Mayoral election in Boston, Massachusetts (2021)

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2017
2021 Boston elections
Ballotpedia Election Coverage Badge.png
Election dates
Filing deadline: May 18, 2021
Primary election: September 14, 2021
General election: November 2, 2021
Election stats
Offices up: Mayor
Total seats up: 1 (click here for other city elections)
Election type: Nonpartisan
Other municipal elections
U.S. municipal elections, 2021

Michelle Wu defeated Annissa Essaibi George in the nonpartisan mayoral election in Boston, Massachusetts, on November 2, 2021. Both candidates were at-large city councilors, and both received endorsements from Democratic officials and groups that tend to back Democrats.

Media outlets described Wu as the more progressive candidate and Essaibi George as the more moderate one.[4][5][6][7] Essaibi George said that she did "not neatly fit in a box."[8] Wu said, "In city government, it’s about getting things done, not being judged on a scorecard of whether you said yes or no on certain things."[9]

Wu called the race a "choice about whether City Hall tackles our biggest challenges with bold solutions or we nibble around the edges of the status quo."[10] She highlighted her prioritization of climate issues and her support for rent control to provide short-term relief for renters.

Following the primary, Essaibi George said, "I want progress to be made — real progress — not just abstract ideas that we talk about. ... Instead of just advocating and participating in academic exercises and having lovely conversations as mayor, I will do these things." She emphasized her background as a teacher and her opposition to decreasing the police department budget.

For more on candidates' differences on housing and policing policy, see below.

Former incumbent Marty Walsh left office in March 2021 to become secretary of labor in President Joe Biden's (D) Cabinet. Kim Janey (District 7)—the city council president at the time—succeeded Walsh. Janey ran in the primary, placing fourth. Janey endorsed Wu in the general election.[11]

The Boston Globe's Laura Crimaldi wrote, "Although census figures show about 65 percent of city residents identify as people of color, the upcoming election will be the first in Boston history that won’t result in a white man becoming mayor."[12] Essaibi George is the daughter of Polish and Tunisian immigrants. Wu's parents immigrated from Taiwan.[13]

Wu completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey. Click here to read Wu's responses and to learn more about both candidates' backgrounds and key messages. And click here for a compilation of interviews and questionnaires from local media outlets.

The mayoral office is nonpartisan. Walsh served in the state House of Representatives as a Democrat. As of 2021, a Republican hadn't held the mayor's office in Boston since 1930.[14]

For coverage of the September 14, 2021, primary election, click here.

Boston also held elections for its 13 city council seats—nine elected by district and four elected citywide—in 2021. Five seats were open, with four incumbents having run for mayor and a fifth who didn't seek re-election. The Boston Globe's Jasper Goodman wrote that the council was "in line for the most turnover it has seen in a single election since 1993."[15] Click here to learn more about those elections.

Candidates and election results

General election

General election for Mayor of Boston

Michelle Wu defeated Annissa Essaibi George in the general election for Mayor of Boston on November 2, 2021.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/_Michelle-Wu_.png
Michelle Wu (Nonpartisan) Candidate Connection
 
64.0
 
91,794
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Annissa_Essaibi_George.jpg
Annissa Essaibi George (Nonpartisan)
 
35.6
 
51,125
 Other/Write-in votes
 
0.4
 
595

Total votes: 143,514
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

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Nonpartisan primary election

Nonpartisan primary for Mayor of Boston

The following candidates ran in the primary for Mayor of Boston on September 14, 2021.

Candidate
%
Votes
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/_Michelle-Wu_.png
Michelle Wu (Nonpartisan) Candidate Connection
 
33.4
 
36,060
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Annissa_Essaibi_George.jpg
Annissa Essaibi George (Nonpartisan)
 
22.5
 
24,268
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Andrea-Campbell.PNG
Andrea Campbell (Nonpartisan)
 
19.7
 
21,299
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Kim-Janey.PNG
Kim Janey (Nonpartisan)
 
19.5
 
21,047
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Barros.jpeg
John Barros (Nonpartisan)
 
3.2
 
3,459
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Cappucci_DRV_WEB.jpg
Robert Cappucci (Nonpartisan)
 
1.1
 
1,185
Image of https://s3.amazonaws.com/ballotpedia-api4/files/thumbs/100/100/Jon-Santiago-Full.jpeg
Jon Santiago (Nonpartisan) (Unofficially withdrew)
 
0.3
 
368
Silhouette Placeholder Image.png
Richard Spagnuolo (Nonpartisan)
 
0.3
 
286

Total votes: 107,972
Candidate Connection = candidate completed the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection survey.
If you are a candidate and would like to tell readers and voters more about why they should vote for you, complete the Ballotpedia Candidate Connection Survey.

Do you want a spreadsheet of this type of data? Contact our sales team.

Candidate profiles

This section includes candidate profiles created in one of two ways: either the candidate completed Ballotpedia's Candidate Connection survey, or Ballotpedia staff compiled a profile based on campaign websites, advertisements, and public statements after identifying the candidate as noteworthy.[16]

Image of Annissa Essaibi George

WebsiteFacebookTwitterYouTube

Incumbent: No

Political Office: 

Boston City Council At-Large member (Assumed office: 2016)

Biography:  Essaibi George received a bachelor's degree from Boston University and a master's degree in education from the University of Massachusetts, Boston. She was a teacher at East Boston High School for 13 years. Essaibi George also opened a store called Stitch House in 2007. In 2015, she was elected as an at-large member of the city council. As of 2021, she was chair of the city council's Committee on Education.



Key Messages

The following key messages were curated by Ballotpedia staff. For more on how we identify key messages, click here.


Essaibi George emphasized she is the daughter of immigrants—her father was Tunisian and her mother, Polish.


Essaibi George highlighted her experience growing up in Boston and working as a teacher, a small business owner, and a member of the city council. She said her years teaching gave her insight "into the work that we need to do together as a city to make sure that each and every one of our kids has an opportunity to a high-quality education, that they have the support services in place every single day."


Essaibi George's campaign ads focused on the theme of delivering results. In one, she said, "You will not find me on a soapbox. You will find me in your neighborhood doing the work. ... Bostonians deserve results, real change, and real progress."


Show sources

This information was current as of the candidate's run for Mayor of Boston in 2021.

Image of Michelle Wu

WebsiteFacebookTwitterYouTube

Incumbent: No

Political Office: 

Boston City Council At-Large member (Assumed office: 2014)

Submitted Biography "Growing up, I never thought I would run for office one day. As the daughter of immigrants, I understood from my youngest days how my family and so many others feel unseen and unheard in our society. When my mom began struggling with mental illness as I was finishing college, I became her caregiver and raised my sisters. In those days as we were trying to figure out how to go on in the depths of family crisis, it felt like we were alone, invisible, and powerless. I am living the stakes of the challenges that our city currently faces. I’m a Boston Public Schools mom, a caregiver, daughter of immigrants, and regular MBTA rider. But I also know what’s possible through city government in Boston. In my eight years as an At-Large Councilor representing the entire city, I’ve delivered on progressive change through building coalitions for fearless leadership. In partnership with community, we’ve passed groundbreaking legislation and stood up for Bostonians to tackle seemingly impossible challenges. I have a track record of building coalitions to empower organizing and activism. From municipal legislative pushes, to statewide conversations on public transportation, to empowering grassroots organizing through Democratic ward committees, I’ve had an impact on building activism through shifting the political ecosystem. "


Key Messages

To read this candidate's full survey responses, click here.


This moment is a call to action. To me, that means thinking big about how to build a more resilient, healthy, and fair Boston, and then having the courage and political will to fight for all of our families. We can make real investments in education, food access, and good jobs. We can build wealth in our communities by closing the racial wealth gap and supporting small businesses and local entrepreneurship.


Our policy platform is more than a vision. It’s a promise to Boston residents—a commitment to take on our hardest challenges, and to center our efforts on the pursuit of racial, economic, and climate justice.


Each day I am reminded that the only way to act with the scale and urgency that this moment demands is to make government as accessible and transparent as possible, so that democracy, community, and advocacy drives everything that we do together.

This information was current as of the candidate's run for Mayor of Boston in 2021.

Noteworthy endorsements

Click the links below for endorsements listed on candidates' websites.

The following table shows endorsements issued after the September 14, 2021, primary. The "Previously endorsed" column shows the name of a primary election candidate if the person or group endorsed a different candidate in the primary.

Noteworthy endorsements
Endorsement Essaibi George Wu Prevoiusly endorsed
Newspapers and editorials
Boston Herald editorial staff[17]
Boston Globe editorial board[18] Andrea Joy Campbell
El Planeta[19]
Elected officials
Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.)[20]
U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.)[21]
State Sen. Sonia Chang-Diaz (D)
State Rep. Liz Miranda (D)
State Rep. Jay Livingstone (D)
State Rep. Adrian Madaro (D)[22]
City Councilor/Acting Mayor Kim Janey
City Councilor Ricardo Arroyo
2017 mayoral candidate/former City Councilor Tito Jackson[23] Kim Janey
Individuals
Former Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick (D)[24]
Organizations
IBEW Local 103
Sprinkler Fitters Local 550
Local 223 Laborers'[25]
Iron Workers Local 7[26]
Painters and Allied Trades DC35[27]
SEIU 888 Kim Janey
Carmen's Union Local 589[28]
SEIU 1199
32BJ SEIU Kim Janey
SEIU 509[29]
Laborers' Local 22[30]
Jamaica Plain Progressives
WAKANDA II[31] Kim Janey
Planned Parenthood Advocacy Fund of Massachusetts[32]
UFCW Local 1445 Kim Janey
North Atlantic States Regional Council of Carpenters[33]
Chinese Progressive Political Action (CPPA)[34] Kim Janey
Right to the City Vote[34] Kim Janey
Mijente[34] Kim Janey
Working Families Party[35]
Bay State Stonewall Democrats[36]

Issue positions

The following were candidates' positions on some of the key policy issues in the race.

Police funding, staffing, and role

  • Essaibi George: The following is an excerpt from an op-ed on public safety from Essaibi George published on July 20, 2021:
"

Boston needs both reforms to policing and safe neighborhoods. Choosing one over the other is an unnecessary and harmful false choice. ...

A racial justice issue, a public health issue and a public safety issue, gun violence is an epidemic that strikes our streets every day. Gun violence will not end with defunding the police or hastily slashing the Boston Police Department budget. To ensure both a safe and just Boston requires a multifaceted and coordinated response and investments in community policing, relationship building with neighborhood leaders and organizations, appropriate police staffing and enforcement, and community programming and initiatives across our city.[44][45]

  • Wu: Wu's campaign website stated the following in a section on public safety:
"

Delivering public safety through a lens of public health and community trust requires urgent action to rebuild the culture and structure of the Boston Police Department. We must deliver structural changes that go beyond announcements or goals, and instead are embedded in the collective bargaining agreements with the City. We need a contract that gets to the root of the cultural and systemic reforms we need — full transparency and true accountability for misconduct, reducing wasteful overtime spending to reinvest those funds in neighborhood-level services, and removing the functions of traffic enforcement and social services from the department’s purview.[46][45]

Housing

Rent control

  • Essaibi George said the following about rent control in an interview with WBUR:
"

Housing is too expensive for too many families in Boston, but rent control isn’t the best way to fix that. While rent control appears to help existing tenants in the short term, in the long term, it decreases affordability, fuels gentrification, and pushes people further and further away from our neighborhoods. We need solutions that get to the root of the problem: better paths to homeownership, more affordable housing, creating generational wealth to break down systemic racism, and increasing equity across every neighborhood.[47][45]

  • Wu said the following about rent control in an interview with Boston.com:
"

Rent stabilization is not a generator of affordable housing, and over the long run, it has the opposite impact. But it’s very important that, if we want to be a city where all income levels are represented, where we are not displacing families of color at an accelerating rate out of Boston, we need to take steps for immediate relief for families and ensure that we’re managing both the increase in supply and the transition period where our residents shouldn’t be facing double-digit rent increases, year after year after year.[48][45]

Eviction moratorium

After the federal eviction moratorium in response to the COVID-19 pandemic ended in August 2021, Boston Mayor Kim Janey implemented an eviction moratorium in the city.[49] The following are statements from the candidates on banning evictions.

  • Essaibi George: Essaibi George said the following in a statement after Janey banned evictions.
"

Nobody should lose their home right now. ... Boston has received the federal funding — in historic sums — to recover from and manage this crisis. But with a lack of leadership and slow execution in getting these critical funds into programs that will help those facing housing instability, we are instead scrambling to put a band-aid over a bullet hole.[49][45]

  • Wu: Wu's campaign website stated the following:
"

Due to the stresses of the pandemic, renters are struggling to afford to stay housed. We must commit to providing immediate support to families through rental relief and a moratorium on evictions. A crisis of this magnitude will have dramatic ripple effects: a reduction in educational attainment, employment and lifetime savings, and a higher incidence of a lifetime of health issues.[50][45]

Interviews and questionnaires

Boston.com interviews

Click candidates' names below to read their Boston.com interviews.

October

August

Boston.com also asked published candidate responses to readers' questions in July. Read candidates' responses here.

NBC10 Boston interviews

NBC10 Boston conducted one-on-one video interviews and published candidates' responses to questions. Click here to view them.

WBUR interviews

October

August

Jamaica Plain News Q&A

WBZ TV/CBSN Boston interviews

WCVB interviews

Real Talk for Change interviews

Campaign themes

See also: Campaign themes

Annissa Essaibi George

Essaibi George's campaign website stated the following.

"

Policy & Platforms

All of our policy plans have been informed and developed by local advocates, stakeholders, and most importantly, Boston residents who were gracious enough to share their thoughts, ideas and experiences at my town halls, through emails and phone calls, and even in line at the grocery store.

These public policy plans are living, breathing documents that are never fully finished—and that’s how it should be. We welcome additional thoughts and feedback, and as your Mayor, Annissa will continue to ensure that you and every other resident in this city has a seat at the table.

There’s a lot to do. Let’s do the hard work, together.

Climate

“From rising sea levels to flooding, air pollution to extreme temperatures, the evidence is clear: climate change is a threat to Boston’s people and neighborhoods.”

As Mayor of Boston, Annissa will lead on climate action with a community-based approach to ensure each and every resident in every neighborhood has the opportunity to shape the policy and initiatives to tackle climate change and environmental injustice. Annissa knows that too many conversations surrounding climate policy neglected to address the real, everyday environmental injustices that disproportionately impact our communities of color and low-income communities.

To do the work effectively, Annissa’s approach will begin with the frontline communities whose health and safety are most at risk.

Annissa believes that the first step in Boston becoming a national leader on climate action is to start here at home. That means taking proactive steps in our communities, including: mitigating how air pollution affects residents living under flight paths, protecting our coastal neighborhoods from sea-level rise and flooding, improving public transit to encourage ridership and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and growing our tree canopy.

As Mayor, Annissa will:

  • Take a community-based approach to fight environmental injustices. Annissa understands the intersectionality of social, economic, and climate justice; and will ensure that those disproportionately suffering from environmental injustices are involved in the planning and development of City policies and initiatives. She will build diverse coalitions and partnerships to do the work hand-in-hand with residents, communities and advocates.
  • Fight for greener, environmentally sustainable development across our city. Boston’s sea levels are expected to rise significantly by 2050. As a Dorchester native, Annissa has seen the effects of coastal flooding in her own backyard and knows that residents across the City have seen it too. We must carry out a thoughtful and inclusive planning process that prioritizes climate resiliency and leverages development to deliver on things like greener buildings, more open space, and pedestrian and bike friendly infrastructure.
  • Work with every City of Boston department and agency to build, remodel, and invest in green, energy efficient, sustainable infrastructure, facilities, and motor vehicles. Annissa will leverage the city’s publicly-owned infrastructure to bolster her long-term climate resiliency vision. Boston Public Schools, making up the majority of city-owned buildings, must be updated.
  • Invest in green jobs. Annissa believes that climate action can be used as a tool for economic development and job growth. She has led the fight for expanding clean energy job training opportunities at Madison Park Vocational Technical High School. Annissa knows that by incorporating resilience skills into Boston’s existing job-training programs we will set our residents, and our city, up for success.
  • Promote a green economy. Annissa believes that Boston has an opportunity to capitalize on its strong fiscal management to further invest in Green Bonds, which can support energy efficient and environmentally friendly projects in Boston.
  • Invest in our open green spaces, find and create more green space in our neighborhoods, and ensure equitable care and investments in public green space across the city. COVID-19 has emphasized the importance of accessible and equitable public parks and green spaces. All Boston residents deserve to be a ten minute walk from a park, Annissa will build on this promise and prioritize investments in our parks within our low-income communities and communities of color. Annissa will also invest in our public spaces by developing our tree canopy ensuring that trees are part of every neighborhood’s landscape.
  • Partner with stakeholders at the local and state level to leverage sustainable transportation and ensure our response to the environment and public health crisis are rooted in transit. As our climate changes, our transportation infrastructure must change as well.

Economic Justice & Workers' Rights

“Boston has the opportunity and responsibility to learn from our past, and not just rebuild our economy, but build a better economy that works for everyone.”

As we look to recover from the pandemic, we have an opportunity to not only bounce back from the past year, but prioritize building an economy that works for everyone. Annissa firmly believes that the prosperity of our City’s economy goes hand in hand with achieving economic justice for every single resident. As Mayor she will fight back against economic inequality, close the racial wealth gap, and build an economy centering shared success and all of Boston’s hard working residents.

For too long, our economy has neglected our residents of color. According to the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, white households in Boston have a median net worth of $247,500, while Boston’s Black households have a median net worth of $8. Further, white households are more likely than nonwhite households to hold liquid assets, and are better equipped to handle unexpected financial setbacks. This must change. Boston has to be intentional in providing more pathways to homeownership and capital, increased access to education and workforce training, and build neighborhoods with reliable transportation options and core job centers.

As Mayor, Annissa will:

Establish a City of Boston Department of Economic Justice & Workers’ Rights

  • Along with creating a Cabinet and Administration that is diverse and reflective of Boston to best tackle systemic inequities in our housing, education, transportation, health and justice systems, Annissa will establish the first-ever City of Boston Department of Economic Justice & Workers’ Rights to advocate for the city’s hard working residents and fight for fair wages and benefits, work to close the wage gap, stand up for our marginalized workers, and be a partner to Boston’s labor unions. The head of this office will be a cabinet-level chief reporting directly to the Mayor and have a seat at the policymaking table to assess the potential impact proposed policies and initiatives may have on Boston’s families.
  • Will establish an Economic Justice Task Force directly overseen by the Chief of Economic Justice and Workers’ Rights to address racial discrimination, identify problem areas in our City, and create city-wide initiatives that focus on economic justice and prosperity, while measuring impacts and progress


ECONOMIC JUSTICE

As Mayor, Annissa will:

Tackle the Racial Wealth Gap

The racial wealth gap in Boston is a product of a long history of systemic racism and inequities that have led to the inability of people of color to grow intergenerational wealth. As Mayor, Annissa will seek to minimize the racial wealth gap through the following multifaceted initiatives:

  • Break cycles of systemic racism by building generational wealth and creating more pathways to home ownership and access to capital for historically underserved communities. Annissa believes that safe, stable, and affordable housing is a right for all of Boston’s residents.
  • Bridge the gap between job centers and our neighborhoods by encouraging growth in our Main Streets districts across the city, bettering reliable transportation to and from these areas, and increasing surrounding affordable housing options.
  • Provide opportunities for asset development that seek to increase savings, property, and retirement accounts that create financial stability and independence.
  • Ensure fair access to housing, credit, and financial services by tackling the many inequalities in every social and financial system in Boston.
  • Ensure equal opportunity to good-paying jobs regardless of race, ethnicity, religion, sex, sexual orientation or gender identity.
  • Strengthen retirement incomes so that Black residents have the ability to comfortably retire and age in Boston.
  • Promote access to education while also addressing the student loan debt crisis in Boston to allow students to graduate without overburdening debt.
  • Ensure equal access to healthcare while helping minimize medical debt to give Bostonians the financial freedom to build wealth.

Invest in Workforce Development

  • Expand and increase investments in the City’s workforce development programs, prioritize Madison Park Technical Vocational High School (Madison Park) and vocational education programs in Boston Public Schools (BPS), and increase school to career pipelines for individuals living, studying, and working in the city.
  • Partner with Boston-based small business owners, labor unions and training programs to create development opportunities for Madison Park students to build skills in areas such as building trades, technical assistance, website building and development, social media operations and culinary experience.
  • Build up Boston’s career pipelines and continue summer youth employment programs to provide new opportunities to young Bostonians.
  • Continue to grow and expand the City of Boston’s tuition free community college and workforce training programs to increase access to postsecondary education options for all of Boston’s students.
  • Partner with BPS and vocational schools to give students a clear understanding of the possibilities of a career in public service with the Boston Police Department, Emergency Medical Services, and Boston Fire Department by conducting outreach to schools and providing informational sessions and job fairs throughout the year to fill anticipated needs from leaves and retirements.
  • Invest and expand the Office of Returning Citizens to support those returning from incarceration with resume and interview workshops, training, and mentorship opportunities to aid in a seamless transition into the workforce.
  • Develop a public health workforce development program in partnership with BPS and higher education institutions to increase access and opportunities for long-term, stable careers in health care.

Leverage City Services to Advance Economic Equity in Boston

  • Continue fighting for state legislation to make the City of Boston’s procurement process more equitable and give women and minority-owned businesses the opportunity to compete for more public contracts.
  • Make it easier to start and grow a small business in Boston by centralizing services and resources, streamlining the licensing and permitting process, providing workshops in our neighborhoods, and creating a new small business mentoring program that partners thriving small businesses with entrepreneurs.
  • Provide resources and aid for continued education and host professional development workshops specifically designed to lift up women and BIPOC communities in their field.
  • Work alongside the Mayor’s Office of Women’s Advancement to close the wage gap by partnering with employers to continuously review employee salaries to ensure equitable compensation and require participating employers to share their hiring and salary data.
  • Offer legal services to help defend women, BIPOC and LGBTQIA+ residents challenge unfair employment practices and wages.
  • Protect consumers from predatory debt collection practices by informing residents of their rights, advocating for state and federal policies that help residents trapped in a cycle of debt, and enforce debt collection restrictions during City-wide emergencies.
  • Eliminate debt accrued through the high costs of minor violations by overhauling the City’s ticketing and debt collection practices.
  • Partner with our neighborhood and community centers to conduct public outreach campaigns with linguistically appropriate materials to ensure that any Bostonian in need of services knows where and how to receive help.
  • Provide leadership and commit to partnering with neighboring cities to share data, results and good practices to inspire policy change throughout the state.
  • Collaborate with our federal and state officials to establish that the City of Boston receives the federal funding it deserves for crucial social programs and services such as Medicaid and Medicare, SNAP and free school lunch programs, housing vouchers, public education, and child care programs.
  • Expand the capacity of Boston’s community programs by expanding the combination of funding sources from both the public and private sector, and leverage social impact bonds through a partnership with impact investors to fund programs.
  • Explore direct cash payment plans from the City to fight poverty and alleviate financial insecurity for Boston’s struggling residents.
  • Advocate for key reforms to the State’s Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) so that it provides all families earning up to $70,000 a cash credit of at least $1,200 a year, increases the State match rate, provides a minimum $1,200 credit to extremely low-income and no-income households, extend income eligibility to include middle-income families, expand eligibility to unpaid caregivers, immigrants, college students, younger workers and older workers.

Fight for Social Justice

  • Recognize that social justice and economic justice are closely linked and continue to fight for equal economic, political and social rights and opportunities for all residents of Boston.
  • Consistently engage with local social movements and organizations in Boston to form working groups that discuss economic justice as a social issue to improve outcomes for all.
  • Protect members of Boston’s LGTBQTIA+ community by increasing investigations into workplace discrimination and advocating for federal and state legislation focusing on employment equality.
  • Create a safe and inclusive environment for women working in Boston by increasing investigations into workplace gender discriminiation and sexual harassment cases.
  • Offer services that connect Boston’s immigrant community to employment resources.

Improve Access to Financial Services

  • Encourage banks and credit unions open in high need areas to improve access to the banking system.
  • Set up people who are leaving prison with the needed resources and guidance to obtain identification and meet requirements to open a bank account.
  • Establish curriculums of financial literacy in our schools, and community and senior centers.
  • Encourage Boston banks and credit unions to open accounts to meet the needs of residents who are new to banking or have previously had an unsatisfactory experience.

WORKERS’ RIGHTS

Annissa knows that when our workers succeed, Boston succeeds. As a former longtime Boston Teachers Union (BTU) member, she has lived the struggles of organized labor— members fighting day in and day out for simply a voice in the workplace. Boston’s thriving middle class is a direct result of the dedication and hard work of our strong unions that continue to fight for that voice.

As Mayor, Annissa will be an advocate for workers’ rights by strengthening our City’s unions and collective bargaining rights to raise wages, increase benefits, maintain safe working conditions, and give labor a seat at the policymaking table. She is committed to advocating for and amplifying the voices of our unions in Boston and across the region.

As Mayor, Annissa will:

Support our Labor Unions and Expand Collective Bargaining Rights

  • Give unions a seat at the table by building a City government that consistently engages with the working members of Boston’s unions to participate in discussions and policy-making. Promote and encourage the involvement of union members in the political process.
  • Create a cabinet-level working group that will solely focus on promoting union organizing and collective bargaining in the public and private sectors.
  • Stand alongside our labor unions to strengthen organizing and collective bargaining rights and ensure they get a seat at the policy making table.
  • Ensure that any workers who wish to join or form a union have the support and resources they need to do so.
  • Ensure that workers across the city can exercise their right to strike without fear of reprisal and support state legislation to modernize unemployment insurance so that striking workers are not left behind.

Fight for Increased Wages, Fair Benefits and Safe Working Conditions

  • Fight for livable wages and benefits that keep pace with the true cost of living, as well as workplace safety and health for all industries in Boston.
  • Work with our partners in the state government to ensure we mandate a $15 minimum wage.
  • Work with the federal and state partners to strengthen wage theft prevention through the creation of a Wage Theft Task Force in the City of Boston to determine the City’s regulatory and legal authority to curtail and prevent wage theft.
  • Ensure that every investment in infrastructure and transportation projects or service jobs is covered by prevailing wage protections.
  • Ensure independent workers receive the benefits and protections they deserve
  • Continue to check corporate power in Boston by investigating and penalizing violations of worker’s rights under the new Department of Economic Justice and Workers’ Rights

Education & Child Care

“I am a former Boston Public Schools teacher at East Boston High School. It has made me a fierce advocate for access to a great education for all. But it also gave me a front row seat to the challenges that our families face day in and day out.”

As Mayor, Annissa will use her experience as a Boston Public Schools teacher, a Boston Public Schools parent, a Boston Public Schools graduate, and current Chair of Boston City Council’s Committee on Education to ensure that every child has equal access to high quality schools and the necessary resources for lifelong success. She will rebuild trust with school communities by creating a transparent and responsive school system for Boston Public School (BPS) students, educators, and families. Under her leadership, every school will be a high quality school.

Annissa believes that every kid deserves access to a great school, and with her lifelong dedication to the Boston Public Schools, she will provide the stable leadership our City needs to implement immediate operational reforms and to dismantle systemic barriers to equity.

Today, the greatest challenge facing Boston Public Schools (BPS) is the lack of access to high quality schools for every student in each of our neighborhoods. The inconsistency in the quality of our schools is directly linked to declining enrollment, a widening opportunity and achievement gap, and a lack of trust in BPS to provide our kids with the education they deserve. Annissa will prioritize establishing equitable baseline standards and resources in every school, including ensuring that every school has appropriate staffing ratios for nurses and school psychologists, fighting for a budget for BPS that provides equitable funding across our schools, and creating a clear academic path for students by organizing the grade configuration system to become primarily a K-6/7-12 and K-8/9-12 system.

As demonstrated by the rise of chronic absenteeism during the pandemic, the impact of COVID-19 on academic performance and on mental health must be a top priority in our schools. Annissa will address the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our City’s students, with a particular focus on mitigating existing inequities that have been further exacerbated by the pandemic. In promoting safe, in-person instruction, academic supports, and social emotional programming, her administration will usher in a brighter future for our City’s students. Her commitment to transparency, reliance on data, and focus on stakeholder ownership and voice will ensure that all students get what they need to be successful.

In order for students to succeed, they need a strong foundation of literacy in their early education. The failure to invest in early detection and intervention places children at a greater risk of dropping out, poor health, unemployment, and incarceration. With the disproportionate impact of this crisis on students of color and ELL students, strengthening literacy is essential to closing the opportunity and achievement gap. As Mayor, Annissa will be an advocate for every child, making sure that they have access to the educational opportunities and resources that they need to read.

Investing in vocational and technical education will ensure our students are prepared to take advantage of the opportunities in our labor market. Annissa will prioritize improvements to Madison Park Technical Vocational High School and vocational programs in BPS to provide our students with a strong foundation for lifelong success and career readiness after graduation. As a graduate of Boston Tech, Annissa has firsthand experience with the benefits of technical training and believes that vocational education is an essential foundation to a well-rounded and rigorous academic experience.

Annissa believes the City of Boston must invest in early education and care infrastructure, just as it does our roadways, health care, and parks because it is foundational to the developmental health and wellbeing of children and is ultimately the largest driver of lifetime outcomes. Annissa is committed to ensuring that Boston families have access to quality, universal early education and child care. To do this, she will not only be a fierce advocate for the proposed Common Start state legislation, but also leverage partnerships with workplaces, our schools, organizations, advocates, families, and current providers.

Oftentimes, achievement gaps begin before our students enter the classroom. When our community-based providers, home providers and private providers receive the resources and support they need, our families and our City’s youngest thrive and succeed. While early education and child care in and of itself is great for the development of children, Annissa knows that it is also critical infrastructure for a thriving economy. Having adequate education centers and community providers gives an opportunity for women, who are often the primary caregivers, to enter or re-enter the workforce, while also benefiting family members that work non-traditional work hours. Annissa will also work to make it easier for small business owners to get licensed and start a provider service to support the City’s educators and reduce the seat gap in Boston.

COVID-19: Lessons Learned and Building Something Better

COVID-19 has exacerbated existing inequities in BPS while also creating unforeseen challenges in the BPS system. As demonstrated by the rise of chronic absenteeism during the pandemic, the impact of COVID-19 on academic performance and on mental health must be a top priority in our schools.

As Mayor, Annissa will address the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on our City’s students, with a particular focus on mitigating existing inequities that have been further exacerbated by the pandemic. In promoting safe, in-person instruction, academic supports, and social emotional programming, her administration will usher in a brighter future for our City’s students. Her commitment to transparency, reliance on data, and focus on stakeholder ownership and voice will ensure that all students get what they need to be successful. She will:

  • Commit to comprehensive academic support to aid transition back to in-person learning, such as tutoring, remedial coursework, and summer academic and enrichment opportunities with a focus on students who are most impacted
  • Empower students and families with the opportunity to repeat an academic year to maximize learning recovery and social emotional wellness
  • Commit to comprehensive social emotional support to address trauma, loss, fear, and isolation resulting from COVID-19 with a focus on students who are most impacted and harnessing the expertise of student support personnel in the early planning phases
  • Provide robust behavioral health supports for students with higher levels of need
  • Address social emotional needs of educators through training and programming in order to be better equipped to support their students and their professional practice
  • Tackle the digital divide with technology through culturally-relevant and accessible training for students and families
  • Use outcome data as well as student and family survey tools such as Panorama and universal behavioral health screening data to inform academic and social emotional engagement efforts and highlight gaps that require further intervention
  • Roll out a student vaccination plan when vaccines become available, including harnessing the expertise of school nurses in the early planning phases
  • Expand testing resources so that every student has the ability to equally prepare for standardized testing

Establishing Equitable Baseline Standards and Resources in Every School

Closing the opportunity and achievement gap must begin with establishing equitable baseline standards and resources in every school. Today, BPS exists as a system of inequitable schools where families are forced to compete for a seat at a high quality school. Due to the extreme variations in the quality of learning opportunities, resources, and facilities, the school assignment process continues to exacerbate racial and socioeconomic disparities. These inequities have created a limited number of high quality schools, forcing families to leave the district entirely to provide their child with the education that they deserve. The major disparities within the quality of schools has created a system of stand-alone schools, instead of an equitable school district.

Annissa believes that every school should be high quality. In order to achieve educational equity, she will ensure that every school is equipped with the baseline services and resources kids need to succeed. As Mayor, Annissa will:

  • Ensure that every school has appropriate staffing ratios for nurses and school psychologists, a full-time social worker, a full-time school counselor, a full-time family liaison, a full-time homeless advocate, strong literacy services, arts programming, athletic opportunities, a library/media center, strong academic resources, English Language Learners (ELL) translators, inclusion done right, and high quality buildings and state of the art facilities
  • Create a budget for BPS that provides equitable funding across our schools, creating a strong foundation for every student that is rooted in ensuring social/emotional supports, robust academics and community partnerships
  • Create a clear academic path for students by organizing the grade configuration system to become primarily a K-6/7-12 and K-8/9-12 system, so that only one transition is required for most students.

High Quality Academics

In BPS, the lack of district wide curriculum standards and equitable classroom resources continues to increase disparities between schools. Eliminating disparities in curriculum standards and classroom resources is a critical component of educational equity and making sure every school is high quality. Ensuring our students have access to a robust early education and elementary education curriculum is a critical foundation of a high quality education. In addition to rigorous academics, we must ensure access to enrichment opportunities for lifelong success including financial literacy, arts and music, athletics, CPR training, health and wellness, nutrition and cooking, and life skills classes. In order to achieve lasting and meaningful equity in all of our public schools, we must guarantee high quality academics programming in every school.

As Mayor, Annissa will establish equity in BPS by reforming the district’s system of academics to:

  • Implement consistent, district wide curriculum standards to reduce disparities between schools and ensure that every BPS school is providing high quality academics
  • Establish baseline and uniform graduation requirements so that every BPS student leaves the school district with the knowledge and skills necessary to succeed in their career, college, and beyond
  • Ensure access to robust and challenging STEAM curriculums that encourage creative problem solving, analytical thinking required for everyday activities, develop meaningful solutions to societal problems, and prepare BPS students for the future workforce opportunities in the workforce
  • Implement a district wide Ethnic Studies Curriculum to inform our students about different global experiences involving race, ethnicity, class, gender, and sexual orientation, while encouraging students to critically think about the lived experiences of those around them
  • Provide modern learning materials and resources in every school to close the digital divide and ensure every student develops the necessary digital literacy to succeed in the modern economy and workforce
  • Strengthen BPS’s summer learning opportunities by providing sufficient funding for comprehensive learning and enrichment activities and increase accessibility so that all BPS families have opportunities for their students
  • Develop a district wide civics education curriculum through community partnerships and increased professional development to ensure students have access to opportunities for civics engagement
  • Continue to update the art education curriculum to teach students about systems of race, class, and gender and develop their critical-thinking skills with the goal to increase civic engagement and improve racial and cultural equity.
  • Ensure equitable access to arts education and celebrate diversity through arts education by supporting art teachers with ample equipment and resources and partnering with non-profit organizations that promote youth in the arts and empowers traditionally underserved students

Literacy

Persistent declines in fourth grade MCAS reading scores and City divestment in school reading specialists speak to a growing literacy crisis within BPS. In order for students to succeed, they need a strong foundation of literacy. The failure to invest in early detection and intervention places children at a greater risk of dropping out, poor health, unemployment, and incarceration. With the disproportionate impact of this crisis on students of color and ELL students, strengthening literacy is essential to closing the opportunity and achievement gap. We must improve elementary grade literacy support in order to avoid cascading issues later in elementary, middle and high school. Strong literacy skills build a solid foundation for learning, growth and opportunities for future success.

As Mayor, Annissa will be an advocate for every child, making sure that they have access to the educational opportunities and resources that they need to read. She will:

  • Establish a structured literacy program for every child from pre K to grade 3 and work in partnership with early education and child care providers
  • Expand and strengthen literacy testing, detection, and early intervention strategies to identify student literacy needs and increase the distribution of reading specialists in our schools
  • Mandate a standard curriculum in all schools to ensure equitable literacy programming throughout the district
  • Ensure every school has a fully supported library staff and a fully equipped library, with culturally, developmentally, and linguistically appropriate materials.

Vocational Education & Madison Park Technical Vocational High School

While most communities across the Commonwealth have access to a first class vocational technical education, students in Boston do not get this opportunity. Vocational education is critical to providing a high quality education. The City of Boston has only one vocational technical high school: Madison Park Technical Vocational High School (Madison Park). Madison Park should be the gem of our public schools system, yet decades of underfunding has caused significant vacancies and declining conditions.

In order to provide our students with a strong foundation for lifelong success and career readiness after graduation, we must prioritize improvements to Madison Park and vocational programs in BPS. Investing in vocational and technical education will ensure our students are prepared to take advantage of the opportunities in our labor market. As a graduate of Boston Technical High School (now the O’Bryant), Annissa has firsthand experience with the benefits of technical training and believes that vocational education is an essential foundation to a well-rounded and rigorous academic experience. As Boston moves forward with the economic recovery after the COVID19 pandemic, our greatest challenge will be to ensure our workforce is prepared for the changing demands of the labor market.

As Mayor, Annissa will establish a direct pipeline from Madison Park Technical Vocational High School to the workforce opportunities in the City of Boston:

  • Develop a strategic plan, including a funding and admissions policy, for Madison Park Technical Vocational High School within her first 100 hundred days in office
  • Develop vocational education exploratory opportunities for elementary and middle school students to promote a bright educational future with rigorous academic and technical programs
  • Increase partnerships with labor unions and local businesses to increase access to internship and job experience for students
  • Expand workforce development opportunities in the emerging industries including biotechnology, green economy, and other non-construction trades

Health Equity, Behavioral Health and Social Emotional Wellness

Given the considerable time children spend in the classroom, our schools play a critical role to respond to the health needs of our students. Addressing the impact of health disparities is a critical component to closing the opportunity and achievement gap. Combined with the impact of COVID-19, the demand for health services, behavioral health support and social emotional wellness programs in our schools has become a necessity. Without a strong system of school based health services and social emotional support, BPS will continue to experience low levels of academic achievement, especially among our high needs students.

By making sure our kids are healthy, we provide them the freedom to learn and create a strong foundation for life-long success.

As Mayor, Annissa will make health equity, behavioral health and social-emotional wellness a priority in our schools by implementing the following initiatives:

  • Expand access to school based health centers by strengthening, investing and growing the number of school-based health centers (SBHCs) in our schools as a means to increase youth access to preventive and primary health care
  • Strengthening school health programs and services to address the impact of health disparities in education
  • Ensure every child has access to the school-based behavioral health services, resources, and programs they need to support their health and thrive and promote social and emotional learning practices be taught in classrooms to give our students the skills they need to best support their health
  • Create district wide staffing requirements through community mental health partnerships by calling for full-time licensed mental health professionals in every school, including a full-time psychologist, a full-time school counselor, and a full-time social worker
  • Provide universal behavioral health screening to adequately identify and serve students of Boston
  • Ensure that every teacher and BPS employee is trained in trauma-informed instruction to address the impact of violence and create a welcoming and safe environment for students dealing with trauma
  • Recognize that health issues widen opportunity and educational gaps for struggling students and continue to address homelessness, food insecurity, and poverty as a social determinant of health and education

Supporting High Needs Students

BPS is home to the largest population of high needs students in the Commonwealth, with approximately 76% of students classified as low-income, economically disadvantaged, ELL, or students with disabilities. We need to do more for our children, especially our most vulnerable, to ensure we are giving them the full range of resources and support they need to have an equal opportunity for success. As Mayor, Annissa will prioritize investments for our high needs students to ensure that every kid has access to the services and supports they need.

She will:

  • Establish equitable and consistent access to special education services, resources for students experiencing homelessness, and programs for ELL in every school
  • Implement a fully funded and well resourced inclusion program with appropriate staffing and ensure we’re doing inclusion right
  • Improve the delivery of Individualized Educational Plans (IEPs) and 504 Plans to increase support for families, including language access, student advocacy and transition services during school years and beyond
  • Revamp special education services in all schools to increase school options for students with higher needs by including the use of research-based interventions, developing skills of all teachers, and targeting struggling students through a multi-tier system of support across the district
  • Reform school policies driving the school to prison pipeline for our students of color to address disproportionate placement of black and brown boys in sub-separate classrooms due to racist stereotypes
  • Increase support and funding for our students experiencing homelessness through the budget process and increase supportive housing for families in coordination with the City’s Housing Agencies to address the impact of the lack of affordable housing on educational equity
  • Advocate that the Student Opportunity Act be fully funded to increase BPS access to innovative teaching practices and close achievement gaps for all students
  • Support our English Language Learners (ELL) by ensuring that they are identified early, and that they participate in a comprehensive and culturally-sensitive language curriculum while having access to a strong support network of teachers and other students
  • Support our students living in poverty and experiencing trauma by providing financial support for school-related costs, cultivating relationships with the schools’ mental health professionals, ensuring trauma informed learning, and teaching emotional-social learning strategies
  • Support students facing food insecurity by ensuring high quality nutrition standards in BPS, streamlining connections to food assistance programs, and increasing partnerships with community organizations and food pantries

Rebuilding Trust with School Communities

In recent years, the absence of stable governance within BPS has fostered deep mistrust for BPS families and educators. The lack of consistent leadership, along with announcements of grade reconfigurations, school closures, and budget uncertainties, has caused many BPS families to sense a real management vacuum. Many families have felt that nobody was actually listening to their concerns. In addition, insufficient translation and communications services for ELL families continues to present a major barrier for BPS families.

As Mayor, Annissa will lead in partnership with school communities to improve engagement with BPS families and rebuild trust with school communities. She will also build and strengthen relationships within our school community that start long before our children enter the classroom. She will:

  • Work alongside the Superintendent to more regularly communicate and engage with school communities, including within early education spaces
  • Regularly visit with every school, attend meetings with school families and educators, and be present for student events to build strong and meaningful relationships within the BPS community
  • Communicate regularly with students and families about academic and social emotional resources and opportunities in different media formats and methods and in their home language
  • Leverage her time in the Boston Teachers Union to collaborate with the BTU, Superintendent, school-related union members and educators, and build initiatives that best support our students all in partnership with stakeholders
  • Strengthen interpreter services to distribute relevant information to families in their primary language to ensure language access and active engagement with families and school communities who speak languages other than English
  • Reform the welcome center/school assignment process to reduce administrative barriers, increase technical support for BPS families, update the waitlist process by creating an online portal for greater transparency

BPS Facilities Reform

Studies on the opportunity and achievement gap prove that the conditions of school facilities have a direct impact on student learning. In Boston, decades of disinvestment from the local, state, and federal government has created major deficiencies in the quality of our school buildings. With an aging infrastructure and 27 grade configurations, the conditions of BPS facilities have exacerbated inequities. Consequently, the BuildBPS facilities plan has focused on long overdue improvements instead of on the major renovations promised to families and school communities.

In addition to access to modern facilities, creating a high quality learning environment requires a strong foundation of school safety. Studies have shown a direct correlation between school safety and lower attendance rates and higher rates of chronic absences. When it comes to safe school environments, it’s more than locks and training. In order to create a school community that is safe and welcoming, it is critical to expand mental health support, implement sensible gun laws, and address trauma caused by violence outside of school. Under Annissa’s administration, BPS will experience significantly improved enrollment as our schools will become much more student-centric, high quality, and reliable places to learn and grow.

As Mayor, Annissa will ensure all students have access to high-quality sustainable buildings, safe learning environments, clean grounds, and healthy air and water quality. She will:

  • Fulfill the promise of the Build BPS Facilities Plan, its initial goals and develop a transparent strategic plan and secure funding for future investment to invest in rebuild, renovate and improve all BPS facilities
  • Conduct meaningful school community consultations to build short and long-term facility plans and prioritize transparency with BPS families and communities
  • Create clear school pathways by reducing the number of grade configurations and decreasing the number of school transitions for students.
  • Ensure that rebuilding our schools will be done methodically and transparently so that school communities have an active partnership and can plan appropriately
  • Integrate alternative education and special programming back into schools to ensure comprehensive education for all children and assure there are sufficient academic and non-academic facilities in response to changing enrollment projections
  • Strengthen the universal pre-k connector system and develop a long term plan to close pre-K eat gap to ensure that all our youngest learners have a high quality seats
  • Prioritize investments in school safety and security measures in the BuildBPS planning process, increase safety trainings for teachers and school staff, and strengthen the enforcement of the district’s school safety standards to ensure 100% compliance
  • Increase transparency with school communities regarding school safety incidents by develop a communications plan for schools that engages more rapidly with families
  • Increase student support services dedicated to responding to trauma caused by violence outside of school and preventing verbal and cyber bullying
  • Ensure safe drinking water for students and prioritizing investments in BuildBPS for improved facilities to ensure infrastructure that includes access to safe drinking water

BPS Central Office

As Mayor, Annissa will foster a culture of collaboration and transparency across the BPS community through open lines of communication with all BPS staff and the School Committee. Annissa believes that with every dollar the City spends, there needs to be a clear benefit to our students, so, as Mayor, she will:

  • Increase transparency and accountability with the Central Office, including outlining hiring procedures for the staff through with a thorough organizational chart that is accessible to the public and school communities
  • Prioritize student facing services in the Central Office, so students have a strong relationship with school administration to receive the services and resources they need to succeed
  • Review funding for the Central Office budget to prioritize student facing services and eliminate waste

School Committee Reform

As a BPS parent and former teacher, Annissa understands the need for greater transparency in the decision making process in the governance structure of the Boston School Committee. The Boston School Committee must be designed to prioritize the stability for our children’s futures while also providing accountability for the decisions. In order for our kids to receive the best education, we must reject any opportunity for special interest and political agendas from influencing the direction of our schools.

Changes to the School Committee governance structure are essential to promoting a productive and straightforward dynamic between BPS families and the School Committee. As Mayor, Annissa will commit to establishing an appointed governance structure with appointments from the Mayor and the Boston City Council. She will:

  • Enact an appointed School Committee with a nine-member body partially appointed by the Mayor and by the City Council. The mayoral appointees will be designated to represent important education stakeholders including families, teachers, special education advocates, higher education advocates and English language learners (ELL). The City Council appointees will serve as At-Large members and be selected through a public nomination process through a series of Council hearings to ensure full transparency and community participation. Together, the members of the School Committee will represent the diversity of Boston
  • Increase transparency of the Citizens Nominating Panel and Process by establishing publicly available guidelines detailing the nomination process and improving awareness of the selection of candidates in partnership with the Boston City Council
  • Ensure there is a voting student seat on the Boston School Committee, with a stipend, to include student voices, perspectives and ideas in all School Committee actions

Exam and Admissions Schools

Annissa supports continuing to have an entrance exam for our City’s three exams schools, but believes the test must change to more accurately reflect our students’ current curriculum. All our students must have an equal opportunity to succeed, especially in our City’s exam schools. Many of our Black and brown students have already been let down by our education system by the time they take the exam. We need to better set all of our students up for success from the moment they first step foot in a classroom—earlier even—long before they are thinking about taking an exam, and intentionally focus on providing opportunities for each and every student. These considerations will also be applied to discussions around any BPS school that has an admissions policy.

Our City’s schools should reflect our City’s diversity. As Mayor, Annissa will:

  • Reduce systemic barriers by selecting an entrance exam aligned with BPS curriculum and provide every 6th and 8th grade BPS student the opportunity to take the test in class
  • Launch a City Voucher Program for Exam Preparation for low-income students, expand access to year round tutoring in partnership with community based organizations, increase free tutoring opportunities, and open eligibility for the summer exam preparation courses to all interested students
  • Strengthen our elementary programs to guarantee that BIPOC students are prepared for the exam and for the academic course load at exam schools
  • Create an exam and admission school information system to increase exam school awareness and accessibility for all families in our district, including multilingual sessions
  • Make sure that any child that wants to attend STEAM summer camps has the option do so by providing resources and creating awareness of the available programs

Transportation Reform

In Boston, the district’s transportation system continues to present a major barrier for children to access a high quality education. While the BPS transportation system represents 10% of the overall budget for BPS, our students continue to experience unreliable and inefficient services. The rising transportation costs reflect the ongoing failures of the school assignment process which forces BPS students to travel long distances to attend school.

As Mayor, Annissa will:

  • Reform the school assignment process and ensure all schools are high quality and special education programming is accessible in all neighborhoods
  • Improve bus operations to reduce costs, improve efficiencies and save time while reinvesting savings directly back into our schools to expand initiatives that directly benefit the students
  • Expand the Safe Routes to Schools approach that promotes walking and bicycling through infrastructure improvements, safety education, and engaging incentives to improve safety and increase levels of physical activity for students
  • Strongly advocate that the State and/or charter schools take fulfill their financial responsibility of transporting charter school students, especially on days that BPS is not in session and better coordinate start and end times

College and Career Readiness

Our responsibility to educate our students extends beyond ensuring they complete their coursework and graduate from BPS. It continues as they choose to enter college, choose a career, and grow into their communities. We need to ensure our curriculum teaches them the necessary skills through meaningful college and career readiness efforts. In the same way that math, science, arts and language courses are necessary for preparing our students for a successful college education and career, we need to invest the life skills that will allow our children to succeed in every facet of their lives.

As Mayor, Annissa will:

  • Improve connections and partnerships with local universities and community colleges for all BPS schools, including a robust college mentorship program for every high school freshman to help guide students through the steps to their college career
  • Establish a Science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics education (STEAM) curriculum at all levels and make sure students are able to explore career opportunities in these fields
  • Offer First Aid/CPR certification for all high school seniors and teach our City’s kids how to swim
  • Establish financial literacy and personal finance courses in all schools to teach students how to manage their money into adulthood
  • Organize a citywide job fair to connect students with all the job opportunities that Boston has to offer, so the students can visualize themselves and their future in a career
  • Develop a workforce development program in partnership with Boston Public Schools and higher education institutions to expand access to underrepresented careers to increase racial, ethnic, and linguistic diversity

BPS Athletics

As an East Boston High School softball coach and a mother of four boys participating in BPS athletic programs, Annissa understands the true educational value of sports for our students. The skills needed to succeed are developed when our students participate in sports. Attributes like teamwork, dealing with adversity, a strong work ethic and dedication will help our students achieve their goals in the classroom and beyond. As Mayor, Annissa will work to ensure strong participation, equity, and safety in BPS athletic programs. She will:

  • Strengthen and expand athletic programming to increase equitable access to athletic opportunities, equipment, publicity, instructors, and facilities throughout the district
  • Eliminate existing gender inequities and socioeconomic barriers by providing all students the opportunity to participate in BPS athletics programs
  • Support high quality coaching and ensure access to professional development and programs to deliver specialized instruction and training for coaches to support student-athletes
  • Increase funding for BPS athletic programs so that our students can successfully compete with help of quality equipment, coaches, and facilities – and make sure athletic facilities are part of the Build BPS Plan
  • Provide proper medical coverage at games across all seasons and expand access to physical examinations to address health inequities in our student population
  • Ensure safe and accessible transportation for every student in BPS to and from practices, competitions, games, and meets

Universal Child Care

Boston has been a leader in offering quality education for years, but many families are suffering when they can’t afford high quality early education and child care for their children. This is an important developmental period of a child’s life because they are forming academic and social skills that prepare them for kindergarten and beyond. Every child in Boston should have the opportunity to enroll in and attend a quality early education and care program, so as Mayor, Annissa will work to increase public investment to provide universal child care to Boston, and in the process, she will prioritize Boston’s lower-income and high-need families’ access to early education.

As Mayor, Annissa will:

  • Offer universal child care and early education to all children in Boston ages 0 to 5 by leveraging Commonwealth and community partnerships, City investment, federal block grants, social impact bonds, private providers and development funds
  • Fiercely advocate for the Commonwealth to implement the proposed Common Start framework that funds universal childcare through bedrock funding and family subsidies; and then build upon that framework to make child care a reality for all Boston families
  • Expand the use of the UPK curriculum to ensure that all classrooms are staffed with highly-trained and well-compensated teachers, culturally responsive and inclusive learning environments, and ongoing professional development for staff

Support our Early Educators

In Boston, and across the Commonwealth, there is now a shortage of qualified educators to serve in the field, making it challenging for programs to return to full capacity post pandemic. The teacher shortage is largely driven by the salaries paid to early educators which average $30,000 a year, 37% below their peers in the public school system. There are limited opportunities for continuing education in the early education space and the City has witnessed a decline in university programs specifically designed for this field. Further, teachers with an advanced degree are encouraged to take a teaching job in a higher grade level, because the benefits and salary are significantly improved. Highly-skilled teachers are leaving the sector because the jobs are not paying enough, and as a result, our children are left without opportunities. There are also many administrative and financial barriers that prevent qualified and enthusiastic teachers from opening their own child care centers. With this in mind, Annissa will implement thoughtful reforms that our early education teachers need to build a long, successful career educating the children of Boston and earn a living, while continuing to offer high quality care to the families in our community.

She will:

Create an Early Education Advisory Board

  • Put together a board of educators, providers, families and experts for the Early Education Advisory Board to create a two-way conversation between the City and the important early education stakeholders including community-based providers, home providers, and private providers
  • Appoint an Ombudsman to the Board to serve as an official that investigates and reviews individuals’ complaints with the system across disciplines, regularly convenes the sector, and be the point of contact for resources and services for families with children ages 0 to 5

Improve Educator Compensation and Benefits

  • Increase teacher compensation through public investment by taking advantage of all federal and state funding opportunities including the Child Care and Development Fund and the Preschool Development Grants Program
  • Support initiatives introduced by the Department of Early Education and Care to develop a more appropriate funding model for early education that recognizes the full cost of providing early education to our City’s youngest learners, particularly those at-risk
  • Prioritize professionalism and specialization in the early education field by recognizing that early education is its own highly skilled sector, and not just an adjunct of Boston Public Schools. It is a service of the economy that supports all families, and involves extremely intentional planning and teaching

Attract Enthusiastic and Qualified Educators

  • Provide Madison Park students with an opportunity to earn the Child Development Associate (CDA) Credential while simultaneously completing their high school requirements
  • Advocate for companies to offer college tuition reimbursement programs for Early Education and Care fields to offer their employees
  • Strengthen the Day Care Facility Requirement that requires proposed projects within certain zoning districts to include day care facilities as part of their building plans by creating facilities on site or elsewhere in the City

Build Capacity in High Quality Early Education

  • Offer assistance applying for grants to help providers with the cost of new facilities and the certification process
  • Organize free legal clinics to assist child care providers in growing their businesses in partnership with local lawyers
  • Incentivize developers to create space for early education programs in new buildings and identify city-owned land that can be used to make the cost of space less expensive
  • Give tax breaks to early education and child care providers that are building new early education facilities

Address the Seat Gap and Improve Support for Families

Long before our students enter the classroom, they are learning about the world and developing skills that will accompany them throughout childhood. This is why a quality early education and care is so important to our children, our families, and our City.

Unfortunately, many families struggle finding a program for their children because there are not enough seats in the city for every child. There are 900 center, family, and school-based providers in Boston that offer 29,000 seats and, as of 2017, Boston had almost 41,000 children that were ages 0 to 5. This leaves us with 12,000 children that do not have an early education option. It is even more difficult to find care for families that are living in poverty, experiencing homelessness, and incarceration—which is the case for about 27% of children in the city. Further, families are struggling to pay for early education. Massachusetts is the most expensive childcare state in the country. The seat gap in Boston is currently experiencing an all-time high because of the pandemic and we are seeing a further decline in accessible seats for children. (Source: 2019 Annual Report – State of Early Education and Care in Boston)

Boston’s child care supply crisis is further exacerbated due to COVID-19 pandemic. Before the pandemic hit our City, there were 679 early education programs, and by mid-February 2021 that number dropped to 573 programs. In Massachusetts alone, 755 childcare centers had to close their doors in 2020, according to the Department of Early Education and Care. (Source: BOA 2020 Early Education & Care Brief- Boston’s Child-Care Supply Crisis: What a Pandemic Reveals)

Annissa believes the City of Boston must invest in early education infrastructure as a public good, just as it does our roadways, health care, and parks. As Mayor, she will address this issue to ensure that every child in Boston has entry to an early education program that is high quality and accessible to all.

Annissa will:

Expand Funding Opportunities for Families

  • Advocate for Boston’s fair share of the Child Care and Development Fund (a federal and state partnership program authorized under the Child Care and Development Block Grant Act) used to provide financial assistance to low-income families to access child care so they can work or attend a job training or educational program
  • Maximize an income threshold for families to qualify for subsidies and vouchers to encourage enrollment in licensed early education programs in partnership with the State and local nonprofit agencies
  • Create a strong pipeline from early education programs to BPS for all students to ensure a clear path to a high quality public education

Improve Quality of Early Education

  • Make bold investments to improve the quality of early education, including funding for professional development, age appropriate curriculum, and for infrastructure for updated buildings, play areas and learning spaces
  • Ensure high quality interactions between our students and their teachers by supporting our educators and directing resources to the workforce
  • Create opportunities for collaboration between home providers, community-based providers, and private providers to promote knowledge sharing and networking that benefits Boston’s children

Increase Access to Early Education

  • Improve the BPS centralized application process to promote equity across the City and streamline the UPK enrollment process to remove barriers for families
  • Update the Early Education program waitlist process by creating an online portal so families can view their spot in line, making adjustments for the non-refundable deposit for families receiving subsidies, and advocating the State for increased funding
  • Offer full-day program opportunities for children through the UPK system in the interest of family members with non-traditional work schedules; make additional significant investments in family-based care and community-based programs to grow beyond to non-traditional hours
  • Partner with The Boston Family Engagement Networks to connect families with resources and guidance
  • Update the Childcare Initiatives website to connect Boston families with early education resources available in many languages, including seat openings, and funding opportunities like subsidies, grants and vouchers
  • Define and improve data collection practices to continue to monitor the ongoing seat gap in Boston

Encourage Families to Enroll in Licensed Programs and Engage in Early Education Practices

  • Create and invest in a public awareness campaign about the value of early education from a licensed program, particularly for the most vulnerable children and families
  • Encourage family engagement in early education and care programs through a variety of informational sessions, support and play groups, and parent-centered approaches and training. Celebrate the cultural differences among parenting styles through integration within the early education system

Improve City Services and Funding

The effects of quality early education touch every part of a community. By investing in these early stages of child development, Boston residents will reap the benefits for years to come. Children are more likely to graduate from high school, go on to earn degrees, and achieve their goals. High-quality early education is critical for family members because they are able to go to work, make a living and contribute to the City’s economy. It is a benefit that will incentivize families to move to Boston and build their homes, business, and livelihoods.

It should be a top priority for the City of Boston to make the investment in the future of our children and Annissa will take the following steps to fulfill that promise:

Address Issues of Funding

  • Recommend that the Department of Early Education and Care reassess their regional allocation for the first time in 10 years to ensure up-to-date funding and reimbursement rates that reflect current market reality
  • Advocate for the Department of Early Education and Care’s funding structure to be adjusted from attendance-based funding to capacity-based funding. The current system provides funding established per child per day and consequently providers are only paid when children attend. This attendance-based funding contributes to a systematic socioeconomic gap in early education, because children living in poverty have a much higher rate of absenteeism and their providers will receive less funding leading to lower quality care. Reasonable approaches might include funding per classroom rather than per child; a model based on capacity that allows for fluctuations in enrollment which is typical in these settings. Offering stable, predictable funds to providers will result in stable, high-quality early education and care for families
  • Promote fair resource allocation to early education programs by addressing funding inequalities and public perceptions of early education programs
  • Leverage Social Impact Bonds through a partnership with impact investors to fund early education programs through performance-based contracts
  • Promote employer-sponsored options for early education programs to be included in Boston’s corporation’s benefits structure through stipends and Flexible Spending Accounts (FSA)

A Quick Note from Annissa

This plan has been informed and developed by local advocates and stakeholders on my policy committees, and most importantly, Boston residents who were gracious enough to share their thoughts, ideas and experiences at my town halls, through emails and phone calls, and even in line at the grocery store. Thank you to all.

My public policy plans are living, breathing documents that are never fully finished—and that’s how it should be. I welcome additional thoughts and feedback, and as your Mayor, will continue to ensure that you and every other resident in this city has a seat at the table.

There’s a lot to do. Let’s do the hard work, together.

To provide feedback, thoughts and ideas on this plan, initiatives or other public policy issues, please do not hesitate to reach out to [email protected].

Equity, Inclusion & Justice

“I believe in a Boston that sees the inequities and everyday injustices and tackles them head on.”

As Mayor of Boston, I will ensure that Boston is intentional in rooting out inequity and dismantling racism in our city–from education and housing, to climate and health care, and even how and when potholes are filled and sidewalks are fixed.

As I stated when I first announced my candidacy, I believe in a Boston that sees the inequities and everyday injustices and tackles them head on. I will not shy away from the tough conversations and hard work that need to happen in order to build a better city for all who call Boston home.

This process and plan underscores my commitment to be intentional in my words and actions to name and eradicate racism and discrimination in city business, policies, and initiatives, and be deliberate in ensuring that Black and brown, immigrant and refugee, women, working class, LGBTQIA+ and marginalized communities, as well as the voices of those aging and with disabilities, are heard and elevated.

Make no mistake, I fully recognize that I will—and need to—be constantly learning in this space. Creating a more equitable, inclusive and just Boston will be a charge in which I will intentionally and deliberately work towards every day.

That being said, to better understand the everyday, systemic barriers that are placed in front of our disenfranchised communities, I will choose to listen and learn from those who have the lived experiences to inform this fight. I will continue to build a diverse group of advisors to help educate and guide decisions.

This plan is nowhere near finished. It will be a constant work in progress—as will I and my Administration—in building a better Boston for all. For all of those who have been living this fight and doing this work, thank you. I hope to amplify and build upon your work and your voices. For everyone else, I hope you join me. This will take all of us.

If you would like to contribute to this plan, provide feedback, or have a conversation on how I can do better, please do not hesitate to reach out to me at [email protected].

Inclusive & Thoughtful Growth

“Inclusive, thoughtful growth and master planning is what will build better, stronger, more resilient neighborhoods across our entire city.” As Mayor of Boston, Annissa will ensure that equity, transparency, and accountability are at the forefront of the conversation around planning and development.

Development should not benefit a chosen few and push people out, instead Annissa believes we must leverage development to create better connected, mixed-use, mixed-income neighborhoods. By constructing more affordable housing, community space, green space, and job centers throughout our city, we use development to lift up all of Boston. Annissa will leverage the tools created by Boston’s building boom for public good—harnessing new development so that our communities reap the benefits.

Annissa recognizes that the current development process has left many residents and communities behind. Creating more predictable processes and timelines better enables Bostonians to contribute to the stabilization, strengthening, and growth of their city. Annissa will listen and respond to residents’ voices during every step of the development process, understanding that development – and the development process – is not a one-size-fits all neighborhood system. Our residents should help drive the process of shaping their streets, their neighborhoods and their city.


As Mayor, Annissa will:

  • Make sure our public process works for everyone. From virtual meetings to online forums, COVID-19 has dramatically shifted the City’s public processes. But Annissa understands the system was broken well before the pandemic, and it is not just about where and when public meetings are held, but who is seated at the table, what language they’re speaking, and how they follow up with the community. On the City Council, Annissa has filed orders to streamline the public process, expediting when we notify the community about public meetings and increasing the amount of information that is available to residents about who and what is shaping our skyline by creating a public developer database.
  • Make Boston affordable for everyone. Annissa knows that if we want Boston to thrive, we must make our city a place where everyone can afford to live. Annissa will work to create more affordable housing and increase the amount of family-sized units across the city.
  • Continue fighting for state legislation to make the City of Boston’s procurement process more equitable and giving women and minority-owned businesses the opportunity to compete for more public contracts.
  • Use development dollars for public good. Annissa knows that Boston can leverage its development boom to directly benefit our residents, when done correctly. Annissa will lead through close coordination and oversight with communities to ensure that funding from development is going directly to our residents and our neighborhoods for job training programs, affordable housing, climate mitigation, public transit improvements, and more.
  • Be a fierce advocate for the federal and states programs and funding to subsidize low-income housing, amend AMI standards to better reflect the realities of our residents, and utilize development funds to build more middle-income housing.

Housing & Homelessness

“Boston’s residents are struggling to pay rent, our families can’t find or afford stable housing, and too many individuals are experiencing chronic homelessness. COVID-19 has only emphasized these realities, and their effects will last long after the pandemic.”

HOUSING AND HOMELESSNESS

As Mayor, Annissa will make it possible for everyone to call Boston home. She will create better pathways to homeownership, relieve pressure in the market leading to higher rents, and build more affordable housing. Along with focusing on closing the wealth gap for Boston’s Black and brown residents, Annissa will prioritize establishing more connected neighborhoods by building affordable housing close to job centers, public transit, and green space.

The COVID-19 pandemic has magnified the fragility of our housing market. As eviction moratoriums, mortgage forbearance programs, and stimulus funds end, we need to protect and to support at-risk populations and the housing stock they live in. To ensure a more equitable and stable future for all Bostonians, Annissa will take proactive measures to ensure housing stability through investments in foreclosure prevention programs to protect vulnerable tenants during this uncertain time.

Annissa realizes the urgent need for housing that is affordable for all families in every neighborhood. Though recent years have seen important changes in terms of housing supply in the city, Annissa is committed to doing the necessary work to expand our housing supply to meet the constant needs and realities of Boston’s families. In the last seven years, we have successfully increased the housing supply in the City after decades of little growth. As of October 2019, over 30,000 residential units had been permitted, with approiximately 10,000 more units approved by Boston Planning & Development Agency (BPDA) in 2020; however, Annissa realizes this is not enough.

Recognizing that our city is growing, and that more and more people want to live here every day, Annissa will fight to remove the serious obstacles in achieving this dream not only for our future residents, but for our current residents too. She will leverage new development to create better connected, mixed-use, mixed-income neighborhoods to build better, stronger, more resilient neighborhoods across our entire city.

Throughout her time on the City Council, and as the founder of the Boston City Council’s Committee on Homelessness, Mental Health and Recovery, Annissa has been a fierce champion for families experiencing homelessness. She has pledged to end family homelessness in Boston and will continue to fight for our children, families, veterans, older adults, and others experiencing housing instability as Mayor. She will prioritize prevention efforts, address and repair gaps in the service delivery system, coordinate and align resources across the continuum of care and make the housing search less burdensome for families in Boston.

CREATING AN AFFORDABLE CITY FOR ALL WHO CALL BOSTON HOME

Affordability and accessibility of both rental units and homes for sale is key for a thriving city. We need to ensure that everyone who wants to call Boston home has the opportunity, option and a pathway to ownership to do so. We must start by building more housing and ensuring what we build is actually affordable for Boston’s residents.

Our housing stock must also be a reflection of the needs of our residents. While Annissa is committed to increasing affordability across the board, her main focus is to create housing for the many residents and families that don’t qualify for subsidized housing, but still cannot afford to pay market rate. This large gap is giving low to middle income families no choice but to leave the city. We need affordable, multi-bedroom housing for our families and we need to push developers to build it.

Alongside building with our families in mind, Boston also needs congregate housing, artists’ live and work space, workforce housing, and senior housing, including housing for those who identify as LGBTQIA+ or older residents with disabilities.

As Mayor, Annissa is committed to increasing homeownership in the City, with a particular focus on improving access for historically underserved communities. Annissa will break cycles of systemic racism and to aid in building generational wealth and pathways to homeownership for marginalized populations in Boston. Since the housing crash of 2008, Boston has lost ground in creating homeownership opportunities; this reality is exacerbated by race, as the City has one of the largest racial homeownership gaps in the country. In order to increase long term stability in our housing market, it is important to create more permanent pathways to homeownership and to the generational wealth that comes from owning a home.

In order to address the affordable housing crisis and the racial wealth gap, we need to make sure our investments in affordable rental units and homeownership units are aligned. Many of the residents in our City-funded rental units are paying about 70 percent of Area Median Income (AMI), which equates to $1,400 a month for a one bedroom unit. In many instances, that would equate to a monthly mortgage payment, so we must ensure that homeownership is accessible and residents are aware of the City tools and resources that are at their disposal when exploring housing options.

As Mayor, Annissa will:

Increase our housing supply to ensure it reflects the realities of Boston’s residents; and develop and expand tools and resources to keep and make existing housing affordable

  • Re-invigorate the Housing Innovation Lab to bring the brightest and most innovative ideas to scale. Boston’s Housing Innovation Lab encourages cross-industry collaboration and places the needs of residents at the center of its work, and we should continue to encourage this type of intentional problem solving.
  • Leverage city resources and assets to create housing that is affordable for everyone. This includes laying out a clear strategy for using surplus land to build additional deeply affordable homes.
  • Maximize the use of existing Boston Housing Authority (BHA) land by bringing back all out-of-service public housing units to increase affordable housing supply.
  • Require Planned Unit Developments to provide a greater mix of affordable housing types in order to be granted their requested zoning relief.
  • Explore amending and updating the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s (HUD) AMI standard for Boston to better reflect the income of the many residents who need more affordable housing.
  • Leverage the recently announced City of Boston Voucher Program (CBVP) in connection to other components of her housing agenda, such as providing $2.5 million funding in the 2021 budget for locally funded rental voucher programs to expand housing opportunities for city’s most vulnerable populations.
  • Preserve restricted housing that is at risk due to expiring use while also supporting anti-displacement strategies for “naturally occurring” affordable housing. This includes the current acquisition program that helps affordable housing developers buy buildings that have been affordable in the market but are at risk.
  • Enhance the existing housing fund by making it more flexible and nimble to respond to compete with private market developers.
  • Continue to monitor the effect college and university students have on our rental market while requiring these institutions to provide both dorm housing on their campuses and affordable housing in their communities during institutional master planning.
  • Support efforts to create community land trusts as a tool to address Boston’s housing crisis by preserving affordable housing and enabling creative, community controlled methods to strengthen our neighborhoods.

Create better pathways to homeownership, especially for Boston’s historically underserved populations and communities

She will:

  • Create opportunities for affordable homeownership for households of color. This includes supporting innovative efforts to specifically target and engage communities impacted by Boston’s history of discriminatory homeownership policies.
  • Continue to invest in and support the success of ONE+ Boston initiative launched in June 2020 by the City of Boston and Massachusetts Housing Partnership. The ONE+ Boston program provides even lower interest rates and enhanced down payment assistance for first-time buyers in Boston.
  • Invest in successful matched savings programs that enable first-generation homebuyers to afford the costs associated with purchasing a house, including doubling the City’s commitment of $325,000 to the Massachusetts Affordable Housing Alliance’s STASH program and laying the groundwork to reach $1 million on Day One of her administration.
  • Consider deeper subsidy programs, including better renovation components, to help people buy our existing housing stock, particularly in high cost neighborhoods. The City can use deed restrictions in these neighborhoods to permanently set aside some existing housing to be owner occupied and affordable.
  • Develop less restrictive deeds and generous shares equity programs to allow for wealth creation and incentivize homeownership in neighborhoods that have suffered significantly from redlining and disinvestment.
  • Invest more in the Boston Home Center and our first time homebuyer programs, to not only prepare home buyers looking to purchase their first homes, but also the opportunity to purchase by qualifying to make a below average down payment and lower monthly mortgage rates.

Leverage development to benefit residents and our neighborhoods

Annissa will:

  • Offer density and zoning bonuses to incentivize projects for more deeply affordable homes and larger units. This can be done by increasing IDP to 20 percent from 13 percent. An anti-speculation tax should also be implemented in order to discourage investors from buying units and leaving them empty.
  • Consistently assess Boston’s Linkage fees alongside developers, community members and advocates to explore opportunities to increase Linkage and ensure these rates are more closely aligned with market conditions
  • Implement an expedited zoning approval process for projects that are centered around increased affordability and variety.
  • Create a local Community Reinvestment Act that rewards Boston lending institutions that support affordable housing.
  • Incentivize developers to build more homeownership-focused housing. These can include density bonuses and other zoning incentives, as well as increased subsidy and a streamlined approval process.

MAKING THE PLANNING, DEVELOPMENT AND BUILDING PROCESSES OF HOUSING MORE ACCESSIBLE AND TRANSPARENT

For our city to grow and thrive, we need to leverage new development to create better connected, mixed-use, mixed-income neighborhoods. Inclusive, thoughtful growth and master planning is what will build better, stronger, more resilient neighborhoods across our entire city.

Annissa recognizes that the current development process has left many residents and communities behind. She will listen and respond to residents’ voices during every step of the development process, understanding that development – and the process behind it – is not a one-size-fits all system. Our residents should help drive the process of shaping their streets, their neighborhoods and their city.

The City of Boston’s planning, development and building processes must be more accessible and transparent to ensure that any growth or change lifts up our neighborhoods and its people. Annissa will prioritize planning that addresses the needs and wants of Boston’s specific neighborhoods and communities, while also carrying out an overall, cohesive city-wide vision for growth.

From conducting more thorough outreach to neighborhoods ahead of community meetings, to making our development and zoning processes more consistent and predictable, to creating a planning office separate from the BPDA, Annissa is determined to make the City’s processes more streamlined, understandable, and inclusive.

As Mayor, Annissa will:

  • Establish a planning office independent of BPDA that is dedicated to the forward-thinking and inclusive development of our city.
  • Create a Chief who would have authority over the Department of Neighborhood Development (DND), Inspectional Services Department (ISD) and BPDA and make sure all agencies are coordinated in achieving housing goals.
  • Build an office dedicated to institutional compliance and transparency to ensure equity for the tax paying residents of Boston.
  • Facilitate smarter connections between these agencies so that planning, zoning, permitting, funding, and building are coordinated to promote Boston’s affordable housing agenda.
  • Reconvene the Payment in Lieu of Taxes (PILOT) Task Force and update existing PILOT agreements to ensure that Boston’s nonprofits are contributing to equitable growth in our city.
  • Update and streamline Boston’s decades old zoning processes to be more transparent, equitable and better align with our city’s housing needs as well as the needs of Boston’s residents
  • Set up a texting and email notification program for residents to opt-into being notified when neighborhood development meetings are being held in their area.
  • Audit our city’s existing residential units, continuing her work on the City Council, to understand what units we have and what units we need to equitably house our residents and more proactively shape and plan our neighborhoods.
  • Continue fighting for state legislation to make the City of Boston’s procurement process more equitable and giving women and minority-owned businesses the opportunity to compete for more public contracts.
  • Lead through close coordination and oversight with communities to ensure funding from development is going directly to our residents and our neighborhoods for job training programs, affordable housing, climate mitigation, public transit improvements, and more.

ENSURE HOUSING STABILITY THROUGH EXPANDING INFRASTRUCTURE, AND FIGHTING AGAINST DISPLACEMENT AND DISCRIMINATION

Annissa is committed to crafting intentional and mindful approaches to managing the impact of COVID-19 on housing access in Boston. The COVID-19 pandemic has magnified the fragility of our housing market. As eviction moratoriums, mortgage forbearance programs, and stimulus funds end, we need to protect and to support at-risk populations and the housing stock they live in. To ensure a more equitable and stable future for all Bostonians, Annissa will take proactive measures to ensure housing stability through investments in foreclosure prevention programs to protect vulnerable tenants during this uncertain time. She will also evaluate existing affordable housing developments, including the Boston Housing Authority, to make sure their eviction prevention programs are adequate and reflective of the challenging reality of today. Annissa will approach policy solutions with a mind towards equity and stability for all Bostonians.

To better assist and support our city’s tenants, we need to expand and strengthen the City of Boston’s Office of Housing Stability and its programming and take proactive measures to ensure housing stability for all in Boston.

As Mayor, Annissa will

  • Invest in staffing and infrastructure on the community level geared to reach people before rent and or mortgage arrears become an insurmountable problem.
  • Enhance outreach programs on the community level to make sure we can intervene quickly while utilizing the existing entities that people trust in our neighborhoods.
  • Supplement arrearage programs with additional funds and focus on tenants who are falling through the cracks of the traditional programs. This includes a focus on making programs easy to access and nimble.
  • Encourage mediation between tenants and landlords to avoid unnecessary legal action. Effective mediation results can include solutions such as reasonable payment plans instead of eviction.
  • Continue to ramp up eviction prevention programs that come out of the court system so that we can prevent an eviction, even if it is already in the court.
  • Evaluate existing affordable housing developments including BHA to make sure their eviction prevention programs are adequate.
  • Advocate for the Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act and create partnerships with existing lenders to make rent-to-own programs more accessible.
  • Push for dedicated investments in public housing and extremely low-income housing and improve measures to prevent race-based, sexual orientation based, and income-based voucher discriminatory behavior

Reorganize and enhance the City of Boston’s Fair Housing Commission

  • Dedicate greater resources to the Fair Housing Commission to ensure that it can adequately review all housing activity supported by the City through a fair housing and equity lens.
  • Prevent vacancies in the affordable housing units for low and middle income familie by improving the application and lottery processes to ensure affordable units become occupied in a timely and efficient manner.
  • Empower the Boston Interagency Fair Housing Development Committee to implement the new zoning requirements in a way that is both efficient and enforceable.
  • Evaluate the current staffing of the Fair Housing Commission and commit to providing enough resources to enforce fair housing laws, particularly those related to discrimination in the rental voucher system.

Support our Aging Residents and their ability to age in their communities

Annissa realizes the importance of giving our aging residents the option to age in community. More must be done to encourage the creation of more senior-specific housing and ensure that those who have made Boston their home can stay here. Boston’s older residents are often forced to give up their longstanding social ties to communities as a result of a lack of financial access. Our neighborhoods are made better by their presence, and we must support residents to age in the community they call home by creating more secure and accessible affordable housing options, including housing for older residents who identify as LGBTQIA+ or older residents with disabilities.

As Mayor, Annissa will:

  • Commission the City’s first Senior Supportive Housing Task Force to set a clear plan and strategy for the development of senior supportive housing.
  • Innovate to make tax credit rents more accessible to order adults. Tax credit rents (i.e. Low Income Housing Tax Credit or LIHTC) for seniors are set at a level which require seniors to have assets in order to be able to afford them, and social security alone will not suffice. Boston can and should be a leader in innovations to take stress off of LIHTC residents so that they can afford the cost of care as they age.
  • Ensure that senior supportive housing has care services baked in so older residents are able to stay in their home and easily access the care they require as they age.

HOMELESSNESS

END HOMELESSNESS IN BOSTON

As Mayor, Annissa will continue to build upon her work on the City Council to end homelessness for Boston’s veterans, youth and young adults, older adults, and families. As the founder of the Boston City Council’s Committee on Homelessness, Mental Health, and Recovery, Annissa has a deep understanding of the reality of homelessness in our city, and she is dedicated to finding substantive and meaningful long-term solutions for Boston’s residents and families.

Given her deep commitment and her experience-based understanding of the importance of access to stable and safe housing in shaping the futures of families, Annissa is uniquely well-suited to address the ongoing family housing crisis in Boston. In particular, she understands the impact of housing instability on children’s well-being and is determined to ensure that children have consistent housing so that they can thrive, educationally, emotionally, and socially.

She will:

Prioritize prevention to catch residents at risk of homelessness before they become homeless

  • Strengthen social work services and bolster McKinney-Vento resources in Boston Public Schools.
  • Invest in early childhood education programs and training for educators to respond to students and families facing housing instability.
  • Ensure early childhood education access for all young children experiencing homelessness in Boston so parents can access workforce development and training opportunities during the day.

Aggressively address systemic breakdowns in our service delivery system for children and families experiencing homelessness

  • Reconvene the Commission to End Family Homelessness.
  • Create a coordinated, aligned data collection warehouse that accurately captures the state of homelessness and allows providers to track people within their system, between other agencies and other providers, including with Homeless Management Information System (HMIS) and Department of Transitional Assistance (DTA). The data collection and transparency would ensure agencies and providers are able to review data, collectively, across the city in order to input data, access data, and identify any gaps in a person’s or family’s services suite.
  • Create preferences for families experiencing homeless in determining access to services/housing. Preference should also be applied to MA Department of Housing and Community Development, public housing programs, BHA, MA Rental Voucher Program, and/or there should be a rule set for the ratio of individuals and families to be housed in a given development.

Resource realignment

  • Create a cross-sector investment and program delivery strategy to increase supportive housing resources for residents at the intersection of homelessness, high behavioral health needs, and criminal justice involvement.
  • Leverage MassHealth covered services for individuals experiencing homelessness to create a sustainable funding stream for our most vulnerable children and families. These services allow families to thrive within their communities and stay stably housed.
  • Establish a flexible housing and services subsidy pool to mirror the efforts seen at the state level.
  • Align, prioritize, and coordinate resources for families experiencing homelessness, especially for people of color across the continuum of care.
  • Connect families who have been stuck in the system to the services they need all in one day. Representatives of all the services and departments that touch family homelessness should be in the same room to match families to housing and services.

Make the housing search easier and more accessible

  • Make the housing search less burdensome by expanding the Coordinated Entry System to families in Boston.
  • Create a clearinghouse for where to find affordable housing opportunities, and bring small landlords and property owners into the discussion.
  • Ensure the efficacy of BHA’s Expanding Choice and Housing Opportunities (ECHO) housing search system and invest adequate resources to keep the system current and to open it to the broader universe to support low- and moderate-income families and individuals.

A Quick Note from Annissa

This plan has been informed and developed by local advocates and stakeholders on my policy committees, and most importantly, Boston residents who were gracious enough to share their thoughts, ideas and experiences at my town halls, through emails and phone calls, and even in line at the grocery store. Thank you to all.

My public policy plans are living, breathing documents that are never fully finished—and that’s how it should be. I welcome additional thoughts and feedback, and as your Mayor, will continue to ensure that you and every other resident in this city has a seat at the table.

There’s a lot to do. Let’s do the hard work, together.

To provide feedback, thoughts and ideas on this plan, initiatives or other public policy issues, please do not hesitate to reach out to [email protected].

Public Health

“And while Boston is an incredible place to call home, COVID has shone a bright light on our shortcomings and disparities.”

Annissa’s plan for a healthier Boston is one that increases access to care, but also tackles the inequities that determine our health outcomes. From air quality to access to healthy foods, gun violence to maternal health, open green space to reliable transportation options, these all—and much more—contribute to the health of our city and its residents.

By utilizing our leading Community Health Center infrastructure and hospitals, advocating for mental health access, getting every Boston resident a primary care provider and improving the quality of life in our neighborhoods, Annissa will fight day after day to ensure every resident in Boston is safe, happy and healthy.

Annissa’s public health plan is centered around the community health care model. Throughout her time on the Boston City Council and as the longest serving Board member of her neighborhood health center, the Dorchester House Health Center, Annissa knows the critical role Community Health Centers (CHCs) play in the health of Boston. In addition to providing primary care, CHCs provide comprehensive community services to address food insecurity, housing instability, behavioral health, immigration support, and other social determinants of health.

Because along with a lack of coverage and care for too many, there are persistent racial inequities that plague our systems and everyday lives in this city–all leading to disparate health outcomes dependent on race, ethnicity, gender, and the neighborhood in which you live. As community led institutions, CHCs are uniquely positioned to combat these, provide culturally competent care, and improve the health of all Bostonians.

As our city copes with the devastation and loss of the COVID-19 pandemic, Annissa believes a true mental and behavioral health crisis is imminent and that we must be prepared to combat it. Having always recognized that mental health and recovery services are an integral part of keeping Boston’s families healthy, she has long been a leader in the fight for greater access to mental and behavioral health services. Annissa will prioritize access to mental and behavioral health services for all, improve school-based services, combat stigma, increase availability of treatment options across the recovery spectrum, decentralize recovery services, continue to expand on the regional response to the opioid crisis, as well as reopen and reimagine the Long Island Recovery Campus.

The Boston Public Health Commission is the oldest health department in the United States and Annissa believes that it should be a proud asset of the City of Boston. The Commission’s goal is to make recommendations that inform health care access and delivery to every resident in the city. Unfortunately, as mentioned above, too many Bostonians are unable to get appropriate health care based on their neighborhood and many struggle to make their voices heard. Annissa believes that the Commission should be responsive to the unique needs of Boston’s health care system by improving access to primary and specialty care services, and promoting an equitable geographic distribution of care. Given the urgency of the pandemic and subsequent recovery, the BPHC desperately needs bold reform, complete transparency and accountability to the residents of Boston.

COVID-19 Recovery: Lessons Learned and Building Something Better

COVID-19 has affected nearly every aspect of our lives, our economy, and our public health systems. The next Mayor will need the leadership to not only see our city through an immediate recovery, but a long-term vision to help Boston through this next chapter and build a stronger and more accessible health care system.

This pandemic has made it perfectly clear: our health care system, even in the world-class city of Boston, is broken. Too many of our most vulnerable residents are left out and left behind. As Mayor, Annissa will center these communities in the fight to rebuild a better system for all.

Annissa will not only work to restore the health of all Bostonians and decrease disparities, but rebuild trust in our public health infrastructure, develop a systematic approach to public health emergencies, and ensure state and federal funding directly benefits the institutions, organizations and residents who need it most. As Mayor, Annissa will:

  • Develop an urgent and systematic approach to public health emergencies by building a Public Health Emergency Team to analyze data and review outcomes to create an action plan for Boston use for both small and large scale, future public health emergencies. This plan will include best practices for disseminating information to reach all residents, best practices to control outbreaks and stop the spread, and how to best deploy contact tracing methods, testing, and vaccinations
  • Avoid a “one size fits all” approach to health care by implementing programs and practices that target our more vulnerable residents, and focus on how, when, and why populations engage with our system and increase positive outcomes from that engagement
  • Fight to remove barriers that have historically prevented BIPOC, LGBTQIA+, lower-income and other marginalized groups from accessing and utilizing Boston’s health care system
  • Strengthen the City’s relationships with our Community Health Centers that continue to be a trusted part of the neighborhoods they serve to provide accurate and culturally sensitive information
  • Analyze race, ethnicity, and socio-demographic data in Boston related to COVID-19 to continue to recover from this pandemic and better prepare for future public health emergencies
  • Recognize that public health emergencies will persist unless we ensure equitable housing policies, investments in public schools, economic justice, and universal access to health care
  • Ensure that Boston receives its fair share of state and federal grants and relief packages, and that all those that qualify for funding and support have the information and resources they need to access and utilize these programs

A Community-Driven Approach

Annissa believes that access to high quality, affordable health care should not be a privilege enjoyed by the few, but must be a fundamental right enjoyed by all. Improving care requires facilities and providers to work together with the City of Boston and other relevant agencies to expand access, increase quality and reduce disparities.

Annissa’s vision for public health will be centered around the community health care model.

As community led institutions, our community health centers are uniquely positioned to combat systemic barriers to health equity and reduce racial socioeconomic health disparities. In addition to providing primary care, they provide comprehensive community services to address food insecurity, housing instability, behavioral health, immigration support, and other social determinants of health.

Support Our Community Health Centers and Invest in Boston’s Health Care Workforce

Annissa will establish community health care centers as the foundation of Boston’s health care system to achieve equity for all Boston residents. Not only do they provide primary care and preventative services, but they also play a critical role in the holistic health of individuals in our city. From meeting language needs to hosting tax workshops, sponsoring senior yoga classes to helping to house homeless individuals and families, community based care centers deliver for Boston’s neighborhoods and Annissa will leverage their strength to build a stronger, more equitable health care system.

As Mayor, Annissa will give them the necessary support in order to continue providing the best possible care to our most vulnerable residents. These institutions have worked hard to build trust within the communities they serve and they will be critical partners in our work to increase access to care across all of Boston.

As the longest serving board member and lifelong patient of her local community health center, Annissa knows first hand the important role our community health centers have in delivering high quality care to underserved communities.

With Annissa in City Hall, community health centers will form the foundation of all public health initiatives, priorities, and the overall agenda for the City. By establishing community health centers as the City’s public health infrastructure, Annissa will ensure every resident has access to low-cost, high quality healthcare with racial, ethnic, and linguistic diversity.

To deliver the best care, build trust and relationships in our neighborhoods, and reduce disparities and inequitable outcomes across the city, we must better invest and grow Boston’s health care workforce.

From providing better educational opportunities to increasing partnerships between institutions and our community health organizations, we have the ability to build a stronger and more diverse workforce that reflects the communities it serves. Integrating culturally competent care across the entire spectrum of care, will lead to increased engagement and better outcomes. As Mayor, Annissa will:

  • Review existing funding streams for community health centers at the city level and dedicate funding through the City’s budget process to support health center initiatives
  • Establish and invest in broader referral patterns between community health centers and City agencies, especially our public schools, our senior centers and City Hall
  • Launch a public awareness campaign in partnership with community health centers to increase transparency and awareness of available public health resources
  • Streamline connection to services by creating a public healthcare directory through 311
  • Develop a workforce development program in partnership with Boston Public Schools and higher education institutions to expand access to health care providers with racial, ethnic, and linguistic diversity
  • Improve existing incentives for community health centers and other small Community Based Organizations to recruit and retain a robust and diverse workforce
  • Focus on preventative care by advertising early and often screenings, promoting vaccines, and being a loud advocate for counseling
  • Invest in and expand mobile health care resources like the Office of Food Access’ mobile food pantry, health care vans, and community screenings
  • Work with state and federal partners to help increase access to housing opportunities for health care workers to be able to live in the communities they serve.

Focusing on the Social Determinants of Health

Annissa’s vision for a healthier Boston is one that increases access to care, but also tackles the inequities that determine our health outcomes. From air quality to access to healthy foods, gun violence to housing, open green space to reliable transportation options, these all—and so very more—contribute to the health of our city and its residents. As Mayor, Annissa will:

  • Ensure that the Boston Public Health Commission and relevant partners conduct outreach efforts intentionally targeted to reach populations disproportionately affected by poor health outcomes, including communities of color, by visiting neighborhoods to meet residents where they are and communicating information in multiple languages
  • Mitigate environmental injustices in Boston’s frontline communities, including addressing how air pollution affects residents living under flight paths, protecting our coastal neighborhoods from sea-level rise and flooding, improving public transit to encourage ridership, and growing our tree canopy
  • Reduce Boston’s carbon emissions related to buildings by addressing energy efficiency standards for new and existing buildings in the municipal, residential, and commercial sectors
  • Invest in our open green spaces, find and create more green space in our neighborhoods, and ensure equitable care and investments in public green space across the city. All Boston residents deserve to be a ten minute walk from a park, Annissa will build on this promise and prioritize investments in our parks within our low-income communities and communities of color
  • Combat food insecurity by strengthening the Mayor’s Office of Food Access to fight for more healthy, fresh food to be available and affordable, and coordinate efforts with leading advocates and organizations
  • Create women-specific programming for the increasing number of unsheltered women who are struggling with substance use disorder and victimized by human trafficking
  • Tackle the barriers to wealth building for communities of color and women including educational opportunities, small business loans and access to capital, equitable transportation options, and affordable housing
  • Continue to grow and expand the City of Boston’s free community college and workforce training programs to increase access to postsecondary education options for all of Boston’s students
  • Build upon the work of the Mayor’s Office of Women’s Advancement to eliminate the wage gap, make childcare more accessible and affordable, and provide more opportunity for entrepreneurship
  • Bridge the gap between job centers and our neighborhoods by encouraging growth in our Main Streets districts across the city, bettering reliable transportation to and from these areas, and increasing surrounding affordable housing options
  • Break cycles of systemic racism in our housing system. Boston’s housing market has disproportionately excluded communities of color. Annissa believes that safe, stable, and affordable housing is a right for all of Boston’s residents. She will work to reform these systems to ensure we have housing for all and establish greater pathways to homeownership particularly for Black and brown families
  • Support our seniors to age in the community they call home by creating more secure and accessible affordable housing options, including housing for older residents who identify as LGBTQIA+ or older residents with disabilities

Mental and Behavioral Health

Despite the growing demand for mental health services, Boston lacks sufficient and adequate resources to ensure access to treatment. The shortage of service providers and high cost of treatment have created systemic barriers in our healthcare system. Within the population of individuals not receiving behavioral health services, 40% cite cost as the primary obstacle. In fact, insurance and Medicaid reimbursement for mental health services are so low that more than half of behavioral health providers do not accept insurance. These barriers disproportionately impact low income and underserved communities who face greater conditions of trauma, depression, violence, poverty and substance use disorders.

With the added pressure of the COVID-19 pandemic, the crisis of homelessness, mental health, and recovery presents one of the greatest challenges for our city. As the number of individuals suffering from addiction continues to skyrocket, Boston-based providers have expressed the need for a minimum of 2,500 additional long-term recovery beds statewide to adequately meet the demand for recovery services. These providers estimate that for every single long-term recovery bed, there is a waiting list of 30 individuals seeking access to the services that one bed can provide. The severity of this shortage is best demonstrated by the fact that the City has replaced every recovery bed from Long Island and we still lack sufficient capacity to meet the demand for services.

Annissa will improve access to mental and behavioral health services for all, improve school-based services, combat stigma, increase availability of treatment options across the recovery spectrum, decentralize recovery services, continue to expand on the regional response to the opioid crisis, as well as reopen and reimagine the Long Island Recovery Campus. As Mayor, Annissa will strengthen and increase mental health services and programs for Boston residents. She will:

  • Create an Interagency Mental Health Commission within the City of Boston composed of City officials and mental health providers to serve as an advisory group to the Mayor on initiatives and methods to promote mental well-being, increase access to high quality care, and address structural determinants of mental health. As an independent body, the Commission will regularly submit policy recommendations to improve access to mental health services in the City of Boston
  • Align with state investments in behavioral health and increase community health center access to the state’s Roadmap for Behavioral Health, a state initiative that addresses the need for expanded and effective treatment and improved health equity by creating a centralized service that connects people to treatment resources and reforms outpatient treatment to be more accessible
  • Streamline crisis services and create an emergency Mental Health Hotline to better support individuals and families experiencing mental health crises
  • Increase remote and telehealth mental health providers to increase access to services, particularly for our more vulnerable including communities of color, low-income and older residents
  • Create a city-wide database of providers and their specialty, and generate a mapping of clinical assets in Boston, including a centralized database that shows bed availability to improve access to mental health beds after discharge from Emergency Departments
  • Fight to decriminalize poverty, mental illness, and homelessness and implement cross- department and agency best practices and initiatives to adequately and efficiently help our most vulnerable residents
  • Develop greater collaboration between community health centers, local non-profits, and other stakeholders to improve mental health access at the community level
  • Continue prioritizing funding Boston Emergency Services Team (B.E.S.T.) clinicians to work with our first responders to ensure that we appropriately and adequately respond to all calls for help
  • Review requirements and structure of Neighborhood Trauma Teams (NTTs), expand available funding for community based trauma services, and increase efforts to immediately deploy NTTs to communities after tragedy
  • Improve community education and outreach citywide so that all Boston residents better understand mental and behavioral health and are made aware of resources available to them
  • Place a mental health clinician in every one of the City of Boston’s homeless shelters around the clock to facilitate engagement in services

Mental Health Services for Children and School Based Mental Health

With children spending more than half of their waking hours in schools, our school system must facilitate access to the necessary mental and behavioral health supports for our kids. The impact of the pandemic and school closures has created a sharp increase in the demand for mental health services for adolescents and young people. While hopeful the pandemic is coming to an end, Annissa believes that we must prioritize outreach and investments to address the mental health of our kids. As Mayor, Annissa will prioritize prevention and intervention services to ensure widely available mental health services for children in schools and community health centers. She will:

  • Ensure that every child has access to the school-based clinical services, resources, and programs they need to thrive, including universal behavioral health screenings, socio-emotional programming, and full time licensed behavioral health specialists in each school. Additional trauma informed training for school professionals must also be offered
  • Generate mapping of all clinical assets in schools and surrounding neighborhoods to inform residents of available resources, organizations, and programs
  • Establish better connections with graduate programs that place interns in schools and secure partnerships with universities that incentivize working in the Boston Public School system
  • Reduce turnover of mental health professionals in schools by improving both benefits for providers and better access to insurance reimbursement
  • Improve school access to Boston Emergency Services Team (B.E.S.T.) clinicians to help students in crisis
  • Create and invest in a public awareness campaign in communities about the school-based health centers (SBHCs) in the City as a means to increasing youth access to preventive and primary health care

Improving Recovery Services

Across the Commonwealth and the region, the City of Boston serves as the primary destination for support services for individuals in recovery. Due to the concentration of recovery services in Boston, our resources have reached their breaking point. The volume of services, compounded with the growth of the epidemic and the ever-changing substance combinations, exceed the capacity of our resources to combat the opioid crisis. Boston has demonstrated that a regional response is critical for a long-term and effective response to this crisis.

Harm reduction is a proven and successful way that many individuals are able to access and engage with long-term treatment. The City has committed year-over-year since 2015 to increases in the Bureau of Recovery Services budget to expand these and other life-saving services; however, as with recovery and treatment services, many of these initiatives have remained housed at the Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Cass Blvd area (Mass and Cass) and created barriers for patients, providers, local business owners, and local residents alike.

Annissa has been committed to harm reduction services and ongoing conversations about the Mass and Cass area since becoming an At-Large City Councilor in 2016. As Mayor, she will renew this commitment and take the necessary steps to decentralize services from Mass and Cass while creating safe and supportive additional services that share responsibility across Boston. Annissa will:

  • Direct the City Health & Human Services Cabinet Secretary to reconvene and rejuvenate the Mass Cass 2.0 Task Force to review the status of the plan, ability to continue implementation of certain aspects, and to develop a new approach that reflects the changes in healthcare due to the COVID-19 pandemic
  • Explore and ensure decentralization of the Mass and Cass area in a way that receives buy-in from communities seeking services and allows them to access services where they are while ensuring safety and livelihood of impacted neighborhoods
  • Improve communication between stakeholders to constantly exchange information and resource availability through an appointed “Mass and Cass Czar” embedded at the Boston Public Health Commission (BPHC) or other broader infrastructure support
  • Create a program of technical assistance and resource deployment run by the Bureau of Recovery Services (BRS) to work with community health centers to establish no less than 3 new Syringe Service Programs (SSPs) in strategic locations outside of the Mass Cass service area. These new SSPs will combine harm reduction and primary care to address the expansive needs of the populations they serve
  • Seek additional funding for the Bureau of Recovery Services to ensure that, at minimum, two Syringe Service Programs (SSP) in the City will have evening and weekend availability to clients
  • Direct the Boston Public Health Commission (BPHC) to develop a robust community engagement and education plan on harm reduction services and Syringe Service Programs (SSPs)
  • Create a city-level Consumer Advisory Board made up of individuals who are in long-term recovery and/or accessing harm reduction services as a means to continuously assess and revise plans and services through impacted communities’ lived experiences and perspectives
  • Create women-specific programming for the increasing number of unsheltered women who are struggling with substance use disorder and victimized by human trafficking

Transitioning, Reimagining and Reopening Long Island

The Long Island Shelter closed in October 2014 as a result of the structural deterioration of a bridge connecting Squantum, a neighborhood in the City of Quincy, with Moon Island and Long Island. The closure of the Long Island Shelter created a ripple effect that is still impacting the City of Boston almost 7 years later.

The impacts of this closure coupled with the opioid crisis has resulted in a sporadic and often disconnected web of recovery services throughout the City—with the epicenter of services at the Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Cass Boulevard area (Mass and Cass). The tremendous demand for services from across the Commonwealth has increased the number of individuals seeking recovery and treatment services in that area year after year, straining the overall recovery system and the surrounding neighborhoods.

Annissa believes we can reimagine and rebuild Long Island into a recovery services campus, addressing the needs of Commonwealth residents across the entire spectrum of care and successfully preparing them to live full, healthy lives after leaving the island. While this will take several years to complete, Annissa believes this long-term, capital investment will pay off dividends for Boston and the entire Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

As a longtime champion of access to life-saving recovery services and a strong proponent of increased mental health awareness across our City, Annissa is uniquely placed to lead the City forward on this issue through the following initiatives:

  • Continue to support city litigation to reopen the Long Island Campus as soon as possible and convene stakeholders on Day One as Mayor to begin laying the groundwork for a reopened and reimagined Long Island Campus as a priority capital investment
  • Convene stakeholders to establish a commission to build out programmatic components of the Long Island campus outside the direct realm of recovery, including housing opportunities, job training, health screenings, food access, and ongoing mental health services.
  • Work with the Boston delegation to the State Legislature, as well as leadership from surrounding cities and towns to petition the Governor to declare a State of Emergency in response to the Opioid Crisis
  • Expand upon the life-saving work of the Providing Access to Addictions Treatment, Hope and Support team (PAATHS) to create a centralized database for recovery services across the City, working in partnership with the Massachusetts Department of Public Health’s Bureau of Substance Abuse Services (BSAS) and other stakeholders to create a “recovery 311 line”
  • Collaborate with the Suffolk County Sheriff’s Office to expand the work of both state and local partners to create a more supportive and successful decarceration process that includes access to the social determinants of health, primary care, and other vital services
  • Preserve the nearly 500 shelter beds across the City created during the COVID-19 emergency to increase recovery service capacity, decentralize services from the Mass Cass Area, and guarantee stronger pathways to permanent and supportive housing as well as employment
  • Continue conversations with the State to explore future uses and possibilities regarding the former site of the Shattuck Hospital campus
  • Determine the best ways to utilize and invest in a ferry service as a secondary mode of transportation to and from Long Island

Violence and Trauma

The connection between violence, trauma and public health is a strong one, and the neighborhoods in Boston that struggle with high crime rates, gun violence, domestic abuse, sexual assault, and drug use are deeply and disproportionately inflicted with extreme health issues. The mental health crisis is also exacerbated by too many Bostonians living in unsafe and traumatizing environments. As Mayor, Annissa will improve public health outcomes by prioritizing the safety of our city through the following steps:

  • Build a Boston Coalition Against Domestic Violence to lead advocacy efforts for funding for domestic violence programs and services
  • Disrupt cycles of violence by investing in prevention initiatives and comprehensive services for victims and families, including providing immediate access to a City-run ‘safe space’ with an assigned caseworker. This caseworker will be an advocate for the victim and/or family and act as a liaison between the first responders and relevant City agencies. They will facilitate finding alternative housing, if victims and families do not feel safe in their own homes, and counseling services. Support for victims and families will be ongoing.
  • Continue to invest in youth community organizations and programming, including the youth summer jobs and SuccessLink programs, to actively reach out and engage young people in all neighborhoods across the city
  • Raise public awareness about the risks of firearm access and safe storage
  • Enforce local and federal gun violence prevention laws, while also acknowledging the racial and socioeconomic factors that lead to gun violence in our neighborhoods
  • Implement a City of Boston employee training program to equip all City employees with the knowledge and resources to identify suspected abuse and direct victims/survivors to a designated point of contact

Youth and Families

Maternal and Infant Health

Annissa understands the importance of prioritizing maternal and infant health access and support, because the steps taken during, before, and after pregnancy improve health outcomes for families across the city. Infant and maternal mortality rates, the most significant indicators of a community’s health, have steadily decreased in recent years but some racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic disparities persist.

  • Revive BPHC data analysis and tracking of maternal and infant mortality to eliminate preventable complications
  • Enforce Boston health care providers to complete training to remove discrimination and biases in treating of pregnant women of color
  • Expand maternal awareness by partnering with community health centers to conduct critical outreach to pregnant women and new mothers to explain options, available resources, and opportunities
  • Work with other relevant mental teams and community health centers to check in with new mothers and their families, assess for signs of Postpartum Mood Disorders (PPMD), and provide appropriate care and support as necessary
  • Conduct a public awareness campaign on car seat safety in partnership with Boston EMS

Healthy Children

In addition to high quality health care, the conditions of a child’s immediate environment and community directly impacts their growth and development. Access to safe and healthy environments for children to live, learn, eat, and play is critical to ensure Boston’s children have a strong foundation for lifelong success and healthy outcomes as adults. As a mother of four teenage boys, Annissa understands the health patterns established during youth will help determine young people’s health status and their risk for developing chronic diseases during adulthood.

In Boston, the persistent health inequities in our communities disproportionately impacts communities of color and low-income residents. These disparities have led to higher rates of obesity, asthma, food insecurity, substance use disorders, depression and chronic stress among our marginalized children.

As Mayor, Annissa will invest in the preventative measures and community resources to ensure every child in Boston has a strong start for lifelong success. As Mayor, Annissa will:

  • Ensure access to affordable and inclusive options for healthy food by increasing food access programs in Boston Public Schools and expanding food assistance programs in community centers
  • Promote youth activity by expanding access to high quality athletic programming in BPS, invest in affordable after school activities for our City’s youth, and strengthen partnerships with youth organizations
  • Address the impact of neighborhood violence on our children by expanding youth programming and the outreach efforts of the Neighborhood Trauma Team to mitigate the impact of violence exposure and trauma
  • Continue to work with Boston Public Schools to ensure that all children enrolled in a quality, accurate, and science-backed health curriculum
  • Create a public awareness campaign by using social media to reach young people with health information and interventions including targeted campaigns for mental health, substance abuse, nutrition, sexually transmitted infections, and motor vehicle safety

Aging Residents

As Mayor, Annissa will support and strengthen the lives of older individuals in Boston. She will make bold improvements to programs that will optimize the health, safety and inclusion of Bostonians ages 55+. She will continue to invest in the generational diversity of our residents by cultivating a safe and healthy community with resources to make Boston an enjoyable place to grow older. In City Hall, Annissa will:

  • Invest in and expand the Age Strong Shuttle to ensure that older individuals have convenient transportation to medical appointments, the grocery store, pharmacy and senior centers
  • Evaluate and grow the food access programs, dining sites, and meal delivery initiatives; work with community health centers and local providers to identify vulnerable, food insecure residents
  • Expand Boston’s outreach efforts to aging individuals by providing information on the work and programming of the Age Strong Commission, health insurance help, mental health resources, home care information, food access, transportation, educational opportunities, and social events
  • Make living in Boston more affordable, so aging residents have the opportunity to stay in their own homes and communities for as long as they want to
  • Partner with Community Health Centers to grow mental health services and their reach, but promoting telehealth and home visits for aging residents

Bostonians with Disabilities

Most Bostonians will experience a disability at some point during their lives, either personally or through someone they love. To improve health outcomes for all of our residents, it is crucial that we continue Boston’s work to create a more accessible and inclusive City for people with disabilities by addressing the challenges in accessibility of housing, employment, healthcare, transportation and City services. As Mayor, Annissa will be a strong advocate for Bostonians with disabilities and partner of the Boston’s Disabilities Commission by promoting equity so that residents with disabilities have the freedom and support to fully participate in all aspects of life in Boston. As Mayor, Annissa will:

  • Connect residents with disabilities to health care resources and health insurance programs for people with disabilities
  • Continue to monitor all of Boston’s facilities, programs, events and activities of the City to ensure that they are accessible to residents with disabilities to participate in every aspect of life
  • Ensure that there are sufficient restrooms and private spaces throughout the City and in public buildings
  • Provide technical assistance for residents with disabilities when working with the City departments, agencies, and websites
  • Ensure accessible parking through permits, registration and coordinating with businesses in Boston
  • Provide resources to help with training for use of adaptive vehicles
  • Provide programs that help residents with disabilities to find affordable housing through public housing, rental assistance, subsidized housing, and voucher programs
  • Help residents file ADA grievances at the Disabilities Commission and provide legal information and guidance
  • Arrange job training and connection services for Bostonians with disabilities

Reforming the Structure of Boston Public Health Commission (BPHC)

The Boston Public Health Commission is the oldest health department in the United States and Annissa believes that it should be a proud asset of the City of Boston. The Commission’s goal is to make recommendations that inform health care access and delivery to every resident in the city. Unfortunately, too many Bostonians are unable to get appropriate health care based on their neighborhood and many struggle to make their voices heard. Annissa believes that the Commission should be responsive to the unique needs of Boston’s health care system by improving access to primary and specialty care services and promoting an equitable geographic distribution of care. Given the urgency of the pandemic and subsequent recovery, the BPHC desperately needs bold reform, complete transparency and accountability to the residents of Boston.

As Mayor, Annissa will take the following steps to ensure that all Boston residents get the care they need:

  • Appoint Board Members that are representative of Boston’s diverse population and including patients, nurses, doctors, and community members from every neighborhood in Boston
  • Increase transparency of the decision-making process of the Commission by modernizing the Commission’s website to be easy to use and available in many languages
  • Effectively communicate the status of the Commission’s short and long term goals through releasing monthly updates
  • Encouraging resident feedback through taking advantage of modern 311 software

A Quick Note from Annissa

This plan has been informed and developed by local advocates and stakeholders on my policy committees, the Massachusetts Nurses Association (MNA), and most importantly, Boston residents who were gracious enough to share their thoughts, ideas and experiences at my town halls, through emails and phone calls, and even in line at the grocery store. Thank you to all.

My public policy plans are living, breathing documents that are never fully finished—and that’s how it should be. I welcome additional thoughts and feedback, and as your Mayor, will continue to ensure that you and every other resident in this city has a seat at the table.

There’s a lot to do. Let’s do the hard work, together.

To provide feedback, thoughts and ideas on this plan, initiatives or other public policy issues, please do not hesitate to reach out to [email protected].

Mass & Cass Plan

Early on in this campaign, I released a policy plan focused on tackling the citywide opioid epidemic, especially as it relates to the devastation at the intersection of Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Cass Boulevard. Since April, when that plan was released, the public health crisis at Mass and Cass has intensified. Over the past six months we’ve seen an increase in tents, an uptick in violence, and new substances flood the area. Yet there has been no immediate plan, response or action from the city, state, or region to help those suffering here.

The city of Boston continues to be the primary destination for support services for individuals in recovery, and because of this, we continue to bear the burden of this crisis. The concentration of recovery services at Mass and Cass alone has caused our resources to reach their breaking point. We need decisive, urgent action and a regional response to directly address this public health crisis, repair the continuum of care, and help individuals access recovery.

While I’ve focused much of my work on the Council around the issues of mental health, substance use disorder, and homelessness, the powers that come with the Mayor’s Office would allow me to tackle this issue more effectively and efficiently. As Mayor, I will immediately direct the Boston Public Health Commission to declare a Public Health Emergency within a one mile radius of the intersection of Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Cass Boulevard. This will allow for a streamlined response from city agencies, as well as better service delivery and improved capacity for responsiveness. The zone will be overseen by a Mass and Cass Czar who will report directly to me as Mayor, and work in partnership with city and state agencies on a coordinated response.

There is a significant amount of funds coming to Boston as part of the American Recovery Plan. We need to invest this money in services for the public good, for the public’s health. I’ve called for this funding to implement our updated plan, including a Public Health Surge at Mass and Cass with the goal of getting those suffering into recovery.

This plan has been, and will continue to be, informed by my conversations with those not only doing the work at Mass and Cass, but with lived experiences in this space. Both them, and you, have my promise as Mayor to make progress on this plan on Day One of my administration.

Declare a Public Health Emergency Zone at Mass and Cass.

Direct the Boston Public Health Commissioner to declare a Public Health Emergency Zone (PHE Zone) for the Mass and Cass area. This zone will encompass the area within a one mile radius of the intersection of Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Cass Boulevard, and includes the communities of Newmarket, Roxbury, the South End, South Boston, Dorchester. This zone acknowledges that while the crisis is at its most acute at Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Cass, every surrounding community has borne the impacts of this crisis.

As part of this Public Health Emergency Zone, Annissa will take the following immediate steps:

1. Allocate $30 million in federal funding to implement this plan for Mass and Cass.

2. Use the Public Health Emergency Zone to create a special, singular district for first responder and city agencies including the Boston Police Department, Fire Department, Emergency Medical Services (EMS), Public Works, Boston Public Health Commission, Boston Department of Health and Human Services, Boston Inspectional Services Department, and Transportation departments to ensure better coordination, streamlined service delivery and improved capacity for responsiveness. Currently, the Mass and Cass area is served by multiple districts for these first responder and city agencies, including three Boston Police Department districts.

3. Appoint a Mass and Cass Czar who will report directly to the Mayor, and live within the Boston Public Health Commission.

4. Direct the Mass and Cass Czar, in partnership with the Mayor’s Office, to:

  • Bring together regional partners with state support to address the urgent need to decentralize services to affect long-term, sustainable change for the area, as well as coordinate and oversee efforts of state, city and private agencies.
  • Reconvene and chair the Mass and Cass Task Force created under Mayor Walsh, review the status of the plan, and ensure implementation of key recommendations and development of key approaches that reflect the changes in healthcare due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Convene a Harm Reduction Working Group with representation from community health centers, non-profit partners, as well as members from a new Consumer Advisory Board, made up up of individuals who are in long-term recovery and/or accessing harm reduction services as a means to continuously assess and revise plans and services through impacted communities’ lived experiences and perspectives. The Harm Reduction Working Group will be tasked with evaluating harm reduction strategies to build solutions for Boston, including everything from the availability of narcan to safe injection facilities.
  • Reopen the comfort station that was available during the pandemic for individuals at Mass and Cass to have access to portable toilets, hand washing stations, outreach services, and other essential resources.

5. Implement a Public Health Surge at Mass and Cass with the goal of getting those suffering into recovery. This would include a multi-day, coordinated effort between several city, state, and private agencies to provide direct services to individuals in need. Services could include: medical and wound care, dental care, hygiene services, eye exams/glasses, an opportunity for reunification, referral for additional services, and an immediate opportunity to enter detox with the promise of a recovery bed.

Longer-Term Action

Invest in Harm Reduction Strategies

1. Building on City Council work, expand access to and number of sites for safe needle disposal with the goal of establishing no less than 3 new Syringe Service Programs (SSP) in strategic locations outside of the Mass and Cass service area with evening and weekend availability.

2. Implement and invest in programming recommended by the Harm Reduction Working Group and Consumer Advisory Board.

3. Acknowledge and create women-specific and gender inclusive programming for the increasing number of unsheltered women and LGBTQIA+ individuals who are struggling with substance use disorder and being victimized by human trafficking.

Increase Mental and Behavioral Health Resources

1. Decriminalize poverty, mental illness, and homelessness.

2. Implement cross-department and agency best practices and initiatives to adequately and efficiently help our most vulnerable residents.

3. Building on City Council work, prioritize funding for and increase the number of Boston Emergency Services Team (B.E.S.T.) clinicians to accompany first responders during a mental health intervention

4. Place a mental health clinician in every one of the City of Boston’s homeless shelters with 24/7 availability to facilitate engagement in services.

5. Increase community health center access to the state’s Roadmap for Behavioral Health, a state initiative that addresses the need for expanded and effective treatment and improved health equity by creating a centralized service that connects people to treatment resources and reforms outpatient treatment to be more accessible.

6. Create a city-wide database of providers and their specialty, and generate a mapping of clinical assets in Boston to inform residents of available resources, organizations, and programs. This database will include data on bed availability to improve access to mental health beds after discharge from Emergency Departments.

Create More Housing

1. Preserve the nearly 500 shelter beds across the City created during the COVID-19 pandemic to increase recovery service capacity, decentralize services from the Mass Cass Area, and guarantee stronger pathways to permanent and supportive housing as well as employment.

2. Continue conversations with the State to explore future uses and possibilities regarding the former site of the Shattuck Hospital campus.

Long Island Bridge & Recovery Campus

1. Continue to support city litigation to reopen the Long Island Campus as soon as possible and bring together stakeholders on Day One as Mayor to begin laying the groundwork for a reopened and reimagined Long Island Campus as a priority capital investment.

2. Convene stakeholders to establish a commission to build out programmatic components of the Long Island campus outside the direct realm of recovery, including housing opportunities, job training, health screenings, food access, and ongoing mental health services.

3. Determine the best ways to utilize and invest in a ferry service as a secondary mode of transportation to and from Long Island.

Public Safety

“I will lead with transparency and accountability to create a system that works for everyone. Boston can and must be both just and safe”

As Mayor, Annissa will fight to ensure that Boston can be both safe and just, and the city will lead on reforms and demonstrate the benefit of community policing, transparency and accountability.

A racial justice issue, a public health issue and a public safety issue, gun violence is an epidemic that strikes our streets every day. Boston requires a multifaceted and coordinated response and investments in community policing, relationship building with neighborhood leaders and organizations, appropriate police staffing and enforcement, and community programming and initiatives across our city. Annissa will work with our Boston Police Department to both implement necessary reforms and keep our residents safe. Justice and safety are not mutually exclusive, we just need to have the tough, honest conversations about the hard work that needs to be done to achieve both in this city. Because our neighborhoods — particularly those disproportionately impacted by this racism, violence and trauma — deserve better.

Annissa will increase investments to community empowerment programs to improve relationships between officers and our neighborhoods, expand youth programming, attack the root causes of incarceration and involvement in the criminal justice system, and decriminalize mental illness, homelessness, and poverty. Annissa knows that a strong system of public safety requires trust between our communities and first responders.

Our world-class EMS team and firefighters protecting our residents every day must have access to updated equipment and safe and healthy firehouses and bays. With the help of the city’s B.E.S.T. team—a group of mental health clinicians able to respond to crises—our EMTs and firefighters will be able to appropriately and quickly respond to calls for help.

Amongst the City of Boston’s public safety agencies is a growing need for more diversity in the ranks. Annissa will fight for a more diverse police department, fire department, and EMS team that represent the populations they serve and build trust in all of Boston’s communities.

POLICE

  • Continue to support and work alongside the Office of Police Accountability and Transparency, its Civilian Review Board and Internal Affairs Oversight Panel, to allow for the complaint process and decisions to be more transparent and appropriately accessible to the public.
  • Perform annual performance evaluations for sworn members below the rank of sergeant using the electronic Performance Evaluation System (PES).
  • Enforce community engagement in formal evaluations of the Boston Police Department policies, procedure, and behavior.
  • Use body-camera footage for non-disciplinary quality assurance, coaching and improvement/training objectives for all officers. Mandating that body camera footage be released to the public no later than 24 hours after an incident has occured.
  • Implement the three-step Early Warning System by pin-pointing potential officers with multiple misconduct complaints, step-in with training and professional counseling, and consistently follow-up with the officer.
  • Explore Early Warning System Software to improve accountability, intervention strategies, and police culture.
  • Encourage employment of an experienced and independent Human Resources professional to address administrative management, instead of relying on trained police officers.
  • Streamline and provide adequate resources for the Internal Affairs Division of the Boston Police Department to create efficiencies in processes.
  • Increase diversity across BPD by recruiting new officers from diverse backgrounds and promoting diverse candidates into leadership roles.
  • Commit to a schedule for promotional exams including incentives for years of service and support leadership training and professional development opportunities for supervisors and creating opportunities for strengthening “the bench”.
  • Extend the probationary period for initial promotion to 5 years of service before consideration for supervisory roles.
  • Implement new mandatory training for both new and existing police officers, including mandatory yearly training on racial bias, de-escalation, and best practices for responding to mental health crises.
  • Re-imagine new-recruit academy training and expand academy training for existing officers with the additional college style course opportunities that integrate developing theories and police reform perspectives.
  • Establish clear protocol for promotions and performance evaluation systems, while providing officers with professional development and training opportunities that come with promotions.
  • Expand the cadet program to partner with BPS schools, vocational schools and local universities. Increase applicant pool and give students a clear understanding of the possibilities of the career by conducting outreach to schools to provide informational sessions.
  • Ensure disciplinary history is reviewed and given appropriate weight in all promotional decisions for relevant ranks in the Department.
  • Expand the Civil Service Exam to give more points to Boston residents and candidates from diverse backgrounds.
  • Recruit more multilingual officers that reflect the changing population of Boston and improve access to language services from the field.
  • Expand educational incentives for officers with advanced degrees including non-criminal justice fields.

EMS

  • Strengthen the work of delivery of high quality care to the residents of Boston and invest in state of the art equipment, facilities and training to ensure the highest delivery of care can be provided to those in need.
  • Explore opportunities for more non- Emergency Room transports to best provide the services our residents need including the development of specialized units to serve special populations in our City (Squad 80).
  • Advocate for more mental health and recovery beds in our communities to actively support returning citizens in their successful reentry to the community and serve as a preemptive measure.
  • Continue to support the Boston Emergency Services team’s (B.E.S.T.) goal to provide a comprehensive, highly integrated system of crisis evaluation and treatment services to all police districts city-wide in collaboration with EMS.
  • Implement street outreach teams made up of mental health professionals and trained civilians to deal with low-priority calls and give help to individuals while freeing up EMTs and Paramedics for high-priority duties.
  • Expand and allocate resources to mental health and public health service partners to ensure they can provide support that is needed in real time.
  • Increase first responder and other cross-functional training by expanding access to Crisis Intervention Training requiring all first responders to be regularly trained in de-escalation and best practices for responding to mental health crises.
  • Allocate resources to support follow up and follow through, ensuring ongoing services and to prevent repeating incidents.
  • Engage with Boston’s communities to build relationships, provide information and improve services and enforce better metrics and data collection around community engagement to improve future partnerships.
  • Expand and support the City Academy to partner with community organizations, Boston Public Schools, vocational schools and local universities. Increase applicant pool and give students a clear understanding of the possibilities of a career in EMS, as well as conducting outreach to schools to provide informational sessions.
  • Increase diversity across EMS by recruiting providers from diverse backgrounds and promoting diverse candidates into leadership roles.
  • Works towards pay-parity for BEMS in comparison to other first responder agencies.
  • Recruit more multilingual EMTs and paramedics that reflect the population of Boston and improve access to language services from the field and create more opportunities for scholarships for advanced training.

FIRE

  • Strengthen the work of delivery of high quality response to the residents of Boston and invest in state of the art equipment, facilities and training to ensure the highest delivery of care can be provided to those in need.
  • Explore opportunities for response to non-fire related incidents to best provide the services our residents need including the development of specialized units to serve special populations in our city.
  • Continue to support the Boston Emergency Services team’s (B.E.S.T.) goal to provide a comprehensive, highly integrated system of crisis evaluation and treatment services to all police districts city-wide in collaboration with EMS and BPD.
  • Increase first responder and other cross-functional training by expanding access to Crisis Intervention Training requiring all first responders to be regularly trained in de-escalation and best practices for responding to mental health crises.
  • Allocate resources to support follow up and follow through, ensuring ongoing services and to prevent repeating incidents.
  • Engage with Boston’s communities to build relationships, provide information and improve services, and enforce better metrics and data collection around community engagement to improve future partnerships.
  • Re-imagine new-recruit academy training and expand academy training for existing Boston Firefighters with the additional college style course opportunities that integrate developing perspectives.
  • Establish clear protocol for promotions and performance evaluation systems, while providing Boston’s firefighters with professional development and training opportunities that come with promotions.
  • Increase diversity across BFD by recruiting firefighters from diverse backgrounds and promoting diverse candidates into leadership roles.
  • Recruit more multilingual firefighters that reflect the changing population of Boston and improve access to language services from the field, and create more opportunities for scholarship for advanced training.
  • Commit to a schedule for promotional exams including incentives for years of service and support leadership training and professional development opportunities for supervisors and creating opportunities for strengthening “the bench”.

Transport

As Mayor, better and bolder mobility solutions will be at the center of Annissa’s vision for Boston. Annissa will make getting around Boston more streamlined, safe, equitable, and predictable for all residents.

As our climate changes our transportation infrastructure must change as well. Annissa will partner with stakeholders at the local and state level to ensure our transportation policies address our environmental and public health crises.

Our existing public transit does not work the same for everyone. Boston’s low-income communities and communities of color are deeply impacted by the underfunded system that inhibits universal mobility, access and economic opportunity. Annissa recognizes the inequality embedded in our public transit and will work with those most affected to tackle these disparities head on.

As Mayor, Annissa will:

  • Make improvements that put people first, including continuing to build upon the City’s Vision Zero efforts, investing in infrastructure that prioritizes vulnerable road users such as cross walks, intersections, bike lanes, and bus lanes, implementing safe routes to schools, improving directional and wayfinding signage, and embracing elements that build community such as open street events, parklets, and murals.
  • Center transportation policy around equity and justice by advocating for better transit options for all residents, such as expanding bus lanes, urging the MBTA to expand service hours to benefit overnight workers, increasing CharlieCard access across the City of Boston, implementing programs to decrease the cost of transportation and improve transit options for disadvantaged groups, and connecting essential workers, students, and seniors to existing programs for free or reduced transit fares.
  • Advocate for a Boston Mayor appointed seat on the MBTA Fiscal & Management Control Board to get Boston a much deserved seat at the decision making table when it comes to MBTA reforms, planning and service delivery.
  • Building a new Transportation Office of Information & Innovation to find practical, data-driven solutions to boost equity, predictability, and safety across all modes of transportation, including being a one-stop shop on current data to make informed policy decisions, implementing new pilot programs in our neighborhoods, and exploring ways to apply successful initiatives from cities across our country and world to Boston.
  • Create a Transportation Access Office to directly assist low-income residents, seniors, students, veterans, the homeless community, and residents with disabilities.
  • Improve the Fairmount Line by advocating for additional service and creating connections around stations by adding BlueBikes, pedestrian wayfinding signage, crosswalks, lighting, and pick up/drop off zones.
  • Leverage regional and state partnerships to advocate for progressive transportation funding solutions, direct federal funding directly to cities, and align planning and project prioritization with city and state agencies.
  • Mitigate the climate crisis by building a task force with experts, advocates, and local stakeholders to address pollution mitigation by expanding the City’s Electric Vehicle Charging Program, pushing the state to expand its electric bus fleet and modernize the Commuter Rail through adoption of fleet to electric operations, and focusing in on our frontline communities bearing the brunt of the climate crisis.[45]
—Annissa Essaibi George's 2021 campaign website[51]


Michelle Wu

Wu's campaign website stated the following themes. See Wu's website for hyperlinks within her themes.

"

Our policy platform is more than a vision.

This moment is a call to action. To me, that means thinking big about how to build a more resilient, healthy, and fair Boston, and then having the courage and political will to fight for all of our families. We can make real investments in education, food access, and good jobs. We can build wealth in our communities by closing the racial wealth gap and supporting small businesses and local entrepreneurship.

Our policy platform is more than a vision. It’s a promise to Boston residents—a commitment to take on our hardest challenges, and to center our efforts on the pursuit of racial, economic, and climate justice.

Whether it’s as basic as fixing administrative processes or as broad as writing new legislation, using policy to change systems has been at the core of my time in public service. In partnership with community, we’ve shaped some of the most impactful policy discussions in our city. Over my seven years on the City Council, I’ve authored and passed legislation to deliver for families across the city, from guaranteeing paid parental leave, language access, and healthcare equity, to ramping up renewable energy and reforming city contracting.

Each day I am reminded that the only way to act with the scale and urgency that this moment demands is to make government as accessible and transparent as possible, so that democracy, community, and advocacy drives everything that we do together.

Housing Affordability

Safe, healthy, accessible, affordable housing is a human right. Yet in Boston, a stable home has become a luxury not everyone can afford. Only about one-third of Boston residents own their own home, and half of Boston’s renters are rent-burdened. As COVID-19 devastated communities already struggling with displacement and rising rents, tens of thousands of Boston families are living in fear of the impending evictions crisis. Michelle will fight for resources to create truly affordable housing and end chronic homelessness, zoning reforms to prioritize fair housing and affordable homes for families, protections to stabilize tenants, and ways to expand permanent affordability, such as community land trusts. Michelle will prioritize housing stability for Boston families.

POLICY PRIORITIES

How We Will Lead

Take bold action to deliver housing justice in Boston

Housing is a human right. Yet in Boston, a stable home has become a luxury not everyone can afford. Only about one-third of Boston residents own their own home, and half of Boston’s renters are rent-burdened. At the city level, Boston has the power to meet this moment and dismantle the legacy of systemic racism in our racial wealth gap and displacement crisis. We also must stabilize families in the near term by working with advocates across the state and neighboring municipalities to lift the ban on rent control. Read Michelle's full plan to deliver housing justice for Bostonians.

Building Boston’s future around affordable housing

Housing is the cornerstone of health, racial justice, economic and educational opportunity, and long-term stability. We can increase access to affordable housing by investing in and expanding social and cooperative housing, prioritize housing for low-income individuals and residents experiencing homelessness, and grow the supply of housing while focusing on housing stability. The City should work to expand permanent affordability through community land trusts and help more families purchase homes.

Combating the housing crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic

Due to the stresses of the pandemic, renters are struggling to afford to stay housed. We must commit to providing immediate support to families through rental relief and a moratorium on evictions. A crisis of this magnitude will have dramatic ripple effects: a reduction in educational attainment, employment and lifetime savings, and a higher incidence of a lifetime of health issues.

Planning for community resiliency, not displacement

As Boston’s residents face the effects of an impending housing crisis and the threat of displacement, we must consider pathways to resiliency. We need to create a true city planning department that does right by the people of Boston, including by preserving opportunities for seniors and people with disabilities to live at home. Read more about Michelle’s ideas for city planning and check out her plan to fix our broken development system.

Stabilizing the rental market and protecting tenants

As the pandemic continues to shake the rental market, tenants are contending with continued uncertainty. We must take action to stabilize the short-term rental market and ensure tenants’ right to counsel. We need to protect tenants against displacement, rising housing prices, and public safety issues by closing commercial loopholes.

Addressing homelessness

We need to create long-term, stable, accessible, supportive housing for people currently experiencing homelessness, going beyond providing short-term shelter to address the root cause of housing instability: affordability. We must also recognize that housing is a public health issue, and coordinate community partnerships to provide people experiencing homelessness with mental health care, treatment for substance abuse disorders, and other wrap-around services. City services must recognize the particular needs of working families, LGBTQ youth, people with disabilities, and other communities living in unstable housing.

Confronting Boston’s legacy of racism and housing discrimination

Discriminatory practices like redlining and exclusionary zoning have resulted in disproportionately high rates of housing instability in communities of color and Black communities all over the country. We know this very well in Boston; the difference in life expectancy in Back Bay is 30 years higher than it is in Roxbury, where COVID-19 infection rates are among the highest in the city. This is a direct manifestation of the legacy of structural racism in policy and practice. We must amend Boston’s zoning code to affirmatively further fair housing.

Implementing Boston’s Green New Deal (GND)

Michelle has proposed a groundbreaking plan to implement the GND at the municipal level, which includes a housing agenda built around environmental sustainability, racial and socioeconomic integration, and safeguards against displacement.

MICHELLE'S RECORD

What We've Done Together So Far

Closed corporate loopholes for short-term rentals

Visited nearly every emergency shelter in the city and held a hearing to examine resources needed to serve unhoused LGBTQ youth

Advocated for rental relief and a moratorium evictions during the COVID-19 pandemic to prevent individuals from being pushed into homelessness

Education Equity

As a Boston Public Schools parent, Michelle knows personally how our schools are at the very heart of our community and our future in the City of Boston. In this moment, school communities are facing unprecedented upheaval and uncertainty. Boston students, teachers, and families deserve a system that is responsive to their needs and provides the type of support that enables everyone to succeed. Our system should be structured and led by anti-racist policies that undermine structural inequities rather than perpetuate them.

POLICY PRIORITIES

How We Will Lead

Implementing a comprehensive Community Vision for Boston's Students and Families

Michelle’s eight-part plan lays out how she’ll bring bold change to Boston Public Schools (BPS) to ensure it serves every school community — with the urgency of a BPS mom. Her approach to Boston schools dramatically expands the services available in schools to address the whole child’s needs, makes the system easier for families to navigate, and commits to a Green New Deal for BPS so every child can learn in a healthy, safe environment.

Planning for a safe reopening and equitable recovery from COVID-19 in every school

In the midst of a global pandemic, our students, educators, and families have had to navigate massive shifts in education. As we move forward, we can’t afford to focus exclusively on reopening schools. We must take a long-term approach to an equitable recovery by listening to our experts - educators, students, and families. We need to combat the effects of the pandemic that occurred during school closures - learning loss, increased incidence of trauma, and adverse mental health effects, among others - and work to create long-term solutions in our schools. Read Michelle’s community-driven report on planning reopening and equitable recovery from COVID.

Closing the early education and child care gap

High-quality early education and care prepares children for a lifetime of opportunities, eases the burden on working families, and properly values the providers who help set the foundation for our children’s lives. But despite years of promises, a massive early education and care gap has persisted in Boston—and the pandemic has only underscored this reality. Read Michelle's bold plan to close the early education and child care gap so children, families, and care providers can thrive.

Valuing and trusting our educators

Teachers are experts and professionals. To provide the best possible education to our children, we must listen to and empower our educators to use their expertise in planning and in practice. We need to ensure meaningful opportunities for ongoing professional development, and offer appropriate support to teachers navigating during and after the pandemic.

Creating safe, inclusive, and anti-racist schools

At the same time our communities are grappling with COVID-19, we’re also in the midst of a reckoning with a long history of racial injustice. In line with this movement, we must eliminate school segregation and practices that maintain inequities in our communities. This means making our schools safe for all students by embedding anti-racism in the fabric of our schools, demilitarizing our schools, addressing the school-to-prison pipeline, and eliminating surveillance of undocumented students.

Investing equitably in schools and students for mental and behavioral health

If we want to serve our students equitably, we need to take a whole child approach to meeting student needs. This means addressing mental health as well as physical well-being. All students in BPS should be able to access guidance and care from a well-staffed support team of nurses, mental health counselors, and guidance counselors.

Supporting ALL learners and their families

Prior to the pandemic, we knew that Boston had a long way to go in serving students equitably. In particular, the state’s review of BPS found that services for English language learners and students with disabilities were in complete disarray. We must tackle the barriers facing these populations of learners head on, ensuring equitable access to high quality curriculum and instruction while differentiating student supports.

Investing in healthy and sustainable school facilities

As community hubs, our schools are crucial sites of learning and development. Teachers and students alike deserve access to environments conducive to teaching and learning. Particularly during a global pandemic, we need to invest in schools’ longevity and health by updating ventilation systems, prioritizing cleanliness, and modernizing infrastructure.

Adopting and funding a community schools model

Our schools need to support students within their home and neighborhood context, creating partnerships to combat underlying needs like food and housing insecurity. To enable every child in the city to receive a well-rounded education, the City should partner with local nonprofits and cultural institutions to implement robust arts and culture programming in the Boston Public Schools.

Expanding vocational education opportunities

In a city as diverse as Boston, we must recognize the necessity of providing high quality vocational education opportunities to students. In order to make good-paying jobs more accessible, we need to create more direct pipelines to opportunities in trades and other industries that do not require a four-year degree.

Guaranteeing universal early education and childcare

All children should have the chance to get a head start through universal affordable, high-quality early education. This includes increasing access to community-based and on-site workplace child care.

Ensuring safe, reliable transportation for our students

Michelle is fighting for transportation policies built on economic, racial, and climate justice, from dedicated bus lanes, to pedestrian safety, fare-free transit, safe cycling infrastructure, and easing traffic congestion. In order to promote healthy, connected communities and ensure that every student can safety access educational opportunities, we need to make our streets safer and invest in transportation as a public good.

MICHELLE'S RECORD

What We've Done Together So Far

Improved access to local, fresh food in Boston’s public schools

Held a hearing on improving access to vocational education, which would increase access to good jobs that do not require a four-year degree.

Held a community panel and townhall to facilitate a collaborative planning process around a safe K-12 reopening and equitable recovery from COVID, centering the voices of students, teachers, parents, and other community members.

Submitted a letter to the BPS School Committee regarding school reopening during the pandemic, sharing community-generated solutions and sharing our recommendations for a safe reopening and equitable recovery.

Closing the Racial Wealth Gap

Black and brown communities, through institutional racism and discriminatory policies such as redlining and segregation, have been systematically denied the rights and access to build generational wealth. In Boston, the median net worth of a white family is $247,500, while the median net worth of a Black family is just $8. The COVID-19 pandemic has widened the racial wealth gap even more. Michelle has been fighting for shared prosperity through aligning city contracting to close the racial wealth gap and policies for racial and economic justice.

POLICY PRIORITIES

How We Will Lead

Fighting the root causes of wealth inequality

Addressing the root causes of the racial wealth gap means rewriting the rules that shape our political and economic systems and rethinking who gets to write the rules in the first place. From home ownership to business creation, quality education, and transportation access, communities of color in Boston continue to face barriers to economic security reinforced through policy over generations. While we work to implement concrete policies that build wealth and power among Black and Latinx residents, immigrants, and other underserved communities, we must also shift the rules, practices, and norms that have enabled racial inequities to persist since our City’s founding.

Require equitable City contracting

We need to make full-scale investments in building healthy, resilient communities by aligning public spending with the City’s goals to reduce income inequality and build wealth in our neighborhoods. By harnessing government spending as a force for community economic development, the City can reverse longstanding disparities by zip code and race through investing in businesses owned by people of color, women, and Boston residents.

Promoting home ownership and housing justice

Safe, healthy, affordable housing is a human right and the cornerstone of health, racial justice, and economic and educational opportunity, but Black families have long been locked out of this key opportunity to build wealth by State-sanctioned disinvestment and predatory lending. Read more about Michelle’s commitment to housing justice.

Attract and invest in Black businesses

Black-owned businesses empower Black communities in Boston to build wealth, but their success is stymied by historic disinvestment. Black-owned businesses face systemic exclusion from access to capital, technical assistance, government contracts, and other resources that allow businesses to thrive, and during the pandemic, the structure and administration of small business relief programs have made Black-owned businesses particularly vulnerable to closure. The City must take steps to correct these historic inequities by connecting Black business-owners with capital, technical assistance, and professional support, while ensuring Black entrepreneurs have the resources they need to start new successful businesses. Read more about how Michelle will champion an economy built for the success of small businesses.

Supporting young professionals of color

Boston’s business ecosystem, with business ownership that is far less diverse than the city’s population, does not provide Black professionals and other entrepreneurs of color with the business and social networks they need to thrive. These networks are critical for business owners to obtain information, clients, mentors, financing, and other resources, while withstanding discrimination from lenders, networks, and potential clients. Boston must improve business networks targeted specifically for young professionals of color to improve small business resource access for all residents across all neighborhoods.

Planning for a safe and equitable COVID-19 recovery

The burden of the pandemic has not been borne equally. We can only build a stronger Boston if we center communities of color in our recovery from COVID-19, from ensuring transparency in how emergency funding is being directed to the fighting for safe workplaces and fair wages for our essential workers.

Expanding participatory budgeting

Closing the racial wealth gap requires us to reimagine power in Boston. Participatory budgeting can help us rewrite the rules around who has a say in how money is spent by the City, leading to more equitable investments aligned with community needs and ensuring that the city works for everyone, not just the wealthy and well-connected.

Implementing Boston’s Green New Deal (GND)

Michelle has proposed a groundbreaking plan to implement the GND at the municipal level, which would mitigate the threat of climate change by eliminating the violence of poverty and economic inequality, closing the racial wealth gap, and dismantling structural racism in Boston. Climate justice is racial and economic justice. Read Michelle’s plan.

MICHELLE'S RECORD

What We’ve Done Together So Far

Authored and passed legislation to increase equity in city contracting

Advocated for transparency and accountability for emergency city spending during the COVID-19 pandemic

Exercised oversight authority to obtain data and reports on city contracting

Transport

Safe, reliable, affordable, and sustainable transportation is the foundation for shared prosperity and health. We need proactive city leadership to fix our broken transportation system: Boston currently has the worst traffic in the country, and Black bus riders spend 64 more hours on average each year on stalled buses than white riders. Michelle is fighting for transportation policies built on economic, racial, and climate justice, from dedicated bus lanes, to pedestrian safety, fare-free transit, safe cycling infrastructure, and easing traffic congestion.

POLICY PRIORITIES

How We Will Lead

Ensuring pedestrian safety

Boston’s streets should be safe for all road users, but too often residents who have been sounding the alarm on dangerous speeding hotspots don’t see safety improvements until after a tragedy occurs. We must ensure access to traffic calming infrastructure improvements citywide, maintain crosswalks and pedestrian-friendly signal timing, and expand sidewalks during the pandemic to allow for safe distancing.

Taking on traffic

Boston has been ranked as having the worst rush-hour traffic in the country, and our transportation infrastructure has not kept pace with the growing population and number of commuters. We must take action to empower commuters with reliable, safe multimodal options and public transit, evaluate congestion pricing, and manage curbside space for pick up and drop off from ride-hailing vehicles and delivery trucks that slow traffic and block bike lanes and sidewalks when parked.

Building a safe, connected, low-stress cycling network

Boston is committed to increasing our share of commuting trips by bike to move more people on our streets and reach our climate and public health goals, but to do this, cycling must be safe and connected. We must accelerate progress in building protected cycling infrastructure with a focus on equity, so every neighborhood has access to safe cycling options.

Improving bus service

Although the MBTA is a state agency, buses run on municipal roads, so city government can play a big role in making bus service more reliable and equitable. We must speed up the design and implementation of dedicated bus lanes in our most congested corridors, expand transit signal priority, and evaluate the location and condition of bus stops.

Championing fare-free transit

Transportation affects every aspect of our lives and how people connect with healthcare, education, and economic opportunity. If we are serious as a city and a Commonwealth about closing the racial wealth divide, advancing climate justice, and empowering communities, we need to remove barriers to public transportation as a public good.

Fighting for equity and transportation justice

Our transportation agenda should be built around access for all of our neighbors, including residents with disabilities, youth, and seniors, and prioritize safety and service to all of our neighborhoods, especially environmental justice communities.

MICHELLE'S RECORD

What We've Done Together So Far

Advocated for safe streets infrastructure improvements during the pandemic

Brought together thousands of MBTA riders to oppose fare hikes, securing protections to shield bus riders, seniors, and youth from fare increases

Shortened rush hour travel times with dedicated bus lanes

Expanded free MBTA passes for Boston students

Released a Boston Youth Transportation report

Advocated for fixing issues facing multimodal commuters

Changed the conversation on fare-free transit, inspiring regional progress

Elevated the need for safe, protected cycling infrastructure

Hosted the first-ever Boston City Council policy briefing series, focused on transportation

Planning and Development

Shaping development across the city for equity and resiliency is one of the most powerful roles of city government. But without comprehensive planning and responsive zoning, Boston’s development decisions are based on special approvals and exceptions after a complex and opaque public process. Not only do we fall short in transparency and accountability, but we are missing out on the potential to harness development to address our growing crises of unaffordability, climate vulnerability, inequality, and traffic. Michelle is committed to overhauling our development processes to empower planning that prioritizes the stability and resiliency of our communities.

POLICY PRIORITIES

How We Will Lead

Creating a true city planning department

The current development process in Boston is only making existing challenges worse. We need to create a city planning department that articulates a long-term vision for community resiliency and empowers all voices, rather than a select few. We must return assets to City oversight, end urban renewal areas, and empower a planning department to create a master plan for updated zoning with clear, consistent rules.

Reforming the Boston zoning process to meet community needs

Our City’s zoning code hasn’t been comprehensively updated since 1965, and the complicated process disproportionately benefits the wealthy and well-connected with the resources to pursue zoning exceptions and waivers. The zoning process must be made more transparent, accountable, and equitable in order to bring private development into alignment with community needs for stable housing, safe streets, open space, reliable transportation, food access, and a healthy environment.

Designating green affordable overlay districts

The status quo of development in Boston continues to exacerbate racial and economic disparities across our neighborhoods. Designating green overlay districts for affordability and resiliency with anti-displacement protections can support the sustainable development of healthy and accessible housing for all, meeting our climate goals while prioritizing the stability of neighborhood residents.

Ending urban renewal

Urban renewal powers enable the Boston Planning and Development Agency to bypass community oversight, based on outdated maps drawn more than fifty years ago that do not reflect our communities’ needs. The City should wind down the BPDA’s urban renewal powers by its current expiration date in 2022 as part of a broader effort to move past the department’s legacy of displacement and neighborhood destruction and build transparency and accountability to community members.

Requiring corporate tax break accountability

Boston’s approach to economic development should benefit all residents, but our current Tax Increment Financing program received a score of zero in transparency from Good Jobs First. Instead of giving tax breaks to bad actors, we should support companies that hire locally and provide full-time jobs with livable wages and good benefits. Companies should publicly report the number and type of jobs created so that Boston residents and city government can hold accountable these private corporations and larger institutions that receive public benefits and services.

Auditing development commitments to ensure public benefit

Private developers must be held to their commitments under community benefits agreements to ensure a transparent and predictable process. These commitments should be negotiated in close consultation with community members and strictly upheld through regular audits to ensure that our City is not leaving money on the table for affordable housing, climate mitigation measures, and other public benefits.

Implementing Boston’s Green New Deal (GND)

Michelle has proposed a groundbreaking plan to implement the GND at the municipal level, which includes a focus on just and resilient development by creating affordable green overlay districts and standard community benefits agreements.

MICHELLE’S RECORD

What We’ve Done Together So Far

Released a report on Fixing Boston’s Broken Development Process: How & Why to Abolish the BPDA, laying out the city-level steps that would unwind this agency and create the pathway to community-centered, accountable planning

Filed corporate tax break accountability ordinance

Authored and passed legislation to protect natural resource areas and empower the Boston Conservation Commission to require resiliency and green infrastructure in development.

Advocated for oversight to restore trust in ZBA and development approvals process

Negotiated limiting urban renewal to a six-year extension, expiring in 2022

Kleines Unternehmen

Small businesses are the backbone of Boston’s economy, serving as cultural hubs in our neighborhoods, economic engines for families across the city, and one of the most important ways to build wealth in our communities. As a former small business owner, Michelle has been standing up for entrepreneurs and breaking down barriers so locally-owned businesses can thrive, starting with streamlining processes for small business permitting and licensing, and reforming city contracting and procurement to align with our goals to close the racial wealth gap and support worker cooperatives. Michelle will help build Boston’s economic recovery to center local small businesses, their workforce, and the communities they serve.

POLICY PRIORITIES

How We Will Lead

Fighting for our locally-owned businesses during and after the pandemic

Businesses are facing unprecedented challenges as they struggle to pay rent, serve their customers, keep their workers safe, and navigate reopening and recovery. We must work with entrepreneurs and advocates to ensure that those with the most need have access to relief and services.

Aligning City contracting to help close the racial wealth gap and support community wealth-building

We need to get the most value out of taxpayer dollars by directing them back into the community and ensuring that businesses owned by people of color, women, and Boston residents have a fair shot at winning City of Boston contracts.

Streamlining small business permitting and licensing

Boston should have a welcoming, convenient, and smooth process to open small businesses and wrap-around services to grow and expand a business in our city. We must create a customer service-focused environment for City processes, with clear timelines and accessible, efficient communications.

Strengthening Boston’s Main Streets and legacy businesses

Our neighborhood businesses anchor our communities, but small businesses are facing commercial gentrification with increasing rents across the city. In recent years, too many of Boston’s legacy businesses, critical to the economy and character of our neighborhoods, have been shuttered. As the stresses of COVID present an unprecedented threat, we need to fight for a pandemic recovery plan that builds on the strength of these mainstay businesses.

Supporting entrepreneurs of color

In combating historical economic exclusion, we need to better equip entrepreneurs of color with programming and resources to promote their success.

Creating specialized supports for restaurants

Restaurants have been hit especially hard during the pandemic with government-mandated shutdowns and restricted capacity adding to the stresses on an industry with already tight profit margins. Boston should work closely to connect federal, state, and local resources to neighborhood restaurants and work to rebuild the local restaurant scene with technical assistance, place-making, programming, and publicity.

MICHELLE'S RECORD

What We've Done Together So Far

Advocated for an equitable recovery from COVID-19, including a focus on small businesses, especially those owned by immigrants and people of color

Ensured oversight on how small business relief funds were allocated and on emergency City spending during the pandemic

Authored and passed legislation to align city spending with closing the racial wealth gap and building wealth in Boston communities

Authored and passed legislation to create jobs and opportunity for local food producers and food businesses by prioritizing local purchasing for City food procurement

Authored and passed legislation removing barriers for businesses to host live music

Authored and passed legislation ending the ban on BYOB in Boston

Issued recommendations for streamlining small business permitting and licensing

Filed legislation to protect small business districts from the expansion of chain stores

Public Health

Boston boasts world-class hospitals and serves as a hub of medical innovation and industry, but the thriving health care economy has not always translated to adequate care for all of our residents. The COVID-19 pandemic has revealed and widened Boston’s deep health disparities by race and neighborhood, further afflicting communities already burdened with exposure to gun violence and environmental hazards, and further destabilizing residents struggling with homelessness and the opioid epidemic. Michelle is fighting for the access and resources to ensure the health of every family and the resilience of our public health infrastructure.

POLICY PRIORITIES

How We Will Lead

Managing the COVID-19 pandemic and creating resiliency to future threats

The next mayor will be responsible for ushering the city through the ongoing crisis of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has reshaped every aspect of our lives. Leadership during this crisis means creating a robust system of testing, contract tracing, and public health outreach built on science and grounded in public trust and transparency.

Ending health disparities in health care access and outcomes

Michelle is committed to rooting out discrimination in all of its forms. Racism is a public health crisis in Boston, from tragic disparities in Black maternal health to the epidemic of gun violence that disproportionately harms Black and brown communities. The fight for equality includes ensuring linguistically and culturally competent care, access to gender affirming services, and health policy that centers people with disabilities and chronic illnesses.

Implementing a citywide plan to address homelessness, substance use, and mental health

The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated Boston's homelessness, substance use, and mental health crises, with opioid-related overdose deaths increasing by 20% in 2020 alone as social isolation, mental health challenges, financial precarity and housing instability have deepened. Across Massachusetts, the highest increase in opioid-related deaths has been among Black men, and the crisis has been worsened by the prevalence of fentanyl, a synthetic opioid that’s up to 100 times stronger than morphine. Boston residents deserve compassionate care, urgent action, and accountability. These intersectional barriers and complexity of broken systems must be transformed.

Overhauling Boston’s public health infrastructure

Boston can be the healthiest city in the country for all of our residents by investing in our community health providers and partnerships, tackling chronic and underlying health issues in the population, and expanding access to outreach and preventative care.

Prioritizing mental health and trauma supports

As the world continues to grapple with the physical health and economic effects of COVID-19, mental health is becoming another pressing health crisis just beneath the surface of the pandemic, with additional barriers to care for communities of color. Michelle believes in ending the stigma of mental illness by sharing the complexities of our stories and fighting to make care accessible to every family.

Investing in substance use prevention, treatment, & recovery services

We need to take a compassionate, evidence-based approach to substance use disorder that is grounded in principles of harm reduction and not criminalization. Our families deserve a renewed commitment to ending the opioid epidemic and the underlying corporate greed, economic stressors, and mental health crisis that feed its devastation.

Creating a local, healthy, and sustainable food system and fighting food insecurity

Access to nutritious food can help power healthy families, and investments in local, community-oriented food production and distribution are the building blocks for fighting food insecurity and creating a sustainable food system. We should be rethinking food access from beginning to end, starting with corporatized food production processes that compromise workers’ rights and leave our food supply chain vulnerable to disruption. Through robust community partnerships, equitable food procurement practices, and support for small businesses like bodegas and family-owned restaurants, we can better serve our communities.

Grounding public safety in a commitment to public health

In all of our public safety priorities, from ending gun violence and domestic violence to reforming our crisis response infrastructure, Boston must lead with trust as the foundation for public health. Building wellness in our city requires setting a new standard for accountability and community oversight in policing, which means we must also reject surveillance technology and practices that threaten civil rights and disproportionately harm Black and brown neighborhoods and families.

Fighting for environmental justice and ensuring all Bostonians live with clean air and water, and healthy homes

Leaders must use this moment to confront the interlocking threats of ecological degradation and environmental racism and call for solutions that will generate green jobs, fight wealth inequality, and build more livable cities. Our families deserve clean air, unpolluted water, and toxic-free buildings. From fighting the urban heat island effect and restoring our tree canopy, to combating pollution, we should build an inclusive, green public health agenda.

MICHELLE’S RECORD

What We've Done Together So Far

Authored and passed legislation securing inclusive health care access for all City employees, prohibiting discrimination based on gender identity

Authored and passed legislation guaranteeing paid parental leave for all City employees, inclusive of all family types

Authored and passed a Good Food Purchasing Policy for the city to require an emphasis on local production, healthy and nutritious foods, environmental sustainability, fair labor, and humane animal welfare practices

Authored and passed legislation prohibiting the use of discriminatory face surveillance technology by Boston law enforcement or any other city agencies

Advocated for measures to address the disproportionate exposure to air pollution for communities of color, including highlighting that Chinatown is the most polluted community in the state

Filed legislation to reform Boston’s crisis response to expand the infrastructure of trained public health professionals

Public Safety

Whether in our schools or on our streets, public safety should be built around restorative justice and community trust. From ending gun violence and domestic violence, to reforming our crisis response infrastructure, building wellness in our city means dismantling racism in our institutions and setting a new standard for accountability and community oversight.

POLICY PRIORITIES

How We Will Lead

Reimagining and grounding public safety in public health

A national and citywide reckoning with racial injustice has created fertile ground for the reimagining of public safety as public health. It’s time to re-evaluate our City’s responses to trauma and allocation of resources. We must improve agency coordination and simplify access to resources, divert 911 calls regarding homelessness and mental health issues to public health professionals, improve street teams’ infrastructure, and expand partnerships with hospitals to spread public health information. Read more about Michelle’s plans for public health here.

Dismantling racism in policing

It is all too clear that our city’s public safety structures have not kept all of us safe, particularly our Black residents. We must take concrete steps to dismantle racism in law enforcement by demilitarizing the police, banning weapons like tear gas and rubber bullets and practices like no-knock warrants that endanger our residents of color. We must also establish an independent civilian review board with subpoena power to investigate police misconduct and close the loopholes in the body camera program in order to build trust between BPD and our communities. We must also dismantle ableism in policing and ensure that Bostonian’s have access to emergency services that can provide the appropriate mental health support, particularly for those with disabilities.

Rebuilding the culture and structure of the Boston Police Department

Delivering public safety through a lens of public health and community trust requires urgent action to rebuild the culture and structure of the Boston Police Department. We must deliver structural changes that go beyond announcements or goals, and instead are embedded in the collective bargaining agreements with the City. We need a contract that gets to the root of the cultural and systemic reforms we need — full transparency and true accountability for misconduct, reducing wasteful overtime spending to reinvest those funds in neighborhood-level services, and removing the functions of traffic enforcement and social services from the department’s purview.

Supporting our youth

The surest way to combat community violence is by creating opportunity. We need to invest in our youth by ensuring access to paid summer jobs and opportunities during the school year. We also need to elevate youth voices and let young people lead the way in reimagining public safety in their own communities. That starts with meeting youth demands to remove police from Boston Public Schools and ensuring all students have access to trauma services, counselors, and other wrap-around services.

Combating violence in our communities

Our public safety structures must address the realities of domestic violence, gun violence, and violence against LGBTQ people, especially nonbinary residents, including by coordinating the medical, counseling, and social support services that survivors need to recover and thrive.

Cracking down on hate crimes

Hate crimes against immigrants, people of color, LBGTQ+ residents, and Jewish and Muslim residents have been increasing in recent years, and they are too often compounded by cultural and linguistic barriers that can keep survivors from seeking and receiving help. We must eradicate the discrimination, intolerance and bullying that seed these despicable hate crimes, fighting the ideologies that sanction and encourage hate and working for every community space to be safe and welcoming.

Ending racial disparities in our criminal legal system

We must rethink our criminal legal system with a data-driven, progressive approach that moves away from the carceral approach to minor non-violent offenses that disproportionately impacts immigrants and residents of color. Our public safety system must work in collaboration with community partners to implement evidence-based diversionary alternatives to arrest, detention, prosecution and incarceration that promote safer and healthier communities. Reforming our criminal legal system also requires ending the failed, racially discriminatory war on drugs; dismantling the discriminatory gang database; and investing in re-entry services for formerly incarcerated people.

Aligning public safety with an agenda for safe streets and transit justice

Rethinking our streets and transportation systems is urgent for public health and safety – particularly during the pandemic. By investing in public transportation and reallocating street space to pedestrians, cyclists, and people who use mobility aids, we can work toward a pandemic recovery that is more equitable and safer for all residents.

Addressing underlying causes of crime and criminalization

Too many of our neighbors, especially in communities of color, are living with untreated trauma. We need to prevent violence by making equitable investments in our neighborhoods and interrupt the cycles of violence by providing survivors with supportive services. At the same time, we must dismantle other systems of violence inflicting trauma upon Black residents and communities of color, including housing instability, food insecurity, transit injustice, mass incarceration, and the climate crisis. By thinking holistically about public safety through a public health lens and redirecting funding into education, housing, health care, and other basic needs, we can alleviate the trauma caused by over-policing while investing in a safer and more equitable future.

MICHELLE'S RECORD

What We’ve Done Together So Far

Authored and passed legislation banning the use of racially discriminatory facial recognition technology

Filed legislation for alternative crisis response from trained public health professionals

Passed a resolution calling for increased state funding for youth jobs

Conducted oversight on the militarization of BPD

Convened a youth-led community forum to reimagine public safety in Boston

Economic Justice & Workers' Rights

Economic justice starts with a commitment to worker power, workplace safety, and livable wages. Especially during the COVID-19 pandemic, standing up for labor rights has life and death consequences. Boston’s economy and our economic recovery should be built on good, green jobs, made truly accessible when we tackle the struggles facing working families, from lack of affordable child care options to housing insecurity. Michelle is focused on confronting wealth inequality and building economic prosperity through a commitment to labor rights.

POLICY PRIORITIES

How We Will Lead

Building worker power

Workers must have real negotiating power as we rebuild our city’s economy and shape our collective future. Boston must proactively affirm the right of all workers to organize and bargain collectively for their rights, including by aggressively enforcing existing procurement standards that give preference to union vendors. At the same time, we must also support the creation of worker-owned cooperatives that build wealth and power in underserved communities.

Establishing a Cabinet-Level Chief of Worker Empowerment

To ensure a just and equitable recovery from COVID-19, our commitment to working Bostonians must go beyond paying lip service to essential workers, to include structural changes at the City level to close gaps, elevate the dignity of work, and advance the well-being of all Boston workers and their communities. As Mayor, Michelle will create a Cabinet-level Chief of Worker Empowerment with oversight and resources to advance working Bostonians in both the private and public sectors.

Protecting essential workers during COVID-19

The pandemic has provided us with the opportunity to recognize the dignity of all workers, including essential workers who risk their lives on a daily basis to keep our city running. Boston must protect the physical health of workers during COVID-19 by modernizing our buildings’ ventilation systems and guaranteeing access to personal protective equipment (PPE) for all workers. We must also prevent retaliation against workers who report unsafe working conditions that heighten the risk of contracting COVID-19.

Fighting for livable wages and benefits

Boston must ensure that all workers earn a living wage and adequate paid family and medical leave to provide for themselves and their families. That includes undocumented workers, who are an essential part of our city’s economy, but are too often denied these same tenets of worker justice and confronted with employer retaliation. The pandemic has revealed the inadequacy of paltry sick leave policies that force workers to choose between their health and their paycheck. Whether dealing with COVID-19, a broken bone, or elder care responsibilities, we must ensure that all workers have the freedom to take care of their loved ones without losing a paycheck.

Tackling wage theft

Wage theft undermines the security and well-being of Boston workers, especially from low-income and immigrant communities, the service sector, and other workers, taking advantage of those who haven’t been informed of their rights or lack the legal or financial resources to defend them. By prohibiting vendors with past workplace safety or wage theft violations from doing business with the City, Boston can send a clear signal to all businesses that they must uphold and enforce labor laws and workplace protections.

Guaranteeing a Fair Work Week

Boston’s service sector workers—including the essential workers that we have depended on throughout the pandemic—experience routine schedule instability and unpredictability. These unpredictable schedules create hardship and stress for workers and their families, who are more likely to experience hunger, poor sleep quality, and higher levels of stress. All employers doing business in the City of Boston must provide their workers with schedules that are predictable and flexible, with enough hours for families to make ends meet, and enough leisure time to participate in family and community life.

Combating wealth inequality and creating corporate and institutional accountability

Boston’s approach to economic development must benefit all residents. Instead of giving tax breaks to bad actors, we should support companies that hire locally and provide full-time jobs with livable wages and good benefits. Companies should publicly report the number and type of jobs created so that Boston residents and city government can hold accountable these private corporations and larger institutions that receive public benefits and services.

Ensuring equitable access to public goods like transportation and education

Our city’s transit system is powered by and for essential workers, and the pandemic has underscored the need for workers to be able to move safely and affordably around the city – now, and in the future. Meanwhile, inequities in the Boston Public School system continue to perpetuate racial and socioeconomic disparities across the city, while teachers, administrators, and other school staff are facing the challenges of a safe reopening and equitable recovery for K-12 schools. We must invest in the transportation and education systems that workers depend on to build resilience during and after the pandemic.

Championing economic empowerment for all Bostonians

Fighting for worker dignity means confronting and dismantling the ways that people of color, women, immigrants, undocumented people, disabled people, and LGBTQ individuals often face additional barriers to employment and unequal payment and treatment at work. A commitment to economic empowerment means safeguarding wages and rights in the workplace, but our local government should also align spending and priorities to uproot the causes of wealth inequality and close the racial wealth gap. To build a strong and just city, we must also invest in youth employment opportunities, affordable child care, and support for small businesses, building on a robust network of community organizations and partnerships.

Implementing Boston’s Green New Deal (GND)

Michelle has proposed a groundbreaking plan to implement the GND at the municipal level, which includes creating green jobs with livable wages, good benefits, and strong worker protections to build a clean, just economy. By partnering with organized labor, workers centers, and technical schools and educators, Boston can ensure that these workforce development pathways are accessible for residents of all backgrounds.

MICHELLE'S RECORD

What We've Done Together So Far

Filed legislation to require a Fair Work Week for workers at city-contracted companies

Authored and passed legislation guaranteeing parental leave for city workers

Authored and passed legislation guaranteeing equity in health care coverage for city workers, prohibiting discrimination on the basis of gender identity

Advocated for a Domestic Workers’ Bill of Rights

Climate Justice

With bold leadership and vision, Boston has the potential to be a worldwide beacon for climate action and environmental justice. In partnership with community activists and organizations, Michelle has proposed the first comprehensive of its kind, laying out an ambitious policy roadmap for delivering the kinds of structural changes we need in order to provide our kids a future built on sustainable energy, good jobs, and healthy, connected communities.

POLICY PRIORITIES

How We Will Lead

Implementing a Boston Green New Deal and Just Recovery

Climate justice is racial and economic justice. Cities can lead the charge to mitigate the threat of climate change, eliminate the violence of poverty and economic inequality, close the racial wealth gap, and dismantle structural racism. Read Michelle’s plan.

Protecting public health with clean air and water

City residents face serious health risks of living near sources of pollution—from East Boston residents dealing with jet fuel pollution near the airport, to Chinatown residents living by highways filled with polluting cars and trucks. Boston should take measures to mitigate and eliminate pollution. And as a coastal city, we can play a major role in safeguarding our ocean resources to protect marine biodiversity and improve water quality. Combating climate change is a key part of creating safe communities and promoting public health.

Fighting for environmental justice communities

Communities of color, low-income and working-class families, and immigrant communities are more likely to see environmental hazards and face exposure to pollution, urban heat island effect, flooding, and other impacts of climate change. Policies to combat environmental racism and ensure resiliency must focus on community stabilization to ensure people benefit from green investments in their neighborhoods without fear of displacement. As we take action on climate change, Boston’s decision-makers must adopt a procedural justice framework that lifts up the voices, ideas and power of historically marginalized communities into processes for setting agendas and implementing policies.

Improving quality of life through better buildings and sustainable transit

Buildings and transportation together account for a large portion of our carbon footprint. Retrofitting our buildings with solar panels, high-efficiency heaters, and stormwater infrastructure will make buildings safer and more comfortable for residents, students and workers, while also cutting down on utility costs for renters and homeowners. And creating multimodal transportation systems that enable residents to leave traffic- and pollution-inducing fossil fuel-powered vehicles behind will not only reduce our emissions, but also improve air quality, ease traffic congestion, and allow all Boston residents to benefit from active transportation.

Accelerating decarbonization

The window to reverse the destructive momentum of climate change is closing quickly, and Boston is vulnerable to intense heat waves and destructive coastal flooding. We must commit to citywide carbon neutrality by 2040, with 100% of our energy coming from renewable sources by 2030, and a net-zero municipal footprint by 2024. These firm commitments demonstrate leadership to the nation while modeling a science-driven climate action plan that centers the safety and well-being of historically marginalized and impacted environmental justice communities.

Creating green jobs and workforce development

Michelle’s plan to implement the GND at the municipal level includes the creation of green jobs that pay livable wages, offer good benefits, and maintain strong worker protections to build a clean, just economy. By partnering with organized labor, workers centers, and technical schools, Boston can ensure that these workforce development pathways are accessible for residents of all backgrounds. Building a sustainable economy is key to championing economic justice and workers' rights.

Expanding Boston’s green spaces

We must ensure all residents have access to the natural spaces that build ecosystem resilience while improving public health. Urban forests provide shade and protect against heat waves, mitigate exposure to air pollutants, and improve our mental health, while also sequestering carbon in the soil. And beyond its environmental benefits, urban agriculture also promotes community engagement in public space, allowing residents to grow food that is nutritious and culturally relevant. Boston must work to expand its urban tree canopy and its network of urban farms to ensure all residents can enjoy the benefits of these green spaces.

MICHELLE'S RECORD

What We’ve Done Together So Far

Released a comprehensive local plan for a Boston Green New Deal and Just Recovery

Authored and passed legislation expanding protections for natural resource areas and requiring resilient development

Authored and passed legislation for Community Choice Energy to increase renewable energy for Boston residents and small businesses, empowering the largest green municipal aggregation in the state

Removed barriers for condo owners to install electric vehicle charging stations

Banned single-use plastic bags in Boston

Passed a resolution calling for Massachusetts to divest from fossil fuels

Authored and passed legislation shifting our public food procurement to agricultural producers that employ regenerative production systems that reduce emissions and protect our water, soil, and biodiversity

Arts & Culture

Growing up, the arts were central to Michelle’s immigrant family, grounding her in culture, heritage, and community. In her time as City Councilor, Michelle has served as Chair of the Arts, Culture & Special Events committee and helped oversee the formation of several of Boston’s cultural districts, as well as the Boston Creates plan. As Mayor, Michelle will be a champion for Boston’s diverse, vibrant arts and cultural sector that stretches across each of our city’s neighborhoods.

POLICY PRIORITIES

How We Will Lead

Long before the COVID-19 pandemic, many of our local artists and arts institutions—from Boston’s world renowned museums to grassroots nonprofit organizations—have struggled to survive, often cobbling together resources from the city, state, and private partners to sustain local jobs and create meaningful cultural experiences for Boston residents and tourists alike. The challenges cut across the entire city: a lack of affordable rehearsal, studio and performance space; unstable labor conditions for artists in the gig economy or employed in contract work; racial segregation that perpetuates inequities; and a siloed approach to public policy that fails to build on artists’ contributions to civic life. As Boston emerges from the pandemic, Michelle will invest in our arts and culture sector, recognizing that arts are central not only to our economic recovery, but also our psychological and emotional healing.

Empowering artists to help communities heal

Boston should ensure that every neighborhood sees new, innovative art that engages community members in placemaking, healing, activism, storytelling, and relationship building—starting immediately this summer.

  • Scale up Boston’s Artists in Residence program to embed artists in municipal buildings–from public schools and libraries to parks, public housing, and fire stations–in paid residency positions to create meaningful employment opportunities for local artists, connect neighborhood residents with community programming and public policy, and provide the civic infrastructure for communities to rebuild social ties.
  • Prioritize residency programs in the neighborhoods hardest hit by COVID-19 and hire artists from our communities to support our collective recovery after a traumatic year that exacerbated racial inequities in our city.
  • Make every summer a Summer of Play, shutting down neighborhood streets to vehicle traffic and creating Play Streets, hiring local musicians, actors, and visual artists to perform, lead public arts workshops, and create opportunities for children to reconnect with each other and with their communities.

Implementing a sustainable, equitable revenue source for the arts

The health and vibrancy of our arts and culture sector underpins our community, economy, and growth. Yet Boston consistently underperforms compared to its peer cities in terms of public investment in the arts.

  • Dedicate 1% of our annual municipal capital budget to commissioning public art projects, supporting venues and facilities, and building out infrastructure for arts and culture organizations.
  • Build a coalition to advance state legislation for long-term financial support to Boston’s arts and cultural sector through a sustainable revenue stream for the City to fund arts organizations, hire artists, and build arts infrastructure.
  • Coordinate private resources to align with and supplement public funding by articulating a clear vision for arts and culture as necessary infrastructure, with clear community oversight to ensure that financial resources are directed to narrow racial gaps, not widen them.

Reforming PILOT to stabilize arts and cultural institutions

Boston is the only major city to request payment from cultural organizations through its payment-in-lieu-of-taxes (PILOT) program for nonprofit, tax-exempt institutions. This unusual PILOT structure means that together, seven of Boston’s arts and cultural organizations actually pay more money to the City of Boston than the entire arts sector receives from the City in the form of arts and culture grants

  • Revisit the 2011 PILOT reforms that implemented a standardized formula for requesting contributions from large nonprofit entities across all sectors.
  • Differentiate arts and cultural institutions from other nonprofits to safeguard the financial stability of Boston’s museums, music halls, and other cultural organizations for future generations.
  • Direct the City’s Office of Arts and Culture to work with arts and cultural institutions to collaboratively support and identify right-sized community benefits projects tailored to the unique strengths of each institution and the needs of Boston’s arts communities.

Expanding access to cultural institutions through a Boston Municipal ID

Many of Boston’s larger arts institutions have launched programs to expand access to lower-income Boston residents, for whom full admission fees serve as an obstacle to enjoying arts and culture. The City should invite its museums and larger arts organizations to commit to further democratizing admission by launching a new municipal ID program, expanding access for residents who are undocumented, experiencing homelessness, lack government ID that matches their gender identity, or otherwise unable to apply for state and federally issued IDs.

  • Design and implement a Boston Municipal ID program aligned with the community recommendations in the 2018 feasibility study, including strong privacy safeguards and rigorous, multilingual community outreach.
  • Coordinate arts and cultural organizations to offer no- or low-cost fare programs for BPS students and families, BHA residents, SNAP participants, and other lower-income Boston residents, regardless of their citizenship status, as part of a renegotiated community benefits agreement through a reformed PILOT program.

Creating space for arts and culture

Across Boston, studio, rehearsal and performance space is increasingly scarce—either unavailable or unaffordable to most local artists and smaller organizations.

  • Make spaces in municipal and other community buildings available to musical, theater, and other artistic performances; and expand the community schools model across Boston Public Schools through collaborative shared-use agreements to open our public school buildings to local artists.
  • Coordinate higher education institutions, houses of worship and other community organizations to open up the doors to underutilized spaces for the benefit of local artists.
  • Dedicate City resources to building and managing a calendar and scheduling platform across public, non-profit and private institutions for artists to find available rehearsal and performance space.
  • Incentivize commercial property owners with vacant office spaces to make low- or no-cost administrative space available to arts and cultural organizations, particularly as the real estate market adjusts to the post-pandemic work economy.
  • Direct a newly-created public planning department to identify citywide gaps in studio and rehearsal space, performance space, and affordable live-work space for artists, and then codify a plan to meet the needs of Boston’s working artists into our zoning code.

Infusing arts leadership across City government

All City services and programs would benefit from the creative thinking, storytelling skills, and holistic worldview that artists have to offer. Artists have deep ties to their local communities, and Boston should employ artists as key strategists and connectors in pursuing our shared goals of racial justice, climate resilience, and civic engagement across all public policy.

  • Bring artists into every City planning initiative early on, with paid, full-time positions for artists to contribute to the design teams that shape new construction projects and major redevelopments.
  • Build on existing partnerships with programs like Arts Train to identify and implement best practices for infusing artists across broader policy initiatives across all levels of municipal government.
  • Bring artists into Complete Streets projects to build streetscapes that are safe, accessible, and enjoyable for all.

Guaranteeing arts funding as foundational school funding

Arts programming is linked to higher student attendance and family engagement, and the benefits are even higher for students with individualized education plans or students who had been chronically absent. Boston Public Schools has made progress in expanding arts education to all K-8 students—but at the high school level, more than one-third of students receive no art programming, and in the 2020-21 school year, at least ten high schools had no full-time arts educator.

  • Reform the Boston Public Schools budgetary process to define arts funding as foundational school funding.
  • Commit to in-school arts education for every BPS student through graduation, meeting or exceeding the MassCore standards, with at least one full-time arts educator in each school and consistent professional development opportunities for culturally competent, anti-racist arts pedagogy.
  • Expand funding and infrastructure for partnerships with external arts organizations to continue to build relationships with school communities, redoubling efforts to increase support for partnerships with arts organizations led by Black and brown artists, so that every BPS student has the opportunity to envision themselves as part of Boston’s thriving arts and culture sector.

MICHELLE'S RECORD

What We’ve Done Together So Far

Authored and passed legislation to make it easier for businesses to host live acoustic performances and support Boston musicians

Successfully pushed the City to commission a study exploring municipal ID as a tool to help those with difficulty obtaining a government-issued ID access museums, libraries, and other municipal institutions

Led the effort on Boston City Council to designate Little Saigon in Fields Corner as a cultural district by the Massachusetts Cultural Council as a center of Vietnamese cultural, artistic and economic activity

Advocated for resources for creatives and artists during COVID-19[45]

—Michelle Wu's 2021 campaign website[52]


Campaign advertisements

This section shows advertisements released in this race. Ads released by campaigns and, if applicable, satellite groups are embedded or linked below. If you are aware of advertisements that should be included, please email us.

Annissa Essaibi George

"I DON'T PLAY POLITICS." - Essaibi George campaign ad, released October 26, 2021
"LET'S TALK ABOUT LEADERSHIP" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released October 14, 2021
"A NEW BOSTON" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released October 14, 2021
"Doing the work." - Essaibi George campaign ad, released October 12, 2021
"We Will Never Stop" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released October 8, 2021
"Meet Team Annissa: Tony" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 27, 2021
"Meet Team Annissa: Terrance" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 25, 2021
"Maestra, Madre, Alcaldesa" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 25, 2021
"Teacher, Mom, Mayor" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 25, 2021
"Meet Team Annissa: Marina" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 23, 2021
"Meet Team Annissa: Stacy" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 19, 2021
"Meet Team Annissa: Paul" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 18, 2021
"Meet Team Annissa: Kesha" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 17, 2021
"Meet Team Annissa: Elaine" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 14=6, 2021
"Meet Team Annissa: Mitch" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 14, 2021
"Meet Team Annissa: Richard" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 13, 2021
"Meet Team Annissa: Mary-dith" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 13, 2021
"Meet Team Annissa: Michelle" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 13, 2021
"Meet Team Annissa: Stefanie" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 13, 2021
"Meet Team Annissa: Mick" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 13, 2021
"Together" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released August 3, 2021
"Every Bostonian, Every Experience" - Essaibi George campaign ad, released February 17, 2021


Michelle Wu

"Michelle Wu Para Alcaldesa" - Wu campaign ad, released October 20, 2021
"October TV Ad" - Wu campaign ad, released October 11, 2021
"Luchando por ti" - Wu campaign ad, released August 19, 2021
"Michelle Wu - Working for You" - Wu campaign ad, released August 19, 2021


Satellite ads

Supporting Wu

"Michelle Wu - Vote" - Boston Turnout Project ad, released October 25, 2021
"Michelle Wu - Endorsed" - Boston Turnout Project ad, released October 7, 2021
"Michelle Wu - History" - Boston Turnout Project ad, released September 21, 2021
"Michelle Wu - Barrier Breaking" - Boston Turnout Project ad, released August 23, 2021

Opposing Wu

"How To Defund" - Bostonians for Real Progress ad, released October 17, 2021

Polls

See also: Ballotpedia's approach to covering polls
Boston mayoral election polls
Poll Date Essaibi George Wu Undecided/
Other
Margin of error Sample size Sponsor
Emerson College/WHDH Oct. 26-27 2021 31% 61% 8%[53] ± 4.3[54] 500 LV --
Data for Progress Oct. 14-18, 2021 32% 57% 11%[55] ± 4 507 LV --
Boston Globe/Suffolk University Oct. 15-17, 2021 30% 62% 8%[56] ± 4.4 500 LV --
MassINC Oct. 6-12, 2021 25% 57% 18%[57] ± 4.9 501 LV The Boston Foundation/
The Dorchester Reporter/
WBUR

Click [show] below to see polls released during the primary election.

Campaign finance

Satellite spending

See also: Satellite spending

Satellite spending, commonly referred to as outside spending, describes political spending not controlled by candidates or their campaigns; that is, any political expenditures made by groups or individuals that are not directly affiliated with a candidate. This includes spending by political party committees, super PACs, trade associations, and 501(c)(4) nonprofit groups.[64][65][66]

This section lists satellite spending in this race reported by news outlets in alphabetical order. If you are aware of spending that should be included, please email us.

  • Bostonians for Real Progress Independent Expenditure Political Action Committee spent $120,546 for digital ads and website development supporting Essaibi George as of September 13.[67] The group spent $342,500 on TV, digital, and cable advertising opposing Wu as of October 29.[68]
  • Boston Turnout Project Independent Expenditure Political Action Committee spent $864,911 on digital and cable ads and direct mail supporting Wu as of October 30.[68]
  • Environmental League of Massachusetts Action Fund Independent Expenditure Political Action Committee spent $158,758 on direct mail and digital ads supporting Wu as of October 15.[68]
  • Local 103 International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Independent Expenditure PAC spent $92,500 on TV ads supporting Essaibi George as of October 29.[67]
  • Real Progress Boston Independent Expenditure Political Action Committee spent $1.5 million on TV, digital, newspaper, and radio ads and more supporting Essaibi George as of October 29.[67]
  • 1199 SEIU MA PAC spent $100,000 on digital ads supporting Wu as of October 5.[68]

Debates and forums

October 26, 2021

King Boston, the Black Economic Council of Massachusetts, NBC10 Boston, and other news organizations hosted a forum featuring one-on-one segments with the candidates. Click here to view videos.

October 25, 2021

WCVB and other local news organizations hosted a debate. Click here to watch the video.

October 24, 2021

The Urban League sponsored a forum. Click here for coverage.

October 19, 2021

NBC Boston hosted a debate. Click here to view the video.

October 13, 2021

WBZ-TV/CBSN Boston hosted a debate. Click here to view the video.

Mayoral partisanship

See also: Partisanship in United States municipal elections (2021)

Mayoral elections were held in 28 of the 100 largest U.S. cities in 2021. Once mayors elected in 2021 assumed office, the mayors of 64 of the country's 100 largest cities were affiliated with the Democratic Party.

The following top-100 mayoral offices changed partisan control in 2021:

Election history

2019

See also: City elections in Boston, Massachusetts (2019)
The city of Boston, Massachusetts, held general elections for city council on November 5, 2019. The primary was on September 24, 2019. The deadline for candidates to file to run in this election was May 21, 2019.


City voters also voted on a local measure to rename Dudley Square to Nubian Square.

2017

See also: Municipal elections in Boston, Massachusetts (2017)

The city of Boston, Massachusetts, held elections for mayor and city council on November 7, 2017. A primary election occurred on September 26, 2017. All 13 seats on the city council were up for election. The filing deadline for candidates wishing to run in this election was May 23, 2017.

2015

See also: Boston, Massachusetts municipal elections, 2015

The city of Boston, Massachusetts, held elections for city council on November 3, 2015. A primary election took place on September 8, 2015. The filing deadline for candidates who wished to run in this election was May 19, 2015. All 13 city council seats were up for election.


About the city

See also: Boston, Massachusetts

Boston is the capital of Massachusetts. As of 2020, its population was 675,647.

City government

See also: Mayor-council government

The city of Boston uses a strong mayor and city council system. In this form of municipal government, the city council serves as the city's primary legislative body and the mayor serves as the city's chief executive.

Demographics

The following table displays demographic data provided by the United States Census Bureau.

Demographic Data for Boston, Massachusetts
Boston Massachusetts
Population 675,647 7,029,917
Land area (sq mi) 48 7,800
Race and ethnicity**
White 52.1% 76.6%
Black/African American 24.2% 7.5%
Asian 9.8% 6.8%
Native American 0.3% 0.2%
Pacific Islander 0.1% 0%
Two or more 7.2% 4.8%
Hispanic/Latino 19.5% 12%
Bildung
High school graduation rate 87.9% 91.1%
College graduation rate 51.3% 44.5%
Income
Median household income $76,298 $84,385
Persons below poverty level 18% 9.8%
Source: population provided by U.S. Census Bureau, "Decennial Census" (2020). Other figures provided by U.S. Census Bureau, "American Community Survey" (5-year estimates 2015-2020).
**Note: Percentages for race and ethnicity may add up to more than 100 percent because respondents may report more than one race and the Hispanic/Latino ethnicity may be selected in conjunction with any race. Read more about race and ethnicity in the census here.


See also

Boston, Massachusetts Massachusetts Municipal government Other local coverage
Seal of Boston, Massachusetts.png
Seal of Massachusetts.png
Municipal Government Final.png
Local Politics Image.jpg

External links

Footnotes

  1. Boston.gov, "City of Boston, 2021 Election Calendar," accessed July 19, 2021
  2. Boston.gov, "Vote Early Boston," accessed October 8, 2021
  3. Massachusetts Secretary of State, "2021 Vote by Mail Application," accessed August 5, 2021
  4. Boston Globe, "With different visions for Boston, Wu and Essaibi George hit the campaign trail," September 15, 2021
  5. Washington Post, "Two women of color will compete to become Boston’s next mayor, marking historic shift," September 14, 2021
  6. Politico Massachusetts Playbook, "Progressives SPLIT in Boston mayor's race — MASK UP and VAX UP — LELLING talks ROLLINS," July 28, 2021
  7. Axios, "The tea leaves of Boston's historic mayoral race," August 2, 2021
  8. Boston.com, "Annissa Essaibi George jabs Michelle Wu in celebratory speech ahead of mayoral general election," September 15, 2021
  9. CBS Local, "Keller @ Large: Mayoral Candidate Michelle Wu Says Boston ‘Can’t Afford To Just Nibble Around The Edges Of The Status Quo,’" September 19, 2021
  10. Boston.com, "4 key policy differences that could drive the race between Michelle Wu and Annissa Essaibi George," September 15, 2021
  11. Boston Globe, "In an unprecedented moment, Kim Janey endorses Michelle Wu for Boston mayor," September 25, 2021
  12. 12.0 12.1 The Boston Globe, "WAKANDA II endorses Janey for mayor," August 7, 2021
  13. CBS News, "Boston's next mayor will make history as Michelle Wu and Annissa Essaibi George advance to runoff," September 15, 2021
  14. Boston.com, "A look back at the mayors of Boston," April 14, 2013
  15. The Boston Globe, "The Boston mayoral race’s unintended consequence: a City Council shakeup," June 20, 2021
  16. In battleground primaries, Ballotpedia based its selection of noteworthy candidates on polling, fundraising, and noteworthy endorsements. In battleground general elections, all major party candidates and any other candidates with the potential to impact the outcome of the race were included.
  17. Boston Herald, "Editorial: Herald backs Annissa Essaibi-George for mayor of Boston," October 28, 2021
  18. Boston Globe, "Michelle Wu for mayor," October 22, 2021
  19. Facebook, "Michelle Wu on October 19, 2021," accessed October 19, 2021
  20. Politico, "Reading between the endorsement lines," October 6, 2021
  21. WCVB, "Rep. Ayanna Pressley endorses Michelle Wu's bid for mayor of Boston," October 1, 2021
  22. East Boston Times-Free Press, "Madaro Endorses Wu for Mayor of Boston," October 6, 2021
  23. Facebook, "Michelle Wu on October 18, 2021
  24. Facebook, "Michelle Wu on October 29, 2021," accessed November 1, 2021
  25. Facebook, "Annissa Essaibi George on September 29, 2021," accessed September 30, 2021
  26. Facebook, "Annissa Essaibi George on September 24, 2021," accessed September 30, 2021
  27. Facebook, "Annissa Essaibi George on October 7, 2021," accessed October 7, 2021
  28. Facebook, "Annissa Essaibi George on October 29, 2021," accessed October 29, 2021
  29. Politico Massachusetts Playbook, "The congressional cash dash," October 27, 2021
  30. Facebook, "Michelle Wu on September 29, 2021," accessed September 30, 2021
  31. Boston Globe, "WAKANDA II, other leaders of color come out for Michelle Wu in slew of endorsements reminiscent of 2013 mayoral race," October 6, 2021
  32. Facebook, "Michelle Wu on October 7, 2021," accessed October 7, 2021
  33. Facebook, "Michelle Wu on October 7, 2021," accessed October 11, 2021
  34. 34.0 34.1 34.2 Bay State Banner, "Activist groups endorse Wu," Octber 11, 2021
  35. Facebook, "Michelle Wu on October 21, 2021," accessed Ocober 21, 2021
  36. Politico, "6 neighborhoods to watch in Boston's elections," November 1, 2021
  37. The Boston Globe, "Andrea Campbell should be Boston’s next mayor," September 2, 2021
  38. GBH, "Black And Latino Caucus Chair Endorses Campbell For Boston Mayor," August 11, 2021
  39. 39.0 39.1 Politico Massachusetts Playbook, "An election of historic firsts," September 8, 2021
  40. The Boston Globe, "Sheriff Steve Tompkins endorses Boston mayoral candidate Michelle Wu," August 31, 2021
  41. The Boston Globe, "Tito Jackson endorses Kim Janey for mayor," August 10, 2021
  42. Politico, "MOULTON FALLOUT — Who HASN'T ENDORSED in the Boston mayor's race — Masks MANDATED in SCHOOLS," August 26, 2021
  43. Beacon Hill Times, "Pipefitters Local 537 Endorses Essaibi George," September 8, 2021
  44. Boston Herald, "Essaibi George: Boston needs police reform and safe neighborhoods," July 20, 2021
  45. 45.0 45.1 45.2 45.3 45.4 45.5 45.6 45.7 Note: This text is quoted verbatim from the original source. Any inconsistencies are attributable to the original source.
  46. Michelle Wu's 2021 campaign website, "Public Safety," accessed October 8, 2021
  47. WBUR, "What The Mayoral Candidates Have To Say About Housing In Boston," June 3, 2021
  48. Boston.com, "Michelle Wu: The Boston.com interview," August 2, 2021
  49. 49.0 49.1 Boston Globe, "Janey and health officials ban evictions in Boston, even as moratoriums come under fire," August 31, 2021
  50. Michelle Wu's 2021 campaign website, "Housing Affordability," accessed October 8, 2021
  51. Annissa Essaibi George's 2021 campaign website, "On the Issues," accessed October 20, 2021
  52. Michelle Wu's 2021 campaign website, "On The Issues," accessed October 20, 2021
  53. Undecided
  54. This poll used a credibility interval, similar to a margin of error.
  55. Not sure
  56. Undecided: 7%
    Refused: 1%
  57. Undecided: 16%
    Refused: 2%
  58. Undecided
  59. This poll used a credibility interval, similar to a margin of error.
  60. Undecided: 8%
    Refused: 1%
  61. Don't know/Undecided
  62. This poll used a credibility interval, similar to a margin of error.
  63. Undecided
  64. OpenSecrets.org, "Outside Spending," accessed September 22, 2015
  65. OpenSecrets.org, "Total Outside Spending by Election Cycle, All Groups," accessed September 22, 2015
  66. National Review.com, "Why the Media Hate Super PACs," November 6, 2015
  67. 67.0 67.1 67.2 Massachusetts Office of Campaign and Political Finance, "15618 Essaibi George, Annissa," accessed November 1, 2021
  68. 68.0 68.1 68.2 68.3 Massachusetts Office of Campaign and Political Finance, "15563 Wu, Michelle," accessed November 1, 2021
  69. Las Vegas Review-Journal, "North Las Vegas Mayor John Lee says he’s becoming a Republican," April 6, 2021