Tag: Affordable Child Care

  • At-Large council candidates differ on policing, housing and school reform

    At-Large City Council panel: (from l to r) Marvin Mathelier, Julia Mejia, Erin Murphy, Will Onouha, Henry Santana, Alexandra Valdez, Frank Baker and Ruthzee Louijeune. Photo by Jacqueline Manetta.

    A forum for candidates running for at-large seats on the Boston City Council revealed stark differences in how the candidates would approach education, public safety, housing and other issues.

    The June 16 forum at Suffolk University — organized by a group of Democratic ward committees— drew eight of the nine candidates seeking four seats: incumbents Ruthzee Louijeune, Julia Mejia, Henry Santana and Erin Murphy, and challengers Will Onuoha, Marvin Mathelier, Alexandra Valdez and Frank Baker. Yves Mary Jean, who did not attend the first candidates’ forum, did not attend this one either. The event was moderated by UMass Boston professor Travis Johnston.

    On issue after issue, Onuoha and Baker – often joined by Murphy – voiced opinions in polar opposition to the rest of the field.

    Education

    The question of whether Boston School Committee members should be elected or appointed by the mayor, as they are now, elicited strong reactions from the candidates. Only Valdez, Baker, and Onuoha said they do not support having an elected committee.

    “Our kids matter far too much for us to start playing politics with education,” Onuoha said.

    Mejia quickly countered him.

    “To say that Black and brown people are under-educated or unable to decide what democracy looks like, I take offense to that,” Mejia said, “because we’re in a moment right now that we have to understand that people want more democracy, not less.”

    Baker, Murphy and Onuoha said they do not support the state’s decision to drop the MCAS as a graduation requirement.

    The candidates agreed on other school issues, including expanding early education programs to infants and imposing a bell-to-bell ban on cellphones in schools.

    Asked how they would address inequities in education, the candidates offered different ideas. Murphy emphasized tackling chronic absenteeism and boosting support for mental health, music and art. Valdez and Frank called for more space for pre-K students. Louijeune, the current councilpresident, highlighted poverty and the need for affordable child care.

    Mejia stressed supporting early childhood education practitioners. Onuoha said he would advocate for helping parents who are struggling with housing. Mathelier and Santana said they would focus on transportation and housing, as 10 percent of students have been homeless during the school year.

    Pictured at the forum (from l to r) Travis Johnston, the moderator, Marvin Mathelier, Ruthzee Louijeune, Henry Santana, Alexandra Valdez, Erin Murphy, Julia Mejia, Frank Baker and Will Onouha. Photo by Jacqueline Manetta.

    Public safety

    Onuoha, Murphy, Baker and Valdez said they would not want police to stop working with the Boston Regional Intelligence Center (BRIC), a federally funded counterterrorism agency that aims to prevent crime through data-gathering and analysis.

    Onuoha, a Mission Hill native, said growing up in a neighborhood directly impacted by street gangs in his youth is part of why he supports BRIC’s work. Louijeune mentioned a deportation that resulted from the center’s intelligence sharing, but Baker said that example is outdated and is not a reason to stop working with it.

    Murphy, Onuoha and Baker said they do not support legalizing overdose prevention centers, where people can safely consume drugs. The candidates all said they would support a policy banning Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents from schools and courthouses.

    Housing

    Baker and Onouha said they do not support Boston’s updated Inclusionary Zoning policy (IDP) that requires 20 percent of new housing units to be income-restricted as a way to increase affordable housing in the city.

    Housing construction has slowed in Boston, Baker said, because it has become unsustainable to follow the 20 percent policy.

    “So 20 percent of nothing is nothing at the end of the day,” he said.

    Onuoha agreed and said focusing on workforce housing – aimed at tenants who earn too much for subsidized housing but not enough for market-rate housing – would be his solution.

    “You have to be poor to get into affordable housing,” Onuoha said. “You have to be poor to stay in it.”

    Baker, Onuoha and Murphy said they don’t support Mayor Michelle Wu’s rent control proposal to cap rent increases at inflation plus 6 percent.

    Baker explained why he opposes it: “Because a lot of renters like myself are small property owners, and I don’t think we necessarily need the government to tell us what we can charge for rent.”

    Onuoha said the regulation aimed at stabilizing rent doesn’t work. “We outlawed rent control,” he said, because it increased the cost of housing.

    Asked how they would ensure that Boston prioritizes long-term stability for low-income residents, families, and older people, Onouha again mentioned workforce housing, while Baker said he would direct city dollars at housing rather than focusing on policies.

    Louijeune emphasized the need for rent stabilization policies as a commitment to Black and low-income communities, preventing them from being displaced by gentrification.

    Mathelier advocated for revising Article 80, the process that governs how new development projects are reviewed and approved by the Boston Planning Dept. Santana used the city of Austin, Texas, as a model of what they should aim for.

    Valdez said the most secure generational housing is achieved by creating tenant protection programs. Mejia and Murphy talked about their work on the City Council and the importance of working with the communities.

    Transportation and infrastructure

    Baker was the only candidate to oppose extending past 2026 free bus fares for all riders on routes 23, 28 and 29 through parts of Mattapan, Roxbury and Dorchester.

    “To say that fares are free, we’re paying for it one way or another,” Baker said.

    He was also the only candidate to oppose updating zoning rules to require new buildings to achieve net-zero carbon emission standards.

    Mejia, Murphy, Baker, Onuoha and Louijeune all said they oppose the renovation of White Stadium.

    Each candidate then offered their visions for a transportation system that balances safety, sustainability, and the needs of drivers, bicyclists, transit riders, and pedestrians.

    “Transportation and housing issues are actually married,” Onouha said.

    Baker said the city should do more with water taxis.

    “And we should also look to see what Uber and Lyft are doing,” he said.

    Civic engagement and leadership

    Murphy, Onuoha and Baker said they oppose increasing the $2 million allocated for participatory budgeting, which now allows residents to decide how part of the city budget is spent.

    The candidates were asked to grade the city’s success in engaging the voices of diverse residents.

    Mathelier, Murphy, Onuoha, Santana, Valdez and Baker all gave Boston a C. Louijeune gave the city a B-, and Mejia gave it an incomplete.

    They were asked to share what steps they would take to engage the voices of small businesses. There was overall agreement on the need to listen closely and find creative ways to include residents in conversations.

    A full video of the forum is available here.

  • Plan for new Mattapan complex aims to foster connection among children and senior adults

    February 06, 2025

    Affordable child care and senior housing are coming to Mattapan in the very same building.

    The Shattuck Child Care Center, an affordable child care center established in 1969, will have a new home on the ground floor of Brooke House, a future apartment complex for low-income older adults.

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    Brooke House is part of a larger plan to redevelop land into Olmsted Village, an intergenerational neighborhood offering affordable housing and services for foster children, families, young adults and senior adults.

    The plan was approved by the state in December 2021, and the team hopes to begin construction on the project, including the $90 million Brooke House initiative, early next year.

    Olmsted Village represents the final phase of a long-term project to develop the last 10 acres of the former Boston State Hospital site. The concept was proposed by housing developers 2Life Communities and Lena New Boston.

    “This is the last chapter of the story, which we’re really excited to be a part of,” said Zoe Weinrobe, the chief of real estate for 2Life, a nonprofit affordable housing developer and operator for older adults based in Brighton.

    Shattuck was an obvious partner to 2Life when it considered incorporating affordable child care into its proposal, according to Lizabeth Heyer, 2Life’s president. She said she sent her children to Shattuck and remembered the center’s struggle to find a permanent home after the state decommissioned its original location in 2012.

    Shattuck has rented space inside First Baptist Church in Jamaica Plain since 2017. Mary Grace Casey, the center’s co-director, said she’s grateful for the relationship. But before Sunday services, she said, the center’s staff must cover up art projects and tuck away tables so the altar can slide back in front of the window.

    Casey is excited for Shattuck to have its own space again — and even more thrilled to return to Mattapan, where the center was originally located on the campus of Lemuel Shattuck Hospital.

    “There’s nothing about this that isn’t amazing, other than the fact that they haven’t dug the hole for it yet,” Casey said.

    Both Shattuck and 2Life want their relationship to be more than landlord-tenant: as the building comes together, so will plans to foster a meaningful connection among the children, senior adults and wider Olmsted community.

    “There’s something about children that really do bring out the best in people,” Casey said. “If you’re lonely, or if you live alone, sometimes hearing kids’ voices and laughter is a nice thing to brighten up your day.”

    Casey also hopes to work with young adults at Treehouse, another proposed project within the village that will offer housing to those who are at risk of aging out of the foster care system.

    “If you’re lonely, or if you live alone, sometimes hearing kids’ voices and laughter is a nice thing to brighten up your day.”

    Mary Grace Casey

    She sees a future where a 20-year-old living in Treehouse is an aide for her classroom, or a former librarian living in Brooke House spends time teaching the children how to read.

    There’s practical benefits, too: enrollment will increase at Shattuck from 46 seats to 55 seats in the larger space. Casey hopes that will give Shattuck the flexibility to turn its pre-K classroom into a Boston universal pre-K classroom, allowing families to feed into Boston Public Schools.

    Other features are on deck: the new space will have everything she’s long dreamed of, such as sinks in the classroom –– thanks to a long conversation with Mass Design Group, the project’s architect.

    Most importantly, the center’s co-director is looking forward to having more socioeconomic diversity in her classrooms at its future location. She believes Shattuck, which accepts vouchers from Child Care Choices of Boston, will be an attractive, affordable option for Mattapan families.

    “I believe that our program is going to meet the needs more of that community,” she said. “And we always want families with vouchers to be able to find space.”

    But outreach to families must wait on development, which is still in its final phases before construction.

    Weinrobe, of 2Life, said the project is anxiously awaiting its last piece of funding to come in from the state, which will allow them to go out to bid and get into the ground in early 2026.

    That timeline leaves Shattuck’s leaders hopeful to move in by spring of 2028. As one of the first providers to arrive to the new community, Casey was asked by the developers if nearby construction would be problematic.

    She said she immediately shut down that concern.

    “I was like, are you kidding? Preschoolers and construction?” she said. “That’s all they’re going to want to see! You’ve got a curriculum right in front of us.”


    This story is part of a partnership between WBUR and the Boston University Department of Journalism.