May 24th, 2013

Media need to do heavy lifting in Boston mayoral race by Marjorie Arons-Barron

by Tony

The entry below is being cross posted from Marjorie Arons-Barron’s own blog.

When the Boston marathon was bombed, we all shared the grief and noted that “We are Boston.”  So, too, when the capital city selects a new mayor, the people of Greater Boston, not just its voting residents, have a stake in who succeeds 20-year incumbent Tom Menino. As John Nucci observed in the Boston Herald, what the mayor does with transportation, tax policy, development, housing, tourism, public works and more, all have implications for those living outside Boston.  So, as the field begins to winnow – this week from 24 who took out papers to 16 who filed them – we should keep a sharp eye on who is best capable of leading the Hub and get involved.

The field will shrink still further with the certification of signatures on nominating papers, but, in the end, we could still see a field of twelve, which may mean it wouldn’t take that many votes in the September preliminary to secure a final berth in November.  But it will take organization, voter identification, and a machine to get those folks to the polls.  Media analysis can be expected to focus simplistically on the horse race mechanics, comparing fundraising results, polls (which at this point may only measure name recognition) and how many endorsements and volunteers they line up. But they need to do much more.

Already we see commentary trying to handicap the candidates according to limited  race/ethnic metrics: the white Irish males,  state Representative Martin J. Walsh, Suffolk District Attorney Daniel F. Conley, and Councilor at Large John R. Connolly. The other white males, Rob Consalvo, Mike Ross, Bill Walczak.  The minority candidates: Felix Arroyo, John Barros, Charlotte Golar-Richie plus William Dorcena and others.

I’d much prefer they do a better job of reporting on issues, and not just superficially. What are candidates’ different policy priorities, their managerial and communication skills,  and especially their demonstrated and potential capacities for leadership.

Menino has described himself as “just Tom Menino from Hyde Park,” an urban mechanic: getting the potholes fixed, doing the nuts and bolts of the job. He called himself the education mayor, with notable successes and also some failures, especially when it came to the teachers union and lengthening the school day.  While he has been faulted for his thin skin, he has had the courage to stand up for what he believed in, whether it was gay rights, a better police or firefighters contract, getting Downtown Crossing rebuilt, became a national advocate on gun safety, creating the Innovation District, and so much more.  When he strode in to give his last State of the City address,  or leaving his hospital room to take the helm of the city in the wake of the Marathon bombings, he exuded confidence, backbone and, no doubt about it,  leadership.

Which of the candidates are leaders?  Menino wasn’t as assured when he became the city’s chief executive 20 years ago. So, which candidate has the potential to grow into that all-important head of the Hub city, the mayor who affects lives well beyond the city’s boundaries?  Let’s hope that those covering the race will do some heavier lifting this time and provide us with real insights into who these characters are, whom they rely on for advice, how they respond to crises, and to what extent they have significant potential for growth. The stakes are high, and we all have skin in the game.

I welcome your comments in the section below.

May 24th, 2013

Review of 2014 political dominos

by DickH

When Lieutenant Governor Tim Murray announced the other day that he would resign his office, it drew my attention to the 2014 state election which, while it seems far off but really isn’t. There is no provision for filling a vacancy in the office of Lt Governor so there’s no buzz around who will be appointed to fill out that term, but that vacancy makes Secretary of State Bill Galvin first in the line of gubernatorial succession so anytime Deval Patrick leaves the Commonwealth, Secretary Galvin will be in charge. I happened to be in Boston yesterday for a meeting and more than one person was speculating about the Governor leaving early to join the Obama Administration which would make Galvin governor. Patrick has repeatedly said he will serve his full term and I think he means it, but things can always change.

Assuming there is no sudden change in the top, it seems that the most likely candidates for governor are State Treasurer Steve Grossman and Congressman Mike Capuano for the Democrats and Charlie Baker for the Republicans. Grossman has been campaigning in Lowell and already has commitments of support (I believe) from Steve Panagiotakos, Kevin Murphy and others. Capuano, should he choose to run, could probably count on the support of many of those who were involved in the local Elizabeth Warren and Ed Markey campaigns due to his progressive record on many issues.

Long before Murray’s resignation, it was clear the office of Lt Governor would be an open seat so there will probably be a host of candidates for that job. I think Democrat Mike Lake, who ran for Auditor last time I believe, has already announced for LG but I can’t think of anyone else overtly in the race now. Assuming Secretary of State Galvin, Attorney General Martha Coakley, and Auditor Suzanne Bump all seek reelection, the race for those three offices should be subdued (although any one of those three could easily seek another position). Then you have State Treasure which would not have an incumbent should Grossman follow through on his governor’s campaign. I’ve heard that State Senator Barry Finegold will run for State Treasurer. Certainly there would be others, but Barry’s candidacy for that office would mean he would not seek reelection to the state senate which would generate a vigorous campaign for that seat among those in Lawrence, Andover, Tewksbury and Dracut.

At the county level, there might be two contentious races. Gerry Leone announced some time ago that he would not run again for Middlesex District Attorney and has since resigned. Marian Ryan, appointed by Governor Patrick to serve the unexpired term, will run for the office in her own right. It will be interesting to see if her incumbency keeps others from jumping in and running for DA which could make that a hotly contested election. With the news yesterday that Middlesex Sheriff Peter Koutoujian has formed an exploratory committee for Congress – he would run in a special election that would be called should Ed Markey be elected US Senator and have to resign his House seat – means that the office of Sheriff could also be on the ballot in 2014.

Then we have the U.S. Senate seat now being sought by Ed Markey and Gabriel Gomez. Whoever wins the special election on June 25 will be on the ballot again in 2014. If you remember what happened with Scott Brown, he won the special election but then lost the seat to Elizabeth Warren in the next statewide election. We might see a replay of that regardless of who wins in June. Should Markey be the victor, there will be a special election to fill his Congressional seat and then whoever wins that will be on the ballot in 2014. If Capuano gets into the governor’s race, his Congressional district would also have an open seat. While our local representatives, Niki Tsongas in Congress and Eileen Donoghue in the State Senate, give every indication they will seek reelection to their current positions, that fact that similar offices close to us geographically will have contested races will just add to the activity in the fall of 2014.

While the 2014 election might seem far off, it really isn’t. A prime opportunity to see just how close it is will come on July 13 here in Lowell at the Democratic State Convention. While this will be only an “issues convention”, it is also prime time for anyone interested in seeking any of the above offices to make an impression on political activists, so it will be a very interesting day in that respect.

May 23rd, 2013

‘To Get to the Other Side’

by PaulM

 

When I was growing up a lame riddle often repeated was: “Why did the chicken cross the road? To get to the other side.” Looking back on it, I can see the question and answer are just kind of daffy, but also hear a little bit of a Merrimack Valley version of the Zen mind-bender: “What is the sound of one hand clapping?” This is all to say that chickens are so familiar in our culture that it’s easy not to think of them, or at least the actual animals that produce eggs for the Owl Diner and meat parts for the packages at Market Basket. In the mid-1950s, when my family moved from Centralville, Orleans Street, to the Dracut frontier way down at the woodsy foot of Hildreth Street in ye olde New Boston Village, some of our neighbors were small-scale farmers (Fournier, Shaw) and a couple of others raised chickens in backyard coops. For a long time the Cotes lived in a semi-finished cellar while they saved money to eventually build a handsome two-level Cape-style house on top. They had hens in the backyard. I hadn’t thought about these close encounters with chickens for a while, but the subject has come up in the city. For decades, one of my uncles raised pigeons in a coop behind his house in Centralville. I was fascinated by the birds and never thought it was strange that they were flying around the yard and living in the small structure out back.

I don’t have a firm opinion on how the city should regulate live chickens. More information is due from various city departments and officials. That’s the way it should be handled. Let’s get the best information available. Stepping back from the particulars, I am interested in the process of petitioning the City Council for action on this issue. This public conversation seems to be of a piece with an increased level of civic activism in the community. That’s a good thing. I want to hear from the other 15 people who showed up to speak at the subcommittee meeting before time ran out this past Tuesday—the meeting will be reconvened soon. This feels like it is part of the larger community gardening movement in the city, part of the discussion about sustainability, part of making accommodations in a one-time factory city where people are customizing the urban lifestyle, part of an adjustment  in a place with thousands of people who have come here from more rural environs not unlike the earlier waves of immigrants. Those small farmers, home gardeners, and poultry-raisers in Dracut included Greek, French-Canadian, and Polish families whose forbears had come to Lowell and Greater Lowell in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Their Yankee neighbors had been on the ground since the mid-1600s. And Lowell has another kind of newcomer, the urban homesteader type who is looking for a distinctive Green-tinted, small-scale urban experience with the benefits of a lively culture and pluralistic population.

I think we can figure out why the chicken crossed the road and learn something in the process.

 

May 23rd, 2013

Tim Murray makes cool career move by Marjorie Arons-Barron

by Tony

The entry below is being cross posted from Marjorie Arons-Barron’s own blog.

Lieutenant Tim Murray is one lucky dude.  You might say he has escaped with his life.  The affable former three-term mayor of Worcester has never been able to elude the bad karma surrounding his mysterious early morning car accident in 2011 and his unsavory connection with felon Chelsea Housing Authority Michael McLaughlin, who also did (possibly illegal) fundraising for Murray.  Once considered the frontrunner in a 2014 race to succeed Deval Patrick in the corner office, Murray ended up announcing a few months ago that he wouldn’t run.  But most people thought he would at least complete his second term as the lieutenant governor.

Today he announced he had accepted a post as president of the Worcester Chamber of Commerce, starting in June, at a salary at least 60 percent more than the $125,000 he makes in the state’s number two spot.  These positions running large chambers of commerce don’t come around often. They typically are well paid (The Boston Herald reported in March, 2009 that the Boston Chamber’s Paul Guzzi then earned well over $330,000), and they are long-term employment with the public esteem that comes from high visibility positions.  Murray wanted to grab the brass ring while it was being offered, and who can blame him?

The voters of Massachusetts, for one. He was elected to a four-year term, with an implicit pledge to finish his term.  Yes, we can probably go without a lieutenant governor, but Patrick has allowed Murray to be a good lieutenant governor, with meaningful responsibilities.  As a former mayor, Murray has been an effective local liaison. He has been out front on housing, transportation and veterans issues, much more than a figurehead lieutenant governor.  The law provides no process for naming a replacement, and, if the governor is out of town, Secretary of State Bill Galvin becomes acting governnor. But Murray’s missing day-to-day role will need to be picked up by Patrick’s staff and cabinet officials.

In the wake of the announcement, the Globe reports that Worcester savants are grumbling that Murray’s being thwarted in his bid for the corner office resulted from an anti-Worcester bias.  That’s nonsense.  He was dogged by that accident and his relationship with McLaughlin.  That’s specific to Murray. Period. He’ll likely do a good job at  at the chamber, and he’ll probably have a good time doing it.  Chalk up another successful exit from the revolving door of public service.

I welcome your comments in the section below.

 

May 22nd, 2013

Distressed Properties Identification and Revitalization Grant

by DickH

Last night I spoke at the Lowell City Council meeting to urge the city of Lowell to apply for the Distressed Properties Identification and Revitalization Grant recently offered by Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley. The purpose of this grant is to fund a position with Gateway Cities (such as Lowell) which would be devoted to addressing distressed properties within the city and speeding their return to productive use. Funding for the grant comes from the nationwide settlement recently entered into by various attorneys general (including Martha Coakley) that resolved litigation with five major national lenders for abusive mortgage and foreclosure practices. Here are the remarks I gave last night:

Thank you for this opportunity to speak. I’d like to provide some background to the Distressed Properties Identification and Revitalization Grant from the office of Attorney General Martha Coakley.

Reckless lending practices by major national banks were a prime factor the worldwide real estate market collapse of five years ago. These same national banks made the crisis worse through the use of ineffective and sometimes unlawful foreclosure practices. Last year Attorney General Coakley entered into a nationwide financial settlement with these lenders. Because the abusive practices of these lenders had a direct impact on local land records, Attorney General Coakley and her staff have collaborated with the state’s registers of deeds to determine how some of the proceeds of the settlement might be used to rectify some of the harm that was done.

Recognizing that just a handful of troubled properties can drag down real estate values in an entire community, my colleagues and I recommended that the money be used to provide grants to Gateway Cities such as Lowell that were hit hardest by the foreclosure crisis. These grants would be used by these municipalities to hire a person dedicated to attacking these troubled properties and getting them back into productive use. Now throughout this foreclosure crisis I’ve worked closely with many city offices and I know that Lowell is in better shape than most when it comes to dealing with these types of properties but there are still many troubled properties out there. The real estate market has not recovered; it’s just not as bad as it was. By taking advantage of this grant, the city of Lowell will have more resources to devote to remediating troubled properties and as a consequence, will accelerate the recovery of the local real estate market which will benefit everyone.

As the Attorney General’s website makes clear, the deadline for applying for the grant is June 13, 2013 with the award to be made on August 1, 2013.

May 22nd, 2013

Letter to the Editor on Chicken Issue

by DickH

Mark Lynch, a well-known member of Lowell’s blogosphere, shared the following letter to the editor he composed about his thoughts on allowing city residents to own and raise chickens:

Last night I attended a neighborhood action meeting for the first time in three years or so. I did so because I wanted to see and hear with my own eyes and ears the responses of my neighbors first hand when a group of citizens who have taken the time to come before the city council to essentially beg for permission to keep chickens be it as pets, egg producers, or a source of meat in their own homes. The ones they legally reside in, the ones they pay taxes on. The ones we as “citizens” we’re told we can do what we want on.

Rachel Chandler from the Lowell backyard Chicken group got up and spoke about the importance of safe nutritiously dense food for her and her children. She was snickered at and in some instances ridiculed. I was there, I heard it, so I know. “I went to Market Basket and the cheapest thing there is a dozen eggs.” one resident said. Yes. That’s true. But do you know what the chickens who produced those eggs were fed? How they were treated? (or more likely mistreated?) Probably not. But if I choose to keep chickens in my yard, I know what they’ve been fed and how they’ve been treated. After watching the documentary Food, Inc. and speaking from personal experience and I can tell you that YES there is a difference in the taste of organic eggs and pasture raised meats then the hormone and steroid filled factory raised and slaughtered animals at the grow houses of Smithfield, Tyson, etc. Those animals are kept indoors for their entire lives yet because these companies are big enough to be able to afford the resources to pay lobbyists in DC to make sure members of both major political parties vote to ensure that their chickens, turkeys, and pigs never get to see the light of day. As NY Times bestselling author and well known and respected farmer Joel Salatin has noted on many an occasion “Folks, this ain’t normal.”

Contrary to what some people think, the food at the supermarket does not magically appear under plastic waiting for you to consume it. Someone, somewhere has to take the time and expend the energy to get up early and seed, feed, and breed on their land so the other over 99% of us have something to buy at the super market. So it should be up to me if I would like to frequent a farmers market to ensure my money stays local and goes to that farmer rather than go to some faceless big Agra firm or better yet trade some of my heirloom tomatoes for some of my neighbors peppers or perish the thought some of their chickens eggs. It doesn’t get more fresh then that does it? Moreover how many of us even TALK to our neighbors anymore? Do not be fooled by those that tell you people are looking to turn the acre into a chicken ranch. No one is. No one’s looking to breed roosters either. These are people looking to keep a small amount of chickens for PERSONAL use and maybe to give some eggs to family and friends.

If this chicken ordinance passes will there be problems? Yes there will. Just like every single other law on the books since the beginning of time. Some chickens will get out. Some will get hit by cars, grabbed by the neighbors dog, a stray cat, a fox or even a raccoon or two. But as I sat in that meeting listening to concerns some legitimate, other specious in nature be answered by raw data and fact only to be met with essentially “well that’s all fine and good but I still don’t want them near me.” that doesn’t sit well with me. It’s not being a good neighbor either. If my neighbor paints there house pepto-bismol pink I have no recourse. NOR SHOULD I. Might it be an eye sore? Yes, but It’s THEIR house, on THEIR property. I have no say. Honestly this issue like so many others boils down to one simple word- control. In this day in age I see, hear, and read a whole lot about one group of people telling others what they can and can’t do. Almost as if it’s sport to some. Again this doesn’t sit well with me, and frankly it shouldn’t sit well with anyone else reading this either. Keeping chickens might not be your issue, it’s not really mine either because I own two dogs and have sense enough to know they wouldn’t get along. But next time maybe they want to ban the breed of dog you own, or enact an ordinance on fence height. If you don’t say anything now how can you expect others to stand with you when it’s your ox being gored?

I’m reminded of a conversation I had with my grandfather not too long ago, he just turned 81 and fought in the Korean War. I told him about a man who had just died. He was a part of Easy Company and was one of the famed “Band of Brothers” they made the miniseries about. I told him that it made me sad that eventually men like him wouldn’t be around anymore to impart their wisdom to younger men such as myself. I told him that compared to when he was my age we’re soft. Not self reliant like men like him. He agreed. I think any measure we can take as people to fix our own roof, can our own vegetables, grow our own heirloom tomatoes, or keep our own chickens shouldn’t be snickered at or made fun of by the likes of Dan Phelps or those that want to be able to tell me what to do on my own land but rather should be looked at for what it really is- freedom. People come to this country everyday for just that reason. Self reliance in today’s society is becoming something that happens less and less. It shouldn’t be snickered at it should be applauded, moreover it’s also an example that should be followed not mocked and ridiculed.

May 22nd, 2013

More on chickens

by DickH

Having to attend last night’s city council meeting for other reasons, I got to City Hall early to catch some of the Neighborhood Subcommittee Meeting on the proposed ordinance that would allow ownership of chickens within the city. There were 30 people in the crowd (I couldn’t see if any were in the balcony) but most of the speakers heard from last evening were opposed – strongly opposed – to this proposal. Plenty who supported the ordinance were also present, but the subcommittee was forced to recess the hearing before everyone could speak when the start time for the regular city council meeting arrived. Note the meeting was not adjourned, just recessed, so it will pick up where it left off at some future date.

As I wrote yesterday, I have mixed feelings about this proposal. Allowing ownership of a limited number of chickens is a trend sweeping across urban America so it’s certainly not some irrational, off-the-wall proposal. Common sense tells me that the canine maxim that “there are no bad dogs; just bad dog owners” has a corollary for poultry: “there are no bad chickens; just bad chicken owners.” One of the few chicken proponents who did have a chance to speak last night (I missed his name but will look for video of his remarks and post them when available) made an eloquent and very rational argument for the ordinance. He addressed the fear of disease by pointing out that turtles and rodents that are already legally owned as pets are much greater threats to human health than chickens would be. As for the accumulated waste, he explained that chicken droppings are composted and then used as fertilizer and that, since chickens eat recycled food waste from the household kitchen, they actually decrease the amount of waste that has to be placed in our refuse containers. He continued on in that vein, effectively making his points.

I confess to not knowing much about raising chickens which is why I’d like to learn more about the experience in other cities before forming a final opinion on whether it should be allowed in Lowell. I have owned a succession of dogs for nearly thirty years and so have a sense for what it takes to be a responsible animal owner. It is a lot of work and often a considerable expense, but I find it well worth it. Just as not everyone who owns a dog lives up to the level of responsibility required, I suspect the same would be true for chickens. (It’s probably true for children, too, but that’s a different issue).

There wasn’t a lot that I heard last night from the opponents of this ordinance that I found persuasive. While there was a lot of passion, there was also a lot of broad generalizations that communicated an unwillingness to even have a rational discussion of this issue and that’s too bad. After all, the city’s new Master Plan, recently endorsed by a unanimous vote of the city council, specifically calls for us to “support the creation and adoption of zoning and other policy that will encourage urban agricultural activities.” The draft of this plan which was circulated earlier even had a picture of a chicken to illustrate this point. Sensing the looming controversy, I assume, the city’s Planning Department replaced the chicken photo with one of a vegetable garden in the final version. Regardless, I look forward to the next meeting of the Neighborhood Subcommittee and the continued discussion of this issue.

May 22nd, 2013

Charles Sumner of Massachusetts Attacked in the U. S. Senate ~ May 22, 1856

by Marie

MassMoments reminds us that on this day May 22, 1856, Senator Charles Sumner of Massachusetts was viciously attacked on the floor of the United States – beaten with a cane by Preston Brooks, a Congressman from South Carolina. The issue – the language used by Sumner in a passionate anti-slavery speech including his trirade against South Carolina Senator Andrew Butler accusing him of having “a mistress . . . who, though ugly to others, is always lovely to him; though polluted in the sight of the world, is chaste in his sight. I mean the harlot, Slavery.” This episode has been described by some as “one of the most dramatic and deeply ominous moments in the Senate’s entire history.” It certain embodied the vast divide between North and South.

 

 

       …in 1856, Preston Brooks, a congressman from South Carolina, viciously attacked Massachusetts Senator Charles Sumner on the floor of the United States Senate. Three days earlier, in a passionate anti-slavery speech, Sumner had used language southerners found deeply offensive. Rather than challenge Sumner to a duel, as he would have a gentleman, Brooks beat him with a cane. It was three-and-a-half years before Charles Sumner was well enough to return to the Senate. Although he never fully recovered from the assault, he served another 15 years. An abolitionist who not only opposed slavery but advocated equal rights for African Americans, Charles Sumner was remembered as a man who marched “ahead of his followers when they were afraid to follow.”

To learn more about Senator Charles Sumner – one of the most influential politicians that Massachusetts ever sent to the U. S. Senate – and the fall-out from that heinous act by Preston Brooks – read the full article here

 

The attack on Charles Sumner by Preston Brooks (1856)

 

May 21st, 2013

Pow Wow Oak Suffered Branch Damage This Afternoon

by Marie

 Photo taken last September, 2012 

Returning home from my errands at 2:10pm … I encountered a Lowell Police presence along with many utility and city trucks as  a very large branch of the iconic Pow Wow Oak that hung over Clark Road in Lowell has broken off… hard to see the exact extent of the damage without pulling over – it’s very congested right now. Photographer Dave Brow from the Sun is there taking photos. I’m sure they will be available soon on the Sun site. Very sad situation for those who have struggle so long to save the oak.

May 21st, 2013

Lowell Historical Society Annual Meeting Tonight at the Pollard Memorial Library

by Marie

The aftermath of the South Lowell (then Tewksbury) Cartidge Company Explosion, 1903.

 

The Lowell Historical Society will hold its annual meeting tonight in the ground level  Community Room of the Pollard Memorial Library.  The meeting itself begins at 6:30pm with a brief business meeting and election of  officers and directors. It will be followed immediately  by a program on “The 1903 South Lowell / Cartridge Factory Explosion.”  This explosion occured in a part of Tewksbury that in 1906 would become a part of Lowell (South Lowell). It brought people from near and far to view the devastation from the blast that broke windows miles away and changed the lives of people and the landscape for years afterwards. This presentation will be given by Kim Zunino, Assistant Administrator of the Lowell Historic Board and current Vice-President of the Lowell Historical Society.

The meeting and the program are both open to the public and refreshments will be served. Parking is available along the area streets and in the lot in front of the Lowell Fire Department.