Tag: Hyde Park

  • ICE agents spotted in Jamaica Plain, other neighborhoods

    Immigrant and Customs Enforcement agents were allegedly spotted in Forest Hills recently, and one person was “pulled off the street” in Roslindale Square, according to City Councilor Benjamin Weber, who spoke at the Boston Police Department’s District E-13 community meeting recently.

    Weber said while he was unsure about the Forest Hill sighting, the Roslindale incident on the morning of Feb. 5 came from “credible” sources.

    Their statements align with other reports of ICE agents in the Boston area in recent weeks.

    Last month, state Senator Liz Miranda, whose district includes Jamaica Plain,  highlighted on her Instagram page “rumors” of impending ICE raids in Roxbury and Dorchester, with a focus on members of the Cape Verdean community.

    She shared a list of “trusted organizations,” key contacts for legal aid and information to help those impacted know their rights.

    “To our immigrant neighbors and families. You have rights, no matter your immigration status,’’ the post said,  “You are not powerless. You are not alone.”

    The Jamaica Plain Gazette reached out to Miranda’s office for comment but did not hear back by press time.

    At the District E-13 meeting, Boston Police Lieutenant Warren J. Hoppie told the virtual gathering of 15 residents that the department does not receive information from federal agencies working in Boston and that information is only provided by residents calling the police.

    “We want you to call if you see a violation of state law or violation of city ordinance,” Hoppie said. “If you’re in fear of your safety or something else’s safety, please call us.”

    Michael Reiskind, a member of the Jamaica Plain Neighborhood Council, also said he was informed about the Roslindale incident and that ICE agents left the resident’s car blocking the street with the keys left inside.

    Reiskind said that the council has been informed of possible ICE activity in the Mildred C. Hailey Apartments in JP.

    Police said they have not heard anything about ICE sightings from officers who usually circle the area to look for unhoused people.

    Many neighborhoods, including Jamaica Plain, have watchers who train for spotting and alerting community members of ICE sightings through whistles and other means.

    Carla-Lisa Caliga, a volunteer “watcher” who said she monitors ICE activity in her community, raised questions at the meeting about how she could otherwise help her community.  

    Caliga said that the watcher organization saw what appeared to be ICE vehicles in Hyde Park, Roslindale and JP.

    “I’m one of the people that potentially can be arrested by ICE, and I was born in Boston, because I am not going to back down from them. I’m not going to attack them, but I am a watcher,” Caliga said, “We are getting whistles.”

  • Annual JP Open Streets

    Local businesses, organizations, food vendors and musicians assembled on Jamaica Plain’s Centre Street last week in celebration of Boston’s last Open Street festival of the season.

    The city closed Centre Street from 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. between Jackson Square and Soldier’s Monument, according to Boston Mayor Michelle Wu’s office.

    The Open Street program began with three neighborhoods in 2022, six years after Open Newbury in 2016, the region’s first neighborhood event. This year’s series began in July with events in Roxbury, followed by Hyde Park, Dorchester and Mattapan before concluding in Jamaica Plain.

    In all, the Open Streets event has attracted more than 30,000 people to various neighborhoods, according to Ginger Brown, executive director of JP Centre/South Main Streets.

    Franklin Park Defenders, a community action group, used the street festival to raise awareness about its opposition to the city’s proposed sports complex at White Stadium.

    “These are the opportunities we have to meet people [and] talk to people,” said Melissa Hamel, a volunteer with the Franklin Park Defenders, an organization that lobbies city officials to restore White Stadium as a public space, rather than proceed with a for-profit establishment.

    Michelle Davis, a Franklin Park Defenders volunteer who grew up in the area, said the city neglects Franklin Park because it is surrounded by minority communities.

    Organizers divided the festival into three zones separated by intersections, which allowed traffic to pass through. Zone 1 stretched from Jackson Square to Moraine/Boylston Street, Zone 2 extended to Green Street, and Zone 3 concluded at Soldier’s Monument, according to a map provided by the city.

    The Stop & Shop near the Jackson Square MBTA station offered free fruit, water and granola bars.

    “We’re doing everything we can,” said Cindy Sailer, the store’s community relations specialist, responding to recent cuts to the federal food stamp program.

    Brown said Open Streets enriches Jamaica Plain’s community spirit, along with year-round events such as dance classes, farmers markets and other community events. According to Niche, a website that profiles neighborhoods and schools, Jamaica Plain is the third best neighborhood to raise a family in Boston.

    Northeastern graduate students Krithika Krishnamurkhy and Tanvi Kandalla are new members of the Jamaica Plain community who visited Open Street for the first time last week. They said it helped acclimate them to the neighborhood.

    “It was nice to go and sort of interact with a bunch of people who live here and meet them,” said Kandalla, who bought chicken wings from Cambridge Smoke, which, according to Instagram @cambridgesmoke, specializes in smoked meats, barbecue, Southern and Haitian cuisines.

    Replenish Scrubs owner Shaneen Harris offered visitors samples of organic body scrubs. Harris began creating the products in 2018. Her products include lavender vanilla, peppermint tea tree and sweet orange lemon scents, according to @replenish_scrubs on Instagram.

    “You create a buzz,” said Harris, describing Open Streets’ benefit to businesses.

    Families were able to use sidewalk chalk, take swings in batting nets set up by the Boston Red Sox, and participate in live painting classes combined with music from At Peace Arts.

    Brown said the Open Street event served its purpose by bringing people together.

    “What tends to happen is we isolate ourselves to the neighborhood we live in,” she said, “so if folks walk a bit further, they could discover something new.”

  • Electrified Fairmount Line hailed as next step for transit equity

    It has been nearly 30 years since Marvin Martin stood on an overpass by Erie and Washington streets in Dorchester and watched as a Fairmount commuter train whizzed by underneath him without stopping. Martin, who is Black, could see that most of the commuter passengers didn’t look like him. In that same time frame, the northbound 23 bus stopped to pick up passengers, and Martin noticed that most of the passengers on the bus were Black or brown.

    “It was already standing room only,” he said, describing the scene inside the bus. “People were packed in there like sardines. I said, ‘What’s wrong with this picture?’”

    When Martin began organizing the community to push for an expansion of the Fairmount commuter line in 2000, there were five stops along the route running through densely populated, majority-minority communities in Hyde Park, Mattapan, and Dorchester, with terminals in Readville and at South Station. As significant community advocacy gathered steam, those five stops became nine, with the final new station, Blue Hill Avenue, opening in 2019.

    The latest improvement set for the Fairmount Line is the electrification pilot project proposed by Keolis Commuter Services that the MBTA approved last July. The $54 million plan will bring battery electric multiple-unit train cars to replace the current diesel-fueled trains. These more environmentally friendly BEMUs are expected to begin operating in 2028.

    Keolis is hearing from bidders on the BEMUs and it is “on track” timeline-wise, though the project is in its early stages, according to Janet Cheung, regional rail lead and program assistant at TransitMatters, an advocacy group for better transportation and accessibility.
    Keolis CEO Abdellah Chajai confirmed in a written statement that the company and the MBTA are waiting on manufacturer responses. Once one is selected, Keolis will confirm plans to launch BEMU cars in 2028.

    The Fairmount Indigo Transit Coalition, one of many community advocacy groups specific to the Fairmount Line, and Keolis hosted a joint event last Thursday (Feb. 27) to celebrate the electrification project as a victory for transit equity in conjunction with Black History Month.

    “This was a civil rights battle, and we all worked together and coalesced to make sure that this happened for our communities, because we would have been left behind,” Mela Bush, co-chair of the coalition said during the event.

    The MBTA has worked over the past year to reduce wait times and increase service on the Fairmount Line. New schedules were announced last May that have trains mostly running on 30-to-60-minute intervals, as opposed to the 90-minute intervals in the past. After the installation of the BEMU trains, T officials anticipate reducing intervals to 20 minutes on weekdays, as BEMUs slow down and speed up quicker than diesel trains. These continuous changes are meant to improve the reliability of the line, a move that regular commuter Jason Ellis appreciates.

    “For the most part, this [train is] usually here when I get here,” said Ellis, who takes the train from terminal to terminal three days a week for work. “When I get to South Station to go home, it’s usually right there, waiting to go.”

    While officially a commuter rail line, the Fairmount Line is situated between the T’s Red and Orange Lines, where there is no rapid transit alternative into the city.

    The communities along the Fairmount corridor are designated Environmental Justice Populations by the Massachusetts Office of Environmental Justice and Equity based on minority population, income, and language isolation data. A 2023 report by the Boston Public Health Commission revealed that Mattapan, one of the neighborhoods that the Fairmount Line services, has the highest rates of asthma emergency department visits in the city.

    Multiple studies show that diesel exhaust and particles exacerbate asthma symptoms. BEMU train cars operate on hybrid power, using overhead catenary wires to charge on-board batteries that move the trains. The electric power reduces both energy use and air pollution compared to diesel trains.

    “It’s not just about transportation, not just about getting you there quicker,” said Coalition co-chair Marilyn Forman. “It’s also about helping to improve the physical health of the people that are living along that line.”

    Forman credited Keolis for facilitating conversations between the MBTA and community advocacy groups on how to improve the Fairmount Line and keeping communication open.

    “It’s a strong partnership. We really work collaboratively and with every part of the MBTA,” said Sheri Warrington, Keolis director of public relations and government affairs. “The MBTA is supporting the Fairmount Indigo Transit Coalition and the passengers that we want to be connected with.”

    At the legislative level, state Rep. Russell Holmes sees the pace of the project as “promises not kept” to the community. Then-Gov. Deval Patrick committed in 2014 to a rollout of diesel multiple units (DMU) to replace the diesel trains.

    DMUs were meant to provide the Fairmount Line with faster service and shorter wait times between trains but those plans never got off the ground. At the time, only one company responded to bid requests, and its asking price was seen as too high.

    With new technology available now, Holmes said, he would hold Gov. Healey and the MBTA to the timeline they promised for BEMUs.

    “Has it been a long time coming? I say yes,” he said. “I hate when we promise our community something and don’t deliver it.”

    For the advocates who have spent years pushing for changes to the Fairmount Line, the electrification project is just the next step. In Forman’s words, “a closed mouth don’t get fed.”

    “When someone says yes to this big thing, it makes you feel like there’s no stopping,” she said. “If you don’t advocate for the things that are going to improve the quality of life for you and your family, for your community, then nothing ever happens.”

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