There are two answers, in order of decreasing likelihood: (1) Failure to get-out-the-vote in what should have been his strongholds of Ward 21, particularly along Commonwealth Avenue; and (2) a split in the institutional expansion vote, particularly due to the participation of fifth-place finisher Alex Selvig.

The analysis here is based on the unofficial returns by precinct that I recently posted.


Glennon Blocs Senior Vote From Ciommo

There is little question that seniors voted heavily for Glennon in this election.

Wallingford Road's Ward 21, Precinct 13 went 303-142-57 for Glennon-Ciommo-Schofield. It wasn't a voting bloc per se, but instead the Russian Jewish senior vote broke well but not overwhelmingly for Glennon at 56%, indicating that there was no formal endorsement for any one candidate by ward boss Naakh Visoky. Compare with November 8, 2005, when incumbent Councilor Jerry McDermott carried 80% of the precinct at 507-114 against Paul Creighton -- that was a voting bloc.

But far more interesting was the senior-heavy, but not so overtly Russian, neighboring Precinct 12 in Ward 21, which includes other senior housing buildings like Covenant House. This precinct sailed into Glennon's hands 147-75 over Ciommo, which is surprising considering Ciommo's connections with seniors at his job as Executive Director of the Veronica Smith Senior Center. In 2005, the precinct went only 55%-44% for McDermott, even though McDermott had the endorsed bloc over on Wallingford Road, indicating how those two precinct votes do not always follow each other. Glennon's victory in 21/12 threw another more than 100 votes to him relative to Schofield.

I'm sure Glennon will be able to read the writing on the walls: he won a place in the finals by gaining 372 votes over Schofield from these two precincts. He's got some helpers to thank.

Ciommo was expected to do well with seniors district-wide, but that is more difficult to assess based on the precinct-level results and the lack of an exit poll.


Not Getting-Out-the-Vote in Progressive Ward 21

After seeing the 303 and 147 Glennon votes in those two precincts, the next biggest thing that stands out in the precinct results is the horrendously low voter turnout in all of the rest of Ward 21. Nine of those other 12 precincts had voter turnout of 1.6 to 5.5%. Yes, you saw that correctly, Ward 21, Precinct 8 had only 1.6% of registered voters show up at the polls, compared to a district-wide average of 12.5%!

If you ignore the two senior-heavy precincts, Ward 21 is generally known to be more progressive than its neighboring Irish Catholic Ward 22 to the west; Ward 21 should have been part of the Schofield base. Schofield did, in fact, win six of the Ward 21 precincts, but did so by getting only 12 to 20 votes in each of those six precincts. The same six precincts had 9-16% voter turnout in the municipal election of November 2005, disproportionately higher relative to the overall turnout rates. All six precincts together could barely make up the ground Glennon gained in 21/12 alone, and were nowhere close to Glennon's relative gain in 21/13.


Silver Lining for Schofield

There is one little nugget that Schofield's campaign should enjoy: he was the only candidate to get votes in the double digits (i.e., at least ten) in each and every one of the 27 precincts. Ciommo, Glennon, and Rosie Hanlon managed ten or more votes each in 20 precincts; Selvig did it in ten precincts. Schofield can take heart that he saw some broad support across the district.


Irish Catholic Vote in Ward 22 Oak Square

This really was a battleground between Ciommo and Schofield in Precincts 7 and 11, with Glennon carrying on in third place. But Precinct 13 went very big for Glennon, no doubt due to the influence of his mentor who lives here lived here until recently, former State Representative Brian Golden. When you put all three precincts together, it all went heavily for Ciommo. Glennon and
Schofield were only separated by two votes, keeping Schofield from making up ground lost on the senior vote.


Institutional Expansion Vote Split, But Could've Swung Election

The issue of institutional expansion gave rise to Selvig's candidacy, but also was a significant factor for Hanlon and Schofield -- long-time and three-month members, respectively, of the Boston College Task Force. First-time candidate Selvig carried nearly 300 votes, and they really did come from the neighborhoods adjacent to Boston College's Brighton Campus and Harvard University's Allston Campus. Selvig picked up 23% of all of his votes carrying his home Precinct 8 in Ward 22, north and west of the land formerly owned by St. John's Seminary. The other precincts he carried at least ten votes were nearly all either adjacent to 22/8 (i.e., precincts 3, 4, 9, and 10) or in the heart of Harvard's Allston country in Ward 22, Precincts 1 and 2; but in the Harvard area, he got beaten soundly by all four other candidates. In short, he carried the BC vote (barely), but Ciommo and Schofield took the Harvard vote. Overall, Ciommo edged Schofield out on the institutional expansion precincts, contrary to my prediction.

The people who stop by Brighton Centered are typically interested and involved in the institutional expansion issue. And they broke for Schofield, followed by Selvig, in that failed poll in July. Could Selvig and Hanlon, who were both active in the issue before the campaign, have driven enough institutional expansion votes away from Schofield to bump him out of second place? Quite possibly, although difficult to prove. I suspect most supporters liked Selvig because of his knowledge of the issue and aggressive stance, but not so much because of non-A-B money; Schofield shared the broad knowledge, but was far more diplomatic than aggressive on the issue in the campaign. I think this implies some degree of overlap among their supporters.


How Did My Predictions Fare?

Prediction: Voter turnout 5000 or significantly more (i.e., up to 6000).
Reality: 4521 votes, or 10% below (or up to 25% below) my prediction.
Judgment: Not bad. I think a lot of people were surprised with the lower-than-expected turnout in an election that everyone thought was high-profile (except at the Boston Globe and Boston Herald).

Prediction: Wallingford Road not vote as a bloc, but instead breaking for Glennon at 65-25-10% for Glennon-Ciommo-Schofield.
Reality: Wallingford Road not vote as a bloc, but instead breaking for Glennon at 56-26-11. Pretty damn close.

Prediction: Elderly vote 60-25-15% for Ciommo-Hanlon-Schofield in Ward 21, Precinct 12.
Reality: Elderly vote 27-8-8% for Ciommo-Hanlon-Schofield in Ward 21, Precinct 12, with Glennon carrying 53%.
Judgment: Couldn't have been more wrong. Surprise of the night for Glennon.

Prediction:
Schofield carries the institutional expansion vote, with Glennon and Ciommo way behind tied for 4th place.
Reality: Ciommo carried the institutional expansion vote, with Schofield close behind and Glennon in third.

Prediction: Glennon won't carry his own precinct [i.e., Schofield takes it].
Reality: Glennon doesn't carry his own precinct -- Ciommo takes it.

Prediction: Schofield gives Ciommo a run for his money in Irish Catholic strongholds in Oak Square at 55-45 for Ciommo-Schofield in Ward 22, Precincts 7 and 11. [I mistakenly wrote 13, which is a much more conservative precinct.]
Reality: Schofield gives Ciommo a run for his money, but Glennon is a strong third. Just counting the two candidates has Ciommo-Schofield at 59-41%, pretty close.

Analysis: Schofield campaign best organized, Ciommo a little bit of a hit, Glennon organization in disarray.
Reality: On election day, Ciommo's organization got out the vote and Schofield didn't. Glennon organization's performance unclear, since so much of his vote came from blocs partnering with others.

Prediction: The race was going to be damn close between Schofield, Ciommo, and Glennon.
Reality: The race was quite close, but only between Ciommo and Glennon.

Prediction: Hanlon 675 votes, Selvig 300. [After correcting down by 25% to account for my mistake, described above, in the overall turnout.]
Reality: Hanlon 576 votes, Selvig 293.

Prediction: Schofield-Ciommo-Glennon-Hanlon-Selvig.
Reality: Ciommo-Glennon-Schofield-Hanlon-Selvig.

Prediction: The Russian vote determines second place, not first.
Reality: The Russian vote determines second place, not first -- but you might instead argue that the split of institutional expansion votes determined second place.


Summary: with odds-making like that, bring on the casinos!

Precinct Results of the Preliminary Municipal Election on 9/25/07

Here are the unofficial precinct-by-precinct results from Tuesday's preliminary municipal election for the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council seat. The City of Boston does not publish the unofficial results on their website; the official results will be available next week, and will eventually make it onto their website (possibly after the November election).

I've put the results into two tables: the first one has the number of votes per candidate in each precinct; the second has the percentage of vote for each candidate in each precinct. They are preceded by a map of District 9's wards and precincts.

"N_reg" is the number of registered voters in that precinct
"N_vote" is the number of valid votes cast in that precinct
"%Vote" is the percentage of registered voters casting a valid vote

Read this accompanying post for an analysis of what these precinct-by-precinct numbers mean.






Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council Election Results
Preliminary Municipal Election -- September 25, 2007
Number of Votes Per Candidate
WardPrecN_regN_vote%VoteCiommoGlennonHanlonJennerSchofieldSelvig
213153134 2.29580120
214111436 3.24351202
215129138 2.953131115
216111614513.06618220363
217134963 4.7165721716
218154524 1.62360121
219169493 5.5124370283
2110121316013.26031143448
2111153382 5.33011180185
2112159527817.4751472232110
2113196154227.61423032455711
211486831 3.64260190
2115121938 3.17170194
2116157418011.4996221466
221188030216.199842927017
222179125914.575413128525
223156825416.2101405603918
224110722420.262552436316
22587511312.93839151164
22685812714.85412270304
227139019814.27034230629
228135024117.946453914367
229131513210.036103402824
2210150928719.0124454015819
221196620621.39828181565
2212100725325.19373381408
221387118120.86973210153
Total36090452112.51406125057628965293




Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council Election Results
Preliminary Municipal Election -- September 25, 2007
Percentage of Vote Per Candidate
WardPrecN_regN_vote%VoteCiommoGlennonHanlonJennerSchofieldSelvig
213153134 2.226.514.723.5 0.035.3 0.0
214111436 3.211.1 8.313.9 2.855.6 5.6
215129138 2.913.2 7.934.2 2.628.913.2
216111614513.045.512.415.2 0.024.8 2.1
217134963 4.725.4 7.911.1 3.227.025.4
218154524 1.6 8.312.525.0 0.050.0 4.2
219169493 5.512.946.2 7.5 0.030.1 3.2
2110121316013.237.519.4 8.8 1.927.5 5.0
2111153382 5.336.613.422.0 0.022.0 6.1
2112159527817.427.052.9 7.9 1.1 7.6 3.6
2113196154227.626.255.9 4.4 0.910.5 2.0
211486831 3.612.9 6.519.4 0.061.3 0.0
2115121938 3.118.4 2.618.4 0.050.010.5
2116157418011.4 5.053.312.2 0.625.6 3.3
221188030216.132.827.8 9.6 0.723.2 5.6
222179125914.529.015.812.0 0.832.8 9.7
223156825416.239.815.722.0 0.015.4 7.1
224110722420.227.724.610.7 1.328.1 7.1
22587511312.933.634.513.3 0.914.2 3.5
22685812714.842.5 9.421.3 0.023.6 3.1
227139019814.235.417.211.6 0.031.3 4.5
228135024117.919.118.716.2 0.417.827.8
229131513210.027.3 7.625.8 0.021.218.2
2210150928719.043.215.713.9 0.320.2 6.6
221196620621.347.613.6 8.7 0.527.2 2.4
2212100725325.136.828.915.0 0.415.8 3.2
221387118120.838.140.311.6 0.0 8.3 1.7
Total36090452112.531.127.612.7 0.621.3 6.5




NOTE: at least one person has reported a problem with the formatting, in that some of the right-hand columns appear missing. If you have such a problem, please email me and tell me what operating system (MS Windows, Mac OS X, linux) and browser (IE, firefox, opera, konqueror) you are using. Later today or over the weekend I will post a PDF version and link to it for easier printing.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Police Sawhorse Souvenir: Not a Good Idea for a Party House

From the Allston-Brighton TAB's coverage of the police and last weekend's parties.
Shortly before 2 a.m. on Saturday, police and BC officials broke up a party at 249 Foster St., where they observed between 25 and 30 college students drinking. Police confiscated the tap to a beer keg and gave it to Tom Keady, Boston College’s vice president of governmental and community affairs, for donation to charity. Police warned the nine lessees that further complaints would result in arrest.

Police also removed a Boston Police sawhorse from the basement of the apartment. The residents said it had been there when they moved in.
I have a feeling that those police won't give the guys at 249 Foster Street a second chance after confiscating that sawhorse.

Phone Survey for the At-Large City Council Race

Tonight I received a call for an extensive phone survey done by one of the candidates for the At-Large City Council race. If you remember back, I received a similarly extensive survey in June for the Allston-Brighton District 9 race, which I reasoned, at the time, to be done for the Tim Schofield campaign. (A June expenditure for a phone survey showed up on his campaign finance report, so I appear to have guessed right on that one.)

I'm always happy to promote transparency in government -- and in election campaigns. So, here's the survey for everyone to see and gawk:
  1. Are you registered to vote?
  2. What is your party affiliation? [Dem, Rep, unenrolled/independent. Doesn't the candidate know there ain't no independents in Massachusetts, only unenrolled?]
  3. How likely are you to vote in the November 6 election?
  4. How often do you vote [on previous City Council races]?
  5. Do you think that things in Boston are headed in the right direction, or off on the wrong track?
  6. Are you proud to be a Bostonian?
  7. In the past five years, have things changed for the better?
  8. Have you ever thought about moving out of Boston? [I initially answered yes in order to hear the follow-up question... but I won't tell you my final answer.]
  9. If yes, what is the [one] reason? [Open-ended, but appeared to have some specificity in the answers/categories]
  10. In the next several years, is your outlook about Boston optimistic or pessimistic?
  11. In your neighhborhood specifically, do you feel safe?
  12. What is the number one problem you want a Boston City Councilor to address? [open-ended question]
  13. Very favorable/somewhat favorable/somewhat unfavorable/very unfavorable/no opinion -- about the following people: Boston City Council; Tom Menino; Ron Consalvo; Stephen Murphy, John Connolly; Andrea Cabral; Sam Yoon; Michael Flaherty; Felix Arroyo; Paul Grogan; Ralph Martin; Chris Gabrieli; John Tobin; Deval Patrick. [The surveyor said that I was the first person to know all of them... she hinted that most people knew very, very few of these names.]
  14. The mayor will be up for re-election two years from now. But if the election were instead held today, then would you vote to re-elect, definitely consider an alternative, ...?
  15. In November, four At-Large City Councilors will be elected. Name who you will vote for (priority order for four): Michael Flaherty, Matthew Geary, Martin Hogan, Stephen Murphy, David Wyatt, Sam Yoon, Felix Arroyo, John Connolly, William Estrada.
  16. Which two (in order) of these five issues should be the priorities for the next Boston City Councilor? (a) Affordable housing; (b) Neighborhood schools; (c) More police on the street; (d) Reduce property taxes; (e) Create more substance abuse programs. [Clearly a candidate who doesn't give a s#!t about Allston-Brighton's issues.]
  17. Which of these attributes, applied to a candidate, would make you more or less likely to vote for him?
  • Supported by the gay community
  • Endorsed by several minority groups
  • Has had a successful career in business and finance
  • Has strong values forged from a life devoted to family and community
  • Raised in a family with strong roots in public service
  • Is a fresh face representing the new Boston
  • Gets involved, is an activist, in uniting people and communities across the city
  • Has young children in public school
  • Is from South Boston
  • Is from Back Bay
  • Is a leader in the progressive community
  • Worked his way through college as a member of labor
  • Is young and energetic
  1. Do you support or oppose a resort-style casino in Boston?
  2. Do you support or oppose moving City Hall to the South Boston waterfront?
  3. Do you support or oppose creating term limits for the Mayor?
  4. [blah, blah, blah, wordy question...] ...Is access to opportunity the same depending on which neighborhood you live in?
And then the usual background questions:
  1. Liberal/moderate/conservative
  2. Age
  3. How long have you lived in the City of Boston
  4. Highest grade you reached
  5. Own or rent your home
  6. Do you have children (under 18) living at home?
  7. What is your ethnic group/nationality? [the options were very odd: Caucasian was broken down to English, Irish, French, German, Polish, and Italian, too, I think. The surveyor said that this was the first survey she had ever had that broke down the Caucasian group into nationalities.]
One of these days, they're gonna put me on a do-not-call-list for campaign phone surveys...

Anyway, I've got my opinion as to who paid for this survey... I'll hold off on stating my opinion for a few days, though.

Now's your chance: who do you think paid for this survey? Choices are: Michael Flaherty, Matthew Geary, Martin Hogan, Stephen Murphy, David Wyatt, Sam Yoon, Felix Arroyo, John Connolly, and William Estrada.

Post a Comment [below] giving one name and a reason for your choice!

Schofield Endorses Ciommo for City Council

Tim Schofield, third-place finisher in Tuesday's preliminary election for Allston-Brighton District 9 City Councilor, has endorsed first-place finisher Mark Ciommo. Harry Mattison has posted the full press release on the Allston Brighton Community Blog.

This move is not unexpected: Schofield's progressive positions on social issues of the day are likely a closer match to Ciommo than to Greg Glennon, the second-place finisher, although this is not exactly certain. Schofield and Ciommo have both pitched themselves as progressive to the online community BlueMassGroup. The endorsement statement, however, makes no note of social issues; instead, Schofield calls Ciommo the "unifying leader that this community needs."

Boston Herald Bursts Into Covering the A-B City Council Race

The Boston Globe's news desk broke their silence yesterday, deciding to cover the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council race with a one paragraph story -- after the preliminary election was over.

The Boston Herald has now burst onto the coverage scene with an in-depth, one sentence story a day later.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Voter Turnout Via Blackberries for the Ciommo Campaign

In the municipal preliminary election yesterday for the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council seat, I received several reports that workers for the Mark Ciommo campaign were at various precincts with their Blackberries. Those reports didn't really describe what they were doing with the Blackberries -- a traditional use or something more clever.

I spoke with their campaign today and found out that the PDA Blackberries were part of their get-out-the-vote effort on election day using software written by a company called "First Tuesday in November". I can't find information online about the company, but it is part of the Sage Systems consulting that Ciommo is using to run his campaign. They claim that this is the first time such software has been used on an election day in Massachusetts.

The way it works: at some point in the middle of election day, a campaign worker at the precinct polling place inspects the list of who has voted; he then checks off those names on the Blackberry; the information is uploaded in real-time to the computer back at the campaign office; and then a worker at the office immediately knows who among their identified supporters in that precinct hasn't yet voted and needs to be called. The advantage of the PDA approach is not only the speed and efficiency with which the information is recorded into the master database, but also that there is no time-delay in getting the information to the campaign office's phone callers. In other words, they don't waste time calling a supporter who voted during the last hour or so. One person reported to me yesterday that they got called by a campaign two hours after they had actually voted -- they were obviously not called by the Ciommo campaign.

This system has some potential working in the other direction, too. The worker carrying the Blackberry can be told where to go to visit somebody's house to help get them to the polls. The technology sure sounds like the way of the future for campaigns all across the country.

Pretty slick!

The Ciommo campaign reported that they were swimming in volunteers on election day, such that they had a little bit of trouble keeping them all busy. I guess the efficiency of computers is not only taking over people's jobs -- it's also taking away the need for so many volunteers on election day.

Boston Globe News Desk Covers A-B District 9 City Council Race

Well, don't get your hopes up too much. It's only one paragraph.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Watching the Precinct Numbers Come In for the District 9 Race

As the election results updated this evening, they did not show which precincts were coming in. But it was clear to me by a jump between N=9 and N=16 that Wallingford Road's Ward 21, Precinct 13 was included.

Going through the numbers: Wallingford Road split between Ciommo and Glennon, but was leaning to Ciommo.

Why? The top three candidates -- Ciommo, Glennon, and Schofield -- combined for 3621 votes overall in 27 precincts. Assume 600 of those came from Ward 21, Precinct 13, leaving 3021 in 26 precincts, or 116/precinct. Six of the precincts in the jump from N=9 to 16 should have carried 696 votes for the three candidates, but all seven carried 1260, meaning that the seventh precinct -- Wallingford Road -- came in with 564 votes. (Close enough to my assumption of 600 votes.)

Who did the Wallingford Road votes break to? I just made a simple model guess of 260-260-44 for Wallingford Road's precinct vote, removed those from the overall numbers, then used that 26-precinct overall vote to estimate the vote for six of the seven precincts in the N=9 to 16 jump. Removing those six precincts gives iteration number one for the Wallingford Road vote, fairly close to my initial model guess. So I just iterate through the procedure again, narrowing in on the final answer. Pretty close to convergence with just one iteration.

Answer: the precinct went something like 286-221-58 for Ciommo-Glennon-Schofield, i.e., a split vote leaning Ciommo. Based on these numbers, the ward boss, Naakh Visoky, must not have endorsed a candidate. The voters followed their consciences between Ciommo, the director of a senior center who delivers care to them daily, and Glennon, the socially conservative candidate in the race who they know through beloved former State Representative Brian Golden.

Without Wallingford Road, Ciommo would have still made the final with Glennon. But if the Wallingford Road had gone as a bloc to Ciommo instead of splitting with Glennon, then Wednesday we might be starting a re-count for second place between Glennon and Schofield.

Wallingford Road's Ward 21, Precinct 13 therefore determined second place in this election, not first.


OK, OK, OK... I'll wait for the precinct-by-precinct numbers to come in before setting that statement in stone.

Ciommo and Glennon Make Final in A-B District 9 City Council Race

Final unofficial results of the District 9 City Council election on September 25, 2007, with all precincts reporting:

DIST. 9 CITY COUNCILOR



Total
Number of Precincts
27
Precincts Reporting
27 100.0 %
Vote For
1
Total Votes
4521

MARK S. CIOMMO
1406 31.10%
GREGORY J. GLENNON
1250 27.65%
TIMOTHY N. SCHOFIELD
965 21.34%
ROSIE HANLON
576 12.74%
ALESSANDRO SELVIG
293 6.48%
JAMES JOSEPH JENNER
28 0.62%
Write-in Votes
3 0.07%

A-B TAB Learns Exit Polling From Enron's Florida Unit

The A-B TAB decided to send their reporter out for a little bit of exit polling today, which they posted at 6:47 pm:
TAB reporter Rich Cherecwich recently headed to the polls for the evening and has done a survey of (so far) 10 people. The votes break down like this: 3 votes for Alex Selvig; 3 each for Ciommo, Glennon and Hanlon, and 1 for Schofield.
Hmmmm. They appear to have counted as well as Enron's accountants. And they posted exit poll results more than an hour before the polls closed -- bad practice.

Let me warn anybody against believing these results: the margin of error for a sample of ten -- assuming they were, in fact, counted correctly -- is 32%. All of the candidates have statistically consistent results for their survey, i.e., within the error bars of their tiny survey, it is a dead heat.

.....

Oh, and the TAB keeps coming at it with their exit poll results (at 8:01 pm):
Rich just talked to five more voters at Jackson Mann — four voted for Schofield and one for Selvig.

According to our extremely unscientific poll of 19 people, this puts Schofield and Selvig in the lead with 6 votes total for Schofield and 5 for Selvig. Ciommo and Hanlon each got three of those 19 and Glennon got 2.
Amen to the "unscientific poll" statement!

The statistical error bar on a sample of 19 is 4.3, therefore Glennon's two votes are statistically indistinguishable from Schofield and Selvig's six each. Still a dead heat.

Predictions for the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council Election

I am putting up this post a few minutes before the polls close tonight. This post does not represent any endorsement, preference, or bias. It is only my best guess at who will win this race based on past election overall results, voting trends by precinct, exuberance of voters, perception of how well candidates have connected with voters, etc. I am no expert on polls, precincts, get-out-the-vote-mobiles, and the like. I just talk to a lot of people, whenever I can, and try to see whose politics they latch onto.

If I haven't offered enough disclaimers yet, let me add another: I may become the silliest looking, ignorant goon after the results come in tonight. But I'll put my predictions out there because, hey, it's worth a shot. And you can all heckle me about my errors... until November 6.


Predictions for the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council Preliminary Election

Summary: This election is going to be damn close.

Total Number of Votes Cast? There were a bit over 3200 votes in the 2005 municipal preliminary and 6000 votes in the 2005 municipal election, while there were around 3750 in Rep. Moran's district for the special primary election in 2005; Rep. Moran and Rep. Honan's districts roughly split City Council District 9 in half. This race has so much interest, I'd expect a good turnout of at least 5000 for this municipal primary election -- if not significantly more.

Wallingford Road. On Saturday morning, Mark Alford joined Patrick Galvin in planting a Greg Glennon sign on his front yard. Since I've never seen a Bill Galvin sign on Bill Galvin's lawn, I can't imagine its lack of a Glennon sign means anything. The Galvin-Alford-Galvin trifecta is signalling to the Wallingford Road voter bloc, as well as other long-term Galvin supporters in Brighton, which way to vote.

But Glennon was a no-show for two candidate forums last week, and no one could get hard confirmation where he was. The most common rumors were a fundraiser on one day and visiting Wallingford Road on the other, but I must emphasize that those are unconfirmed reports -- Glennon hasn't been answering his phone when I call. If the string-pullers are pushing Glennon, then why might he have been spending time over there working on the vote?

I am betting on no uniform voting-bloc coming out of Wallingford Road today. Instead, the elderly, mostly Russian Jews, are voting their consciences not their ward boss, breaking 65-25-10% for Glennon-Mark Ciommo-Tim Schofield. Schofield? Councilor Sam Yoon pulled 150 at-large votes in that precinct in 2005 (with 4-way voting), so Schofield may pick up half of them. Glennon is their comfortable choice because of his socially conservative views, particularly on gay rights and abortion, while Ciommo has been vocal in playing to the left in this campaign. The precinct delivered 420 and 631 District 9 votes in the 2005 preliminary and municipal election, but 858 for state representative in 2006 general election; expect at least 600 votes for this turnout-heavy precinct (Ward 21, Precinct 13) in a well-publicized race.

Institutional Expansion Vote. This voting bloc has firmed up into a strong contingent since this City Council seat was last open. The neighborhoods are well-informed and increasingly well-organized. Think of at least 300 activists (including spouses) involved near BC and 500 around Harvard, and you've got quite a bloc of educated, civic-minded people who have far higher rates of turnout than the general population.

Alex Selvig's "protest candidacy" might seem the odds-on favorite, but a little nugget argues otherwise: an online poll I had up in late July (until one candidate sent hordes of online voters to the polls for two hours, completely reversing the results) showed Schofield winning the internet-active crowd handily over Selvig. Rosie Hanlon picked up a handful of votes, but Ciommo and Glennon were nearly zero. Amongst this crowd, I hear Schofield's name mentioned most. Selvig's bump up and down the last few days won't change it much at all: his supporters are loyal, and virtually everyone had decided on their candidate well before this. Want to see if Schofield can trump Selvig among this crowd? Watch the results come in for Ward 22, Precinct 8 (BC neighbors) or 22/1 (Harvard neighbors and Glennon's home) -- and that Glennon won't carry his own precinct. I am betting 45-30-15-5-5 Schofield-Selvig-Hanlon-Glennon-Ciommo, where Glennon's votes mostly come from the Galvin-Alford-Galvin trifecta and their friends.

Irish Catholic Stronghold. The area near to the now-closed Our Lady of Presentation (aka Presentation School) consists of moderate, and educated, voters in a stable neighborhood of owner-occupied housing twice the A-B average. It was former Councilor Jerry McDermott's stronghold, and will be the primary battle-ground between Schofield and Ciommo. If Schofield can battle to a near-tie with Ciommo, look for Schofield to run away overall. Votes to watch are Ward 22, Precinct 7 (to the south) and 22/13 (to the north). Predict 55-45 Ciommo-Schofield. Note that Hanlon does well with the Catholic vote across Brighton, but this is hard to tell from individual precinct results.

Small Business Owners. They just love Rosie. One after another tells of a story about how she helped them do a promo to drum up business. The problem is that there's just not that many votes available here, particularly since some live out of the district. There's no way to track this vote via precincts; we would need a true exit poll. There may be 200 votes here, and it'll break heavily for Hanlon.

Elderly / Seniors. Some of the senior vote is already accounted for in the Wallingford Road precinct, but there are still many more in the B'nai Brith housing area, as well as in houses they've occupied for 30-50 years (or more). Ciommo, Ciommo, Ciommo. If they managed to meet Hanlon, she has a shot at a good piece of the group. Look for 60-25-15 for Ciommo-Hanlon-Schofield in Ward 21, Precinct 12 -- which carries a number of likely voters second only to Wallingford Road in 21/13, so a big plus for Ciommo.

"Old-boys", but not quite seniors. Ciommo's base, and the ones who put up all those lawn signs in the first few days of the election, are 40-55 year-old guys who used to play ball with Ciommo. They can't imagine doing anything but voting for him. Three hundred lawn signs deliver at least 300 votes in this demographic. They are scattered all around town, but look for their votes in Ciommo's old stomping grounds in Ward 22, Precinct 11 in the vicinity of Hobart Park. The problem for Ciommo is that this kind of precinct -- parallel to A-B in general -- has been steadily moving out to the suburbs, leaving a demographic with a plurality of younger people (one-third) in the 25-34 age bracket. If Ciommo has trouble in 22/11, then he'll have trouble overall in A-B -- a direct result of the nature of our neighborhood's demographic trends working against his base.

Hispanic/Brazilian. This constituency is highly under-represented, since many of the Brazilians, for example, move to the suburbs once they naturalize and set down roots. If Selvig could find these voters, they're his because of his language ability. He must've had a flyer written in Spanish... but I never saw it. Probably a couple of hundred votes for Selvig if he is making a concerted effort to knock on doors and walk people to the polls. Sadly, I doubt the turnout side will happen. Hispanic residents are 14% overall in A-B, but look to a place like Ward 22, Precinct 2 for a higher concentration near 20%; note that the Hispanic vote will get mixed up with the institutional expansion vote in precincts like this one. (Note to everyone: I can't figure out where the largest voting turnout of Hispanic voters will be... I am only stabbing in the dark based on census data, which is not the same. So this is one subject on which I expect ridicule!)

Voter Exuberance. Schofield gets this because he is very appealing to the young crowd; no one else has made a dent in that constituency.

Well-Run Campaigns. Glennon stands out for an apparent organizational collapse in the last few weeks: two missed public events; phone calls not answered or returned, no phone number listed on his website, unlisted home phone number; useless push polling in the last couple of weeks, instead of real phone calling; sloppy campaign finance form indicating lack of organizational support; etc. Ciommo's organization -- even though apparently farmed out as consulting work at Sage Systems (i.e., 90% of his expenditures were for "consulting"), and being run in a professional manner -- showed a series of mis-steps across the spectrum: failing to buy his own web domain prior to sending it out on cards; taking three months to put up a website; making more problems than he solved while trying to put out fires on gay marriage and domestic partnerships; giving excessively brief answers to questions and questionnaires; pitching himself as a progressive while simultaneously trying to appeal to the conservative Russian Jewish elderly vote; etc. But they answer their phones, and make a lot of personal connections, so I expect organizational issues to be only a relatively small hit.

Schofield, on the other hand, has run a smooth and well-oiled political machine, and Hanlon comes in a close second. Selvig's organization improved as the campaign went along, but lack of visible supporters outside the first candidates forum, no manager until well into the campaign, the need to appeal to an online forum for warm bodies, etc., meant that he was catching up a lot of lost ground. "Protest candidates" aren't supposed to be about smoothly-run campaigns, anyway.


Conclusion: Schofield ekes out a small victory by 200 votes; watch his performance in the stable, owner-occupied neighborhoods as the bell-wether of his overall performance to determine if he squeaks past Ciommo or beats him soundly. Second-place is too close to call between Ciommo and Glennon, both in the neighborhood of 1500 votes. Glennon pulls off second-place (or a close third) if, and only if, Naakh Visoky decides to deliver a full voting bloc to him; otherwise, Glennon falls to third, if not fourth, because he's just not carrying strong votes in the more moderate areas (fought over by Ciommo and Schofield) and the institutional border regions (fought over by Schofield and Selvig). Hanlon comes in fourth with around 900 votes (or pulls off third if the Russians endorse or lean Ciommo). First-time candidate Selvig garners a respectable 400, a result of hard work in places many other candidates didn't tread, and thinks about running in a future election.

Catch the drift here? The Russian vote determines second place, not first. I'm not sure they're going to be happy when they realize they aren't in the driver's seat anymore in A-B elections.

Outsourcing Election Coverage to the Local Papers and Blogosphere

The major papers in town, the Boston Globe and Boston Herald, have not run a single story, as far as I can tell, on the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council preliminary election or campaign. David Bernstein of the Boston Phoenix searched the archives confirming this. The Globe did publish an editorial endorsing Tim Schofield, but it strikes me as odd that they can enter an endorsement on something that doesn't even warrant a story by their reporters.

I added a little comment to Bernstein's Talking Politics blog post:
For the record, the Allston-Brighton TAB has had regular coverage, the Boston Bulletin ran at least one story early on, Bay Windows has covered it, and the Boston Phoenix ran your story a couple of weeks ago on both the At-Large and District 9 City Council races.
Adam Gaffin of UniversalHub points out some blogosphere coverage of the election campaigns, including a link back here to Brighton Centered.

The Boston Globe managed to outsource its coverage of the September 11th election results to one of the campaigns.

It's increasingly obvious that the city papers are outsourcing their coverage of local news to the local papers -- and the blogosphere. What might be next? Outsourcing the coverage to India?

Meeting for BC Off-Campus Students, Landlords, and Residents

For Boston College Students Living Off-Campus

September 26, 2007
6:00PM

Fulton 511

Who should attend?
Students Living Off-Campus, Local Residents, Landlords & Property Managers.
Off-Campus students requested to send at least one representative from each address; attendance will be taken.

Who will be there?
Boston Police, BCPD, ODSD, Residential Life and more!

Directions to Fulton Hall
Campus Map

Questions?
Paulette Durrett 617-552-3480

Parking? Visitors may park in the Commonwealth Avenue garage here at Boston College. They can access the garage by driving onto the campus through the More Drive/St. Ignatius gate. The rates are as follows:

First 2 hours - FREE
$2.00 - Every hour after
$10.00 - Daily maximum

Please note that visitors must park in the garages third floor and above. If you need any more information please feel free to contact: Colleen [Salmon], BC Office of Govt and Comm Affairs

Monday, September 24, 2007

Election Day Tuesday 9/25: Preliminary Election for A-B District 9 City Council

Voter Information Guide. In case you haven't seen all the Election 2007 related voter information, load the full website of the Brighton Centered Blog and look at the links across the top of the page. Transcripts, audio recordings, questionnaires, interviews, campaign finance reports -- as well as analysis and critical commentary. There is literally no shortage of information about the candidates in this election.

League of Women Voters has a thorough guide detailing everything you need to know about voting.


Who to vote for?
For the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council seat there are five active candidates: Mark Ciommo, Greg Glennon, Rosie Hanlon, Tim Schofield, and Alex Selvig. (All links are to Brighton Centered Blog postings about each candidate.)

There is one candidate, James Jenner, whose name will appear on the ballot but has withdrawn from the race.


Where to vote? Just go to "Where Do I Vote (MA)?"

Note that a few A-B precincts have changed their poll locations. If you go to a polling place and your name is not on the list of registered voters -- but you believe that your registration may still be current -- then request a provisional ballot. You vote now, and then the elections officials will sort it all out later.


When to vote? Polls open 7:00 am -- 8:00 pm. Usually, voters who are in line by 8:00 pm are allowed to vote, no matter how long it takes to process through the queue.


Candidate Websites? Mark Ciommo, Greg Glennon, Rosie Hanlon, Tim Schofield, and Alex Selvig.


Election Results? Probably at the City of Boston's Current Elections website.


How often to vote? Once per registered voter, please.

Update: Mattison Reiterates Support for Selvig

Harry Mattison of the Allston Brighton Community Blog has reiterated his support for Alex Selvig despite the turn of events in the last couple of days.  "Will this affect the outcome of tomorrow's election?" Mattison writes.  "I doubt it...  After all this, I still am supporting Alex."

Alex Selvig Issues Statement About Anonymous Emails

Alex Selvig, candidate for the Allston-Brighton District 9 seat on the City Council, issued this statement after the story was reported here that three anonymous emails attacking two other candidates originated from a person using his house's computer network. He wrote a statement as a comment posted at the end of that story, but since those comments don't appear to readers who load this blog's home page I offered to put it in a new, separate posting. He asked that I use the text sent to several Google Groups this afternoon:
"I apologize publicly for the actions of one of my supporters.

The comments expressed were neither sanctioned, shared, nor approved by me or anyone on the Alex Selvig campaign. People who know me know that I would never do this.

I deeply regret that damaging postings about the Hanlon and Schofield campaigns were made in a way that implied my participation. I condemn them without reservation.

I have run on the principles of openness, transparency and integrity. I stand by those principles. The independent actions of this person have been unfairly damaging to Tim Schofield and Rosie Hanlon, but also to me.

I had nothing to do with this, and I am deeply sorry. Being a leader requires me to accept full responsibility, and I do. The buck stops here.

Alex Selvig."
I personally admire that Alex has stood up to take responsibility by: confirming that the emails came from a supporter using his house's computer network; apologizing to the two campaigns who were unfairly attacked; and publicly issuing the statement above. We should all commend him for taking these three actions today to address the issue.


EDIT (9/24 5:10 pm; and 10/8): Read the statement at the end of this Google Group posting for the identity of the anonymous emailer.

Ups and Downs on the Campaign Trail for Alex Selvig

The campaign for Allston-Brighton District 9 City Councilor is in the last 48 hours, with the candidates making last-minute phone calls, knocking on doors, attending events, and planning how to get out their voters. I've already received a call from one campaign not only asking me to vote, but reminding me how to find my precinct's polling place. The candidates all showed up to the Allston-Brighton Day Parade Sunday that started in Packard's Corner and ended in Oak Square.

Against that backdrop, Alex Selvig's candidacy took a big bump up in the standings this weekend following an endorsement by a prominent activist; unfortunately for him, it may now be followed by a very hard hit over an online smear campaign undertaken by someone with access to his house's computer network. And it is no stretch to think that some of his supporters may become disillusioned, if not outright angry, with his campaign over the rapid turn of events.


Endorsement for Selvig by a Harvard Expansion Watchdog

After fellow Allston-Brighton blogger Harry Mattison and I posted the campaign finance reports on Friday for the candidates for the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council seat, it became apparent to me -- and events subsequently confirmed this -- that Mattison would be throwing his support to Alex Selvig. On Saturday morning I received Selvig campaign literature, with hand-signed notations by Mattison, saying that he is "voting for [Selvig] on September 25th, and hope you will, too." Sunday morning, he made it official by endorsing Selvig. (In contrast, I announced in July that the Brighton Centered Blog would remain non-partisan and not endorse a candidate in the election.)

Mattison has been vocal of his dislike of contributions made to Allston-Brighton campaigns from outside the district. He analyzed Greg Glennon's and Tim Schofield's online campaign finance reports from their 2005 race for State Representative, and showed that only a small fraction of each candidate's total support came from A-B. Rosie Hanlon and Mark Ciommo, on the other hand, are long-time residents whose campaign finance reports from their last race -- for the same District 9 City Council seat in 2002 -- showed that a large fraction of their money comes from A-B contributors.

Selvig, however, is a first-time candidate and a self-described long-shot who railed against "rich downtown lawyers, developers" and "lobbyists," thereby attacking "politics-as-usual" as well as "the usual politicians"; he supported taking on the BRA by breaking out its planning functions, but he also diplomatically noted his background in diplomacy. He had few contributors, instead relying on infusing massive amounts of his own money into his campaign -- whether by choice or by limited public support for his candidacy, he told me that he wanted to make it clear that he was beholden to no special interest.

While not likely to change the election result by itself, Mattison's endorsement is no small story. Mattison carries enormous respect among the North Allston and North Brighton community as an individual who has consistently: pored over Harvard University's expansion documents with a fine-toothed comb; organized the online community through his blogging, two Google Groups ("AllstonBrighton2006" and "Harvard Neighbors Forum"), and now a website; and spoke out persistently at community meetings to demand that Harvard keep their promises as well as back off on proposals that would doom the neighborhood.

Selvig's voter base are people opposed to Boston College's expansion; Mattison provided the keys to the similar crowd opposing Harvard.

When asked about Mattison's endorsement, Selvig said that it was "fantastic having somebody who is so [involved] with the [Harvard Allston] Task Force to back me up." He sees it as a sign that "people are really happy with my active work" on institutional expansion issues. "I have great admiration for [Mattison] and his work on the task force."

Before Mattison's endorsement, wouldn't the North Allston residents already see in Selvig the candidate with a style that they have been longing for? Many say yes, but a number of activists opposed to institutional expansion on both sides of town have said to me that they don't believe Selvig can win, and have been looking to vote for a candidate who's got a better shot at making the final. That vote of confidence from Mattison is likely to encourage residents on both sides of Allston-Brighton to look again at Selvig as someone who just might have a chance in this election.

As I prepared to write those words Sunday morning, however, I saw some emails fly by that may turn Selvig's candidacy upside-down. You'll have to decide.


Anonymous Online Smear Campaign by Person Close to Alex Selvig

Friday evening and Sunday morning a member of the "AllstonBrighton2006" and "Harvard Neighbors Forum" Google Groups sent out a series of anonymous emails (here, here, and here) under the pseudonym, "BoughtPolitician@gmail.com", that was increasingly inflammatory about two of the candidates in the race. One candidate was said to have "moved here six years ago just to poach a seat. Any seat. State Rep, Councillor [sic], Dog Catcher"; another candidate was described as taking money from "any slumlord, big developer, or bar owner" because the candidate "needed the money, I guess." In short, this was an online smear campaign.

The facts underlying those emails from "BoughtPolitician" were based on contributions to those two other candidates' campaigns, as stated in their September 17 campaign finance reports and described both on the Brighton Centered Blog and the Allston Brighton Community Blog.*** In particular, it is true that a member of the legal counsel at the BRA contributed to one candidate's campaign and that a landlord who has been reported on critically by the Boston Globe contributed to another candidate's campaign. The issue at hand, however, was not whether or not the contributions were accepted; instead, it was the smear language being used and the fact that it was done anonymously.

I personally replied to the first posting at the Google Group partly out of a desire not to have my writing quoted out of context, but also in order to encourage a person to tone down rhetoric that appeared to be stepping over the line of decency. Since the writer continued the anonymous emails on Sunday, I thought it necessary to get to the bottom of it.

I was surprised that the evidence seem to point directly at the home IP address for a candidate for City Council.

I examined the "most important" IP address (keyword "X-IP") in the email headers of those three anonymous emails and compared them to the same IP addresses of emails received from those two Google Groups, a third Google Group ("BC_Neighbors_Forum"), and my other personal email folders:
  • The IP addresses in all three anonymous emails sent September 21-23 by "BoughtPolitician@gmail.com" matched IP addresses in all sixteen emails sent by "Alex@AlexSelvig.com", Selvig's campaign email address, to me since September 7; and
  • That IP address was used in no other emails in all my personal files.
The IP address match was therefore unique, and likely that of the internet router at Selvig's house (which was later confirmed). Any computer using Selvig's home network could have been used to send the anonymous emails -- so it could have been either Alex Selvig or someone else in his house.

Selvig could not be reached for full comment on Sunday, because that day was full of a 5-K race, parade, post-parade party, and street fair. When I finally caught up with him Monday morning, he stated that he did not personally send those anonymous emails, but confirmed that it came from "a very enthusiastic supporter who has access to the network" at his house -- not a member of his campaign -- and that he "didn't know it was happening." He declined to name the person.

"This wasn't sanctioned by the Selvig campaign," he continued. "It's not the way we want to do business." He said that he was "willing to accept full responsibility" for the comments.

When asked if he agreed with those comments that were posted anonymously, he responded no. "I agree with the gist of it, but not the way it was said... It's something I don't like." Of the person who did the email posting, he concluded, "I guess people are entitled to their own opinions."


Will these shenanigans affect the vote on Tuesday? It is hard to tell, because Selvig is already viewed as a long-shot. Selvig's supporters are clearly drawn to him for his willingness to confront the issue institutional expansion aggressively; the hardball politics of his broader candidacy, like these anonymous emails, might be something that goes alongside the hardball activism. His supporters may be disappointed in what has happened, as well as any role that Alex Selvig or his close supporters had in it. One activist, however, is sticking by his man: Harry Mattison, when contacted Monday morning, said that he would eagerly support Selvig even if Selvig were found to be behind the anonymous emails, because Selvig's positions on the issues are what matters to Mattison.

As they say in politics, let the voters decide. Tomorrow is preliminary election day in Allston-Brighton.


Postscript

I was personally extremely worried that leveling allegations about one of the candidates for City Council one day before the preliminary election would be contrary to journalism standards, and possibly not consistent with serving the public interest. Readers of this blog should be assured that I consulted with two professional and highly-respected journalists prior to my decision to run this story.


*** Note that I have reported here on the contribution of James Tierney, Senior Counsel for the BRA Director, to the Tim Schofield campaign. His campaign manager was offered the opportunity to comment and provided an explanation of Schofield and Tierney's long personal ties.

The initial reporting at the Allston Brighton Community Blog about the other campaign contributions did not offer any of those candidates the opportunity to respond. Mattison has since requested comment from the candidates related to those postings, and edited the posts accordingly, so readers are encouraged to re-read the recent posts on that blog related to campaign finance.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Scenes From the Allston-Brighton Day Bicentennial Parade

The Allston-Brighton Day Parade took place on Sunday, September 23 following the Brian Honan 5-K Race and Walk. I missed out running the race due to a sore ankle, but watched it and the parade in their entirety. The events this year were part of the Brighton-Allston Bicentennial Celebration, which meant that there were far more entries in the parade, particularly marching bands.

While all the candidates joined in the parade, one of them also ran in the 5-K. Here's a look at Team Selvig a bit before he shook my hands with his sweaty one:


I didn't see Representative Kevin Honan running or walking, which I believe he did last year. Hope nothing's wrong.

Oddest thing? The parade was led by Mayor Menino. No, that's not weird. But he was alongside Westwood resident and former A-B District City Councilor Jerry McDermott. It has been a long time since anyone I know has seen McDermott around these parts. Welcome back to town!

OK, one more thing that was really odd: campaign literature handed out for Joe Jaworski, candidate for the Texas State Senate District 11. We've got enough candidates here already, take him away!

I think it was last year when At-Large City Councilor Felix Arroyo trailed his entourage by a full two, if not three, city blocks due to his thorough hand-shaking. This time he was just under two blocks behind his team -- the Councilor was personally handing-out candies to everyone, including the police -- and At-Large City Councilor Sam Yoon was even further behind his guys. But both were eclipsed by candidate Greg "Where's Waldo?" Glennon, who seemed to be just a few steps ahead of the street sweepers -- and probably four blocks behind his team. OK, maybe I exaggerate a little bit:


Speaking of Arroyo and Yoon: they teamed up to follow immediately behind candidate Tim Schofield, reinforcing their endorsements of his candidacy and attempting a bit of cross-pollination:


Note to Tim: bring along a big-@$$ car for the next parade!

Boston College Vice President Thomas Keady, Jr., found his next calling in life as a groupie trailing alongside the BC Marching Band. I'm not sure how much sleep he got after his midnight-3am shift in the BC Police patrol car last night.

Candidate Rosie Hanlon's entourage included her own white monster SUV, a gray convertible -- and an ambulance color-coordinated with her red-white-and-blue campaign signs. I'm not sure if she's appealing to the St. E.'s institutional expansion crowd or the elderly vote:


Candidate Mark Ciommo was definitely going after the elderly vote this time -- not the pirates, because everyone was wearing an official shirt -- with his trolley transporting seniors. Are those trolleys going to be seen all around town on Tuesday ferrying seniors to the polls? He was also right ahead of the Carpenters Local #40 group, another cross-pollination effort:


At-Large City Councilor Stephen Murphy didn't shake my hand. Again. Sure, I look like a bearded hippy with questionable personal cleanliness -- but I really did shower an hour or two earlier.

Prime Realty won the "Best Favor Award" again this year with their frisbee in a goodies bag. (EDIT 9/24 8:00 pm): I can't believe I forgot about Rosie Hanlon's hand towels! They were throwing us the the towels -- not to be confused with her throwing in the towel. I am changing this to a tie for the award.

At-Large City Councilor Michael Flaherty was way up there near the front of the parade -- trying to stay far ahead of the street sweepers pulling up the rear:


Note to the Councilor: there are no cars parked on this street because they got towed. It's kinda hard to have a parade with all those cars parked all over the place.

Finally, it wouldn't be a parade without a bit of performance art. Here's Ms. Brighton-
Allston with her two babies -- you guessed it, Brighton and Allston:

He Flat-Out Stated That He Was Steamrolled Into Doing It

I can't make this stuff up:
DARE YOU TO DO IT

At about 3:30am, on Sunday, September 23, 2007, officers from Area D-14 (Brighton) responded to a radio call for a fight at 15 Pratt Street. On arrival, officers observed a small group gathered in the middle of the street. Officers spoke to the victim who stated that an individual, after being dared, jumped into the seat of a steamroller, started it up and, then, drove it into his car. Officers observed minor damage to the bumper of the victim’s car. When speaking to the suspect, officers observed that it appeared the suspect was under the influence of alcohol. Officers arrested Matthew Gilman, 22, of Allston and charged him with the Destruction of Personal Property and Larceny of a Motor Vehicle.
You can say the vehicle was pressed into service. The police officers got the ball rolling by taking him down to the station.

Saturday, September 22, 2007

One Story That Just Ain't True

In a guest column Mark D. Trachtenberg wrote for Brighton Centered recently, he speculated that James Jenner might have been promised a job by Rosie Hanlon in exchange for him withdrawing from the race and throwing his support over to her. I tried unsuccessfully to contact her for comment at the time, but we are both in the middle of a crunch time leading up to the election and she could only get back to me this afternoon.

She denied his speculation completely, saying that there is no agreement with Jenner. "My values are on the same line as his," she said. "He gave it his very best, and I loved what he did" in running so well as a first-time candidate. All he asked her was, "Would you mind if I supported you?" And Hanlon accepted his offer.

And so the non-story is put to bed.

Labor Union Endorsements (and the Mayor) in the City Council Race

I haven't dug around to figure out the labor endorsement situation for the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council race because, frankly, I just can't keep track of all the different unions and then call them all up to find out who, if anyone, they endorse. The Allston-Brighton TAB has listed labor union endorsements and Harry Mattison has listed campaign finance contributions by labor unions; these are not exactly the same things, although they usually track each other fairly well. Note that the union endorsements are self-reported by the campaigns; nonetheless, I can't imagine a campaign mis-representing a union endorsement, because they would be run out of town with no political future.


Labor Union Endorsements

Mark Ciommo wins the labor endorsements hands down: IBEW Local #2222; Painter and Allied Trade District Council #35; United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) Local #1445; Operating Engineers Local #4; Boston School Custodians Local #1952; Boston Carmen’s Union Local #589; Iron Workers Local #7; AFSCME Corrections Officers Local #419; Pipefitters Local #537; and Carpenters Local #40. The last two have offices in Allston-Brighton, and the TAB gives Ciommo's labor bio (note: probably written by the Ciommo campaign***):
Four generations of Ciommo’s family have been involved in the labor movement. His great-grandfather organized Local 39 Curbsetter and Pavers in the early 1920’s which was recently merged into Local 151 Laborers. Ciommo continued his family’s proud involvement in union organizing. In the early 1990’s he actively assisted the Boston Community Center staff to unionize.
I asked Mark several months ago about his large number of labor union endorsements, and he said it was the result of his long-standing and close personal ties to the people in those groups. It was obvious from the nature of his remarks that he was demonstrating how he won those endorsements himself, the old-fashioned way -- rather than having a higher power help him out.

Tim Schofield won only one union endorsement (not noted by the TAB), but it is a plum: the Boston Teachers Union.

Rosie Hanlon informed me that she has very recently received the endorsement of the Teamsters Local #25.

I cannot find any listings of labor union endorsements at the other candidates' websites. (Note that there are some prominent politicians who donated to Glennon -- but he did not list any endorsements whatsoever on his website, so this is an inexact science.)


Labor Union Campaign Contributions

It is interesting to compare this list of union endorsements to the campaign finance reports, to see which of these unions backed up their endorsements with a contribution.

Schofield's BTU endorsement netted the maximum $500.

Ciommo got $500 each from Iron Workers, Carmen's Union, and Pipefitters, $250 each from Carpenters and Painters/Allied Trades, $200 from Sheetmetal Workers, $150 from Operating Engineers, and $100 from the Boston School Custodians. Adding them up, Ciommo received $2200 from unions, or 9% of his overall campaign contributions of $24,592. As of September 14, Ciommo had received no contributions from United Food and Commercial Workers, AFSCME Corrections Officers, or IBEW Electrical Workers. I can only assume they'll correct that admission in time for the next filing deadline.

Hanlon has not received a contribution from the Teamsters (because their endorsement occurred after the September 7th closing date for the finance report), but she did receive contributions (but not endorsements) from the Sheetmetal Workers Union for $200 and the Sprinkler Fitters #550 for $300.

Note that it appears as though the Sheetmetal Workers are supporting two candidates (Ciommo and Hanlon) and endorsing neither (at the moment) -- this is not exactly clear, however, because the two candidates list different contributor names and contacts for these two contributions (Festus Joyce of Sandwich for Hanlon, and Neal Kelleher of Dorchester for Ciommo), so they may be different local groups of the same larger union.


Union Endorsements and That Force Behind the Scenes

At last Monday's candidates forum, I asked an unusual question of all the candidates: to name which of them they thought to be the "Mayor's Candidate". Two went for Ciommo; two for Schofield; and Hanlon for herself. You can read the subsequent exchange in the transcript. The Boston Phoenix argues for Ciommo. One reader of this blog posted a comment, based on the campaign finance reports, arguing for Schofield:
Tim's report solves the mystery of "who is Menino with" - he has all of Menino's contributors = Billy Ferullo; McDermott, Quilty and Miller; Joe Hanley; Howard [Leibowitz] - those are key Menino supporters while no other candidate has them. Check it out!
Two knowledgeable insiders of Allston-Brighton politics flatly state that Mayor Menino has neither endorsed any candidate nor is making any serious effort to pull strings behind the scenes. They both point to the labor union endorsements: if Menino had chosen to back a particular candidate, there would be lots of additional union endorsements, including one particular union (I'll leave it unnamed) that would tip his hand. Enough said for now, but we'll no doubt re-visit this issue between the preliminary and general election.


*** Note that the "Political Notebook" in the Allston-Brighton TAB prints information "submitted by area politicians and others." The TAB's disclaimer does not appear in the online version of the paper, but does appear in the print version.

BC Football Game Today at Alumni Stadium

For those who might've forgotten: there's a Boston College football game vs. Army at Alumni Stadium today at 1:00 pm. Parking restrictions two hours before to two hours after.

Friday, September 21, 2007

Campaign Finance Reports of A-B City Council Candidates

The first filing of this campaign occurred last Monday, September 17, eight days before the preliminary election of September 25. The reports cover the campaign through September 7, 2007. (Mark Ciommo's filing, however, gave an ending date of September 14, although it did not report any campaign contributions after 9/4/07 -- i.e., no contributions listed from the campaign rally on 9/14/07.)

Candidates for District seats on the Boston City Council are required to file their campaign finance reports in hardcopy form at City Hall, unlike At-Large City Council candidates who use the state-wide, online OCPF system. Hardcopy reports makes it difficult for voters to have easy access to information about the candidates' campaign contributors.

Harry Mattison, of the allston02134 blog, and I value transparency in government and the election process, so we requested electronic and/or paper copies of the campaign finance reports from the candidates; the campaigns of Mark Ciommo, Rosie Hanlon, and Tim Schofield provided the documents. Alex Selvig beat us to it by putting his report online at his website. We did not make a request from Greg Glennon, but instead just picked up a copy from the City Clerk downtown (at $0.50/page). Since James Jenner has withdrawn from the race, we didn't track down a copy of his report. Harry and I would like to thank the campaigns for providing the reports as a sign of their desire to promote transparency in government.

The reports are public documents, all in PDF format, and have been placed in the document repository site that is part of the web browser version of the Google Group AllstonBrighton2006 (a group moderated by Mattison). Here are links to all the reports:
  1. Mark Ciommo
  2. Greg Glennon
  3. Rosie Hanlon
  4. Tim Schofield
  5. Alex Selvig
What follows in this post is my own analysis of the information contained in those reports.




2007 Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council Preliminary Election
CandidatePreviousRaised# ofOwn MoneySpentEnding

Balance
Contrb.
Mark Ciommo $0.00$24,592.00116 $0.00$21,441.41 $3,150.59
Greg Glennon $0.00$15,598.00 53$4,000.00 $7,684.30 $11,913.70
Rosie Hanlon $943.30$15,720.00 66 $0.00$12,055.05 $4,608.25
Tim Schofield $1,646.17$39,395.00226 $7,243.37$34,639.18$10,401.99
Alex Selvig $0.00 $1,960.00 9$40,900.00 $2,118.89$40,741.11
TOTAL
$97,265.00
$52,143.37$77,938.83


Note that "Own Money" includes both loans and "In-Kind" contributions paid for by the candidate. "In-Kind Contributions" from a person other than the candidate are not included in the table. Personal loans have been removed from the "Total Receipts" (Schedule A) and instead included under "Own Money". Number of contributors is for itemized contributors. It is not necessary for the campaigns to itemize contributions under $50: Schofield and Hanlon itemized all contributions, Ciommo and Glennon each have over $5,000 in un-itemized contributions, and Selvig has $500 in un-itemized contributions. The Ciommo campaign quickly amended their first filing in order to correct a $500 clerical error on the first one.

Total Raised By Candidates = Contributions + Own Money = $149,408.37

Total Spent By Candidates = $77,938.83


Enron Prize

I am not an accountant, nor have I attempted to do a full audit of all of the campaign finance reports, but it is clear to me that Glennon's report contains incorrect sums that will require him to file an amended report. I award him the Enron Prize. I calculated $9,974 for itemized receipts, not $8,230.34, where the difference cannot be explained by him including the $81.34 in "in-kind" contributions; I have totalled his receipts as $9,974 [itemized] + $5,624 [un-itemized]. His loan of $4,000 to his campaign is not listed under receipts or included in the ending account balance, while the other candidates did both; I have included an extra $4,000 in his ending balance to reflect this, so he may have more cash in hand than he thinks. And finally, his total expenses are $7,486.23 [itemized], not $4,956.48. The stamp on his filed report shows that he got it in with only 15 minutes to spare, and the sloppiness of the writing on the form (with various items crossed out in many places) is consistent with the sloppiness of the accounting in it.


Contributors

The most eyebrow-raising contribution was to the Schofield campaign from James Tierney, "Senior Advisor" at the Boston Redevelopment Authority (actually Special Counsel to the Director of the BRA) and nephew of Congressman John Tierney. When asked about his relationship with the contributor, Schofield's campaign manager, Bob LaRocca, said that Schofield is a long-time, personal friend with James Tierney dating back to their time together as students at Boston College Law School. James and two of his relatives (Doris and Kristin) had, in fact, contributed to Schofield's 2005 campaign when Tierney worked in private practice prior to working at the BRA, which can be viewed in Schofield's 2005 report online.

Senator Steven Tolman appears to be hedging his bets: contributions to Schofield (from his campaign committee), Ciommo, and Hanlon. Representative Michael Moran, however, only donated to Schofield. Representative Kevin Honan has no contributions; neither does Representative Michael Moran.***(See note below)

Harry Mattison joined the Senator Tolman "spread-the-wealth" club by contributing both to the Selvig and Ciommo campaigns.

Glennon's campaign had the financial backing of $500 from Patrick Galvin -- as well as another $500 from Thomas Galvin -- which confirms the gist of the story about the Glennon sign on Pat's lawn. Other interesting figures have also contributed to Glennon, including Ray Flynn, Tim Flaherty, and former boss and former State Rep. Brian Golden.


Putting Their Own Money Into the Race

Alex Selvig wins the "John Corzine Award" hands down, having loaned $40,900 of his own money to his campaign, which represents around 95% of his total receipts. Thing is, Selvig hasn't been spending all that cash. It's nearly all sitting in the bank account untouched. Most of his own cash -- $35,000 -- was plunked down 9/6/07, the next-to-last-day of the filing period. I can't tell if he wanted to have the appearance of lots of cash on-hand, or large total receipts, or if he has some plan to spend on a casino in a cranberry bog during the last couple weeks of the preliminary election campaign. He's run a frugal campaign to date (see below), so this large contribution didn't make any sense to me.

I asked him for comment, and Selvig explained that there were a few reasons for his large loan. First, he has a lot of campaign expenses that were coming due just after September 7, but which don't appear in the report ended September 7. Secondly, he wanted to send a sign of his total personal commitment to winning this race. Finally, he wanted to show the voters that he was not beholden to any special interests.

Schofield loaned $4,000 to his campaign and made in-kind contributions of more than $3000 -- basically paying out of his own pocket for lots random campaign expenditures, rather than loan the money to the campaign and then spend it out of the campaign account. His $7,243.37 thrown into his campaign is a little bit less than the $10,000 he loaned to his campaign in the 2005 race for State Representative.

Glennon also loaned $4,000 to his campaign. As noted above, it has been accounted for in a non-standard way on his campaign report.

Mark Ciommo previously won the John Corzine Award for his 2002 contribution of $14,500 into his campaign; this time around, he put in none of his own money. Rosie Hanlon didn't, either.


Expenditures

The Ciommo campaign spent $19,000 of $21,441.41 on "consulting" with Sage Systems, charges which are not further itemized. Reasonable guesses might include a phone survey in August, flyers, research, staff salary, etc. Farming out the charges as consulting results in no itemized expense for rent; the Ciommo campaign did not spend the money on a campaign office per se in this election.

The Schofield report shows most of these itemized, such as $5,000 for phone survey in June, lots of printing and postage, rent, four different people on the payroll (ranging from intern to campaign manager), etc., leaving only $2,800 of $34,639.14 classified as consulting.

The Hanlon campaign had only one person on the payroll, no consulting fees, and received "in-kind contributions" for the cost of the two campaign headquarters (one in Brighton, the other in Allston).

The Selvig campaign was streamlined on expenditures, spending just a bit over $2000.

The Glennon campaign only showed one payment of $500 to a campaign worker, listed no consulting work, and had lots and lots of printing and stamps charges. I didn't see the usual "voter list" under itemized charges.


Previous Elections for These Candidates (2002 and 2005)

Note that Rosie Hanlon and Mark Ciommo both ran for the same seat in 2002, so their previous reports are also available in hardcopy form from the City Clerk. Greg Glennon and Tim Schofield previously ran for State Representative in the seat won by Rep. Michael Moran; their previous reports are available online. I summarized those reports in a previous posting. These four candidates had raised a combined $163,000 in their last run for office (either 2002 or 2005), along with combined personal loans of $29,900, meaning that their fund-raising track records could generate $192,000 for this race. The 2002 race for A-B District 9 City Council race raised a total of $200,000 (including Jerry McDermott). Mattison analyzed the campaign contributions that came from Allston-Brighton in the 2005 race for State Representative, finding that only 3.3% of Schofield's, and 7% of Glennon's, contributions (in dollar amounts) came from Allston-Brighton zipcodes (excluding personal loans).



*** "Michael Moran" of Rowens Road in Newton contributed to Schofield. I erroneously reported this initially as being a contribution from Representative Michael Moran of Brighton. I apologize for the mistake.

Allston-Brighton TAB Endorses Tim Schofield

Making an additional pickup of the media endorsements, Tim Schofield has been given the endorsement from the Allston-Brighton TAB in the race for the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council seat. They wrote:
What makes Schofield stand out, however, is the people and negotiating skills that will help him to effectively represent the community as part of Boston City Council. These skills likely stem from his experience as an attorney, experience that will also allow him to understand legal details that could be critical in helping A-B face the massive powers of the universities expanding into its streets.
Getting the endorsements of the Boston Globe and A-B TAB doesn't assure victory. Just ask Tim Flaherty.

Guest Column: The Man Who Wasn't There and the Man Who Should've Stayed

Anticipating that I would be busy trying to keep the questions flying like a horde of Monarch butterflies on Monday night, I asked Mark Trachtenberg if he would write a guest column for the Brighton Centered Blog, and he graciously accepted. His fee was remarkably affordable: a few slices of pizza Monday night. Don't tell the TAB. For those who don't know Mark: he ran unsuccessfully for the same City Council seat in 2002 ("a spirited campaign") and writes a column for the Allston-Brighton TAB most months. I would like to thank him for an interesting piece.

-Ed.


The Man Who Wasn't There,
The Man Who Gained The Most From Being There,
And The Young Man Who Shouldn't Have Quit


By Mark D. Trachtenberg


It was a total shocker.

Gregory Glennon, a District City Council candidate who had attended at least two Brighton Allston Improvement Association meetings since the campaign for the now-vacant Allston-Brighton (District 9) City Council seat began, failed to show up at the candidates' forum jointly sponsored by the BAIA and the Allston Civic Association this past Monday evening. He didn't call my good friend and fellow member of the BAIA board of directors Abigail Furey to tell us he couldn't make it, or even to tell us he'd be late. As Woody Allen is widely quoted as saying, "Half of life is just showing up." Uh, oh.

Greg Glennon didn't show up for a candidates' forum at the Fidelis Way housing project Wednesday evening, either, but at least he called that forum's organizers in advance to tell them he couldn't make it. Nonetheless, a no-show is a no-show, and it's always a self-inflicted wound.

Of the candidates who were present and accounted for at the BAIA/ACA forum, Alex Selvig was the one who benefitted most from his participation. The key moment came near the end of the event, when Selvig was asked about his position on casino gambling. "I will oppose it with every fiber of my being," Alex Selvig answered, which prompted BAIA board member Harry Nesdakis to yell out, "God bless you!" from the back of the room. Since Mr. Nesdakis is actually supporting Mark Ciommo, this is no small feat.

There's an important difference between Alex Selvig's candidacy and those of the other candidates: while the other candidates are merely running well-intentioned political campaigns, Alex Selvig is running a crusade. It turns out that the city does indeed have some jurisdiction to at least curtail casino gambling -- "You can squeeze it through zoning," Selvig explained after the BAIA/ACA forum. Aha! -- a clever, crafty crusader.

For the rest of the campaign, Selvig needs to be Selvig -- a protest candidate like him should never answer a question "maybe" (question 3) under any circumstances, as Selvig did to one real estate query in the written questionnaire that was distributed before the BAIA/ACA forum. Since most likely very few people at the BAIA/ACA forum actually read the questionnaire from start to finish, the damage was probably very limited. On the scorecard that I keep for candidates' forums and/or debates, I gave Mr. Selvig no deductions but an asterisk for the written "maybe" -- quite a strong performance.

Mark Ciommo's effort was solid and thoughtful, but he lost at least a little credibility as an independent advocate for the neighborhood when he was mentioned by some of the other candidates as a possible "mayor's candidate," as did Tim Schofield and Rosie Hanlon, especially since Rosie Hanlon nominated herself for this dubious honor. Alex Selvig benefitted from not being mentioned at all as the "mayor's candidate," as did the now-departed James Jenner.

Speaking of self-inflicted wounds, I count young Mr. Jenner's decision to exit the race as a big one (though my mother disagrees). For most of the campaign, James Jenner had seemed like a junior version of Alex Selvig, somebody capable of speaking his mind with a solid knowledge of the issues and confronting the powers-that-be. But when he threw his support to Rosie and became her "senior strategist" -- which I speculate might have been in exchange for Rosie appointing him as her chief of staff if he wins, although she could not be reached for comment -- he severely damaged his credibility as an antidote to "politics as usual," which is something that Tim Schofield, believe it or not, actually still has some of. After Schofield finished his closing statement at the forum at Fidelis Way last night, he patted Alex Selvig on the shoulder, as if to say, "Thank you for pushing me to be less of an insider." I think that Jim Jenner got impatient, Jim Jenner got greedy, and while no night school admissions officer is going to turn him away -- hey, I'd even give him a postcard to send to U.Mass.-Boston myself -- many of his supporters are going to be very annoyed at him for some time to come, especially the owner of the car I saw in the Burger King parking lot yesterday afternoon with the James Jenner bumper sticker. Most ordinary voters simply don't like politics done by backroom deals, and I think Jim Jenner may be suspected by some as having made a "politics-as-usual" deal. Too bad -- he's a nice young man.

This has been a remarkably friendly city council campaign, conspicuously free of nastiness or personal attacks among the candidates. Where I expected at least an icy stare -- between Schofield and Selvig -- I saw a pat on the shoulder, and in his closing statement at Fidelis Way last night Mark Ciommo comented, "There are four very good candidates." (I suspect Ciommo would have complimented Greg Glennon as well if Glennon had been there.) Given the highly emotional nature of the institutional expansion issue, the absence of angry finger-pointing among the candidates is noteworthy and commendable. "There is common ground," notes protest candidate Alex Selvig.

So there is absolutely no excuse for failing to vote in the preliminary election for the District 9 City Council seat in Allston-Brighton on September 25. The stakes are high, and the candidates have been on their best behavior. Do your civic duty -- the future of Allston-Brighton may depend on it.

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Getting Out the Pirate Vote

Mark Ciommo's supporters were out in force this evening in Brighton Center with an evening rush hour visibility. Right in front of Rosie Hanlon's Brighton HQ.

Seen on one of the Ciommo sign-holders: black shirt, with a white skull-and-crossbones on the back, and the text:
"Pillaging,
Drinking,
Flogging,
Wenching"
Always try to get every last vote, even the pirate vote -- or is that the pillaging Viking vote?

Ciommo has probably won over my daughter's vote, however. She spent the summer eating one box of Raisin Bran after another, in order to send away for a pirate clock. Can she vote? You never know. Her school is located in Ward 21, Precinct 13 -- you know, near Wallingford Road.

Transcript of City Council Candidates Forum on September 17

The transcript is not yet completed, but I thought I would post the Q&A in the moderator-prepared question portion of the event.

Corrections to pahre@comcast.net . Since this is a transcript (rather than commentary), no reader comments are allowed at the end of the post.


A-B District City Council Candidates Forum
2007 September 17, 7:10 pm -- 8:40 pm
Brighton Elks Lodge
Moderator: Michael Pahre

Candidates Present (left-to-right from audience's perspective): James Jenner, Alex Selvig, Tim Schofield, Mark Ciommo, Rosie Hanlon

Candidate Not Present: Greg Glennon


OPENING STATEMENTS (2 minutes per candidate):
[to be completed]

MODERATOR-PREPARED QUESTIONS (1 minute response per candidate):

QUESTION: Roughly 25% of new housing built in recent years in Boston is categorized as "affordable," a result of requirements at the city level. Vancouver, British Columbia, on the other hand, has not required affordable housing to be built, but instead required 25% family-friendly housing be built as part of new projects, resulting in a return of families to their city center, according to the Boston Globe Magazine. Do you favor regulations requiring family-friendly housing or affordable housing?

JENNER: I have to say I am not familiar with the housing in Vancouver, but I think they kind-of go along the same lines of bringing families to the community and keeping families there. And I completely support that, yes. We have a lot of affordable housing in this area and contracts that are about to expire on some government buildings, I believe, next year. There's the potential of losing some affordable housing apartments in this are. So, it's definitely important that we maintain a standard of living that everyone can be comfortable in and survive, and won't have to live paycheck-to-paycheck and can stay in the community that the work. Raised [inaudible] children in. So, yeah, I completely support it, definitely.

QUESTION: What is your vision of the specific elements that would make housing "family-friendly"?

SELVIG: Specific elements... you could even start by not having it be the housing at all. You could have it be the environment that those houses are placed in. We could have more green spaces. We could have clean parks. We could have better transportation networks, schools that are closer to these people's homes, as opposed to being three neighborhoods away, for example. I think would go a long way in attracting families [inaudible].

QUESTION: State-wide and in Boston, citizens average $700-800 annually per capita in spending on the Massachusetts Lottery, according to the Watertown TAB. Do we need more or less gambling in the City of Boston, and what should we do about it?

SCHOFIELD: Obviously, we all saw that the Governor today released a plan. I have to say that, if I could turn back the clock 30 years ago, 30 years, I'm not a huge fan of gambling. But I also want to be realistic as to the place that it has in our society today. And the fact is that there are a lot of folks who are traveling to Connecticut, to Atlantic City, to Las Vegas to gamble. We don't want to ignore that reality. My concern is that if we're going to have gambling in this state, I want to make sure that it is highly regulated, I want to be sure that the jobs that are created are good-paying jobs, with health care, with pensions. So I wish that we didn't have gambling as part of our culture, frankly, I don't know that it's a good thing in the big picture. But I don't want to be naive, it is part of our society. And it is an opportunity for us to create [inaudible], create the jobs, create tax revenues, to be used in the way the Governor is proposing: to fix our streets, to lower property taxes, then I do support that.

QUESTION: Historically in Boston, residential property taxes have contributed around 30% to the tax base while commercial properties contributed 70%. In the last few years, the residential tax contribution has risen steadily to more than 42% overall. Is this the appropriate relative contribution to the tax base between residential and commercial properties? -- that's 42% residential, and 58% commercial.

HANLON: The commercial taxes is a big part of the maintainance of the city. I do think that it is fair. I do think that the commercial taxes should be higher than the residential taxes. So, my answer is, yes, I do believe that the commercial should bear a bigger burden because they are drawing people into our streets, and... yes, I do.

MODERATOR: If I could: the nature of the question was that the residential proportion has raised in the last two decades, whereas the commercial percentage of the overall rate has gone down in the last two decades. Do you think that direction, of residential going up, and commercial going down, is the correct direction for it to be headed?

HANLON: Thank you. I do not want to see the residential taxes going up. We do have to keep our businesses here -- we don't want to see our businesses fleeing. I do not want to see our residential taxes go up. I don't know if I'm answering this correctly.

CIOMMO: I believe that the commercial tax rate should be higher, and I believe the Mayor went to the Legislature, maybe two years ago, because statutorily he had to get approval from the Legislature to raise the commercial ceiling so to reduce the residential burden. I would say that, in what I've been reading recently, the housing market right now is kind of stagnated, while the commercial industry has actually boomed downtown. So I would hope that we will see that in our next assessments. And also, that if we need to go back to the Legislature again, as a City Councilor I will support the administration and the delegation of City Councilors to make sure that the residential burden is lessened.

MODERATOR: Next set of questions... as you might start to notice in the subsequent questions, we may bounce around a bit, not strictly go from left-to-right.

QUESTION: Often, the city will cite illegal front yard parking, excessive numbers of tenants, etc., but there is little or no followup after the property owner pays the one-time fine. How would you put teeth into ISD enforcement in order to force property owners to correct violations?

JENNER: I think, if you want to hurt somebody in terms of a property owner -- landlord, like that -- the only way to do it is in the pocketbook. And I think stiff fines, raising fines, and enforcing those fines, is probably the only way you're going to get that message that those people that this is not going to be tolerated. You know, you're breaking the law, not just little things you can look over and say, "Oh, well, you know he has one more person that he's allowed, or he's an extra car here and it's illegally parked and it's not really in the way." There are major issues, it's breaking the law. You know, you are breaking the law, regardless, and you need to keep fines for that. And if it is repeated fines happen, I wouldn't be opposed to a, like, three strikes sort of setup, where if the same person gets three strikes, then, you know, maybe they lose their right to be able to rent out to people or have off-street parking, things like that.

CIOMMO: Well, I agree with James, you have to hit them in the pocketbook. And one way would be to put a lien, I would give a few chances. I would give them the opportunity to apply to some of the homeworks programs that the city has to offer, if they needed the financing. Certainly, the best way to put teeth is to put it in the form of the lien on their property, and penalize them severly until they undo the damage they've done to their neighborhood.

MODERATOR: Now is the chance for me to make a little plug. Online, I write for the Brighton Centered Blog. Online, we did a crowdsourced questionnaire, and on the back side of your agenda, you will see the seven questions that were posed. If you go online to the website that's there you'll see answer to these seven questions. And what I note is that Question #1: some of the candidates that I didn't call on here, actually gave an answer which included the question I just posed in their response. So if you want to hear more of the candidates responding to that question, you can go online to the blog. Secondly, we have some copies of those answers. All the candidates responded to it. Those copies are near to the entrance to both sides. So afterwards, pick them up if you are not someone who goes online.

QUESTION: Developers often seek approval from the Zoning Board of Appeal prior to presenting their plans to the civic groups, such as the BAIA and the ACA. How can this situation be addressed?

SELVIG: I think that this is a procedural problem. I think they should not be able to apply for a zoning variance before they submit plans. If those plans fit in with current zoning, then, yes, there would be approval. If they don't fit in, then they have to go through the propert process. They need to go in front of the citizens' groups. I think that this should be a hard-and-fast rule, so they cannot bypass the system.

MODERATOR: What the system was, actually, what people complain about in BAIA is that first they go to the Zoning Board of Appeal, but then they tell them to come to BAIA afterwards, just to get a rubber stamp. How do you avoid that specific problem of getting the initial approval from the ZBA prior to coming to the specific...

SELVIG: How do I handle the problem that they're getting approval first, and retroactively they are getting the rubber stamp. Yes, I've been to a couple of meetings where that has actually happened. The problem with the BAIA and the other civic groups is that their role is purely advisory. So essentially what the ZBA is saying, for us it's fine. But why don't you go ask your neighborhood? And, you know, oftentimes what happens is that the ZBA's decision is final. The decision of the BAIA really doesn't have much bearing, unfortunately. They are trying to be nice by saying, "Go to the community, put it in front of them," but the ZBA -- Zoning Board of Appeal -- really doesn't have to listen.

MODERATOR: Would somebody else like to say how could we address this, that the ZBA is basically giving tacit approval in advance -- before they go in front of the civic associations?

JENNER: I think, you know, the principle here is that basically the community is coming as an after-thought of when somebody's already gotten the approval. And I think that we've dealt with that with Boston College and Harvard, and the extensions and past dealings. And it's just another example of regular, old government thinking that, you know, they can do what they want and they know that we'll go ask the community later, and if they raise up, then maybe we'll look at it again. The bottom line is that these are our backyards. We live here. And we should be the first ones to have the say in any kind of development or zoning, or any kind of thing that happens in our neighborhood.

QUESTION: Your law firm's website promotes the fact that: "The Boston Board of Appeal granted a zoning variance to our client for the construction of a deck in the South End." Yet in the July 23rd candidates forum, you stated, "The first thing I think we have to do is to enforce the zoning that we have." How can you reconcile your work seeking zoning variances with your insistence that the City better enforce the zoning code?

SCHOFIELD: I have a very good answer to that, which is this: the ISD screwed up. Let me tell you what happened to my client in that case. My client applied for a building permit, wanting to put a deck on the back of their condominium, they were told they could. When ISD filled out the appropriate paperwork, ISD approved it and issued the building permit. My client just spoke, they don't know any better, they did what they were told to do. They went to build the deck, they notified their neighbors, Hey, we're gonna start building, if the construction company is being noisy, or anything's going on, please let us know. Well, the neighbors got very upset, they said: Well, we didn't know you were going to build the deck. Our client, before they spent $15,000, went back to ISD, hey, are you sure we can build this deck, because the neighbors told us we can't build the deck? Oh no, you're good, you've got a building permit, go forth and build your deck. Two days after the deck was done, ISD issued a stop work order, and told them they had to tear down their $15,000 deck. What are they supposed to do in that situation? Literally, what are they supposed to do? What we did is we appealed, we ultimately reached a negotiation with the neighbors, and we cut the deck in half. Every lawsuit has a story, and that's the story.

CIOMMO: Why wasn't the abutter made aware before that even happened?

SCHOFIELD: Well, I think I can't answer that, because I wasn't involved before that, the neighbors ...[inaudible, overlapping]

MODERATOR: It may be a fair question, this is not a debate, so we are not posing questions back-and-forth. Ask him afterwards. [laughter]

QUESTION: You have made drug abuse an important issue in your campaign. But you have lobbied for beer and wine licenses - for example, Esperia Grill this month - yet many people consider alcohol to be a gateway drug. How do you reconcile your advocacy against drug abuse with your advocacy for more alcohol licensing?

HANLON: My job as Executive Director of Brighton Main Streets is to bring economic stability and [inaudible] to work to bring more vibrance and more restaurants. And I have not advocated for bars, I have advocated for beer and wine licenses served with food with dinner. I am a strong advocate of education to bring the community awareness of the problems that we have of the substance abuse. We have children that are dying, and I will not stop this, to advocate for such a strong issue and such a dangerous issue for our families. I was a co-founder of the parents empowerment group, to let people know of this problem. I am a member of the Allston-Brighton Substance Abuse Task Force, and I will continue to do so, and work with the schools and our law enforcement, and our elected officials, and the parents of our community.

QUESTION: Local elected officials typically are given the opportunity to nominate neighborhood residents to the City's appointed boards and committees - such as the BRA's institutional task forces - and the City often appoints one of each elected official's nominees. Without referring to any individual people, how do you plan to avoid conflicts-of-interest when nominating people, if you are elected?

SELVIG: I think that even if people do have some kind of intimate connection to the university that they are making decisions for -- whose projects they are making decisions for -- that's OK. The important part is that there be a good mix -- that there be people who absolutely have no ties. That the community at large is represented, that all segments of it are represented. So, yes, there will be people with interests, one way or another, does it mean [inaudible] opposed to anything the university wants to do, and there are people who will be happy with everything the university wants to do. We need to make sure there is a balance, there is a mix. I think that taking one person from each representative list -- or maybe two -- and really striving for that balance is really important. People should disclose what their interests are when they are being appointed. They should disclose in public what kind of gratuities they have received, what kind of scholarships they have received, what kind of rental agreements they have with these kind of universities, etc. We should note that they should still be allowed to serve.

QUESTION: On April 17th, the BC Task Force held an unannounced meeting at 5:30 pm, closed to the public, with BRA and BC officials; both of you were members of the task force at the time, and, I believe, participated in this private meeting. The Suffolk County District Attorney's office later issued an opinion that the meeting was in violation of Massachusett's Open Meeting Law. If you are elected, will such private meetings be a neighborhood-wide hallmark of your tenure as City Councilor?

SCHOFIELD: The direct answer is "no", it will not be a hallmark of my service. I think it's important to note a couple of things. One, I think we have to acknowledge that the BRA's lawyers have a different opinion, so what the District Attorney says, others disagree. For me, frankly, that was my second meeting on the task force, and perhaps I was a bit naive at the meeting. The point of the meeting, I think it is important to understand this, it was a logistics meeting. The previous meeting had been one of the largest they had had in a long time. I think everyone who was there will agree it didn't run very smoothly. And so the task force looked around and went, we have got to organize these meetings better, this isn't going to work. The community and [inaudible] chance to speak. So the meeting was organizational. Frankly, it was before this issue came up, in hindsight people wouldn't have had that meeting. But it was of the best of intentions that [inaudible] some of what Alex said. It is important to remember that people on these task forces are members of these community dedicating their time for something that [inaudible] the bad guy, that's what BC wants, that's what Harvard wants.

HANLON: No, it will not be a hallmark of mine, either. As a task force member of over ten years, it takes a lot of work, it takes a lot of passion, it takes a lot of time to go and work on these groups, and to gather up the information. We are spokespersons for the community. We need to take the thoughts and the ideas and the concerns of the community, and put them all together so we can organize meetings and have a very structured, thoughtful process. There's nothing, nothing hidden in these meetings, except for to strategize. It doesn't bother the universities if we're not together, if we're not unified. So, as an experienced task force member, I will continue to advocate [inaudible] to continue to work, to make sure that the concerns are constantly heard and delivered to any of the institutional expansion [inaudible] universities or large developments.

QUESTION: In interviews I conducted, both of you candidates stated that institutional expansion was one of the most important issues facing Allston-Brighton. Between January 1 and April 30, 2007 - i.e., in the four months immediately prior to Councilor McDermott's announcement that he would not seek re-election - three of the six candidates -- Ciommo, Glennon, and Jenner -- and Glennon is not here -- did not attend meetings of any BRA institutional task force (Harvard, BC, or St. Elizabeth's), according to public records provided by the BRA. Furthermore, two of the candidates -- Glennon and Jenner -- did not submit public comments to either the BRA or MEPA related to Harvard's science complex earlier this month. Assuming that the public records I have assembled are accurate about attendance and submission of public comments, what does this record of attendance and submitting public comments tell about your commitment to the issue of institutional expansion?

CIOMMO: I do happen to know just about everybody on the task force, and I have confidence in the task force and in the residents who are attending meetings. I continue to raise my family, I continue to work my job, I continue to run Little League, I continue to go back to the things that I have done in this community for a long time. And I trusted the people, the folks that have participated on the task force, and the residents that have attended those meetings. But now I am going for a position in which this is a major issue. I believe I have the experience and the skill to work with the City Council to bring my colleagues on the City Council and to fight this expansion. And that's why I'm in this race.

JENNER: Your research is correct. And part of my answer is that, up until the point of BC's master plan and Harvard's Science Complex, I wasn't even aware of the massive amount of impact that these plans were going to have on the neighborhood. Like many of you, were not informed by BC or Harvard of their plans -- you know, they do a lot of dealings inner-house, and Alex actually brought this up many times in the campaign that the community wasn't informed. Aside from that, I have the internet at my house, and I stay informed on the issues. The month I was laid up after losing my toe, kind of put me out of going to those meetings. But I just, honestly, I wasn't aware of it until Jerry announcing, that I looked into it and realized what a deep impact it's gonna have, and that's why I've made it one of my key candidate issues.

QUESTION: Boston College has proposed to build 90 beds of graduate student or seminarian housing next to the Foster Rock on property that abuts the Orthodox Jewish Community on Portina Road. As City Councilor, how would you address BC's proposal?

SCHOFIELD: I'm opposed to the proposal simply because if you look at the space that they have on the Archdiocese property and the uses that we as a community have told them are acceptable to us, I think that graduate housing, particularly seminarian housing, is one of the uses that I think we all agree. So it is really not fair to have this huge piece of property and you are going to put these units at the bottom of the hill of one of the most stable family neighborhoods he have in this community. Furthermore, the Foster Rock, of course, Charlie Vasiliades could tell you, is one of the great environmental -- great green, although I guess you cannot call a rock green -- one of the great green spaces in our community. So again, putting those uses there seems to me, once again, is not taking advantage of the space they have for the appropriate uses. There is a place for that housing, but I don't think that's the location for it.

CIOMMO: I would want to talk to the abutters, again, the families off of Portina Road. Graduate housing, you're talking about a different demographic than undergrads, you're talking about possibly young people... or are you talking about seminarians, I'm sorry?

MODERATOR: They proposed for graduate students or seminarians.

CIOMMO: Graduate students, again, are a different demographic than undergraduate students. You might be adding young families to the neighborhood. In that case, I would look at the demographic proposed for that site. But I would also like to talk to the abutters on Portina Road and see what is acceptable to them. Actually see what the proposal is -- the scope and size of the project. And then make a decision. I want more facts before I make a decision like that.

MODERATOR: Is there anyone else who would like to address that question... I'll go backwards... I guess Rosie?

HANLON: It is my belief that it is seminarian housing and not graduate housing at the bottom of that. And there is low to no impact with that development. Again, Boston College hasn't submitted their final plan; they did go before part of the task forces. Request was to go [inaudible] was out in the Allston-Brighton area. Their final plans have not been proposed to the community. Low to no impact is something that we can look at. There is going to be give-and-take when it does come to the master plan, and this might be one of the tools that we can work with.

MODERATOR: St. Elizabeth's Medical Center proposed last year to build a new emergency room and a new access road for it. Many oppose the access road because it would cut through protected open space, cut down many trees, and pass close to the St. Gabriel's Monastery, an historical building. The project has since had difficulty gaining final approval at the state level due to issues related to this road. As a member of the task force, I believe you voted in favor of the St. E.'s proposal. Do you stand by your vote?

HANLON: Again, as a task force member you are infused with a lot of information. We get many hours, many meetings, going for walks, taking a look at this property, seeing the logistics, where we gave them other options -- asked if there were other options where this emergency room could be built or access road, etc. And reality is, no, because there is a lot of ledge up there. We desperately need a new emergency room, that was very much outdated. Myself, my family, go to the emergency room, and you're in the hallway waiting to be treated. So the emergency room is a necessity for the community. The access road was actually developed on our suggestion, because the initial road was going right into a neighborhood street, and the abutters did not want that. So that's how it came up to along Monastery Road. So, yes, I do, and there were give-and-takes with that as far as green space, [inaudible] in our community.

MODERATOR: Harvard University has proposed to construct a combination art museum and art storage facility near Barry's Corner in North Allston. Do you support their proposal or any specific alternative?

JENNER: This is probably one of the only points that I would support in terms of Harvard's plan, because I think bringing art to the community is a valuable asset. And I think having a gallery or museum or storage area down in that area, you know, if they allow people to display that, store, citizens go in and see some beautiful pieces and things. I have no problem with that. That probably is one of the only points in their plan that I don't have an issue with at this point.

SELVIG: One of the biggest things that Harvard seems to be doing is in their entire plan for Allston is proposing buildings that don't comply with the North Allston Strategic Framework. This is a document that was drawn up by community groups to figure out what would be a livable situation. What would be a great combination of university use and projects that would actually sustain the community around it. It was a very carefully drafted document. A lot of people put in a lot of time on this thing; Harvard was a part of this. Now, all of a sudden, they are proposing buildings that don't comply with this anymore. They have gone on and done their own thing. So, I don't think it's a good use for Barry's Corner unless the actual building does comply with the North Allston Strategic Framework.

MODERATOR: Next set of questions related to open space. North Allston and North Brighton suffer from poor direct access to the Charles River. What specific elements should be in Harvard's institutional master plan to improve public access to the Charles River.

HANLON: One of the things that I've been working on in my experience with Brighton Main Streets goes directly with this. We're working on wayfinding and directional signage and ways to access open space. Harvard's plan I would like to see better wayfinding, better access, better bicycle paths, making family-friendly, pedestrian-friendly, handicap-friendly, so that we have better access to this beautiful resource that we have, to the Charles River.

JENNER: It's kind of one of those questions that you're going to get a very similar answer from everyone. I would like to see some bike lanes put in, obviously, improving the infrastructure and actually keeping the promises and maybe re-paving the sidewalks. And making sure crosswalks are paved in that area. And, I'm not opposed to overpasses, at certain points, to get to that [inaudible], obviously that would have to be something that the community discusses in terms of constructing those. We have to take safety into consideration, also. A general, monetary, good-will -- fix the sidewalks, paint the cross-walks, give us some good lights at those cross-signals, make sure that people who want to appreciate the Charles River for the beauty that it is, especially after the massive cleanup its undergone. Have the ability to do stuff.

MODERATOR: Several years ago, the City Council passed an ordinance providing a mechanism for citizens to create "Dog Recreation Spaces" -- so-called "dog parks" -- within public parks. What specific details in this ordinance are good or bad, and what, if anything, would you change in the ordinance to improve it?

CIOMMO: I have to tell you, I don't know the ordinance. I do know, I was speaking to someone the other day about the first dog park run that was instituted, I believe it is in the South End. So, what I would do is see how that works, not being familiar with the ordinance, to be honest with you. But I would see how that works, and try to implement it. We have, I'll tell you, I've knocked a lot of doors in this neighborhood. Everybody has a dog. [inaudible audience noise] So, I believe that we need to provide for the people in our community who have pets. So I would look at that, but I would look at the pilot project in the South End first and see what the results are from that.

SCHOFIELD: I also think that dog parks are important. The only thing I would want to ensure is that they are a segregated place for the dogs. A lot of people are afraid of dogs, so running in an open park can place a lot of concern for people. I think the one in the South End has a segregated space for the dogs for people to run. I tell, on the Common there's actually a dog walk area which is incredibly popular. And when I walk by there frequently when I'm going to court or I'm going downtown, and I'm always -- I love the community that it creates, actually. You see these people who all live on Beacon Hill, the Back Bay, and they are all "doggie friends" as they call each other. I have some friends, and they frequently say that I have no idea what that person's name is, but the dog is "Spot," I know that. You know it actually is a community-building tool, and I think that we should support that. Look, people have needs for -- there are a lot of dogs in this community, I think that would be a good community building tool. But let's make sure the dogs are segregated, [inaudible] those people who may be afraid of dogs, [elderly] and children.

QUESTION: You are a rower, operate a business selling shells, and have had a personal affiliation with Community Rowing Inc. You also made past statements, including on your website, that you are a green space advocate. Community Rowing has begun construction of a new facility along the Charles River. Did you, or do you, support this project? If so, how do you reconcile your suppport with its associated loss of the community's open space?

SELVIG: Well, the actual footprint of the boathouse is not large, and most of it is actually being built on a location that was a parking lot. So there really isn't much associated loss of green space in that particular location. One of the wonderful things that Community Rowing does, is that it does provide access to the Charles River. I will tie back to the previous question, is how do we improve access to the Charles River? We have made facilities available for people to use the river. Community Rowing's boathouse is actually one of those facilities. And the fact that it is a community rowing boathouse means that every single one of us can go down there and enjoy the Charles River and learn how to row. Most of us see the Charles just driving by, but it's a wonderful, wonderful place: it's full of wildlife, it's clean now. I've been swimming in it. I've had full access to the Charles River for about 20 years, and all of you should really take advantage of it, too. So I do approve of Community Rowing's boathouse.

MODERATOR: Now, for the next set of questions, we are going to talk about public schools. We are going to start from the right-hand-side and work to the left now.

QUESTION: You served on the Site Council and Steering Committee for the Gardner School as they successfully lobbied to become a Pilot School within BPS. According to the BPS website, the Gardner is therefore "part of a network of innovative schools that are free from teachers' union and BPS work rules." In your role at the Gardner, are you anti-teacher's union?

CIOMMO: When I did this it was year's ago when my children were attending kindergarten, and we worked with Boston College School of Social Work and Education to get funding to provide for the extended services school. So, right now, the pilot school model, actually 2/3 of the teachers have to vote to accept the pilot in their school. So, I support that the teachers want to do that, then I support it. I do not support, at this point, charter schools, because it does undermine the teacher's union.

QUESTION: Both of you have previously stated that you are advocates for BPS to return to neighborhood or community schools. I believe you used the term "community schools." If enacted, would such a plan further segregate the Boston schools, as well as exacerbate the achievement gap?

HANLON: No, it wouldn't. I strongly support community schools, and what I would like to see is a one-mile radius for parents to be able to choose the school of their choice within the community. We are losing our families, and this is a fact. I spoke to somebody in the post office today that moved -- twenty years ago, I think was around twenty years ago -- anyway, he moved when his children were going to school because he wanted his children to go to a community school. I would strongly support that we bring a one-mile radius. This is going to lessen transportation [inaudible]. So we can put this money back into the schools, and bring the faith of the parents to know that there are great resources, that their children will stay with them in the neighborhood. I still have best friends that I went to kindergarten with. I think it's all about community and society, isn't it, to keep us together. No, it won't -- if I can just address the segregation -- Allston-Brighton is one of the most harmoniously diverse communities in the city of Boston. We're blessed.

QUESTION: Name one public school in Allston-Brighton that you consider to be a successful model that can be replicated across the entire Boston Public School system?

SCHOFIELD: Mary Lyons School. When you talk to people in this community, when you door knock on this community -- public schools, public schools, public schools, that's what people talk about when you look at why we've families over the years. It's interesting, you see that, it's interesting, it's sort-of like your local football team, people sort of talk about the public schools in a generic sense, they don't talk about their school, talk about schools in our community that are good. We have many, many good elementary schools in this community. Where I think the Mary Lyons is a model, because it is a K-8 model, and I think, ultimately, that's the system we need to have. A strong K-8 school will keep a family in this community. Ask anybody whose children who go to Mary Lyons, they'll tell you, It's tremendous, I love it, and we're there K-8. We're in this community. So the Mary Lyons is the model that I think we need to replicate in this neighborhood and throughout the [inaudible] city.

JENNER: You must be a mind-reader, Tim, because that was my answer, actually. And, you know, it is because of the K-8 model. Not breaking up a child's learning progression is a key thing. And to keep them motivated, and to keep them rolling forward, as opposed to having to change schools as a sixth-grader and go to a different class, different teacher. There's something to be said for familiarity when it comes to teaching children. You know, when many of you parents out there know, when you're helping your kids study for a test, repetitiveness, repetitiveness helps them memorize things. So, it's kind of the same model, where you keep them there K-8. I like K-12 personally. You keep them there K-8 and you know they get familiar, teacher's know their learning style, they know how to get children to retain information as important in their learning. So, again, my answer would be the Mary Lyons again, thank you.

QUESTION: Name one public school in Allston-Brighton that you consider to be at-risk, and what would you, as City Councilor, do about it?

SELVIG: I actually understand the Garfield School has had a significant drop in enrollment, and there is some question as to whether or that school -- I don't want to start rumors here, don't start getting scared -- there's actually some question as to whether that school will continue to stay open. Again, part of the problem is that we're losing families in Allston-Brighton -- they're fewer and fewer children here. And so, if there are empty buildings, if there aren't enough students, then schools will have to be consolidated and some of them will have to be closed. Was there a second part to the question?

MODERATOR: The question was, what school is at-risk, and what would you do about it?

SELVIG: I would love to have more families in Allston-Brighton. We're working on starting our own right now, and hopefully there will be enough time for us to populate the Garfield. [laughter] Bringing families back to Allston-Brighton, one at a time.

CIOMMO: I would just say that I've read a lot recently, especially about the violence and assaults in our public schools. And you can't have good teaching and learning and productive environment unless the teachers and the students feel safe. And I know Brighton High is one of the higher assault rates in the city of Boston. So, if I'm elected City Councilor, the first thing I'm doing is making our classrooms safe for the children and students.

QUESTION: Next, and this is a non-standard question, and we will see... I'm asking everybody, I'm going to start with Tim Schofield and work my way left. Just to name a person, a single name: Mayor Menino has not endorsed a candidate in this preliminary election. Despite this, who among the six candidates would you say is the "Mayor's Candidates"?

SCHOFIELD: I get to go first, right?

MODERATOR: Yes. Just a name, not a full answer.

SCHOFIELD: The Boston Phoenix tells me that it's Mark Ciommo.

SELVIG: Ciommo.

JENNER: Schofield.

CIOMMO: Tim Schofield was the Ward 21 co-chair for the Menino campaign...

SCHOFIELD: That is true, and Deval Patrick ... [inaudible]

MODERATOR: Ciommo, is that you're answer, Schofield?

CIOMMO: Yes.

HANLON: Me. [laughter] Me. [laughter] Me.

MODERATOR: There are two very confident answers, and so Tim Schofield and Mark Ciommo, I'm going to offer this question to each of you:

QUESTION: Since the other candidates also closely associate you with the Mayor, is this a blessing or a curse?

SCHOFIELD: Look, the reality is that we're sending a City Councilor to go there to do a job for us, and the Mayor is an important part of that job. I think it is important for the next City Councilor for this community to have good relationships with everybody -- the Mayor, the other City Councilors, I'm proud to have been endorsed by Sam Yoon, by Felix Arroyo. Look, I'm going to go there and represent this community. And if the Mayor and I agree on something, I'm going to take his help and I'm going to use that for our neighborhood. And if we disagree on something, then he'll know about it. But I don't think we should be making blanket statements. This job is about building relationships and accomplishing goals for this community. We need a City Councilor who is going to do what it takes -- if that means working with the Mayor, if that means standing up to the Mayor, so be it. Whatever you need to do so represent this community, that's what I'm going to do.

CIOMMO: All I can say is that for the past 20 years in this community, I've been in an executive position for the better part of those 20 years working on the behalf of the citizens of this community -- first, as the assistant director of the Jackson-Mann Community Center, and for the past 14 years, at the Veronica Smith Senior Center. And I have to work with the Mayor. He helps provide services that I deliver to the seniors in Allston-Brighton. I have to work with the Mayor as president of Little League, to make sure our parks and playgrounds get cleaned and the fields get mowed. As a Hobart Park Neighborhood Association founding member, I had to work with the Mayor to re-design the park, organize a community build, find funding from the grounds funds to erect the ornamental fencing and the historical markers. So, I will work with the Mayor, but I've always been a strong and independent voice on behalf of the citizens of this community, and I will continue to be that as your next City Councilor.

QUESTION: On August 20th, the Environmental Protection Agency released allegations against Chestnut Hill Realty Corporation for violating federal law related to lead paint disclosure, including for residential properties they rent in Brighton. This was reported briefly in the City Weekly a week ago. If you were City Councilor when you read such a news report, what specific actions would you take, if any?

SELVIG: If I were City Councilor when that happened, I would push for an inspection of all that realtor's properties. If there were any lead paint that were found that hadn't been disclosed that the landlord or owner actually knew about, we would force them to mitigate -- which means basically, de-lead the entire house. Now, there are issues with lead, I believe, for children under six and up to a height of four feet, I think is what needs to be de-leaded. Apparently, if those buildings are not rented to families with young children, believe it or not, it's OK to have lead in their houses. But if there was a family with children, then that property must be de-leaded.

QUESTION: Regarding constituent services, do you support or oppose rolling out a 311 service in Boston? And, if so, why?

JENNER: Well, I have to be honest, I have to look into the issue a little bit more, because I'm not familiar with a 311 service.

SELVIG: It's a New York thing.

MODERATOR: It's in a number of cities. Pass that [question around]. Timi, would you like to try that?

SCHOFIELD: Absolutely. It's been adopted in a number of cities: Baltimore, for example. Essentially, what it is, instead of dialing 911 for an emergency, if you have an issue with City Hall, you dial 311. And there is one person, operator, who will filter you to the appropriate person. So that if you are calling about a building permit, if you are calling about an abandoned car in front of your house, street light -- any of these things, if you are a small business starting up, it's designed to really facilitate a more consumer-friendly government. And a lot of cities have adopted it with great success. Absolutely, Boston should adopt it.

QUESTION: Have you used the Mayor's Constituent Service hotline, either the phone number or the online version? Is it an effective tool for constituent services? What would you change about it?

HANLON: No, I have not used it. I have referred people to the hotline. What I would like to do about it, I think the 311 service is a good tool to direct people. I think it's important that people... For instance, I get calls about parking, where [inaudible] services is what I would refer them to the Mayor's hotline. So I think it is important that there's a simple number, such as 311, that people can find out where they can park, where resident parking can be [?], that there are issues that they need to have addressed, they need to have a switchboard, if you will, to be able to direct people [inaudible].


AUDIENCE QUESTIONS
[to be completed]

CLOSING STATEMENTS (2 minutes per candidate):
[to be completed]

Boston College Student Behavior Policies

Several residents have been asking what exactly is BC's student behavior policy. It is available online in their Student Guide, where section 5 "Behavior Policies" is the relevant portion. I reproduce here several excerpts.

More information on alcohol-specific policies (and Massachusetts State Law) can be found here.


NOISE DISTURBANCES

A city ordinance prohibits all noises which would disturb neighbors beyond 50 feet of the residence hall areas between the hours of 12:00 a.m. and 7:00 a.m. Students responsible for noise violations are subject to University disciplinary action. Within residence areas, any noise or sound heard outside one's immediate room/suite/apartment is unacceptable. Violations of Quiet Hours as posted in the residence halls will be dealt with as a student disciplinary matter by the Residential Life staff.


ALCOHOL POLICY

Students must be 21 years of age or older to consume or possess alcohol.

  • Students who are of legal age may only possess small amounts alcohol for personal consumption.
  • Students under the age of 21 may not host a guest who possess or consumes alcoholic beverages in their room, suite or apartment regardless of guest age.
  • Providing alcohol to minors or intoxicated persons is prohibited.
  • Unacceptable behavior by a Boston College resident as a result of abusing alcoholic beverages will be subject to University judicial action which may result in suspension or dismissal from the residence halls and/or the University.
  • The unauthorized use of alcoholic beverages in common areas (i.e., corridors, public lounges, Mod backyards and porches, on the grounds, etc.) is prohibited.
  • All "central sources" (i.e. kegs, large containers filled with alcohol, punch, home brewing kits, etc.) will be confiscated and disposed, and responsible students will be referred to University disciplinary action.
  • Drinking games and/or any other activities which promote the use or abuse of alcohol are prohibited. This includes, but is not limited to funnels and gaming tables used for drinking. When found, these items will be confiscated and disposed of without compensation to the owner.
  • Students of legal drinking age who are hosting guests are responsible for assuring that all guests consuming alcoholic beverages are of legal drinking age.
  • No empty containers of alcohol are permitted in the residence areas of students who are under the age of 21.
  • Alcohol containers, advertisements, and paraphernalia can not be displayed on windows or on doors, or used as decorative pieces.

Off-campus Disturbances

As members of both the Boston College and the neighborhood communities, students who reside in off-campus apartments have a responsibility to demonstrate respect and concern for all members of the local community. As a result, Boston College imposes an obligation upon all its students to demonstrate responsible citizenship in the local neighborhood. Excessive or unreasonable noise, the illegal use and/or sale or distribution of alcohol or drugs, objects being thrown out of apartment windows, excessively large parties, and/or rude and abusive language or behavior are not in concert with the obligation. Numerous off-campus arrests have occurred for such offenses as false IDs, disorderly conduct, illegal sale or possession of alcohol, and public drinking. Therefore, the University reserves the right to refer any students identified as being involved in this type of behavior to the University's Student Judicial System for disciplinary action. If found responsible, students are subject to sanctions up to and including loss of University housing privileges or suspension or dismissal from the University.


Off-campus Misconduct

Whether or not alleged misconduct constitutes a violation of criminal law, students may be sanctioned by the Student Judicial System for violations of the University Code of Student Conduct occurring on or off the Boston College campus. Accordingly, persons who are not members of the Boston College community may initiate a complaint with the Office of the Dean for Student Development.


Brighton Allston Bicentennial Events This Sunday 9/23: 5-K Race, Parade, Street Fair

This Sunday, September 23rd, sees two staple events -- the Brian Honan 5-K Road Race and the Allston-Brighton Parade -- join with the new Allston Village Street Fair to make a day of fun for everyone. It's all part of the Brighton Allston Bicentennial year of celebration. I'm hoping that my new classification as a master leads to a good result in the race... you can also root for racer State Rep. Kevin Honan along the way.

Sunday, September 23rd
12:00 (noon) -- Brian Honan 5-K Road Race: Start/finish at The Kells of Boston, 161 Brighton Avenue, Allston, MA. Race goes west along Brighton Avenue, southwest on Cambridge Street, west on Washington Street, then turns around near the Swan Cleaners just before Oak Square.

1:00 pm -- Allston-Brighton Parade: start in Allston Village Barry's Corner, otherwise same route as the race, ending in Oak Square. (Note: the starting time is unclear. A-B TAB announces it as 1:00 pm, while Tolman/Moran/Honan flyer I received in the mail [twice] said 1:30 pm.)

12:00 - 6:00 pm -- Allston Village Street Fair: on Harvard Avenue between Brighton Avenue and Cambridge Street. Food vendors, music groups, and children's activities (face painting, Storymobile, clown, moonbounce, etc.). website

2:30 - 6:00 pm -- Post-Parade Party in the Park: sponsored by Representative Michael Moran. At Hardiman "Tar" Park, Oak Square.

No Surprise on This Media Endorsement for Schofield in City Council Race

Bay Windows, the LGBT paper of record in the area, has published an Editorial endorsing Tim Schofield for the Allston-Brighton Distrinct 9 City Council race. No surprise there, since Schofield is openly gay and was actively involved with the movement to defeat the proposed Amendment to the State Constitution banning gay marriage. The only real news is that five of six candidates in an historically Irish Catholic -- which now contains many conservative Russian Jewish immigrants -- are currently vocal in their strong support of marriage equality. It is nonetheless a sign that Schofield is holding the progressive vote despite Mark Ciommo's and Alex Selvig's attempts at inroads.

Boston College to Submit IMPA This Fall -- Prior to Submitting New Master Plan

Boston College has recently completed their transaction to purchase the remaining land of the former St. John's Seminary from the Archdiocese of Boston. The purchase also included Bishop Peterson Hall (mid-20th century extension to the historic St. John's Hall) and the Library.

Since these two buildings are not currently part of Boston College's approved Institutional Master Plan from 2000 (as amended with an IMPA in 2006), BC must apply to extend their institutional master plan area to the buildings and allow their occupancy for institutional use. They wish to do some significant interior renovations to both buildings, too.

As a result, BC legal counsel Joe Herlihy announced at Tuesday's BC Task Force meeting that they will be submitting "in the next few weeks" an Institutional Master Plan Amendment to allow renovations of these two buildings and permit their institutional use. He said that BC would not be pursuing an expedited review process, but instead will follow the standard timeline defined in the Article 80 review process. BRA project manager John Fitzgerald said that the initial comment period (following the IMPANF) is 30 days, and the later comment period (following the DPIR) is 60 days, so the full process will take a minimum of three months.

BC's full, 10-year IMP will be filed later in the fall, possibly overlapping a bit with the approval process of the IMPA.

Bishop Peterson Hall will now be used for offices and classrooms of the Weston Jesuit School of Theology, which is re-affiliating with BC; WJST students will continue to reside in Cambridge and commute to the Brighton Campus for classes. The 2006 IMPA approved St. Williams Hall for these WJST offices and classrooms. It appears as though St. Williams Hall will no longer have an approved institutional use during the time period between approval of the upcoming IMPA and the later IMP; their plan is for office space. Housing for the WJST seminarians will also be deferred to the IMP. BC's goal is to get quick approval of a largely renovation project that will likely not be controversial, while deferring possibly controversial projects (that may slow down the approval process) to the IMP.

The WJST has 18 faculty, 15 staff, and 140 students who will be using Bishop Peterson Hall. The current occupants of the building are overflow offices from the Archdiocese's Chancery, who will be moving to Braintree, so there will not be an increase in density of workers between Bishop Peterson and St. John's Halls.

The Library will also be renovated, and will then be jointly used by the St. John's Seminary and the WJST. It requires HVAC mechanical upgrades, code updates, and ADA-compliant updates.


The meeting also included a discussion of the student behavior plan and its enforcement during the first three weekends of the school year. I will defer that information for a future post.

BC to Remove Dead and Diseased Trees on Former Seminary Land Beginning 9/24

At the Boston College Task Force meeting on Tuesday night, 9/18, Jeanne Levesque, Director of Governmental Relations at Boston College, described the problems with diseased and dead trees on the Brighton Campus (the former Seminary land).

Seventeen trees are planned to be removed beginning next week.

Most of the trees are red pine trees along the north side of Commonwealth Avenue which are suffering from Diplodia Canker infections. A few other trees are at various other locations within the property: one along the Tribunal building entrance road, two along the spine road,
one at the guardrail, and one Hemlock suffering from wooly adelgid near the Edison School. There are another 5-7 trees that are being monitored but may eventually have to be removed, too.

A certified arborist inspected the trees on the property, and labelled those trees in need of removal by a pink ribbon. (Blue ribbons on trees interior to the property are not part of the dead tree identification project -- they are from a student project during the summer.)

You can see a few such trees in a photo from a previous post. I have no expertise in the matter, but even to my untrained eye it's clear pretty clear that these red pine trees have to be removed.

Levesque also confirmed that some tree removal had occurred in mid-summer along the border with the Edison School parking lot. She said that many of those trees had been removed at the request of Edison School officials, but all were dying and would have required removal soon in any case.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Boston Globe Endorses Schofield for A-B District City Councilor

The Boston Globe editorial page today announced their endorsement of Tim Schofield for the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council seat. The editorial noted his "combination of legal acumen and commitment to the community," and thought his "zoning experience and knowledge of settlement agreements would be a clear win for the neighborhood" when confronting institutional expansion issues.

I am not suprised with the announcement -- which I had privately predicted -- because I think that Schofield's background and temperament match those of candidates historically endorsed by the Globe. Watch for the Allston-Brighton TAB to come out with their own endorsement in this Friday's edition -- they recently had the candidates over for a forum, and had a reporter at Monday's forum.


Audio Recording of 9/17 A-B City Council Candidates Forum Posted

The audio recording from the one-and-one-half hour forum was put up last night on the "Election 2007 Coverage" near the top of the Brighton Centered Blog under "9/17 NEW audio recording" (mp3 format; 31 MB so it takes a while to download). For those using RSS readers or aggregators, you may have to follow this link to load the full webpage in a browser. Many thanks to Harry Mattison for webhosting of the audio recording on his HarvardInAllston website.

Between Foster Rock and a Hard Place

There's a hard issue that has been the source of much angst in the Brighton community since Boston College put forward their draft institutional master plan in February. The issue is covered in dangerous shards of broken glass, just like the top of Foster Rock.

At the forum on Monday night, three candidates for the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council walked into the line of fire over this housing issue. Why? The potential support of the Portina Road Jewish Orthodox community -- and their friends -- lies on the line.

Boston College has proposed to put 70 -- now up to 90 -- beds of "graduate or seminarian housing" on the land next to the Foster Rock, a five-acre property across from the St. John's Seminary land proper, but nonetheless part of the 2004 land purchase from the Archdiocese of Boston. This property, at 188-192-196 Foster Street (where the large parcel is listed as 192), is currently classified under Article 51 of the zoning code as a Conservation Protection Subdistrict, but BC's 2006 IMPA put a BC master plan overlay allowing them to re-zone it under Article 80 of the zoning code. Three houses currently lie on one corner of the site; they would be razed to build the new housing.

Not very interesting. Yet.

The back side of the property abuts a series of houses on Portina Road, many of them owned by members of the Jewish Orthodox (Hasidic) community. This is a lovely road, full of large families and large numbers of children that can play in the street in the afternoon, early evening, and especially on Saturday. In fact, the children can make quite a scene on the Sabbath.

When they got wind in March of BC's proposal to build the housing, the Orthodox community was furious -- and started to get mobilized. This issue is far and away the biggest reason that Rabbi Rodkin and his congregants show up to neighborhood meetings on BC's institutional expansion. Needless to say, the Orthodox community opposes BC's proposal with the strongest language they can muster, worried that quiet "seminarian" housing could easily switch to noisier "graduate" students and then -- in the blink of an eye when no one is looking -- be converted to "undergraduate" housing. BRA officials have tried placating them, but no assurances of requiring master plan review before allowing change in the building occupancy seems to satisfy the Portina Road neighbors.

Simply put: the Orthodox community fears a loss of their very way of life by having their quiet, out-of-the-way one-way street turned into a higher-traffic thoroughfare -- and having students, of any kind, living within a stone's throw.

But wait, you say, there's no access to the property from the east, so BC's proposed housing on Foster Street shouldn't bring extra traffic to Portina Road (except for a bit of increased foot traffic). Last fall, however, somebody with heavy equipment removed the barricades and cleared the brush for a footpath along one side of BC's property, thereby opening up the undeveloped extension of Wiltshire Road. Adventurous drivers could now go directly between Portina Road and Foster Street. And some did. And the neighbors worried that their way of life really was about to change.

BC claimed they didn't open up the road, the city also denied it, and the missing barricade problem was in a logjam. A couple of gentleladies twisted arms, stepping past the office of then-District City Councilor Jerry McDermott to find assistance from At-Large Councilor Sam Yoon's office. Barricade returned, dirt road closed off again, the universe re-aligned.

But the problem of the proposed housing is still there. The broader community isn't quite sure where we stand on the issue: there are three nice houses c.1880s on one corner of the lot that ought not to be torn down in a neighborhood starving for single-family housing; BC's proposal already wisely avoids building on the Foster Rock itself; and maybe BC could be convinced to put a more positive development on the site, like faculty housing (which they seem to need, based on house purchases on Wade Street). I know; I led a community meeting in April which included this on the agenda.

Into this Orthodox-angst over BC's proposal walked the candidates during Monday's forum. As moderator, I posed the question, answered by three of the five candidates who showed up:
QUESTION: Boston College has proposed to build 90 beds of graduate student or seminarian housing next to the Foster Rock on property that abuts the Orthodox Jewish Community on Portina Road. As City Councilor, how would you address BC's proposal?
Tim Schofield and Mark Ciommo were given the question; under the rules of the forum, since Ciommo didn't take a strong position, another candidate, Rosie Hanlon, was given the chance to answer, too, and did.

Schofield had attended several meetings in the spring which included this project, had voiced a negative opinion about the project at the March meeting of the BC Task Force, and took a strong position opposing it:
SCHOFIELD: I'm opposed to the proposal... So it is really not fair to have this huge piece of property and you are going to put these units at the bottom of the hill of one of the most stable family neighborhoods we have in this community... So again, putting those uses there seems to me, once again, is not taking advantage of the space [BC has] for the appropriate uses. There is a place for that housing, but I don't think that's the location for it.
Schofield appears to have been assessing the relative merits of graduate student or seminarian housing on the former Seminary land (which already houses seminarians) and the Foster Street parcel (which he was rejecting).

Ciommo, on the other hand, was not in attendance at those neighborhood meetings in the Spring, wanted more information to determine where he would stand, and also seemed open to graduate students (not just seminarians):
CIOMMO: ... Graduate students, again, are a different demographic than undergraduate students. You might be adding young families to the neighborhood. In that case, I would look at the demographic proposed for that site. But I would also like to talk to the abutters on Portina Road and see what is acceptable to them. Actually see what the proposal is -- the scope and size of the project. And then make a decision. I want more facts before I make a decision like that.
Hanlon, as as member of the BC Task Force, was, like Schofield, aware of the nature of the project, and expressed a strong opinion that the project has minimal impact:
HANLON: It is my belief that it is seminarian housing and not graduate housing at the bottom of that. And there is low to no impact with that development... Low to no impact is something that we can look at. There is going to be give-and-take when it does come to the master plan, and this might be one of the tools that we can work with.
I am unable to understand fully her point in the last sentence, but it sounds like she was considering use of this property as a bargaining chip in future master plan negotiations.

The score: Schofield opposed the proposal, Ciommo had no position yet (but was open to graduate students), and Hanlon seems OK with the proposal as is. They stepped into the Orthodox minefield and set off some ordinance. Methinks some injury resulted from it.

I wonder if the Portina Road Orthodox community has yet heard about the candidate's positions? I can't imagine that they would be willing to accept a candidate who didn't come out in strong opposition to BC's proposal on this property.

Political insiders have been trying to handicap the Brighton Jewish vote for years, and this year is no different. While one insider expressed the seemingly obvious view that there was no way Schofield would win the Jewish vote, once the Orthodox bloc figures out who's on their side on this seminal seminarian housing issue, I bet Schofield's odds have improved significantly overnight. And as for Councilor Yoon who re-barricaded the extension of Wiltshire Road? He already carried Ward 22 / Precinct 9 in 2005 in the At-Large race. Since Yoon has also endorsed Schofield, the two are bound to help each other out in that neighborhood.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

James Jenner Drops Out of City Council Race

Seven days before the preliminary election, candidate for Allston-Brighton District 9 City Councilor, James Jenner, has withdrawn from the race, according to the Allston-Brighton TAB. He is throwing his support to Rosie Hanlon.

The last day for a candidate to withdraw from the race and remove his name from the ballot was July 3rd, so his name will most likely still appear on the ballot. Recall that Mark Alford withdrew from the race on July 3rd, for example, such that Alford's name will not appear on the ballot.

During the last two months, this race had seemed to be a pretty nice one... but it is starting to get weirder by the day.

Greg Glennon a No-Show in Allston-Brighton Candidates Forum

Greg Glennon, candidate for the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council seat, was a no-show for the Candidates Forum Monday night at the Brighton Elks Lodge -- and nobody could figure out why. Abigail Furey, organizer and listed contact for the event, received no notification of his cancellation. Several of the other candidates said that Glennon has often been late to other joint events, so they didn't seem surprised.

The irony of the situation couldn't be more striking: a question at the forum was waiting for Glennon and two other candidates who had not attended any meetings of the BRA's Allston-Brighton institutional task forces in 2007 before deciding to run for the City Council.** Two of those three candidates -- including Glennon -- also failed to submit public comments in response to Harvard's request for a MEPA phase one waiver and science complex DPIR filed with the BRA. ***

It's hard to under-emphasize this point: in a neighborhood under seige by institutional expansion, attending public meetings and submitting public comments on regulatory filings are the bread-and-butter work of the A-B District City Councilor.

A-B District 9 City Council candidate Greg Glennon is now not only a no-show on institutional expansion -- he's AWOL at a candidates forum with a question about his no-shows.

Is he laying low, thinking that he would do better not facing the questions and the public? As I noted in a post several days ago, Patrick Galvin, brother and campaign manager to Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin, recently put a Glennon sign up on his front lawn. Secretary Galvin had only one opponent in 2006 -- Green-Rainbow candidate Jill Stein -- and refused to debate her at all. Well, actually, for the record, he allowed CBS4's John Keller to query Galvin and Stein for 16 minutes in a hallway in the Boston Athenaeum, which made a number of bloggers unhappy, to say the least. So if one or more Galvins are supporting Glennon in front or behind the scenes, then their apparent contempt for debates could be one explanation for Glennon AWOL Monday night. If so, I suspect they've not only given Glennon bad campaign advice, but they've handed him to gun to shoot his own foot.

EDIT (9/18, noon): Glennon has not yet responded to a request for comment on his no-show. Another journalist also reports the same.

EDIT (9/18, 1pm): A press release out of the Rosie Hanlon campaign about James Jenner's decision to withdraw from the race states that "organizers later learned that [Glennon] was attending a campaign fundraiser." Actually, we hadn't heard... although a different, unnamed source has since hinted it was a fundraiser downtown. Maybe it will help him pay for better phone surveys. But there was a rumor circulating at the Elks Lodge right after the debate that Secretary Galvin had told Glennon not to show. In retrospect, just a rumor wafting out from the bar.


** According to documents provided by the BRA through a request under the state's Public Records Law. The documents consist of audience and task force sign-in sheets for meetings of the Harvard Allston, Boston College, and St. Elizabeth's Medical Center Task Forces between January 1 and April 30, 2007, i.e., before Councilor Jerry McDermott announced in early May that he would not seek relection.

*** The other two candidates (who showed up!) who received the same question during the forum gave honest and reasonable answers. Their names, and their responses, will be provided in the audiotape and transcript of the forum; I think it inappropriate to name them at this time without also providing their response.

Monday, September 17, 2007

Harvard Sends Allston a Big New Year's Present: Professessional Technical Assistance

In tune with the Jewish New Year's holiday Rosh Hashanah, Harvard announced in a press release, made along with Massachusetts Environmental Protection Act Office, that they have agreed to a "Special Review Procedure" to deal with each and every project Harvard will propose to build as part of their Allston development. Harry Mattison announced this tonight on his allston02134 blog following the meeting of the Harvard Allston Task Force.

The press release gives a sketchy description of this Special Review Procedure:
The Special Review Procedure for the Harvard-Allston project requires Interim Updates every three years. It also requires every project-specific filing to go through an extensive public comment process.

For the purpose of that public comment process, the Special Review Procedure establishes a Citizens Advisory Committee, consisting of the City of Boston’s Allston-Brighton Task Force [i.e., Harvard Allston Task Force], which serves as an advisory group to the Boston Redevelopment Authority for its review of the university’s institutional master planning process, and several additional members to be named by the Secretary.

In addition, Harvard has agreed to provide financial resources to allow the CAC to retain professional expertise for the purpose of reviewing technical planning documents on issues pertaining to transportation, energy, and air quality produced through the Special Review Procedure, giving the CAC the ability to comment on proposed development that could affect the quality of life in the Allston neighborhood.
This sounds to me like Harvard has pledged to fund independent peer review of transportation, energy, and air quality, and that the Citizens Advisory Committee (the Harvard Allston Task Force plus a couple more people to be named by the Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs) will be the "client" for the work.

While the details need to be filled out, and the process worked out, this appears to be a big gift, presumably made along with some horse-trading with the Secretary. The Secretary announced earlier today that he is planning to approve Harvard's request for a Phase One Waiver to avoid completing a full environmental review of the science complex project.

Over here in Brighton, we have a similar need for technical expertise in order to analyze the transportation and environmental elements of Boston College's upcoming Institutional Master Plan. Let us hope that BC can follow Harvard's generous lead, and provide a similar present before the Gregorian New Year.

EPA Alleges Brighton Property Manager Chestnut Hill Realty Inc. Failed to Inform Tenants About Lead Paint

On August 20, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency issued a public allegation that the Chestnut Hill Realty Corp.:
failed to inform 135 tenants of known lead-based paint or lead-based paint hazards in apartments, and failed to provide records concerning the lead-based paint or lead-based paint hazards to tenants. EPA alleges that Chestnut Hill Realty Corp. also failed to provide 42 tenants with copies of an EPA-approved lead hazard information pamphlet or the Massachusetts Tenant Lead Law Notification. A financial penalty for the the alleged violations has not yet been determined.
These 135 tenants are in Brookline, Brighton, Cambridge, and Rhode Island, according to the Boston Globe's City Weekly. The Globe also reports that CHR attorneys suggest the lack of disclosure may have been due to a "clerical error."

When called to ask the names of the Brighton properties in question, George McHugh, President of Property Management for CHR, said that he would be unavailable for comment on the matter at this time. (I can only imagine the conversation between secretary and boss: "Take a call from a blogger?!? Of course not!" Why companies think that stone-walling citizen journalists in factual matters of the public record escapes me.) Since the information is public as part of EPA allegations, it was easy to find with only a few minutes of work -- starting with the EPA press release of 8/20/07.

David Deegan of the EPA's New England Region No.1 Office provided the EPA complaint which specifies the allegations against CHR related to their actions taken in 2004-5. Some of the allegations are that CHR:
failed to provide the following tenants with an EPA-approved lead hazard information pamphlet when they offered to lease apartments to them.
But many of the allegations appear to be more serious, in that the EPA alleges that CHR was aware that some properties had lead paint, but failed to disclose that information to the tenants (or maintain documents showing that they had made the disclosure), according to EPA spokesman Deegan. The complaint alleges that CHR:
failed to disclose the presence of known lead-based paint or lead based paint hazards and/or failed to provide records or reports pertaining to lead-based paint or lead-based paint hazards when they offered to lease apartments.
In the EPA complaint, the following Brighton properties are identified:
  1. 71 Kilsyth Road, Apartments 9, 11
  2. 75 Kilsyth Road, Apartments 1, 3, 4, 5, 8, 14
  3. 100 Kilsyth Road, Apartments 3, 4, 8, 16, 19
  4. 111 Kilsyth Road, Apartment 5
  5. 115 Kilsyth Road, Apartments 2, 4, 9
  6. 77 Lanark Road, Apartment 2
  7. 156 Newton Street, Apartment 1
  8. 58 Selkirk Road, Apartments 8, 11
With the exception of Newton Street, these are all buildings near Cleveland Circle and the border with Brookline.

EPA N.E. regional spokesman Deegan was unaware if young children were living in any of the properties known to have lead paint, nor if local health agencies have begun to follow up by identifying the children and having their blood tested. Obviously, local health officials should follow up on this, including finding out if any (other) children have been living in the properties known to have lead paint since the 2004-5 time period covered in the EPA allegations.


A Local Realtor's Perspective

I spoke with a local real estate agent who sometimes works with CHR on leases. The agent was surprised -- if not in disbelief -- to hear the allegations against the company, since the agent said that CHR usually has all the paperwork in good order on leases, including the lead paint disclosure. Nonetheless, the agent said that it is reasonable to assume that a number of CHR properties in Brookline and Brighton would have lead paint, due to specific details about those properties such as construction dates and style of building. On the other hand, the agent said, CHR has properties in West Roxbury that are known among realtors to have been de-leaded.


Federal Law on Lead Paint Disclosure

Note that the EPA complaint is for violations of Federal Law. I believe that Massachusetts Law is more stringent, but no allegations have, to my knowledge, been made for violations of State Law. The Federal Law of 1992 requires the following disclosures (text from EPA complaint):
The implementing regulations set forth at 40 C.F.R. Part 745, Subpart F, require sellers and lessors of target housing to, among other things:
(a) provide to lessees and purchasers a lead hazard information pamphlet;
(b) disclose to lessees and purchasers, prior to their becoming obligated under any contract to lease or purchase target housing, the presence of any known lead-based paint and/or lead-based paint hazards;
(c) provide to lessees and purchasers records or reports available to the lessor or seller pertaining to lead-based paint or lead-based paint hazards in the housing; and,
(d) ensure that the contract to lease or sell includes the following items:
(i) a Lead Warning Statement;
(ii) a statement by the lessor or seller disclosing the presence of known lead-based paint or lead-based paint hazards, or indicating no knowledge thereof.

City Council Candidates Submit Public Comments on Harvard's Science Complex Proposal

Harvard University's proposed Science Complex along Western Avenue in North Allston reached an important step along its path towards possible approval in the last two weeks. Public comments were solicited by two agencies and due during the last two weeks.

The Massachusetts Environmental Protection Act (MEPA) Office requested public comments related to Harvard's request for a Phase 1 Waiver of the requirement to conduct a full environmental review.

The Boston Redevelopment Authority (BRA) requested public comments related to the Draft Project Impact Report (DPIR) submitted by Harvard, their second public filing on the project, and the last one before the BRA Board's likely vote on the project September 27.

On his website http://HarvardInAllston.net/ , Harry Mattison provides links to the public comments he knows about that were submitted to both agenciese, including those by candidates for the Boston City Council. I provide direct links [below] to the candidates' public comments.

Regarding the A-B City Council Candidates who did not submit comments, I contacted them requesting copies of the documents -- in case they had not yet posted them publicly. Neither James Jenner nor Greg Glennon responded. In response to my query, Rosie Hanlon and Tim Schofield both confirmed that, while they submitted MEPA comments, she did not submit BRA comments.


A-B District 9 City Council Candidates Public Comments

The following candidates for Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council submitted public comments to MEPA:
  1. Mark Ciommo
  2. Rosie Hanlon
  3. Tim Schofield
  4. Alex Selvig
The following candidates did not:
  1. Greg Glennon
  2. James Jenner

The following candidates for Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council submitted public comments to the BRA:
  1. Mark Ciommo
  2. Alex Selvig
  3. [edited 10/25/07]: Greg Glennon [see p.82 of link]
The following candidates did not:
  1. Greg Glennon [edited 10/25/07]
  2. Rosie Hanlon
  3. James Jenner
  4. Tim Schofield

At-Large Boston City Council Candidates Public Comments

The following candidates for At-Large City Council submitted public comments to MEPA: none known to date. I have not yet formally requested clarification from any of the candidates, and will update this page as I learn more.


The following candidates for At-Large City Council submitted public comments to BRA:
  1. Councilor Felix Arroyo
  2. Councilor Sam Yoon
I have not confirmed with the other At-Large City Council candidates whether or not they submitted BRA comments, but will update this page as I gather that information.

Allston-Brighton TAB Has Their Own Candidates Forum

The Allston-Brighton TAB editorial board had an in-house candidates forum where they asked three questions... and then video-taped the answer to a fourth.

Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council Candidates Forum TODAY at 6:30 pm

Allston-Brighton City Council Candidates Forum

Cosponsored by the Brighton Allston Improvement Association
and the Allston Civic Association

Monday, September 17th
6:30 pm -- Informal Meet-and-Greet with the Candidates
7:00 - 8:30 pm -- Candidates Forum
Moderated by: Michael Pahre

Brighton Elks Lodge
326 Washington Street, Brighton, MA 02135
Limited parking available at rear of the building

Light refreshments will be served for a meet-and-greet with the candidates beginning at 6:30 pm. Attendees may submit questions for the candidates prior to the 7:00 pm start. Due to time constraints not all questions submitted will be selected. No campaign signs inside the venue, please.

For more information contact: Abigail Furey, 617-782-1382, abbycfurey@aol.com

The preliminary election to narrow the field from six to two candidates will take place on Tuesday, September 25th. This election will shape the future of our neighborhood and this is your opportunity to meet the candidates running for Allston-Brighton's open City Council seat. Please come and hear where the candidates stand on current neighborhood issues as well as their vision for our community.

City Council Candidate Responses to Harry Mattison's Questionnaire

Earlier this summer, Harry Mattison of the Allston-Brighton Community Blog sent the City Council candidates (both A-B District 9 and At-Large) a questionnaire focusing on issues important to Allston (as well as Brighton):
  1. Do you support the creation of a Boston Planning Department?
  2. Should height limits in the North Allston Strategic Framework be strictly applied to Harvard’s proposed buildings?
  3. Should City Council approval be required before a university can purchase property in Boston?
  4. What are your thoughts about a possible Charlesview relocation?
  5. What should be the future of the Speedway property on Western Ave?
  6. How do you feel about the vacant Harvard-owned properties in North Allston and North Brighton?
The following candidates have, or have not, responded to his questionnaire to date (click on their names to read their responses on Mattison's blog):

Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council Candidates Responding to Questionnaire:
Candidates not responding to date (as of September 16, 2007):
  • Rosie Hanlon
  • Greg Glennon

At-Large City Council Candidates Responding to Questionnaire:
Candidates not responding to date (as of September 16, 2007):
  • Michael Flaherty
  • John Connolly
  • William Estrada
  • Matthew Geary
  • David James Wyatt

Sunday, September 16, 2007

WGBH Turns on the Digital Mural Alongside MassPike

A couple of months ago, they were testing it; now they're about to switch it on for regular use. It's a large, digital screen alongside the MassPike designed to be seen by eastbound travellers. It's supposed to be showing a single image each day, but news reports are now sounding like they'll be trying a rapidly moving cloud loop, too.

The Boston Herald story notes:
It will be visible to eastbound commuters from about a mile and a half away, and westbound drivers also will be available to catch a glimpse.
That second part worries me: sounds like a lot of westbound necks craning to the left will all cause their steering wheels to pull to the left. Any wagers on when the first person files an accident report with the state police claiming he was distracted by the screen?

You can take WGBH's "Image of the Day Poll" at their site to choose among three pictures to get displayed.

As an astrophysicist, I am happy to heard that there will be a Hubble Space Telescope picture up this week. Assuming WGBH doesn't give full information about it, the first person to post below with the correct name of the astrophysical object in the image will win special mention right here! **

Saturday, September 15, 2007

One Lawn Sign That Will Vote -- Many Times

"Lawn signs don't vote; people do." That is a standard mantra of local politics, an indication not to judge a political campaign by counting signs.

Over in Ward 22/Precinct 8, however, I recently saw a lawn sign that I think will vote -- and may bring a lot of votes along with it. It's a red sign for Greg Glennon for the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council race, and it's on the front lawn of Patrick Galvin, brother and long-time campaign manager for Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin.

The Galvins, their inner political circle, and their broad base of supporters (Bill Galvin represented the neighborhood for many years in the State House prior to his election as Secretary) provide a base as big as anything over on Wallingford Road or Portina Road. And the Galvin team carries connections to those constituencies, too. Then Representative Galvin worked with the Brighton Orthodox community to build its eruv (completed in 1993), a point which they clearly remember. And sandwiched between the two Galvin's houses is none other than Mark Alford's house, who participated in a May 8 meeting with the Orthodox community over Boston College expansion -- and was a candidate in the A-B City Council election until he pulled out suddenly on July 3 (the last official day to get off of the ballot). For the record, neither Alford's nor Secretary Galvin's houses have sprouted campaign lawn signs; nobody yet knows publicly how they lean.

The Galvin-Alford-Galvin trifecta have long ties to the Brighton neighborhood, lists of campaign supporters from Secretary Galvin's decades of running for elected office, and a behind-the-scenes influence that is hard to match. While Secretary Galvin's list of six Allston-Brighton campaign contributors (search on CFPID 10176, City of Boston, and year 2006; then count 02134 and 02135 addresses) might have been thin during his most recent re-election campaign, those guys no doubt have an extensive database of supporters ready to be mobilized.

If one move has the potential to mix up this race, Patrick Galvin's lawn sign might be it. Two candidates are probably the least pleased with this development: Mark Ciommo and Rosie Hanlon. Why? Those two are long-term residents who have been splitting the "old boy" neighborhood vote of long-term A-B residents. I don't have enough digits -- even after removing my shoes -- to count the number of men who have told me they were going to vote for Ciommo solely based on knowing him since they were kids. Hanlon's connection to the neighborhood is not quite as deep, but no doubt growing -- her five kids (with the web of school and friend connections that brings), and her work with the Brighton business community, reaches all across the established residents of the neighborhood.

Glennon has comparatively far less of that traditional support in the neighborhood -- except for some of the inherited supporters of former state Representative Brian Golden. Patrick Galvin's lawn sign may indicate that some of Ciommo and Hanlon's long-term resident support may now be split with a third candidate, Glennon. A three-way split for the "old boy" vote may actually work to the benefit of Tim Schofield -- or probably more so for Alex Selvig, who could eke out a second-place finish if he can mobilize large portions of the anti-institutional expansion and under-40 crowd.

Finally, I wonder if my "phone survey" last night from the Glennon campaign had anything to do with this lawn sign over in 22/8? Best left as speculation.


Of Whales and Elephants

I previously commented on how there were too many lawn signs up during this campaign season, and that I was praying for rain to disintegrate some of them. The recent rain did just that to at least a few signs. I'm gonna continue my backyard dance to summon a nor'easter and clear these signs away.

Brighton's Conservatory Lab Charter School Meets NCLB Adequate Yearly Progress Goals

The Boston Globe reported today on the release by the state Department of Education of how schools in the past year have met national performance metrics. Those U.S. goals -- Adequate Yearly Progress -- are required under the federal No Child Left Behind act.

Seven schools in the state that had not been meeting AYP standards this year made sufficient progress to bring them within the AYP standard. Five are in Boston, all of those five are elementary schools, and one is in Brighton: the state-chartered Conservatory Lab Charter School at 25 Arlington Street (space leased from St. Columbkille's parish). Twenty-eight schools in the state that were previously meeting the AYP standard, however, went in the other direction and are now classified as "identified for improvement"; nine of the schools declining in their AYP performance are in Boston, of which seven are high schools. Note that there are many more schools in Boston that are currently failing to meet AYP standards, including many in Allston-Brighton; this news story only reported on those schools whose status changed from last year to this year.

Earlier this year, I reported on how the Conservatory Lab Charter School was doing well in comparison to its peer schools in Boston, but not in comparison to the state average. The school is using a very novel approach: starting in first grade, all students learn to play the violin, with music integrated into all aspects of the curriculum. In June I wrote:
As the school moves forward, it will be interesting to see if this experiment in music-based education can beat its competition in Boston and Massachusetts.
I think the recent announcement by the state Department of Education on the school's improvement is the first indication of success for this innovative school. Congratulations to the staff, students, and parents on their success!

Friday, September 14, 2007

Courting the Wallingford Road Conservative Russian Jewish Vote Redivivus

Every election, mainstream media reporters** keep harking back to Naakh Visoky's ability to deliver a large bloc of conservative votes to swing elections to the right in Allston-Brighton, and this year is no different.  A recent Bay Windows story includes a great bit of reporting on a recent event over at the Wallingford Road's Jewish Community Housing for the Elderly. People argue about how many votes are available over there (300 to 500), but it's hard to argue that he has no influence:
It was a more promising change of pace from a candidate forum earlier that afternoon in the auditorium of the Jewish Community Housing for the Elderly (JCHE), where candidates and audience members alike sipped on their choice of two beverages: ginger ale and diet ginger ale. The Wallingford Road complex is home to a bloc of 400-500 Russian voters that has reached legendary status for its purported ability to swing Allston-Brighton races. The complex also houses a large Asian population; in fact, the entire forum was translated into Russian, Mandarin and Cantonese by two translators standing at microphones alongside the stage on which the candidates sat. Schofield clearly had ceded the Russian voters in the audience, perhaps because among his opponents are Mark Ciommo, the executive director of the Veronica B. Smith Senior Center who was backed by the Russians when he made an unsuccessful bid for the seat in 2002, and Greg Glennon, an aide to former state Rep. Brian Golden, who had their support when he ran against Schofield in a special election for Golden’s seat after the pol stepped down in 2005. (Mike Moran defeated both of them.)

Never mind the fact that a Boston Phoenix article that hit the streets that morning quoted an unnamed observer saying that Schofield “will never get the Russian vote” in part because he’s gay and too progressive. So while Glennon name-checked his old boss, a social conservative who was beloved by the Russians, Schofield played to the Asian crowd by emphasizing several times his endorsement by At-large City Councilor Sam Yoon, the Council’s only Asian-American member. “I promise that I will work hard at City Hall with my friend Sam Yoon and with the mayor and the other city councilors to insure that our community is well-represented,” he said in response to a question from the floor about whether the candidates would keep all of their campaign promises if elected.
Clever work by Schofield to turn the topic away from conservative Jewish votes and towards the Asian elderly vote; it shows how he thinks the demographics have changed in this neighborhood. We'll see if he's right and how he fares.

OK, I'm done with Wallingford Road.  Really.


**
Yeah, in effect I just referred to a Bay Windows reporter as being part of the MSM. Go figure.

An Old Phone Survey, Trend Polling, and a Quick Survey

Tim Schofield is an openly gay candidate for City Council, and openly acknowledges it on the campaign trail.  Nonetheless, he does not appear to be pushing the point in public forums: it would probably turn off some voters even if they generally supported LGBT issues.

Back in June I was called for an extensive phone survey about the A-B City Council campaign. I was fairly certain then that the survey was run by Schofield's campaign, not only because he was well-positioned to raise lots of money (including his own) to pay for expensive phone surveys -- but also because the survey omitted the obvious fact that he is an openly gay politician. Any competing campaign would have used the information because, well, Schofield's just plain open about it. I thought then that Schofield was using the survey to see how identifying as an openly gay politician affected his poll numbers in A-B. The sad truth is that it probably does, even in fairly progressive A-B.

I have heard repeated reports over the last two months about short phone surveys which read off the six candidate names and ask which one they support; examples include Harry Mattison in early August and another one earlier this week.  Each report of this phone survey sounds suspiciously identical, suggesting that trend polling has been underway in Allston-Brighton by one of the campaigns.

If the June survey I attribute to Schofield was the most sophisticated one run this campaign season, the survey I just got Friday evening from the Glennon campaign was the total opposite. At the other end of the line all I heard was something like, "Can we count on your support for Greg Glennon this September?" To which I replied, "I have pledged to remain non-partisan this election year." I asked the caller if he was trying to raise campaign donations, and he said, no, they are just asking a survey consisting of one question.  Either that's one minimalistic survey, or it's a pretty gentle -- and ineffective -- kind of push polling.

Outing Gay Issues in the A-B City Council Race

Boston City Councilors rarely have reason these days to vote on LGBT issues like gay marriage, since mostly those issues are in the purview of the State Legislature. As such, we haven't heard too much about gay issues in this year's election campaign for the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council seat -- unlike the 2005 special election for state representative to replace a foe of marriage equality, Rep. Brian Golden.

Openly gay City Council candidate Tim Schofield was the first to announce his candidacy for the seat, which was conveyed by the LGBT website Bay Windows. Fortunately it wasn't too electrifying, because Schofield lived to tell about it; he doesn't seem to follow the instruction not to use cell phones while filling up at a gas station. Schofield and Mark Ciommo have both pitched their support for LGBT issues to the progressive community BlueMassGroup. But aside from a few other bits of banter, the topic hasn't really been raised in this campaign.

The LGBT paper of record, Bay Windows, now outs the gay issue in the A-B City Council race:
Denis Dison, Victory Fund’s vice president of communications, disputes the notion just because the Council doesn’t regularly vote on LGBT issues, there’s less need for an LGBT voice in the chamber. “You would never hear somebody say, ‘Gee, the City Council doesn’t really vote on women’s issues so we don’t need a woman,’ or, the City Council doesn’t really vote on African American civil rights issues so we don’t need any black people on the council,” said Dison.
You would think that openly gay candidate Tim Schofield would have a lock on the LGBT vote... but not so fast. While Schofield earned the endorsement of a prominent national organization, the Gay and Lesbian Victory Fund, Mark Ciommo's "campaign manager, Michael McLaughlin, is a former MassEquality canvasser and his website prominently touts the support of Dale Mitchell, the executive director of the LGBT Aging Project." And "Cathy Greene, a lesbian lawyer who lives in the district, is passionate in her support of [Rosie] Hanlon, who she said is a whole-hearted supporter of gay rights." Schofield and Ciommo both went before the tough critics at BlueMassGroup to tout their progressive credentials, including on LGBT issues.


Past Records and Confusion in the Fog of History

Endorsements don't win elections; people do.  Those two candidates have a little bit of a track record to offer us insight.  Schofield testified at the State House against the anti-gay marriage constitutional amendment that was later defeated.  Most people, regardless of their position on the amendment itself, will respect him for speaking out on that big stage to defend a politically poisonous issue of the day.

Ciommo's record, however, is mixed-up with accusations and denials, as detailed by the Bay Windows story.  Let's look through them and see if they hold water.

Ciommo maintains that he was a supporter of domestic partnerships since the early 1990s, but a column by Tom Keane in the Boston Herald late in 2002 claimed Ciommo opposed them.  Regarding gay marriage, most Massachusetts politicians didn't openly support marriage equality before the 2003 Supreme Judicial Court opinion -- but most have since become supporters, as indicated by the rejection of the constitutional amendment.  No different for Ciommo, who said "I’ve been a supporter of marriage equality since it was passed by the SJC.”

More difficult to explain, however, is his wife Laura's signature on an anti-gay marriage constitutional amendment petition in 2005; she doesn't remember signing it, Mark thinks she was duped (many other people have made similar allegations about these particular petitions), and he said she was "devastated" when she found out that she had actually signed it.  The problem with this explanation? It's hard to maintain, simultaneously, both that she can't remember signing the petitition and that she was duped; you can remember signing it but claim you were duped, or you can remember neither signing it nor being duped.

The Bay Windows story further asserts that Ciommo used coded language in referring to his 2002 position on domestic partnerships when he recently said the confusion could have been a result of his desire in 2002 "to extend those benefits to siblings as well." Bay Windows reporter Laura Kiritsy argued that:
Extending domestic partnership benefits to spinster sisters or a son caring for his widowed mother is a tactic that has been used by gay rights opponents to water down or sink domestic partnerships bills in the past.
Ciommo appears to have stuck his sibling's foot in his mouth trying to wiggle out of his 2002 position on domestic partnerships (whatever that position was).


The fog of history is especially tough to peer through when the issue is as highly-charged as discrimination based on sexual orientation.  Based on the information above, I cannot figure out what Ciommo's past positions were, and I'm not sure it is all that important for voters in general. I personally believe that those who support marriage equality ought to give a politician like Ciommo a pass on the issue -- not only because so much has happened so fast in the last few years, but also because the allegations against him are not so simple to disentangle. Since roughly 75% of a District City Councilor's job is in delivering constituent services, voters are more likely to focus on filling potholes, street cleaning, parks -- and institutional expansion. LGBT issues are tangential at best to these basic functions of local government.  Today, Ciommo forcefully states his support for LGBT issues like gay marriage, so he ought to be taken at his word.


The Other Candidates' Positions on Gay Marriage

As for the other candidates...  Hanlon has posted on her website support for marriage equality. Alex Selvig wrote to me that he "support[s] their right to marry, and also that they have full rights as any married couple would under the law." Greg Glennon opposed gay marriage in his 2005 race for state representative, but has not yet, as far as I can tell, expressed a position during the 2007 campaign.  James Jenner wrote to me that he "completely support[s] gay marriage," and that he bases that support, in part, on his strong belief in the separation of church and state.

Now that all the candidates' positions are pretty much out in the open, let's move on.  Except for one related story on surveys...


State Senate Race: Ballots Cast By 6% of Allston-Brighton, 15% of Charlestown Registered Voters

In last Tuesday's special election for the State Senate seat vacated by Jarrett Barrios, only the northwestern-most region of Allston-Brighton (basically Allston but not Brighton) lay within the district and went to the polls. Also voting were portions of Cambridge, Somerville, Everett, Revere, Saugus, Chelsea, and the Charlestown neighborhood of Boston.

Between Charlestown and Allston-Brighton, 2176 of 19,502 registered voters cast a ballot, or 11.16%, according to the Boston Elections Department. But in just Allston-Brighton, 524 of 8156 registered voters in those six precincts cast ballots, just 6.4%, according to information collected by the Allston-Brighton TAB from the Boston Elections Department. That means 1652 of 11,346 registered voters in Charlestown voted, or 14.6%.

Why did Allston-Brighton registered voters show up at the polls at less than half the rate of Charlestown voters?

Some speculated on low voter turnout due to the bad weather that day... but there weren't thunderstorms in Allston alongside sunny skies in Charlestown.

Harry Mattison, who lives in Allston in the Senate district (unlike me over here in Brighton), wrote that Tim Flaherty visited Allston for a house party once to his knowledge, and the other candidates didn't at all. Ouch. I didn't personally see former Senator Barrios at any events in Allston in the last year -- but my attendance in Allston ain't all that good, either, so I could've missed his appearances. People just weren't excited about a race where the candidates and former elected official stay out of town. I didn't cover the race because the election district barely skirts one corner of Brighton. And I've never seen any of the four candidates around town.

An alternative explanation that I find more likely for the low voter turnout is a structural one. It is related to the transient nature of the households in Allston-Brighton, which includes the middle class flight to the suburbs. Here, I think that U.S. Census data can provide us with some insight, comparing the average length of time each household has been at a particular address between Allston and Charlestown. The 2000 census reported that 45.8% of Allston-Brighton households moved into their March 2000 address after January 1, 1999, while only 26.2% of Charlestown households did. That is one whopping difference between the two neighborhoods!

When people move, they may lose their voter registration. According to the League of Women's Voters's website:
9. I am registered, but I've recently moved. Does this affect my registration?

Yes. If you are registered and have moved within your current election jurisdiction, contact your local election office to update your registration and determine where you should vote. If you moved outside of your old election jurisdiction, you will have to reregister in your new jurisdiction before the registration deadline in your state.
But since everybody moves on August 31 -- right before September primary or preliminary elections -- most are still registered voters on the voting rolls for their old address (they haven't yet been purged), even though they don't live there anymore. As long as they moved within the same city or town, they may still be legally allowed to vote, but they may not realize that. They may not know their new polling location; if they show up at the old one they may be challenged, etc. (Cases like this were to be addressed by the provisional ballot system.)

How many people re-register to vote within a few days after moving in? Very few. I've gotten whacked by this myself when I was young, and I'm sure a lot of the "transient," young population living in A-B are similarly affected every year. An enterprising reporter could probably dig up some people to quote in less than an hour. A few questions posed to the Secretary of the Commonwealth's office might offer the scenario of how elections officials respond on election day to a changed address, and how often this has occurred in recent elections.

People who move, but realize they haven't updated their voter registration, are likely not to show up at the polls at all. This problem of low voter turnout in Allston-Brighton could very well be a structural one -- hidden below the surface -- a sad result of the low rate of family and long-term households in our neighborhood.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Boston Phoenix and Election Rumor Mill on Wallingford Road

It's almost election time in Allston-Brighton, so it's time for the big newspapers to trot out their latest version of the story of Wallingford Road in Brighton. The Boston Phoenix has its ear to the ground in that neighborhood, the one populated by many elderly Russian-American Jews and headed by Ukrainian-American "ward boss" Naakh Vysoky. I have heard some similar stories, some different -- and a few much uglier ones -- but have not printed what I have heard because people have been unwilling to be quoted for the record (whether or not anonymously). The Phoenix seems to have had better luck, and instead categorizes their information under the "rumor mill":
A good bellwether for these votes is the Russian Jewish residents of Allston-Brighton. Connolly had their support in ’05, as did White — but not Arroyo or Yoon. And that could make all the difference.

In 2005, for instance, Naakh Vysoky, who organizes several hundred votes — if not more — at the Jewish Community Housing for the Elderly buildings on Wallingford Road, put Connolly on “the list” of recommended votes — and left off Murphy. Connolly beat Murphy by 317 votes in that single voting precinct, giving him a 193-vote edge in the citywide tally.

Then Vysoky added Murphy to the list for the general election, helping him retain his seat on the Council.
Vysoky is getting quite old, but is known to exert strong influence on his group. Unfortunately for him, there were allegations recently of improper influence on voting in that precinct, which seems to be influencing his endorsements:
Serge Bologov has a similar influence on other tight-knit neighborhoods in the area, including a growing Hasidic congregation around Chestnut Hill Avenue. As a result, the two are being watched closely in the September 25 Allston-Brighton preliminary, where six candidates are vying to replace Jerry McDermott, who is moving out of the city to raise his young children. The top two finishers in that race will face off in November.

Observers are handicapping Vysoky and Bologov like Vegas oddsmakers. Greg Glennon, who got the Wallingford Road vote in his 2004 race for state representative against Michael Moran, is ideologically closest to their views, and is a protégé of one of their favorite pols, former state representative Brian Golden. But Mark Ciommo has a good relationship with Vysoky and others through his work as executive director of the Veronica B. Smith Senior Center. Ciommo is also favored by Menino, who Vysoky and Bologov usually — though not always — try to help. One local pol says that Bologov and Ciommo arrived together at Menino’s July cookout.

Fellow candidate Rosie Hanlon, director of Brighton Main Streets, is less likely to get the Russian vote, although she is not conceding. “Rosie is spending a lot of time at Wallingford Road,” says her campaign manager, Mark Handley.

The most progressive candidate in the race, Tim Schofield, is said to have the least chance with the Russian community — even though he helped organize the ward for Menino in 2005 — since he worked for David Friedman, who Vysoky blames for a 2005 Department of Justice inquiry into suggestions of electoral skullduggery among the Russians. Plus, Schofield’s progressive politics aren’t their cup of tea, and, some say, neither is his homosexual orientation. “Tim Schofield will never get the Russian vote,” says one Brighton political player.

Other progressives — including Arroyo and Yoon — have also never won that vote. If Connolly can be progressive enough to attract liberals while still holding the votes of neighborhood voters such as the Russians, he may have the opening he’s looking for.
The irony is that Ciommo supporters have been trying to claim that he is the most progressive candidate in the race; Ciommo even states clearly on BlueMassGroup that he supports gay rights (including "marriage equality") and is pro-choice. It's hard to know if Vysoky and Bologov realize this, or if they are willing to overlook it as a small blemish. I would bet on both men endorsing Glennon, but if they endorse Ciommo -- who knows? -- it might actually cause him to lose votes among progressives.

The bigger question is: are these Russian Jewish and Othodox Jewish voting blocs as important now as they used to be? The beginning of the election campaign saw Benjamin Bloomenthal fail to garner even the 139 certified signatures needed to get on the ballot. I saw candidates all over town gathering signatures... but I must have missed those who were collecting them across the street from Whole Foods. In a year in which Allston-Brighton civic engagement appears to be at its highest point in recent memory, a big turnout in the polls for the City Council election depresses the influence of either the Russian Jewish vote organized by Vysoky or the Orthodox Jewish vote influenced by Bologov -- especially when the Federal government and the Secretary of the Commonwealth are watching over the shoulder of the Boston Elections Department.

Rather than continually re-visiting the Ukrainian boss of the Russian Jewish ward -- or the Orthodox Jewish vote of Portina Road -- let's look at the other constituency blocs currently up for grabs in Allston-Brighton in this election: institutional expansion opponents; Asian and Brazilian immigrants; graduate students; catholics; the elderly; parents of public school students; Republicans; small business owners; and so on. There's at least as many votes in each of those blocs as there are at Wallingford Road or Portina Road. A well-organized campaign strategy in one or two could be the difference between fourth and second place -- the difference between ending your bid on September 25 or proceeding on to November.

BC Task Force Meeting: Tuesday 9/18 at 6:30 pm

BC Task Force Meeting

Tuesday, September 18, 2007
6:30-8:30 pm

Brighton Marine Health Center
77 Warren Street, 3rd floor
Brighton MA 02135

Agenda:
  1. ISD Briefing- Overcrowding
  2. Bishop Peterson Hall and Library- Renovations
  3. Diseased/Dead Trees- Brighton Campus
For more information, contact:
John FitzGerald
Project Manager
Boston Redevelopment Authority
617-918-4267
John.Fitzgerald.bra@cityofboston.gov


Brown and Dying Trees

For more information on the dead and dying trees in the Brighton Campus (former St. John's Seminary property), see my previous post.

Late last week, I was informed that BC people (looking more like outside contractors than internal employees of their Urban Ecology Institute) were tagging some of the trees on the property. Upon visiting, I found the dying pine trees in question along Comm Ave to have pink tags on them; healthier trees were untagged. I also heard that there were other colored tags used elsewhere on the property: what I found were blue tags on apparently healthy trees (at least to my uninformed eyes) in the interior of the property, trees of all different kinds. But there were lots of trees without tags. And there was one metal lamppost with two colored tags, neither blue nor pink; I hope they don't try to saw it down.


Bishop Peterson Hall and Library: Renovations

These are buildings part of the final $65 million sale of property by the St. John's Seminary (controlled by the Archdiocese of Boston) to Boston College. See previous post for information on what buildings these are, and another previous post for BC's intended use for the buildings as of June 2007.

It is unclear the extent to which Boston College can occupy these buildings for institutional purpose prior to approval of some kind of Institutional Master Plan (or IMP amendment), let alone renovate them. In 2006, BC got an IMPA approved which provided for renovations and institutional use of other buildings within the Brighton Campus that had been purchased up until 2006, but that IMPA (in conjunction with the prior IMP) did not cover these new buildings (Bishop Peterson Hall and the Library).

At the task force meeting, BC and the BRA will presumably be explaining what approvals they may or may not need in order to proceed with these renovations and occupation of the buildings for institutional use. It is possible that it will involve an IMPA that they would want to fast-track for approval prior to dealing with the 10-year IMP, or that they will roll the renovations into the IMP itself... or that someone can figure out how they'll avoid the IMPA/IMP route altogether.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Should NESN Cover Notre Dame or Boston College Football?

An admitted rant by Ben Ostrander about how the New England Sports Network is showing no respect for Boston College football by not covering it at all -- while devoting a weekly broadcast to Notre Dame football.  Maybe our neighbors who are devoted BC football fans can set the record straight on why NESN does this?  Bad blood over a past agreement?  Cluelessness?  Doesn't fit into the programming model of All-Red-Sox-All-The-Time?

I wonder how NESN will cover the Boston College vs. Notre Dame football game October 13, if at all?

After Action Review of Crowdsourced Questionnaire

WARNING!!! Shameless Self-Promotion! WARNING!!!

David S. Bernstein of The Boston Phoenix's "Talking Politics" has very nice words about the crowdsourced questionnaire for candidates to the A-B City Council seat that was put together here over the last month. Bernstein then lost all credibility by referring to Brighton Centered as "one of the best blogs in town."

For those who weren't following the process early-on, I picked up the idea for submitting questions and running a poll from Adam Gaffin of UniversalHub -- who pulled it off successfully with a questionnaire that Suffolk County District Attorney Daniel Conley then answered. The term "crowdsourcing" was suggested by Dan Kennedy to describe Gaffin's process, based on a term that seems to have first appeared only in 2006. The concept of crowdsourcing has been applied retroactively to describe processes that have occurred centuries ago, such as the Longitude Prize.

I believe the crowdsourcing process worked well here in Allston-Brighton for a series of reasons. First, while daily readership of the Brighton Centered Blog may not be astronomical -- it is, after all, a blog mostly about local politics and neighborhood issues -- there are several active Google Groups full of members with similar interests that supplemented the daily readers. They sprouted up in response to Harvard's Allston expansion ("AllstonBrighton2006" and "Harvard Neighbors Forum") and Boston College's expansion into the former St. John's Seminary ("BC_Neighbors_Forum"). Yes, we can thank Harvard and BC for something. Second, another blogger in Allston who predates me, Harry Mattison, prepared the activist neighborhood at large on the concept of reading blogs and groups. Third, I got an advance agreement from most of the candidates that they would participate. Fourth, I reminded most of them about the questionnaire when the date approached. Fifth, as the deadline loomed I chased down the last candidate's questionnaire by contacting every phone, answering machine, pager, and email address I had for him/her. Sixth, the candidates seemed to realize that the questions were directly from the voters. It is far more difficult for a candidate to blow off the voters themselves than a two-bit blogger. And finally, I was asked to moderate the City Council candidates forum next week -- the last one before the preliminary election -- so the candidates probably all felt they had to be nice to me in the hopes of getting a softball question in return.

In response to Bernstein's concerns about not fact-checking the candidates' responses (which I originally noted on the final blog posting): I think the process followed here is parallel to the idea of having a voter information guide that many states publish in hardcopy and mail to all registered voters (Massachusetts does not), although the hardcopy aspect of the guide is probably becoming rare these days. Some states (or municipalities) have the candidates each give a brief biography and/or answer one general, but topical, question. I don't think the Secretaries of State fact-check those candidate answers or biographies; instead, they let the candidates deceive, mislead, or lie at their own risk. That's the same idea I adopted here by publishing their responses unedited.

Anyway, I hope it was an educational experience for everyone who watched and/or participated in the process!

BC Law School Students Partying As If They Were Undergraduates

From the police blotter at the BU student newspaper, The Daily Free Press:
Law School Student in Need of Good Lawyer

Just before 11 p.m. on Sept. 7, several Brighton residents contacted the Boston Police Department complaining of noise disturbances on Lake Street. Officers who arrived at the scene discovered more than 100 partygoers drinking an assortment of beer and liquor inside the apartment.

Officers advised a group of males who resided at the location to end the party, but the group asserted they were all of-age Boston College Law School students. Eventually, the group agreed to eject their guests.

As neighbors thanked the officers for dissolving the loud party, one of the apartment residents began to protest the police presence. The 21-year old white male was later placed under arrest when officers were forced to reenter the house and clear the remaining 50 guests who had still not left.

The suspect remained disruptive at the station and caused unnecessary delays in the booking process until 12:20 a.m.
I think law students ought to be taught that admission to the bar can be jeopardized by a past record of arrests and/or convictions.

Edit (7:30 pm):  The Allston-Brighton TAB has covered this and other drinking-related arrests over the last weekend in A-B.

Ward 21 Democratic Committee Endorsement for City Council

Last week the Ward 21 Democratic Committee met to consider endorsements in the non-partisan election for Allston-Brighton District 9 City Councilor.  Candidate Tim Schofield had been the committee chair until he stepped down during the campaign; Nan Evans is holding the position at least temporarily, and ran the meeting on the endorsement.

Five of the six candidates accepted the invitation to address the group and then answer questions.  Greg Glennon was the only no-show, probably a result of the difficulty he had with the group in 2005 when they focused on social issues, like gay marriage, during that year's special election for State Representative.

The five who attended -- Mark Ciommo, James Jenner (both of whom put "Democrat" on at least some of their campaign signs in this non-partisan race), Rosie Hanlon, Alex Selvig, and Tim Schofield -- all were effective advocates for the issues, according to one committee member in attendance at the meeting.  Questions were heavy on institutional expansion, drunk and rowdy students, and so on.  In short, neighborhood issues, not national ones.

In the end, the committee voted to endorse Tim Schofield.  "He's one of us.  He's been our chairman," said the committee member.  While a quorum was not present at the meeting, the rules for the committee appear to allow for endorsement votes without a quorum.  The Boston Phoenix recently referred to Schofield as the most progressive candidate in the race, which must have been a selling point to the Democrats of Ward 21 when choosing who to endorse.


City Council Campaign in the Age of YouTube

While Schofield's website doesn't yet note the endorsement, they have embedded a series of videos onto the site.  The videos are billed as being "unscripted"; the opening one reads mostly like a honed stump speech, but the others address issues in more depth than you're likely to see at any candidate forum or campaign event.

A month ago, Harry Mattison found just one City Council candidate with a YouTube video -- and it was At-Large candidate John Connolly's ad from 2005.  It is refreshing to see Schofield embracing the new technology.  I hope others follow the lead.  Hey Tim, the new videos would, you know, be a great subject for a nice blog posting, don't you think?

Boston Globe Outsources Its Election Coverage to a Candidate's Campaign

Anthony Galluccio won yesterday's Democratic primary for the open State Senate seat vacated by Jarrett Barrios.  The Boston Globe appeared to be too lazy to call up elections officials to get vote tallies, instead relying on one of the candidate's campaigns to report the results, and then publishing the tallies without fact-checking:
With all 24 precincts reporting in Boston and Cambridge, Galluccio led Timothy R. Flaherty, a Cambridge lawyer, 1,933 to 1,389, according to unofficial results. Voters also went to the polls in Saugus, Everett, Somerville, Chelsea, and Revere. A complete tally of unofficial results compiled by Galluccio campaign workers, showed he led Flaherty 4,388 to 2,232.
Wasn't it media incompetence that contributed to the Florida election fiasco in 2000?  Get on the phones and call up the Saugus, Everett, Somerville, Chelsea, and Revere elections departments!

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Allston-Brighton District City Council Candidates Respond to the Crowdsourced Questionnaire

The candidates for the Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council seat have responded to the crowdsourced questionnaire generated by readers here of the Brighton Centered Blog and on the Google Groups AllstonBrighton2006 and BC_Neighbors_Forum. The questions were submitted by members of the public in mid-August; I selected the "best" 14, re-worded by me as necessary, and then put those to a vote in late-August; and the top seven vote-getters were sent to the candidates as a questionnaire on September 1. The final vote tallies can be seen at the Brighton Centered Blog by scrolling down on the right-hand-column of the webpage.

The instructions to the candidates were that they should submit responses by COB on Tuesday, September 11. All responses submitted by then would be posted at the same time, so no one could read another's responses in advance. No word limit was imposed, although I suggested:
"approximately a paragraph (2-4 sentences) in the response to each question, although some questions may naturally lead to a longer or shorter response."
All responses are published in their entirety without editing, although I have done a little bit of re-formatting (e.g., bullets) for consistency in layout. None of them have been fact-checked, either.

All six candidates submitted responses (click on their name to see their responses):
  1. Alex Selvig
  2. Mark Ciommo
  3. Rosie Hanlon
  4. Tim Schofield
  5. Greg Glennon
  6. James Jenner.
Thank you to everyone who submitted a question, voted on the poll, and/or responded to the questionnaire!!! I hope that everyone has found this process to be interesting, the questions to be important to our neighborhood, and the responses insightful for choosing your candidate for the preliminary election on September 25th.


EDIT (9/12/07): I have added an "After Action Review" discussing how effectively this online, crowdsourced process worked.

NOTE (9/17/07):  While I generally accepted (moderated) comments on this blog, I am not accepting comments on the individual candidate questionnaire responses.  Accepting such comments would be counter to the spirit of a level playing field and open to abuse.

Readers are still encouraged to post comments on other posts on Brighton Centered.

Alex Selvig Responds to the Crowdsourced A-B City Council Candidate Questionnaire

Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council Candidate Alex Selvig responds to the crowdsourced questionnaire at the Brighton Centered Blog:
  1. What could the city do about noisy parties, illegal parking (both on front lawns and streets), and tenant occupancy code issues, either by enforcing existing ordinances, increasing or changing penalties, or passing new ones?

    Response: To keep our neighborhoods livable, we need a carrot-and-stick approach, and the involvement of both the government and residents.

    THE CARROT: Let’s lead by example and show each other how to be good neighbors!
    • Intensive and spirited public education campaign directed at residents and landlords about existing city laws and regulations.
      Encourage outreach to neighbors, and provide support to community block parties, picnics in the park, etc.
    • Support community initiatives like the bed bug prevention program.

    THE STICK: We need meaningful enforcement of existing laws and regulations.
    • Ensure that the Inspectional Services Department (ISD) has adequate resources to respond to complaints in a timely way.
    • Work with the Boston police and the colleges and universities to ensure that complaints about noise and parties receive a quick response. Boston College’s recent plan looks good on paper, but the community must let BC know what’s working, what’s not, and what needs improvement.
    • Determined enforcement: notices, fines and ultimately revocation of occupancy permits.


  2. What will be your first three steps as the new A-B City Councilor to improve the infrastructure of Allston/Brighton?

    Response:
    • Make bike transportation a priority. Cycling makes sense for health, the environment, and traffic! I will work with the Mayor, other members of Council and City staff to create a cycling plan for Boston that will include bike lanes and bike “networks” to link cyclists with neighborhoods and destinations across Boston; bike parking; and safety, education and promotion.
    • Conduct a safety audit of Allston-Brighton public spaces. The goal of a safety audit is to identify and, if possible, improve streets, sidewalks and public spaces for all users, including women, children, seniors, and disabled people. Small improvements, such as improved lighting, increased crossing times (for streets), fixing broken sidewalks, creating curb cuts or trimming bushes can have a big impact on reducing crime and improving everyone’s personal safety. The first step is partnering with community and neighborhood groups and their direct experience to identify what they believe needs to be changed, and then work on making the necessary improvements.
    • Clear snow and ice. Although property owners are required to clear sidewalks within 4 hours after a snowfall (or by 9 a.m. if the snow stops after 9 p.m.), this regulation is not vigilantly enforced. It will be! Clean sidewalks are safe sidewalks, and are especially important for seniors, people with strollers and small children, and disabled people. To assist senior and people with disabilities, I will propose a program whereby they can apply to have the City clear sidewalks.


  3. What are the specific steps you will take in order to implement the needs of the community related to institutional expansion (Harvard, BC)?

    Response: Boston needs a planning process that is transparent, accountable and responsive. Boston needs a city plan that takes into account the city’s needs for community planning, urban design, transportation and the environment. Boston residents should have a role in the planning process with greater and more meaningful participation. Right now, the Boston Redevelopment Authority does not meet those goals, and I will work tirelessly to bring planning back to the people of this City.

    In the meantime, we need a way to ensure that our community’s voices are heard NOW with respect to Harvard’s and Boston College’s plans.
    • Work intensively with the Harvard and BC task forces to ensure that they have planning, architectural, engineering and research expertise to respond meaningfully to proposals.
    • We are one community, and what happens in one area affects us all. Increase publicity and encourage Allston residents to attend BC task force meetings, and Brighton residents to attend Harvard task force meetings. There is strength in numbers and we need to leverage that.
    • Assist the community to organize to ensure that our voices are heard. Coordinated letter-writing campaigns, phone banks, e-mail blitzes, and press releases will make all elected politicians at all levels of government know what Allston-Brighton residents think.
    • Organize voters (whether I win or lose!). Allston-Brighton residents must vote. We need to show City Council (and all levels of government) that if they don’t listen to us, we have political clout. And we will use it.


  4. Do you support the goal that BC build dormitories for their juniors on the main campus and therefore eliminate undergraduate student rentals on neighborhood streets? If so, what steps would you take to accomplish this?

    Response: Boston College should make their best efforts to house all of their undergraduate students on their main campus. While this will not eliminate the “bad tenant” problem, it would go a long way. It is vital that we put pressure on Boston College NOW, while the institutional master planning process is still underway. A strong and unified neighborhood, and a courageous and outspoken City Councilor are needed to do that.

  5. What measures do you propose for improving the appearance of Allston-Brighton, particularly related to trash, street-cleaning, and graffiti?

    Response: Beautiful and clean streets not only support local business and shoppers, but also attract visitors. My plan for Allston-Brighton includes:
    • Ensure that all streets in Allston and Brighton receive regular street cleaning.
    • Enhance litter collection and public recycling: Increase the number of trash cans and add public recycling. There should be no reason not to dispose of trash and recyclables properly! Moreover, receptacles do not have to be an eyesore. Engage in a design competition to create attractive, unobtrusive and urbane garbage and recycling containers, and permit private companies to advertise on them in an appropriate way. Cities around the world do this, and so can we!
    • Create an private-public tree partnership. Trees are good for the environment and good for business! On average, an acre of trees can store 2.6 tons of carbon (pollution) annually and generate enough oxygen daily for 18 people. Trees provide visual relief by improving a streetscape. They are natural habitats for birds, insects and other wildlife and protect from soil erosion. Create a program whereby property owners may apply to the City of Boston to have a seedling planted on their property, free of charge. It would then be up to the owner to maintain the tree. Imagine how different our City will be in 10 years if every household planted one tree?


  6. While City Councilor, do you intend to work a second job, run a business, stand for another office, or leave for another job before your term expires?

    Response: Absolutely not. Being a City Councilor is a full-time job and you will have my full-time commitment for the entire term. Moreover, I will not run for as a state or Congressional representative. I will not use City Hall as a launch pad to another political office. I want to represent Allston-Brighton at City Hall. Period.

  7. What are your plans to improve the Allston-Brighton school system without overhauling the whole Boston school system?

    Response:
    • Work with local schools to engage community groups, businesses and local seniors in Allston-Brighton schools. Citizens of Allston-Brighton are rich in experience. By sharing their skills and time, they can assist our teachers and parents. There are volunteers who can be athletic coaches, music instructors, reading and math helpers, story-readers, and playground and after school supervisors. Businesses can donate goods, services and can help children learn about entrepreneurship and trades. Let’s make our schools real community schools.
    • Support and expand school gardens. The Thomas Gardner School’s outdoor classroom program has already been recognized for its excellence in environmental education. Replacing concrete and asphalt with grass, plantings, and trees not only makes a school more beautiful and welcoming, but also can be used as a teaching tool about nature and the environment, food and art!
    • Walking school buses to Allston-Brighton schools. Studies show that fewer children are walking and biking to school, and more children are at risk of becoming overweight. Parents may be reluctant to have children walk along busy streets alone. A walking school bus can be part of the solution. A walking school bus is a group of children walking to school with one or more adults. It can involve only a few children or many, and can include all neighborhoods and all schools. Walking to school is good for our children’s health, the environment, and fosters a sense of community.

Mark Ciommo Responds to the Crowdsourced A-B City Council Candidate Questionnaire

Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council Candidate Mark Ciommo responds to the crowdsourced questionnaire at the Brighton Centered Blog:
  1. What could the city do about noisy parties, illegal parking (both on front lawns and streets), and tenant occupancy code issues, either by enforcing existing ordinances, increasing or changing penalties, or passing new ones?

    Response: I will work with other city officials to:
    • Implement stricter enforcement of existing ordinances
    • Educate residents about existing services such as the community party line which any resident can call to report a house party. (the number is 617-343-5500)


  2. What will be your first three steps as the new A-B City Councilor to improve the infrastructure of Allston/Brighton?

    Response: I will work to:
    • Improve bike paths to take cars off the road and make biking safer in our community
    • Implement and expand traffic light timing devices to improve traffic flow on our main streets and the over-flow onto our side streets
    • Bring the commuter rail stop back to Allston-Brighton


  3. What are the specific steps you will take in order to implement the needs of the community related to institutional expansion (Harvard, BC)?

    Response: I will work to:
    • Have Colleges and Universities house all of their students
    • Hold universities accountable for the commitments they make to the community


  4. Do you support the goal that BC build dormitories for their juniors on the main campus and therefore eliminate undergraduate student rentals on neighborhood streets? If so, what steps would you take to accomplish this?

    Response: Yes, B.C. should have a plan to house all of their undergraduate students.

    I would encourage B.C. to build more dormitory beds on their main campus

    I would also encourage B.C. to have all of their students sign a contract with the university promising that they will not rent in any non-owner occupied two, three or four family houses.

  5. What measures do you propose for improving the appearance of Allston-Brighton, particularly related to trash, street-cleaning, and graffiti?

    Response: I will work to improve trash pick-up and street cleaning as well as work to make graffiti clean-up faster.

    I will also work to educate people about the Graffiti Busters program which is run by the City of Boston. I have had great success with this program while working as the Executive Director of the Veronica B. Smith Multi-Service Senior Center.

  6. While City Councilor, do you intend to work a second job, run a business, stand for another office, or leave for another job before your term expires?

    Response: I wrote a Letter to the Editor of the Allston-Brighton Tab regarding this issue that was printed in the September 7th edition. Below is an excerpt from it and a link to the full article.

    “I will not step down from office, nor will I seek higher office in the public or private sector. For me there is no higher office than serving the residents of Allston-Brighton.
    Furthermore, I will not work a second job. I will be a full-time city councilor because Allston-Brighton needs and deserves the representation of a full-time city councilor.”

    http://www.townonline.com/allston/opinions/x602893288

  7. What are your plans to improve the Allston-Brighton school system without overhauling the whole Boston school system?

    Response: I understand the importance of quality education in a community. I am the only candidate in this race who is a product of the Boston Public School system from K-12. I was the first person in my family to earn a college degree, graduating with a B.S. from Suffolk University.

    I will:
    • Work to provide teachers with the resources and support they need to create a safe, productive and positive learning environment.
    • Work to promote universal pre-kindergarten education.
    • Work with Superintendent Carol Johnson on initiatives to lower the drop-out rate and close the achievement gap.


Rosie Hanlon Responds to the Crowdsourced A-B City Council Candidate Questionnaire

Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council Candidate Rosie Hanlon responds to the crowdsourced questionnaire at the Brighton Centered Blog:
  1. What could the city do about noisy parties, illegal parking (both on front lawns and streets), and tenant occupancy code issues, either by enforcing existing ordinances, increasing or changing penalties, or passing new ones?

    Response: The two primary common denominators between these three issues are: students and landlords/management companies. Students will always live in Allston-Brighton and landlords will provide their housing. Therefore, it is critical that our next City Councilor work with colleges, universities, property owners and management companies to ensure students and non-students alike can co-exist in way that does not threaten the safety of our neighborhoods and our quality of life. For more than a decade, I have served on the Boston College Task Force – I was appointed by Mayor Menino to represent the community and work with Boston College to minimize the negative impact of institutional expansion. I am the only candidate with a proven track record of successfully representing and protecting the community from the negative consequences of institutional expansion. Now more than ever, we need a City Councilor with experience – someone who knows how to voice our concerns in a way that will get things done.

    Noisy Parties: This year, the Boston Police Department is partnering with Boston College security to increase its presence in the Cleveland Circle areas on Thursdays, Fridays and Saturday nights. Also, Boston University has instituted a new “partying-policy”. This is a good start but the city, campus/university administrators, campus police and landlords must do more.

    First, BPD must not be content to slap students on the writs simply chalking-up their behaviors to “kids being kids”. I will work with BPD to enforce the laws. If party revelers find themselves in the back of a paddy wagon and spending the night in jail, they’ll be much less likely to engage in disruptive behavior. Undergraduate students (the primary offenders), don’t want to hurt their chanced of acceptance to graduate school or have to explain an arrest record to future employers.

    Second, civil penalties should be enforced and fines increased on the party hosts, party guests and landlords alike. If party hosts know that they will be held accountable for their guests behavior, they are much more likely to self-monitor and stop the problem before its necessary to get the police involved. And, the party revelers themselves will quiet down because steep fines will threaten their available “beer money”! Additionally, holding landlords fiscally responsible will get their attention and they’ll be more likely to evict their partying tenants who are costing them money.

    Third, the schools themselves must be much more aggressive ensuring that their students who live off-campus respect their neighbors. For example, an effective enforcement tool is a policy whereby students who cannot abide by community standards forfeit their “right” to live-off campus. Disciplinary actions including suspensions and possibly expulsions for repeat offenders are other necessary enforcement tools.

    Parking: Unfortunately, issuing parking tickets aren’t enough to prevent students from illegal parking because so many of them have out of state licenses and know that they’ll be long gone before the system can track them down. Parking is a huge problem in certain areas of both Allston and Brighton and, as City Councilor, I will take a four-pronged approach.

    First, I will work with schools to develop parking lots for students and require that all students with cars, both those living on and off campus, use these designated lots when parking overnight. (Other colleges and universities have successfully implemented this approach.) Second, I will work to create more Resident Only parking spaces. Third, I will work to develop more public-parking garages as they’ve done in Brookline, the Coolidge Corner area being a perfect example. And fourth, I will work with owners of local towing companies to patrol those areas where it is a real problem.

    Tenant Occupancy Codes: Tenant occupancy codes exist as a matter of public safety and public health. As City Councilor, I will enforce existing laws and hold landlords responsible for violations of local ordinances.

  2. What will be your first three steps as the new A-B City Councilor to improve the infrastructure of Allston/Brighton?

    Response: I have identified 8 priority issues: affordable housing; business viability; city services; civil and human rights; education; environment; institutional expansion; and public safety. Improving Allston-Brighton’s infrastructure is essential to improving our quality of life and sustaining the vibrancy of our community and its diverse neighborhoods. I am committed to representing, serving and protecting Allston-Brighton and I have the experience and a proven track record of results when it comes to building and strengthening our infrastructure.

    There are many steps I will take as City Councilor to accomplish this and I’ve addressed a number of these in my responses to other questions pertaining city services, education and institutional expansion. Therefore, my response to this question will focus on affordable housing, business viability and public safety.

    The work of a City Councilor is to foster stable communities through the creation of an affordable housing stock. I believe to create that community in Allston-Brighton, there needs to be a range of housing opportunities including both rental housing and homeownership for a mix of incomes. As City Councilor, I will work with all partners in housing creation to ensure that those who want to reside in Allston-Brighton will find the housing opportunity that meets their needs and those who want to stay in Allston-Brighton will not be priced out.

    A key component to promoting and protecting our community’s strength is ensuring the viability of our local businesses. Does Allston-Brighton have the infrastructure to attract and sustain commercial and other retail stores? Are we a community that will support local businesses and engage in public-private activities that benefit all? Can we become a shopping destination for residents and non-residents alike? The answer is a resounding yes! I have worked to accomplish just this in the Brighton Main Streets are and I am committed to working with others to do the same throughout Allston-Brighton.

    Everyday we read in the papers or hear stories on local news about murders, domestic violence, drug deals, sexual assaults, home invasions and other threats to our safety. There is perhaps no greater social ill than violence and its devastating impact on victims, families and the community-at-large. The murder rate in Boston is higher than it’s been in years and many communities are paralyzed with fear: residents are afraid to walk the streets at night or to let their children play outside during the day. In Allston-Brighton we’re fortunate that we haven’t experienced the same levels of violence as many neighborhoods but we must remain vigilant with a zero-tolerance approach. This requires a combination of prevention and intervention programs, including providing police and prosecutors with the tools necessary to enforce the laws and increase offender accountability. We must also create and support public-private partnerships that provide victims with the services they need to seek safety, justice and healing.

  3. What are the specific steps you will take in order to implement the needs of the community related to institutional expansion (Harvard, BC)?

    Response: I am the only candidate with a proven track record of successfully representing and protecting the community from the negative consequences of institutional expansion. For more than a decade, I have developed important relationships with Boston College, Boston University, Harvard University, St. Elizabeth’s, Genzyme, WGBH and other institutions and large companies. These relationships are essential to my effective advocacy and negotiations on behalf of the community. Our neighborhoods continue to face serious threats and now more than ever we need a City Councilor with experience – someone who knows how to voice our concerns in a way that will get things done.

    Specifically, leveraging my experiences and relationships, I will promote transparency and ensure accountability during all planning and development phases. The fact remains that Boston College and Harvard own land in and abutting Allston-Brighton. As long as their proposed development complies with zoning laws and regulations, they will build and develop this property. To assert that a City Councilor has the power or ability to prevent these institutions from “legal” development is naive and unrealistic.

    Rather, as City Councilor, I will be a strong voice for residents and a tough negotiator. As I have already done, I will be effective by convincing Boston College, Harvard and others that they also have a strong interest in protecting and serving the well-being of Allston-Brighton. For example, one position I will take is to negotiate to prevent dormitories from being built on recently acquired property.

    As City Councilor I will continue to actively bring our community’s voices to all tables and will appoint and reappoint only respected, committed and engaged members to task forces, boards, advisory groups and committees charged with advocating on our behalf.

  4. Do you support the goal that BC build dormitories for their juniors on the main campus and therefore eliminate undergraduate student rentals on neighborhood streets? If so, what steps would you take to accomplish this?

    Response: Boston College has recently acquired more than 64 acres from the Archdiocese of Boston and much of that land directly abuts neighborhoods. Therefore, the building of student dorms “on” BC-owned land is not necessarily the answer to the problems we experience.

    As a general principle, as City Councilor I would strongly encourage Boston College to build new dorms and increase the number of on-campus rooms not only for juniors but also for all students.

    In fact, I am the only candidate who has served on the Boston College Task Force. I was appointed by Mayor Menino and have served on this Task Force for more than a decade. In this capacity, I negotiated with Boston College for the creation of 850 rooms on campus.

    As City Councilor, I will continue these efforts.

  5. What measures do you propose for improving the appearance of Allston-Brighton, particularly related to trash, street-cleaning, and graffiti?

    Response: One of a City Councilor’s primary responsibilities is making sure that residents’ basic needs are met. Whether it is dealing with trash, rodent infestation, playgrounds, street lights, transportation, traffic congestion, parking availability of access to park and clearly marked bike paths, the health, safety and well-being of our communities requires nothing less. Allston-Brighton deserves better and I know how to get things done.

    For example, I responded to residents concerns about littering and street garbage by providing more city trash cans in Brighton. As City Councilor, I will do the same in Allston.

    Also, I provided Brighton Main Streets local businesses with brooms and strongly encouraged them to sweep in front of their businesses each day. I will work with Allston local businesses in the same way.

    As City Councilor, I will hold landlords accountable for property upkeep and maintenance and work with Inspectional Services to guarantee clean and sanitary home and work conditions.

    As City Councilor I will replicate my successes in Brighton in Allston.

  6. While City Councilor, do you intend to work a second job, run a business, stand for another office, or leave for another job before your term expires?

    Response: I was born and grew-up in Brighton and it’s where I’m now raising my children. I’ve dedicated my career to working and advocating on behalf of this community for more than 15 years. Unlike other candidates, I have never run for any other elected offices. I am committed to continuing what I’ve been doing my entire life: working to improve Allston-Brighton residents’ quality of life. I want to give future generations the opportunity to call Allston-Brighton their home.

    When I am elected City Councilor, I will resign from my current position as the Executive Director of Brighton Main Streets and focus exclusively on my roles and responsibilities as City Councilor. I have never entertained holding any other elected office nor am I pursuing any other government, private or non-profit position.

  7. What are your plans to improve the Allston-Brighton school system without overhauling the whole Boston school system?

    Response: I understand that a strong educational system is fundamental to our children’s and our community’s health, safety and future. We must provide access to affordable daycare so parents can work. We must provide schools and teachers with the resources they need to provide students with first-rate classroom academic experiences. We must provide students with the opportunity to enjoy other learning opportunities such as music, sports and the arts. We must provide residents with adult-education options. Parents, teachers, employers, city officials and business owners alike, we must work together to support and strengthen our public education system. As City Councilor, I am committed to prioritizing education and will continue my efforts to maximize our fiscal and community resources to enhance Allston-Brighton schools and education programs.

    As City Councilor, I will build new public-private partnerships to increase resources for books, teaching supplies, science and lab apparatus, sports equipment, etc. I have already been doing this for many years. For example, I forged a public-private partnership between the Jackson Mann School and New Balance in which the company supplied new sneakers for students participating in a walking group as part of a weight-loss program. I also partnered with Boston Public Schools to bring Countdown to Kindergarten to Allston-Brighton – an annual parade in August to connect families with local businesses who give children about to start school fun gifts. This event continues to grow every year and is a real crowd pleaser for parents, children and local businesses alike.

    I will also create relationships and youth programs working with our wealth of local expertise, e.g, Boston University and New England Conservatories of Music, MA School of Art, etc.

    I will lead initiatives to increase families’ access to affordable childcare, after-school and summer programs.

    I will work with parents, schools, the city and others to explore student uniforms in all public schools.

    And finally, I will promote teen-dating violence prevention, diversity, tolerance, self-defense and conflict resolution in schools.

Tim Schofield Responds to the Crowdsourced A-B City Council Candidate Questionnaire

Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council Candidate Tim Schofield responds to the crowdsourced questionnaire at the Brighton Centered Blog:
  1. What could the city do about noisy parties, illegal parking (both on front lawns and streets), and tenant occupancy code issues, either by enforcing existing ordinances, increasing or changing penalties, or passing new ones?

    Response: Many of these problems are caused by absentee and speculator landlords who do not live in our community and whose negligence and unlawful conduct is destroying our housing stock and undermining our quality of life and our ability to attract families into our community. We must increase enforcement of existing codes and ordinances and ensure that the fines levied against violators are actually paid (as it stands, the fines are often ignored and unpaid because the Inspectional Services Department (ISD) does not have the resources to take violators to court). I propose that we hire more ISD inspectors; adopt higher and escalating fines for each subsequent offense; and impose all fines as part of quarterly property tax bills. We must make it financially painful for landlords to operate in an unlawful manner. I believe that this will result in greater compliance with the law and will discourage absentee and speculator landlords from purchasing properties in our community.

  2. What will be your first three steps as the new A-B City Councilor to improve the infrastructure of Allston/Brighton?

    Response: As City Councilor, I will maintain open lines of communication with the residents of Allston-Brighton about the specific infrastructure needs in our community. My first step will be to conduct a community-wide survey to determine what infrastructure repairs and improvements (i.e., sidewalks, crosswalks, streets, streetlights) are needed where. The best way to learn about the needs of any given street is to ask the people who live there. The second step that I will take to address our infrastructure needs is to demand that local colleges live up to their commitments to make repairs and improvements to our infrastructure (i.e., Harvard’s promise to make repairs and improvements on North Harvard Street). Finally, I will meet with residents, civic leaders, principals and teachers, local police and fire departments, and others to determine our long-term infrastructure needs and to develop a list of priorities for capital investment. I will then push for these priorities to be included in the City of Boston’s Capital Plan (i.e., the plan for large infrastructure projects).

  3. What are the specific steps you will take in order to implement the needs of the community related to institutional expansion (Harvard, BC)?

    Response: One of my primary responsibilities as City Councilor will be to serve as a proactive facilitator and consensus-builder for our community. With respect to institutional expansion, I will convene a community-wide conference to coordinate a unified response to these developments. I know that the Community Planning Initiative and others have been engaging in such efforts and I appreciate and respect their work, but I believe that it is time for our City Councilor to step up and take a leadership role on this issue. I would also convene a series of meetings with any group who is concerned about specific development issues (i.e., the families on Lane Park who will be most directly affected by BC’s proposed baseball stadium) to ensure that their specific concerns are understood and represented. I am certain that we will be more effective if we work together and if we speak with one voice.

    In addition to taking a leadership role in developing a unified community response, I will hold an immediate meeting with representatives of the Boston Redevelopment Authority, Boston College, and Harvard University. I will make it clear to them that I will represent and advocate for the interests of the community at every stage of the process and to demand that they promptly and specifically respond to community questions and concerns prior to filing any further plans.

    Furthermore, I will be a proactive voice and advocate for the community at every stage of the process and I will use the power and influence of my office to ensure that the interests of the community are represented and respected. I will take our concerns directly to the BRA, the Zoning Board of Appeals, and any other agency or department whose actions will have an impact on our community.

  4. Do you support the goal that BC build dormitories for their juniors on the main campus and therefore eliminate undergraduate student rentals on neighborhood streets? If so, what steps would you take to accomplish this?

    Response: I strongly support the creation of more dormitories on the main campus because I believe that it will help us to address several important challenges facing our community including the availability and affordability of housing for families. Under current circumstances, the price of housing is artificially inflated because landlords (frequently absentee or speculator landlords) are able to charge students excessive rents and to cram many students into an apartment. By housing students on campus (where most students would prefer to live), we will make units available and affordable for families. We will also reduce speculation and absentee ownership that is leading to the decline in the condition and usefulness of our housing stock. If we continue to allow every house to be converted into condos or turned into a rooming house, we will not have a sustainable residential community in the future.

    I would work to accomplish this important goal by offering Boston College my strong support and assistance in developing dormitories on its main campus. I will advocate for the necessary approvals with the BRA, the ZBA, and other agencies and departments.

  5. What measures do you propose for improving the appearance of Allston-Brighton, particularly related to trash, street-cleaning, and graffiti?

    Response: Keeping our streets and buildings clean is important to our quality of life. I propose that we institute twice-a-week garbage pick-up in Allston-Brighton, which will help to make our neighborhood cleaner and will help to reduce the rodent problem. I will work closely with Judge Donnelly at the Brighton District Court to ensure that the court-supervised community service program is utilized to help keep our neighborhood clean. I will work to increase the number of streets that receive street sweeping and ensure that we strictly enforce parking bans for street sweeping so that the work can be done properly. I will also work to expand the city’s “Graffiti Busters” program, which cleans graffiti from both public and private buildings. Finally, as described above, I will crackdown on absentee landlords who allow their properties to become blights in our community.

  6. While City Councilor, do you intend to work a second job, run a business, stand for another office, or leave for another job before your term expires?

    Response: I will be a full-time City Councilor. My law firm, which employees four other people (including three from Allston-Brighton) and which frequently provides pro bono legal services to people in our community, will continue to operate under the day-to-day management of my law partners. I am proud of the local business that we have built and I have learned much about the needs of our community by serving our friends and neighbors.

    If I am fortunate enough to be elected, I will not leave the position for another job or stand for any other office before my term expires.

  7. What are your plans to improve the Allston-Brighton school system without overhauling the whole Boston school system?

    Response: Allston-Brighton has some excellent public schools (including, but not limited to, the Mary Lyon School, the Winship, and the Gardner), but we must do more to provide our children with the best educational opportunities possible. One way to do that is to develop more quality K-8 schools so that students can learn in a consistent environment from the early stages of childhood to the start of high school. Such schools enable us to consolidate our best practices in one setting and to create a collaborative environment for students, teachers, and administrators. I believe that the development of more K-8 schools in our neighborhood should be one of the community benefits provided by Harvard University as part of its proposed Master Plan. The development of more such schools in our community will encourage families to stay in our neighborhood and will attract new families to Allston-Brighton.

    As the product of public schools, I know how important good schools are to the success of our children and the stability of our community. I am proud to have earned the endorsement of the Boston Teachers Union because they are the ones who are working every day to teach our children and they know that improving our schools is one of my top priorities.

Greg Glennon Responds to the Crowdsourced A-B City Council Candidate Questionnaire

Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council Candidate Greg Glennon responds to the crowdsourced questionnaire at the Brighton Centered Blog:
  1. What could the city do about noisy parties, illegal parking (both on front lawns and streets), and tenant occupancy code issues, either by enforcing existing ordinances, increasing or changing penalties, or passing new ones?

    Response: I support "district-based" inspectors from Inspectional Services that work out of District Police Stations so reponse times to complaints can be more timely and effective. I also support significant increases to the civil penalties for code violations. These increases are essential if citations for code violations are going to have their intended deterrent effect.

  2. What will be your first three steps as the new A-B City Councilor to improve the infrastructure of Allston/Brighton?

    Response: Infrastructure improvements will come with improved city services and better access to city government. Residents of Boston should not have to go to City Hall to conduct much of their City business. I will support increased use of City buildings in Allston-Brighton for appealing parking tickets, obtaining resident permit stickers, and other "headaches" which seem to cost people much of, if not an entire day. More neighborhood-based services is essential to improving infrastructure.

    Also, I will work with City departments to address any concern that may arise related to City Services such as street cleaning, street light repairs, street paving, and the like. I have already been processing such requests as I go around the neighborhood and learn about the concerns of individual residents. I will be vigilant in addressing these types of issues and concerns.

    Another important infrastructure improvement I will work for is an improvement to the traffic problem. It is important to think outside the box on this. Getting through Brighton Center at certain times of the day is virtually impossible without an extended wait. And it's usually quite backed up, even at what we would consider non-peak times for traffic. I will work with my fellow city councilors and the Mayor's Office to improve conditions for travel by bicycle and lobby the MBTA for service improvements in Allston-Brighton. It is also imperative that traffic impact in Allston be mitigated by Harvard if development goes forward on the science complex on Western Avenue.

    I will also call for the issuance of current resident permit parking stickers. It is unacceptable that Allston-Brighton resident permit stickers have not been issued. We have now passed moving day in Allston-Brighton, September 1st. Many who have moved out of the community will undoubtedly take advantage of a sticker that should be invalid by parking their cars here for the work day or other uses that takes parking spaces away from residents.

  3. What are the specific steps you will take in order to implement the needs of the community related to institutional expansion (Harvard, BC)?

    Response: I will be an aggressive advocate in dealing with Harvard and Boston College on behalf of the neighborhood. I look forward to working with residents, members of the respective task forces, and other interested parties, as well as other local elected officials to find common ground on key issues that gives rise to a "united neighborhood front" that can have an effect on making sure that the most important concerns of the community are advocated for as effectively as possible.

  4. Do you support the goal that BC build dormitories for their juniors on the main campus and therefore eliminate undergraduate student rentals on neighborhood streets? If so, what steps would you take to accomplish this?

    Response: I support efforts by Boston College to expand student housing on campus but will not support undergraduate housing on the Brighton campus. This would have a serious negative impact on the quality of life for abutters and the neighborhood as a whole. Boston College has many lands that can be used in different areas of its campus and other lands it owns that would accomodate a "full" level of on-campus undergraduate housing.

  5. What measures do you propose for improving the appearance of Allston-Brighton, particularly related to trash, street-cleaning, and graffiti?

    Response: Please see my answer to question #1 above.

  6. While City Councilor, do you intend to work a second job, run a business, stand for another office, or leave for another job before your term expires?

    Response: If elected as City Councilor, I will resign from my position as an Assistant District Attorney for Suffolk County, not work any second job or seek any additional income, and I will serve a full two-year term.

  7. What are your plans to improve the Allston-Brighton school system without overhauling the whole Boston school system?

    Response: An overhaul of the school assignment system is part and parcel of what I believe is necessary for long-term improvements to the Boston Public Schools. That means a return to the neighborhood school model. I also support more charter schools, and school vouchers for parents who choose to send their child to an accredited private or parochial school.

James Jenner Responds to the Crowdsourced A-B City Council Candidate Questionnaire

Allston-Brighton District 9 City Council Candidate James Jenner responds to the crowdsourced questionnaire at the Brighton Centered Blog:
  1. What could the city do about noisy parties, illegal parking (both on front lawns and streets), and tenant occupancy code issues, either by enforcing existing ordinances, increasing or changing penalties, or passing new ones?

    Response: I believe that curfews for loud parties would be a good idea especially in residential areas. Illegal parking has always been a problem in Allston/Brighton and the fact is that it causes serious safety concerns for motorists and pedistrians and should not be overlooked as a simple annoyance. We need to ticket illegal parkers to make sure they know this is not a light annoyance but a safety hazard. Tenants codes must be enforced to their full extent and risidual tenancy should not affect the review process of a landlord.

  2. What will be your first three steps as the new A-B City Councilor to improve the infrastructure of Allston/Brighton?

    Response: First, I would initiate a massive repaving of all the damaged streets and sidewalks in A/B. I am tired of driving down the same bumpy and cracked streets for years as are many others. Secondly, I would disguise all the traffic signal boxes and electrical boxes on our streets so they dont stick out as the ugly eyesores they are. Third, I would work with the MBTA to ensure that we have covered bus stops with emergency call buttons at every bus stop in A/B to ensure the safety of our residents and keep all of us safe from the elements.

  3. What are the specific steps you will take in order to implement the needs of the community related to institutional expansion (Harvard, BC)?

    Response: I have already sat down with representatives of Boston College to discuss their plans and I believe that communication is our biggest asset. My job as your city councilor will be to talk to the community and bring our concerns to BC, Harvard and Bu. We must remain open in diologue as it is the only way all concerns from both parties are addressed.

  4. Do you support the goal that BC build dormitories for their juniors on the main campus and therefore eliminate undergraduate student rentals on neighborhood streets? If so, what steps would you take to accomplish this?

    Response: I believe that the ideal of a centralized domitory village on BC's main campus is a good idea. I feel that if BC and their planners go to the drawing board they can find a way to accomplish this.

  5. What measures do you propose for improving the appearance of Allston-Brighton, particularly related to trash, street-cleaning, and graffiti?

    Response: We need to make sure that people are vigilant when it comes to trash. The receptacles are there but pepoles behavior is hard to break. I have seen people drop a piece of trash on the street and have told them there is a trash can right on the corner. If more people do this we can break people of the habits of littering and help in the cleanup.

  6. While City Councilor, do you intend to work a second job, run a business, stand for another office, or leave for another job before your term expires?

    Response: Absolutly not. I will be a full time full term councilor.

  7. What are your plans to improve the Allston-Brighton school system without overhauling the whole Boston school system?

    Response: You cannot address a leak in a dam without knowing that one day the whole dam has to be fixed. With that said new programs in A/B schools to teach our kids some trades would be nice. Bringing Art and Music back as options for students, and making sure resources such as text books are up to date and reliable.

Mario and Donna Roffo's Tomato Extravaganza

Mario and Donna Roffo recently had their annual tomato extravaganza at their Surrey Street house near Brighton Center.  They bottled around 300 jars of tomatoes from their backyard, alond with the help of neighbors and friends.  Story and photos in the Boston Herald.

Msgr. John Day Obituary

The Boston Globe published an obituary of Reverend Monsignor John Dillon Day, formerly of St. John's Seminary and Boston College and a reknowned and avid Boston College football fan.  He died last Friday.
Msgr. Day was the de facto historian of Boston College athletics and a beloved presence at the college, where he finished his undergraduate degree in 1997 at age 84 and was inducted into the Boston College Hall of Fame as an honorary member in 1991.

State Senate Election Today

There is a special, primary election today for Jarrett Barrios's former State Senate seat. There are no Republican, Independent, Unenrolled, or Third Party candidates, so the winner of the Democratic Party primary wins the seat. The Boston Globe and Allston-Brighton TAB have both endorsed Tim Flaherty in the election.

The odd district includes a lot of Allston (and a tiny bit of North Brighton), so I've been leaving the race to Harry Mattison to follow. Nonetheless, for those undecided voters who would like to see the four candidates in a forum from 9/6/07, you can see the five parts on video at this link.

Luxury Travel to BC Football Away Games

Boston College announced that it will be offering chartered travel to BC football away games, according to the Boston Globe's boston.com:
Fenway Sports... will charter a 200-seat Boeing 757 jet to fly Eagles fans from Hanscom Field to games versus Notre Dame, Virginia Tech, and Clemson this season. Along the way, they'll be given Boston College jerseys and other team paraphernalia, be treated to private tailgating, and sit in premium seats at opponents' stadiums.
The cost? Packages running at $1700 for two games or $1100 for one. Ouch.

The easiest way to get Red Sox tickets is to follow the team onto the road to an opponent's stadium; they are very difficult to come by (legally) unless you have an entire Saturday to waste online.

BC football seats at $27-45 a piece, however, were still available the night before for the September 1st home game against Wake Forest, so the fan travel model isn't exactly the same as it is for the Red Sox. I think BC is instead catering to hard-core sports fans who can't get enough in the seven home games -- and who want to see some of the top teams playing in their own, storied stadia (Notre Dame, Clemson, and Virginia Tech).

Monday, September 10, 2007

The Campaigner and Her Shoes

Rosie Hanlon notes that she is on her fourth pair of shoes.  Sensible shoes, I hope, not Manolo Blahniks, otherwise she might be on her fourth pair of legs, too.

Cardinal and Abe

Reading Sean Cardinal O'Malley's blog is often difficult, because virtually everything makes him incredibly happy and pleased -- except, of course, human tragedy caused by natural disasters. You know, lines like, "The director there, Father Thomas Hoar, SSE, is doing a wonderful job." (But don't miss the beautiful, seaside pictures in that link!)

But this recent blog entry from 8/31/07 had a little zinger buried in it:
I also want to acknowledge the great work of both Abe Foxman, the National Director of the Anti-Defamation League, and Sister Celia Deutsch, a Sister of Sion, who has been very active in ADL as well.
For those people with short memories -- a list that usually wouldn't include Cardinal O'Malley -- Abe Foxman is the national head of the ADL that stuck by his story that the mass killings of Armenians in Turkey in 1915-9 was not genocide. Watertown pulled out of the ADL's No Place for Hate program, and Foxman also fired Andrew Tarsy, New England regional ADL's director for speaking out against ADL's national policy of genocide denial.

Under pressure, Foxman later acknowledged on 8/21/07 that Turkey's mass killings were "tantamount to genocide", which was not a 100% admission (but close enough for most people). I could imagine a lot of positive comments I might make if I were the Cardinal -- like "Abe Foxman has a long history of doing good and has survived recent events well" -- but I wouldn't characterize him, a couple of days after relenting on the Armenian genocide denial as doing "great work." He screwed up big time by playing politics (trying not to offend Turkey, thereby keeping it as a pro-Israel Muslim country) rather than calling a genocide what it really was.

Cardinal O'Malley's blog also contains a photo of Foxman appearing quite weary. It's hard to cover up anything there.