A/B elected officials write BRA re Harvard Community Benefits

Sen. Tolman, Reps Moran and Honan, and Councilor Ciommo recently wrote this letter to the BRA. They ask for Harvard to provide:
  • Expanded programs at the Educational Portal for English, Writing, Civics, the Arts, Music,
    and test preparation courses and tutoring for the MCAS, BPS Exam Schools, and college entrance exams.
  • Use of Harvard athletic facilities for the students of the Gardner School during the day
  • A full scholarship to any Allston/Brighton resident student who has lived in the community for at least five years and who has gained admission to Harvard
  • For Harvard to begin the work necessary to lay the foundation of a university-assisted school.
  • A Harvard partnership with schools in Allston/Brighton to enhance the math and science programs currently in place
  • Access to Harvard libraries for all children using the Education Portal
  • Preference for A/B residents for construction jobs on the Science Complex
  • Public access to the Harvard shuttles
  • Several construction mitigation measures to reduce impact on the neighborhood near the Science Complex
  • Increase the community’s share of the day care facilities at the Science
    Complex from the current nine slots to twenty-five slots
  • 60 new units of housing located in Allston/Brighton
  • Improvements along the Charles River

Quite a long list! Stay tuned to see what comes of it...

They said "Trust Us"

Over and over again we asked during last year's review of Harvard's Science Complex project what would be done to minimize the impact that the construction would have on our community. While nobody was trying to stop the construction, we did want it to be done in a concientious and respectful way. And we were basically told "Don't worry". Here are excerpts from a few Task Force meetings:

Commissioner Tinlin– When you anticipate there being a problem, you fix it. You’ve shown me where the problems are and what your concerns are, but then it’s up to me to fix it. Leave it to me to worry about the resources. If we need more resources, then we’ll have that discussion at a future time. We do this all the time in other areas of the city. I understand that this is real and new to you because you’re dealing with this, but trust me, we know how to deal with this. (I promised I’d never say "trust me" in public meetings – so, I guess "give me the chance to mess it up".)

Commissioner Tinlin: The construction management plan is overseen by BTD. BTD discusses it with the proponents. The developer has to develop a plan through this process and come up with a solution that provides the least amount of impact to the area affected. The construction management plan is not a formal filing. The public can comment and challenge the plan at forums like this community meeting. BTD’s charge is to keep impacts to a minimum. The construction management plan will also be monitored throughout the project. The City can shut down a project at any time if necessary.

Bryan Glascock, Director, City of Boston Environment Department, then discussed the regulation of work hours. Regulations stipulate that construction hours are Monday-Friday from 7am – 6 pm. There is a process for requesting a variance from these hours. If the neighbors agree that they would rather the project be done quicker, then it is possible to extend the hours and/or days that construction is allowed to take place. Bryan explained that heavy construction tends to be much more noisy (such as driving piles, pouring concrete, etc), but there is also quiet construction work that can take place without any neighborhood impact (such as hanging drywall, installing finishes, etc.). The variance for construction hours is granted by the Building Commissioner, but he would want to know from the neighborhood if this would be beneficial. A notice would go out in advance to all neighbors and it would be coordinated with the Mayor’s Office of Neighborhood Services.

But what do we get once contstruction starts?
Harvard goes behind the community's back to get permission to continue construction work until 10:00 PM. The City lets Harvard do this with no public process. Ooops! Sorry!

Read more about it at A/B North Neighbors Forum group

Southie’s fear: Allston/Brighton's studentifcation

Rep. Wallace could have found a less denigrating way to express his concern about a possible increase in apartment units in his neighborhood. Maybe the next time Honan or Moran see him at the State House they could ask him to ease up on their home turf.

Not long after the BRA approved plans to build 139 condominiums at 50 West Broadway, home of the former Cardinal Cushing High School, the developers went back to the BRA, seeking permission to build apartments, instead of condos.

To the dismay of South Boston state Rep. Brian Wallace, the BRA approved the change.

“I’ll never support that because we’ll become Allston-Brighton,” Wallace said, adding that he fears other condo developers will also switch to apartments, and his constituents will become transient students from area colleges, instead of homeowners.

Southie’s fear: Allston - BostonHerald.com

Friday afternoon armed robbery a few yards from the Allston line

Brookline Police Blog: January 25th-27th Police Reports

Occurred between 12:40 PM and 12:46PM 525 Harvard St.

Victim reports that while she was walking down Harvard St. she was approached by a light skin Hispanic man, the victim said that the suspect demanded $20. The victim replied “no”. The man than brandished a knife and robbed the victim and in doing so ripped her coat with the knife. The victim described the man as being a light skin Hispanic between 20 and 25 years of age, clean shaven with short black curly hair and wearing blue jeans and a black jacket.

Wednesday evening event - Street Design: Dirty Little Engineering Secrets Revealed

Wed. Jan. 30, 7 - 9 pm
Jeff Rosenblum, Co-founder and President, LivableStreets Alliance
100 Sidney Street, Central Sq. ,Cambridge
free and open to the public, donations suggested, beer/wine/drinks served

Why do cyclists, pedestrians, and transit riders get short shrift in street design while cars continue to get all the attention? Hear in detail the typical arguments that transportation departments and their consultants make-- and where they've gone wrong. Get in on the secrets! Jeff will also talk about best practice for urban street design showing slides from around the US and world of successful and inspiring streets. In the words of the late European traffic engineer Hans Monderman, "If you want vehicles to behave like they are in a village, build a village."

More info at http://livablestreets.info/node/1365

More on the hate and debate over BC's expansion

Threats taint BC dorm debate - The Boston Globe

Allston entries in Globe's list of best new restaurants

Cantonese restaurant New Trend Eatery receives high marks for lots of crisp veggies, super-fresh spring rolls, and generous portions - 103 Brighton Ave

Try Grain and Salt for Indian and Pakistani food and "Indian-Chinese food - basically the subcontinental version of chop suey" - 431 Cambridge Street

Suvarnabhumi Kiri serves Thai, sushi, and Cambodian food and "everything tastes fresh and vibrant" - 92 Harvard Ave

Yoma is the place for homemade Burmese tofu and other unusual ingredients that give diners a "taste revelation" - 5 North Beacon Street

Best of the New: Food - The Boston Globe

The quietest type of university expansion

Stephen Joel Trachtenberg, former president of George Washington University, write on his blog about some of the zoning and neighborly issues related to university expansion and student-community interaction. He mentions BU, Harvard, and BC in passing and then describes "a renewed and growing trend on campus, the construction of crypts" at Duke, the Citadel, and elsewhere.

Proposed Harvard/Allston planning schedule for 2008

Click here to see the draft schedule presented last night by the BRA

More A/B-University news from the TAB

Story about last night's Task Force meeting: Harvard science complex gets green light - Allston/Brighton TAB

What a shame to see so many nasty personal attacks in the "comments" section of this story: Neighbors: BC housing will bring noise, litter - Allston/Brighton TAB

BCHeights.com coverage of BC expansion meetings

Two stories about recent BC Master Plan meetings. In the Editorial it is suggested that students should have a role in the community/BRA/BC discussion about where undergraduate dorms will be built and how that will impact the neighborhood. The news story summarizes the many concerns and objections voiced at Tuesday's Task Force meeting.

Bring Students to Master Plan Table - Editorial

Concerns aired on housing - Neighbors react to Master Plan housing provisions

Brighton Ave continues fine-dining trend

Kells owner Jerry Quinn is spending $600,000 to $700,000 to create a Japanese restaurant with a French name. - Pub owner tackles Japanese food - BostonHerald.com

One homeowner's failed attempt for zoning relief

Brighton resident Mac Chinsomboon has left an interesting comment about his personal experiences applying for zoning variances for his home at 36 Shepard St and having his application denied. He has even posted his application and emails with the BRA at http://chinsomboon.com/omac/home/36shepard.pdf.

Allston Brighton CDC's Bob Van Meter resigns

Bob Van Meter, who has lead the ABCDC for the last 15 years, is moving on to the Greater Boston Local Initiatives Support Corporation.

From the LISC website:
LISC helps resident-led, community-based development organizations transform distressed communities and neighborhoods into healthy ones – good places to live, do business, work and raise families. By providing capital, technical expertise, training and information, LISC supports the development of local leadership and the creation of affordable housing, commercial, industrial and community facilities, businesses and jobs. We help neighbors build communities.

Allston Civic Assoc. - meeting 1/23 @ 6:30, Honan Library

Big Belly Trash Receptacles - discussion of where and how they are placed around the city.
Tacqeria Restaurant, 254 Brighton Ave. - Request for Beer and Wine license
457 Cambridge St. - Proposal to convert 2-family to 3-family
95 Everett St. - Request to change zoning to allow commercial (office) use for building formerly used for auto-body shop.

TownGown World looks at rental housing licensing

The February 2008 discussion on TownGown World presents several viewpoints on zoning and licensing approaches from around the world to address issues of absentee landlords, residential overcrowding, and general neighborhood quality of life.

There are examples cited from across the United States and beyond about making family-oriented neighborhoods near universities. For example:

Anyone interested in a variety of ideas for how housing policy can help communities maintain and improve their quality of life for all residents will find plenty of thought-provoking ideas.

How they design public spaces on the "other side"

Soon we will be working on a design for the new park to be created in Allston behind the Honan Library. Here is a chance to learn something about how public input and park design is being done for a similar project less than a mile away.

In Cambridge where the Mahoney's Garden Center used to be (on the corner of Western Ave & Mem Drive) there will soon be a public park. This is part of the deal negotiated with Harvard for the residential development under construction in that area. The Cambridge Community Development Department is having to discuss the proposed design on Thursday, January 24th from 6pm-7:30pm at the Cambridge Senior Center 2nd Floor, 806 Massachusetts Avenue.

For more information contact Taha Jennings at 617-349-4603 or visit www.cambridgema.gov/cdd/cp/parks/riverside/index.html

State of the City addresses in Boston and beyond

Mayor Menino's State of the City address is now online (press release, complete speech). There isn't much specific relevant to Allston/Brighton other than his recognition of Brighton High's championship football team. Most of the speech concentrates on achievements from last year. The forward-looking items include:
  • His insistence that a new contract for Boston firefighters must include random drug and alcohol testing (for more on this subject see this week's edition of Radio Boston and this letter in today's Globe from the Mass ACLU)
  • New recycling bins and single stream recycling so we can put all of our recyclables (glass, plastic, paper, etc) together without any sorting.
  • New bike lanes on Comm Ave between Kenmore Square and the BU Bridge
  • New arts programming and extended hours at community centers
  • Doubling the number of Advanced Placement classes in Boston high schools over the next five years
  • International Baccalaureate programs at two of Boston's non-exam schools
  • A review of the Boston Public Schools zone-assignment and transportation plan

Mayors all over the country are giving State of the City and Inaugural Addresses at this time of year. Below are links to what a few other big-city mayors are saying:

College prep efforts at Brighton High recognized in NY Times

This story (Urban Schools Aiming Higher Than Diploma) in Thursday's Times highlights efforts in urban public schools to prepare students not just to graduate from high school, but to also attend college. Programs and efforts at Brighton High receive special attention in the story:

At Brighton High in Boston, for the first time this year, John Travers, the head of counseling, and his staff visited every freshman English class to begin mapping out the steps toward college: Maintaining a high grade point average. Taking tough classes. Building a résumé.

Mr. Travers leads students on trips to colleges many of them pass every day on the “T” to high school, but have never visited.

“We all went to Bentley on the bus together,” said Rashell Wilson, 18, vice president of Brighton’s senior class. “We had a beautiful tour.”

Ms. Wilson and her classmates ride the T over an hour after school to nonprofit programs where they get extra help with tutoring, and with their college applications. They take free SAT prep classes at night.


Instead of wider sidewalks, no sidewalks

An unconventional idea in the world of transportation and public realm has cars, pedestrians, and bicyclists all together in roads without traffic lights, sidewalks, lane markers, and all of the other apparatus designed to control and seperate the various user groups of modern roadways. Its called "Shared Space" and an implementation in the German town of Bohmte was featured in a story on NPR today.

Wired Magazine wrote a good story about this approach back in 2004 and it is another prism through which we can look at the transporation future of our community.

Giles Li isn't happy about what Harvard is doing in Allston

Giles Li, founder of the Boston Progress Arts Collective and Arts Coordinator at the Boston Chinatown Neighborhood Center, shares some thoughts on Harvard's approach to Allston at http://gilesli.com/.

my soul is the right size»Blog Archive » Sorry Harvard University, You Suck
"What’s really more infuriating about Harvard recently is the way it has treated the Boston neighborhood of Allston, which is directly across the river from Harvard. When they released their plans to expand the Harvard campus more seriously into Allston last January, it was clear they’d never approached community leaders in the neighborhood for real input, and a year later still have not. They act as though Allston is a big parking lot, and not a vital part of the urban landscape. Harvard says it will create 14,000 jobs by building in Allston…in 50 years. So that’ll be great for the Brazilian, Korean, and Russian immigrant communities there…or not, since they will all have been priced out of the neighborhood 45 years prior.

It’s as though Harvard administration believes that having any association with their esteemed institution is an honor. Like residents of Allston - one of the few mixed commercial/residential neighborhoods that is home to recent immigrants and multi-generational Boston families both - should be honored to share a street with Harvard.

Anyway, on an up note, Larry Summers was run out of Cambridge and replaced by Drew Gilpin Faust as president of the university like about a year ago. And I guess - from what I be reading in the paper - she isn’t all about trying to get blood on her fangs, and may be taking it slower as far as Allston is concerned. Of course, I’ll take that with a grain of salt though because the school has continually proven to be a bad neighbor for a long time."

Harvard Forest spared

In a reversal from previously reported plans, Harvard has decided to do the right thing for our environment and natural resources, keep its 99 acre forest in Hamilton, and thereby spare it from development.

Harvard pulls back from plan to sell forest land - The Boston Globe

Upcoming zoning hearings

For more information go to http://www.cityofboston.gov/ons/pdfs/allstonbright.pdf

  • 36 Shepard Street - Create two separate entrances to the building, erect rear deck for unit #1, remove bulkhead, remove chimney, erect rear deck for unit #3, install skylights
  • 457 Cambridge Street - Confirm the legal occupancy as a three-family dwelling and renovate.
  • Bidgdough, 110 Brighton Avenue - extend closing hour from 11pm to 1am

Harvard Allston Task Force also meets tomorrow (Wednesday)

Please join the members of the Harvard Allston Task Force on Wednesday, January 16 at the Honan-Allston Library. This will be a two-part meeting to discuss the Cooperation Agreement and community benefits that will accompany Harvard's Western Ave Science Complex project. The format will be:
  • 6:00-7:30: BRA/Task Force
  • 7:30-8:30: BRA/Task Force/Harvard

BC Task Force meets tomorrow (Wednesday)

BRA BC Task Force Meeting
Wednesday, January 16, 6.30-8.30 PM
Brighton Marine Health Center - 77 Warren St., Brighton

There will be a meeting in which the BC Task Force and assembled public will discuss proposed transportation plans in BC's 10 year Institutional Master Plan. Among the topics:

  • Creation of a 500 car, 5 floor parking garage in the former Seminary land, for a total of 863 on the parcel. There are presently 788 parking spaces, of which approximately 200 are currently used.
  • Relocation of St. Thomas More Drive's outlet onto Comm. Ave farther East (towards Boston).
  • Relocation of the BC "T'" stop farther East, in the center of Comm. Ave, with widening of the street (and consequent loss of natural features and trees) on both sides of this Greenspace Overlay District.

Menino hopes for a miracle

In tonight's State of the City address, Mayor Menino will announce a $1 million program "to coordinate the programming of schools, branch libraries, and community centers to boost test scores and graduation rates in the school system while decreasing dropouts and youth violence."
The City clearly isn't awash in extra money these days, but it how much can $1M program do to improve the services of these city departments that will spend $830 million this year?

Boston Public Schools: $782,535,360
Boston Library Dept: $28,840,631
Boston Centers for Youth & Families: $20,201,040

Another way of thinking about it - there are 87,000 school-age children in Boston ranging from nursery school to grade 12. $1M divided by 87,000 is $11.50 for each child in Boston.

You can't buy much with $11.50 and unfortunately this "miracle proposal" does not seem to propose any new services or programs. The Globe explains that a "school that had to cut music or art classes because of a lack of funds could ask the neighborhood community center or library to offer the class." Conceivably a school principal could already make this request, but how will the community center or library pay for the music and art class? City-wide, one million dollars is not going to provide too many art, music, or sports programs.

Anyway, having schools unable to afford art and music and outsources these programs to the neighborhood library or community center doesn't seem like much of a solution. The real solution would be giving the school the money to reinstate the music and art classes! The time, logistics, and cost to get kids from one school to somewhere else and back to school is alone enough to make clear why these programs during the school day should be offered in schools, not somewhere else.

For some historical perspective, the major announcement in last year's State of the City address (links for: press release, speech, video) was the City's commitment to spend $6M to restore the Strand Theater in Dorchester. What's the deal with this year's major initiative being so much smaller than last year's? If this is any indication of our city's fiscal problems we better see some huge new revenue real soon.

Menino hopes to work a new 'Boston Miracle' for children - The Boston Globe

Sounds familiar

Her battle at Bunker Hill - The Boston Globe
'I've lived in this town my whole life,' Pat Ward said. 'I've seen them all come and go. When I was a kid, it was the absentee landlords. Then the BRA. Then it was the condo flippers. Now it's these guys filling in every open space. They make money but they don't have to live with what they do.'
She looked out the window again. 'It might be legal,' she said, 'but that doesn't make it right.'

Three stories about alternative transportation

The discussion about density, transportation, and parking happening over at the Allston/Brighton North Neighbors Forum makes these three stories particularly relevant. A local resident who doesn't own a car writes about biking through the winter, a bike-sharing program starts in Cambridge, and the CEO of Zipcar talks about car-sharing.

Pedaling through winter on a bicycle built for one - The Boston Globe
Free bike rides for tenants at Cambridge enterprise - The Boston Globe
Zipcar is shifting into higher gear as market widens - The Boston Globe

Consistency of Boston's planning and zoning

A letter written by Boston resident Stephen Jerome in today's Globe about development in Chinatown raises issues relevant to the Charlesview housing project and future development in A/B. In both the Dainty Dot project in Chinatown and the Charlesview project in Brighton, the need for additional affordable housing is used as a rationale for zoning relief to allow building far taller what the existing zoning allows. Mr. Jerome observes:
"The same city planning and zoning standards should apply here as they would in any neighborhood. Otherwise, luxury condominium towers that threaten historic buildings and that violate zoning laws would be rising throughout the city, from Charlestown to Readville, as a putative mechanism to subsidize affordable housing. That this is not the case raises questions about the ad hoc nature of city planning in Boston, and how your zip code, rather than the rules on the books, can shape the fate of historic buildings and development on your block."
Claim overshadows project's real cost - The Boston Globe
Despite concessions, developer faces fight to build 27-floor tower at Dainty Dot site - The Boston Globe

Two early morning stabbings in Allston

BPDNews.com - News Updates from the Boston Police Department

STABBING INCIDENT AT 26 ALLSTON STREET
At about 12:45am, on Saturday, January 12, 2008, officers from Area D-14 (Brighton) responded to a radio call for a person stabbed in the area of 26 Allston Street in Brighton. On arrival, officers located two males in front of the location both suffering from apparent stab wounds. Both victims were transported to area hospitals where they were treated for non-life threatening injuries.

STABBING INCIDENT AT LINDEN STREET
At about 3:10am, on Saturday, January 12, 2008, officers from Area D-14 (Brighton) responded to a radio call for a person stabbed in the area of Linden and Pratt Streets in Brighton. On arrival, officers located three individuals (two males and one female) all suffering from apparent stab wounds. All three were transported to area hospitals where they were treated for non-life threatening injuries.

Register to vote in the Presidential Primary

The last day to register to vote for the Massachusetts Primary is Wednesday, January 16th. If you want to vote in the Primary, you MUST register by this date.

January 16th is also the last date to change your party affiliation if you want to vote in a different primary than the primary of the party you are already affiliated with. For instance, if you are registered as a Republican, but want to vote in the Democratic Primary, you must re-register either as Unenrolled or a Democrat. You can always change your party again after Election Day, but if you want to vote in a primary you must be registered as either a member of that party or as Unenrolled.

You can register to vote by mail with the form on the Boston Election Dept. website.

(info courtesy of MassVote)

TAB & Crimson coverage of Harvard Task Force meeting

Neighbors ‘completely dissatisfied’ with Harvard benefits plan - Allston/Brighton TAB

The Harvard-Allston Task Force is “completely dissatisfied” with the $21 million community benefits package proposed by Harvard, and will meet separately with both the Boston Redevelopment Authority and the university to discuss possible last-minute changes.

“I think what we wanted was to be able to dazzle our community,” said task force member Millie McGlaughlin. “Now we’re at a point where people don’t feel they did a good enough job for the community, and that’s difficult to hear, as a member of the community.”
The Harvard Crimson :: Allston Residents Balk At Proposed Benefits

“It seems like some of these dollars do not accrue to our needs, but instead to exactions—mandated payments that don’t filter down to our local community,” Task Force chairman Ray Mellone said.

“None of the proposals and suggestions we made have been incorporated into the second draft of the proposal,” said Task Force member Brent Whelan. “Harvard says that they’ve considered them, but I can’t see that there has been any effect of that.”

Defining "partnership"

One of the interesting questions raised at last night's Harvard Allston Task Force meeting is whether or not there is a viable partnership between the community and Harvard. The Harvard staff took umbrage at my assertion that, despite all the talk, there actually is no partnership at all. This was in the same meeting where Harvard staff said that after 2 years they are still trying to figure out how to allow community members to ride the Harvard shuttle ("we had a meeting about that just this morning" they told us) and that they can't find a way to allow limited public access to their athletic facilities without displacing their own students. It seems possible that most of the time not all of Harvard's 28 tennis and 16 squash courts in North Allston are being used.

But if Harvard doesn't want the unwashed masses on their turf, that's fine. But what's not fine is claiming that we really are partners and "all in this together" while acting as if we are held hostage by an evolving set of unsolvable constraints (liability, security, etc.) that prevent this integration. At the same time, Harvard has established a virtual monopoly over the non-residential land in our neighborhood, and it is pretty well established that the general welfare of society may not be well-served if monopolies are able to exercise all rights that they had before achieving monopoly status.

The Harvard staff explained that we have a partnership based on attending more than 70 meetings together in the past 2 years. Here are some more traditional definitions of "partnership":
  • "a type of business entity in which partners share with each other the profits or losses of the business undertaking in which all have invested." - Wikipedia
  • "A relationship between individuals or groups that is characterized by mutual cooperation and responsibility, as for the achievement of a specified goal" - The Free Dictionary
  • "two or more parties working to achieve common interests and goals"
  • "a relationship... usually involving close cooperation between parties having specified and joint rights and responsibilities" - Merriam-Webster

Those sound great - close cooperation, joint rights, mutual responsibility, shared outcome - but also so distant from the current relationships that the community has with Harvard and the BRA. Admitting that our relationship lacks these attributes seems like a better step toward reconciliation than continuing to pretend we have something that we don't.

It makes sense to wrap up thoughts with the mission statement of the University of Pennsylvania's Center for Community Partnerships which includes:

"...bringing to bear the broad range of human knowledge needed to solve the
complex, comprehensive, and interconnected problems of the American city so that
West Philadelphia (Penn’s local geographic community), Philadelphia, the
University itself, and society benefit."

Presentation from ABNNF meeting

We had a well-attended and lively discussion at last night's Allston/Brighton North Neighbors Forum. The presentation from the meeting can be downloaded from the ABNNF website.

A demographic change in A/B?

The Allston-based Brazilian Immigrant Center estimates that 5,000 and 7,000 Brazilians left Massachusetts and returned to Brazil in 2007. Reasons cited include a weak US Dollar (which means money sent back to Brazil is worth less), high cost of living (gas, housing), and concerns that immigration policies at the State and Federal level show little signs of liberalizing. Brazilian immigrants are a large and visible portion of the Allston/Brighton community (10-15% in some areas) and if this trend continues it would certainly change the neighborhood.

Hardships here spur local Brazilian exodus - The Boston Globe

Yale Plans to Increase Spending From Its Endowment, Will Havard Follow?

Yale announced plans to spend an additional $307 million next year in income from its endowment. Yale's endowment is $22.5B and the Yale's $307M increase means Yale will use an additional 1.4% of its endowment. By comparison, 1.4% of Harvard's $35B endowment would be $478M.

Yale will likely use this money to increase financial aid, increase the size of the Yale College by 700 undergraduates (13%), fund more science research, and make more course material freely available online.

Pressure from Congress and other sources led to Yale's decision. “The folks in Washington are saying you’re hoarding money,” Yale President Richard Levin said. “And we felt uneasy about it ourselves.”

Yale Plans to Increase Spending From Its Endowment - New York Times

Somewhere in Boston universities are creating major initiatives

There isn't too much new news in this editorial in today's Globe. We know colleges and universities are important to Boston and there is a lot of expansion coming up. Schools are building more dorms so students will live on campus instead of off campus. I don't know anyone who would dispute any of these observations:

"As Harvard, for instance, pushes forward with its science center in Allston, neighbors worry about Barry's Corner, an area whose fate is almost entirely in the university's hands. For city officials, the greatest challenge is to find the right balance when the needs of universities conflict with those of their neighbors."

"Loud, late-night parties do not make for good student ambassadors. And families often resent even the best behaved students, because their presence often drives up housing costs, especially in modest neighborhoods such as Allston."

"The proposed BC dorms are meeting with stiff resistance from neighbors in the Lake Street area, who want to see the student housing built on the main campus - further from their own homes."
But after a few months encouraging the BRA to do something bold with the Harvard Science Complex community benefits and getting a rather unimpressive response, this conclusion to the editorial came as a big surprise.
"Mayor Menino, meanwhile, is using the colleges' desire to expand as his leverage to increase their civic commitments. He wants colleges to create major initiatives in public education, sports, and job training - initiatives far broader than the limited community programs that universities now offer. "I'm out of the pilot program business," Menino says."
I don't see anything even close to a "major initiative" in the benefits agreement distributed last week by the BRA. The ABNNF proposal made bold suggestions to make a dramatic difference in education and public health. But the BRA rebuffed those suggestions as too big and too complicated. Maybe some day Harvard's "education portal" idea will become something great, but at this point it sounds like the kind of "pilot program" that the Mayor rejects.

Academic sprawl - The Boston Globe

Battlground: Boston

Today's Globe has a series of sketches by Sage Stossel and Con Chapman on page D3 making war-time metaphors about university expansion in Boston. They describe Harvard allying with Northeastern to eliminate BU, BC expanding to make up for its Beanpot hockey futility, and MIT offering asylum to refugees from Kenmore Square.
Because they are professional satirists, do they get a free pass when they compare Harvard's policies with those of early 20th century Germany? Personally, I prefer a comparison with Jefferson's Louisiana Purchase.

Private Cash Sets Agenda for Urban Infrastructure

The New York Times has a new installment in its "Age of Riches" series examining the effects of the growing concentration of wealth in our society. This story is about the diverging fortunes of Yale University and the city of New Haven, CT. In many ways the same story could have been written about Harvard and its neighbors, though there are also key differences.

Most of Harvard's land in Allston & Brighton continue to sit empty or underused. But in New Haven, Yale "employs two people full time to recruit boutique retailers in New York and Boston as tenants on spruced-up streets" and "biotech start-ups, restaurants and stores now occupy Yale-owned buildings."

Like Harvard is the only major corporation here, "There are no corporate citizens left in New Haven except Yale,” Mr. Levin, the university president, said. And New Haven, with limited state and federal help, is languishing while it tries to move forward with transportation improvements to its airport, commuter rail, and bridges.

Yale is helping with smaller things - "$10 million to repair bridges, streets, lights and sidewalks in the neighborhood", but that is hardly enough to move forward major infrastructure projects and isn't much compared to the $400 million annually that Yale spends on its own campus.

Yale can't be solely responsible for the future of New Haven. At the same time, the heightening contrast between the campus in the midst of a renaissance and a run-down community isn't good for either.

Private Cash Sets Agenda for Urban Infrastructure - New York Times

A Campus Builds, a City Waits (audio slide show)

The Globe asks: "Fun on Storrow - why not?"

Fun on Storrow - why not? - The Boston Globe

"Let's concede the point that no feasibility studies have been done on von Tscharner's idea. No one knows the traffic impact, the number of police officers needed, or the compatibility of closures with the repair work.

But surely most motorists using Storrow Drive on Sunday mornings are going into, not out of the city, to church, perhaps, or brunch. With the eastbound lanes open, their travel won't be affected. The tunnel will be repaired at night, so closures should not interfere. At this quiet time of the week, overseeing the closures should not be too difficult for the police.

Our advice to DCR is simple: Do the study and, unless an insurmountable obstacle arises, give the closures a try."

Boston College IMP review meetings

Tim Schofield sent this important info about upcoming meetings to review the BC IMP:
The Allston Brighton Community Task Force will hold meetings in January to provide Allston-Brighton residents with the opportunity to provide their comments and concerns about Boston College’s proposed ten-year Institutional Master Plan.

8 January, Tuesday - Athletic Facilities
16 January, Wednesday - Traffic, Transportation and Parking
22 January, Tuesday - Housing
29 January, Tuesday - Open Space, Academic Uses and Summary of Community Meetings

All meetings will begin at 6:30 and will be held at Brighton Marine at 77 Warren Street.

Copies of Boston College’s Institutional Master Plan Notification Form are available at local branch libraries in Allston-Brighton and at the O’Neill Library at Boston College. The plan also is posted on Boston College’s Institutional Master Plan website at www.bc.edu/imp.

President Faust's new book & the price of conflict

Forbes.com has an early review of President Faust's new book "This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War". She kicks off her book tour with a lecture and book signing on Wednesday at the National Archives in Washington, DC.
“No other generation of Americans has encountered death on the scale of the Civil War generation. This Republic of Suffering is the first study of how people in both North and South coped with this uniquely devastating experience. How did they mourn the dead, honor their sacrifice, commemorate their memory, and help their families? Drew Gilpin Faust’s powerful and moving answers to these questions provide an important new dimension to our understanding of the Civil War.”—James M. McPherson, author of This Mighty Scourge: Perspectives on the Civil War
Faust made a career studying conflict as it manifested itself during the Civil War. Now she has the opportunity to influence, among other things, the local (and of course much smaller and less violent) conflicts that Harvard tends to create with its neighbors.

Addendum:
President Faust recently said, "For the last several years, the university leadership has been in transition. I can own a project and look at it in a deliberative way. . . . We're looking at everything again." What does that mean? How does she intend to "own" a project in a way different than Rudenstein, Summers, and Bok?

She hasn't come to Allston and talked with people here about Harvard's expansion or said much of anything about Allston in public, so for now nobody knows for sure what that means. Just as she makes time to talk about her scholarly work on a trip to D.C., neighbors and I hope she will find the the time and justification to visit Allston.


One plausible way a scholar of history and conflict might look at situations that have historically given rise to conflict would be to seek to minimize future conflict and the ensuing damage it can do to all parties involved.

Honestly, I don't see the belligerence in that reasoning. To the contrary, I consider it a hopeful and optimistic attitude that there can be better relations between Harvard and Allston and that, in the grander scheme, someday other institutions might look positively on Harvard (the way UPenn is now considered) when they consider their relationship with their neighbors.

If the tone of my original post did not sufficiently express any of that, I hope this additional viewpoint sets the record straight.

Storrow Drive or Storrow Stroll

The Globe published two letters today from people opposed to the proposed Sunday morning closure of the westbound lanes of Storrow Drive/Soldiers Field Road. One is from a Belmont resident concerned about her commute to church in Boston. One thing to consider is that the closure is proposed to end at 10:30 and only affect the westbound lanes. So her trip to church would be unaffected and her trip home would only be affected if she is driving home before 10:30.

According to Google Maps, the fastest way to get from downtown Boston to Belmont doesn't use Storrow Drive at all. Taking the Mass Pike to Newton is a 21 minute trip, Storrow Drive to Route 2 is a 25 minute trip, Mass Ave to Concord Ave is a 25 minute trip, and using the Longfellow Bridge to Broadway and Concord Ave is a 27 minute trip.

Maybe this these lane closures are a bad idea and the negative impact would be greater than the benefit, but let's understand the impact using facts instead of a small sample of anecdotal opinion.




It's Storrow Drive, not Storrow Stroll - The Boston Globe

Let the voting begin (and the donations continue)

Federal campaign contributions, being much more transparent than local contributions, are online for all to see at politics.nytimes.com and elsewhere. In honor of tonight's Iowa Caucus, here is how A/B residents donated to presidential campaigns as of 9/30/07.

Allston (02134): $13,655 total. $7,700 to Clinton and $3,355 to Obama. Only $1,950 (14%) combined to Republican candidates.

Brighton (02135): $37,966 total. $19,011 to Clinton and $7,010 to Obama. More $ to Republicans (22% of total), almost all of which went to Romney, who got $5,950.

Two points for Allston

All through last night's Celtics-Rockets game Tommy and Mike kept mentioning a player for the Rockets named "Allston". Alas, even though Celtics Blog - Boston.com and some other sources spell his name with two L's, it seems that Rafer Alston is one L short of being another namesake of the famed painter Washington Allston. I tried the baseball, football, and basketball archives, looking for players named Brighton or Allston and found a lot of Alston's who made it to the big leagues (even one in the Baseball Hall of Fame) but there apparently still a 'first' waiting to happen.

Landmarks Commission hearing - proposed demo on Murdock St

The Boston Landmarks Commission is meeting on Tuesday the 8th at 5:30 in City Hall room 801. A demolition delay hearing is scheduled for 6:50 for the proposed demolition of 43-45 Murdock Street, Brighton.
According to the City Assessing website, the property is owned by Newton resident Dr. Arni Mohan who also owns 697 Cambridge St where he practices psychiatry.
For more info call the Landmarks Commission at 617-635-3850.

Car-free Sunday mornings on Storrow Drive & Soldiers Field Road

The Charles River Conservancy has proposed closing 5 miles of the westbound side of Soldiers Field Rd / Storrow Drive on Sundays from April to November. The proposed closure would be mornings from 7:30 to 10:30 a.m and would start at the Herter Park parking lot in Brighton and continue to the Longfellow Bridge.
The Department of Conservation and Recreation was noncommittal in its comments to the Globe and the Mayor's office did not comment. The support of our State officials (Moran, Honan, Tolman, and Galluccio) will be key to getting this approved. The DCR email address is mass.parks@state.ma.us and other ways to contact them are on its website.

Proposal would make part of Boston's Storrow Drive car-free on Sundays for recreational use - The Boston Globe

The real story on Harvard's supposed generosity

Continuing the theme from yesterday's entry about Harvard's forest in Hamilton, educational consultant Steve Goodman writes in today's Globe about Harvard's recent decision to increase undergraduate financial aid and the Senate Finance Committee's concern about whether or not there is sufficient public good resulting from the tax breaks that help university endowments grow so big.

All this talk about the announcement helps Harvard and other universities sidestep the real questions.

Why does an institution of higher learning have $35 billion in its back pocket anyway?

Why has it become customary for universities to spend only a small fraction of their interest income - and not even the endowment funds themselves - for daily operations?

Why do American taxpayers continue to subsidize schools that increasingly operate like for-profit companies - and less like tax-exempt educational foundations that are charged with educating the next generation?

The real story on Harvard's generosity - The Boston Globe

Harvard - Benjamins first, Environment second

Unlike Yale's thriving forests, Harvard continues to sell off its forest properties in the Northeast. The Harvard Forest in Petersham (near the Quabbin Reservoir) is in active use, but how many forests can one university use?

In 1981, Harvard sold the 3,600 acre Black Rock Forest in Cornwall, NY (60 miles north of New York City and 200 miles from Boston) to William Golden, a New York investment banker and philanthropist who attended Harvard Business School for a year before leaving to work on Wall Street. Fortunately, Golden then transferred ownership of the forest to a non-profit organization to permanently preserve the forest in its natural state.

Now, 99 acres of Harvard-owned forest are potentially for sale 30 miles north of Boston in Hamilton, MA. According to the Globe, The Trustees of Reservations "are already talking about selling some of the forest - potentially to developers - to help offset the cost of the purchase."

Harvard has talked a lot about how environmentally sensitive and sustainable they are and how "green" their Allston development will be, so why can't they make a deal in Hamilton to preserve all of this forest? Couldn't Harvard afford to donate the land to the Trustees, Mass Audobon, or a similar group just as the land was donated to Harvard eighty years ago? As Puff Daddy would say, it seems to be "all about the Benjamins", which does seem odd for a $35 billion institution with such an oft-stated commitment to preserving the environment for future generations.

Preservationists, alumni fear Harvard may sell forest in Hamilton - The Boston Globe

Helping first time homebuyers in Boston and elsewhere

A question that has been coming up in the neighborhood is, "How can we help children who have grown up in our community buy homes and stay here?"

Prices for reasonably-sized "starter homes" have skyrocketed here in the past several years. Here's how a condominium in a Franklin St row house has tripled in value since 1997, showing that Allston's ownership affordability is certainly not what it used to be.
1997 = $140,000
2000 = $200,000
2003 = $300,000
2006 = $450,000
2007 = $475,000

A summary of Boston and other nearby programs for first-time and median-income homebuyers shows that the housing assistance in Boston is much less than what Cambridge, Newton, and Brookline provide.

Buyers making less than 120% of the area median income can receive from $1,000 to 3% of their purchase price.

For a family of four can make up to $98,900 to qualify. A Bank of America calculator suggests that with this income you could afford to buy a home in the $400,000 range. A 3% grant would be $12,000. This is approximately 1/10th of what is available in nearby communities.

For first-time homebuyers earning up to 80% of the area median income, Cambridge gives grants for as much as 6% of the cost of a home. To receive the full grant, the homebuyer must live in the home for 5 years.

For first-time homebuyers earning up to 100% of the area median income, Cambridge gives grants for up to $130,000. The homebuyer must live in the home, to long-term restrictions limiting the future resale price of the property, and have lived in Cambridge for at least one year.

Income eligible homebuyers can receive as much as $125,000 to buy a single-family home or condominium. The price of the home must be less than $365,750, the purchaser must live in the home, and other conditions apply.

A grant of up to $115,000 for people with income less than 80% of the median who are either a first-time homebuyer, or live or work in Newton.

Police make arrest related to convenience store robberies

Man arrested and shotgun found at 18 Riverdale St that may be connected to armed robberies in Allston last month.

Convenience store crook nabbed - Allston/Brighton TAB
A man believed to be involved in several armed convenience store hold-ups in Allston was arrested on outstanding warrants last week, then charged with intimidating a witness after he subsequently unleashed a series of violent threats on police.

USNews & World Report's top "service learning" colleges

In addition to its well-known ranking of schools (which ranked Harvard #2, BC #35, and Boston University #57), US News also selects the nation's top "service-learning" schools. At these schools "volunteering in the community is an instructional strategy--and a requirement of a student's coursework. The service relates to what happens in class and vice versa."

Tufts and Bentley are nearby schools on this list which also includes Brown, Duke, Georgetown, Stanford, Trinity, Cal-Berkeley, Michigan, Notre Dame, and UPenn (these links are to service learning and community organizations at these schools). They give us us many examples of what enhanced partnerships with our Allston/Brighton college neighbors might be.

USNews.com: America's Best Colleges 2008: Service learning

The chance to build a better life

Dr. Lloyd David, founder of the Brighton-based education and training non-profit Creative Workplace Learning, recently wrote to the Allston/Brighton North Neighbors Forum to remind us that according to the 2000 Census there were 5,783 adults in Allston/Brighton over age 25 who had not graduated from high school and 24,504 people who spoke a language other than English at home.

While we talk about Allston/Brighton being a "middle-class" neighborhood, we also have thousands of neighbors living in poverty. In many cases, their situation is similar to our parents, grandparent, or great-grandparents who immigrated to this country in years past.

In this video, Presidential candidate John Edwards offers a message for the holiday season that is a worthwhile break from the rampant over-consumption that so often dominates our culture.

"One out of every four homeless people on our streets is a veteran. Thirty-seven million Americans live in poverty. Who speaks for them? We do.

This is the season of miracles, of faith and love. So let us promise together: You will never be forgotten again. We see you, we hear you, and we will speak for you.

In America, the chance to build a better life is a promise made to each of us, and the obligation to keep it rests with us all."

The Globe reviews Faust's first 6 months as H Prez

After the media turmoil earlier this month, this story about Drew Faust should need to retraction or further clarification. It profiles her as competent, open, listening, and diplomatic - traits that bode well for a new chapter in Harvard-Allston/Brighton relations.

Faust earns high marks on leadership at Harvard - The Boston Globe
Faust, who said through a spokesman that she was unavailable for an interview, impressed department chairs at a recent meeting when she said she planned to move deliberately and consult a wide variety of faculty and others as Harvard fine-tunes its 50-year expansion plan for its Allston campus, Eck said. By comparison, Summers gave the impression that he would move quickly on Allston and not necessarily consider faculty concerns, Eck and others said.

Allston community activists said they have not seen enough of Faust to judge her. But Mayor Thomas M. Menino said he has been impressed by Faust's affable manner with Allston residents at neighborhood events.

"She has no airs about her," Menino said.

Laurence Summers and the concept of "implicit contracts"

Christopher Caldwell, senior editor at The Weekly Standard, writes in today's NY Times Magazine about the use of personal information in the world of online shopping and social networking. A Harvard connection arises when he cites a 1988 paper written by two Harvard economics professors, one of whom ended up 13 years later becoming Harvard's 27th president.

The paper that Laurence Summers co-authored introduced the concept of the "implicit contract" between managers, employees, and other stakeholders (think generous employer-provided health insurance, pensions, lifelong employment, and other formerly sacred cows that are with us no longer). The focus was on the value of these contracts and how these contracts could be relatively easily revoked by new managers who come to power in the wake of a hostile takeover.

The relevance of all of this is the current situation with Harvard, the BRA, and the Allston/Brighton community. At this point we are operating under a giant implicit contract that tells the A/B community that some local good eventually make up for (and them some) the land-banking and mothballing that Harvard has been doing in our neighborhood for the past several years and we will collectively be much better off as a result of Harvard's presence in our community.

The North Allston Strategic Framework came close to making this contract explicit. But Harvard and the BRA have gone to great lengths to emphasize otherwise, saying "It was a framework but not a plan" and "I think that what’s happening is some people are interpreting those [guidelines] very strictly and it was never our sense, nor I think the city’s sense, that those guidelines were meant to be interpreted as explicit."

The contract in the Strategic Framework certainly has real value ("2,400to 2,800 new housing units", "a newly-'greened' Everett Street corridor", "creation of new parks, and improved existing parks", "transformation of Western Avenue into a more pedestrian-friendly neighborhood Main Street with streetscape and related improvements", "200,000 square feet of new and existing retail space", and more). And while Harvard and the BRA will never be the subjects to a hostile corporate takeover, Caldwell's phrase “I didn’t promise nothin’!” has a familiar ring to it.

So many people in the neighborhood are asking the BRA and Harvard to make this contract more explicit as part of the Cooperation Agreement for the Harvard Science Complex. Many of us have posted these comments on the Allston/Brighton North Neighbors Forum. Professor Summers, if he is still keeping tabs on the Allston situation, would probably understand our concerns.

Intimate Shopping - New York Times

"The concept of “implicit contracts” was developed in a landmark 1988 paper by the economists Andrei Shleifer and Lawrence Summers. Their subject — hostile corporate takeovers — seems far from cyberprivacy, but it is not. Shleifer and Summers showed that increases in share price following takeovers were not due to gains in efficiency, as the defenders of those buyouts claimed. There often were such gains, but they were not the source of the profits. The profits came from reneging on implicit contracts — like the tradition of overpaying older workers who had been overworked when young on the understanding that things would even out later. These contracts, because implicit, were hard to defend in court. But the assets they protected were real. To profit from them, buyout artists had only to put someone in place who could, with a straight face and a clean conscience, say, “I didn’t promise nothin’!”"

The Shleifer/Summers paper, "Breach of Trust in Hostile Takeovers" is summarized as follows:

Hiring and entrenching trustworthy managers enables shareholders to commit to upholding implicit contracts with stakeholders. Hostile takeovers are an innovation allowing shareholders to renege on such contracts ex post, against managers' will. On this view, shareholder gains are redistributions from stakeholders, and can in the long run result in deterioration of trust necessary for the functioning of the corporation.

Massachusetts's need for more regional planning

The Globe makes a case for stronger regional planning in Massachusetts, citing the 135-acre mixed-use Westwood Station project and objections by neighboring Canton and its plans to block the project in court. Allston/Brighton's neighbors in Brookline, Watertown, Newton, and Cambridge will be significantly affected by Harvard and Boston College expansions.

Cambridge submitted comments to the State opposing the Harvard Science Complex Phase One Waiver, citing in particular "the area's transportation network, which is already at or near capacity." And Cambridge will have a representative on the State's Citizen Advisory Committee to review Harvard's expansion.

Time will tell if our other abutting communities will sit back and let Boston manage the projects or seek to get involved themselves.

Tension at the town line - The Boston Globe

"But a consistent region-wide approach requires the intervention of state government, with the force of law. The Legislature needs to get involved. It might consider reviving the Office of Commonwealth Development, an innovation of the Romney administration, and give it the power to assess the regional impact of developments and trim them down or order mitigation if they overburden the local infrastructure. Or it could vest these powers in the Executive Office of Environmental Affairs, which now is limited to project-by-project evaluations."

Letters to the Globe about BC's expansion

A BC student complains that the Globe shouldn't stereotype them as loud drunks. Eva Webster suggests that BC shouldn't build dormitories that will degrade the public's enjoyment of the Chestnut Hill Reservoir.

Closer looks at BC's expansion plans - The Boston Globe

Collegiate revenue sharing - $$$ from Harvard to State U?

Gold in the Ivory Tower - New York Times

Herbert A. Allen knows more than a little about extreme wealth. CEO of the investment firm Allen & Co. and a director at Coca-Cola, he is listed by Forbes as the 133rd richest American with a net worth of $2 billion and guests at his annual retreat in Sun Valley, Idaho include Bill Gates and Warren Buffett.

Today in the New York Times, Mr. Allen remarks that "there’s a particularly corrosive shift that’s taking place, one that has tremendous consequences for the development of America’s best minds: the growing gap between super-wealthy colleges and universities — and the rest of the academic world."

He write that this gap allows the rich schools to "raid poorer colleges and scoop up the best teachers" and "further separate themselves from less fortunate colleges by taking the best high school students and offering them ever richer deals."

His solution - "tax the investment income of the wealthiest colleges", pool this tax revenue, and redistribute it to schools with the lowest endowment per student. "It wouldn’t hurt Harvard to give up $1 billion or so of its gains in order to make the sharing of our intellectual wealth fairer," he claims.

As you might imagine, the comments on this article run the gamut. Regardless of the specific merits of Mr. Allen's premise, it is undeniable that the wealth of Harvard and a small # of other schools is getting more and more public attention. How will these schools react, if at all, out of generosity or desire to protect the status quo?

Berklee rethinks expansion - The Boston Globe

Berklee rethinks expansion - The Boston Globe

In the face of strong neighborhood opposition, Berklee College of Music is shelving plans for a high-rise dormitory and theater complex at the junction of Massachusetts Avenue and Boylston Street and is instead seeking to buy a parcel from a neighboring church to divide its expansion into smaller parts.

"I think they got the message," said Susan Ashbrook, a Back Bay resident and cochairwoman of a community task force that has been reviewing Berklee's preliminary plans over the past year. "It was made very clear to them they would have a fight on their hands if they built anything as big as they were floating."

State Representative Martha Walz, who represents the Back Bay and is a task force member, said the 35-story plan was "unacceptable to the Back Bay and Fenway communities."

Jackie Yessian, chairwoman of the Neighborhood Association of the Back Bay, praised the college for heeding neighborhood concerns and exploring alternatives to the high-rise plan. "They are trying really hard to meet their needs and ours as well," she said.

Columbia Expansion Gets Green Light

Columbia Expansion Gets Green Light - New York Times

The university plans a $7 billion project over the next 25 years that will transform a section of Upper Manhattan now dominated by warehouses and auto body shops into a campus with glass-walled high-rise buildings, tree-lined thoroughfares and student dormitories.

It plans to provide open space for the community and the university and a permanent site for the new, university-assisted public secondary school for math, science and engineering.

The community benefits agreement that was completed Tuesday night calls for Columbia to grant $150 million to residents of the area during the next 12 years.

Of that sum:
$76 million would go into a flexible benefit fund to be overseen by a committee of community and Columbia representatives
$50 million would be dedicated to in-kind services, including $30 million toward a school for kindergarten through eighth grade
$20 million would be set aside for a housing fund
$4 million would go toward legal services to help those displaced by the development.

Globe editorial on Charlesview & Barry's Corner

Town-gown common ground - The Boston Globe

Some thoughts on what the Globe wrote:

"The Boston Redevelopment Authority will review the projects, with plenty of neighborhood input."

- Hopefully that input will be considered as important during the process of reviewing and improving the project. Because what is the point of review if the project emerges from the review essentially unchanged (as we experienced this year with community "review" of Harvard's Science Complex). It would be great for the Mayor say about development in Allston what he said about a project in Readville a few months ago:

"It's serious density... We want to make sure it's a well-planned neighborhood that is put together in concert with the people who live in the neighborhood. Some of them have lived there for 75 years or more."

"Some of the neighbors would prefer to see the low-income housing spread out, rather then concentrated in one place. But would Charlesview residents want to be scattered about the neighborhood? A straight land swap seems simplest."

- Since when does "simplest" equal "best"?

- What I have heard neighbors suggest is that this should be a true "mixed-income" development that follows industry best practices by having 1/3 market rate, 1/3 public housing, and 1/3 subsidized affordable housing. The current proposal is less than 1/3 market rate and it seems most of the market rate units will be across the street in the tower overlooking the river instead of integrated with the rest of the development.

Harvard's Nicolas Retsinas and Kent Colton know more than a little about housing policy, and here is what they wrote in "Our Communities, Our Homes", a new book co-authored with former HUD Secretaries Henry Cisneros and Jack Kemp:
"A series of class-action lawsuits starting in the late 1960's launched a national conversation about the failures of a public housing system that isolated poor, predominately African-American families in communities wracked by intergenerational poverty and lawlessness. The lawsuits were fought and won on the argument that economic and racial segregation is bad for families and, when government sponsored, violates their civil rights.

The desire to reduce the concentration of poverty and new federal policies have led authorities nationwide to create new, mixed-income communities and scatter subsidized housing regionwide."

Retsinas and Colton also dedicate a chapter of their book to the importance of housing vouchers as a "springboard for personal and economic advancement". Voucher are certainly not the simplest solution, but a lot of data and expert opinion indicate that, in the words of Retsinas and Colton:
"Improving opportunities for housing voucher holders is tough but important. Many of the approaches outlined here align with bipartisan goals of helping poor families build assets and leave welfare. Mobility and self-sufficiency services demonstrate how housing assistance can be a hand up, rather than simply a handout."

"Height is not necessarily bad, but the design has to be superb to justify it here. The BRA needs to make sure that whatever is built enhances the neighborhood."

- Absolutely

"Harvard should seek to make the [Barry's Corner] intersection a venue for town-gown mingling."

- Yes, it should. The master plan published in January did not do this. It moved a bunch of athletic facilities into Barry's Corner, proposed no changes to quiet & private Teele Hall, suggested the office/storage art building next door to Teele, and committed to little more than some "possible retail".

"An enlivened, exciting Barry's Corner will be worth the wait."

- The sooner the better. Allston and Brighton residents have already been waiting a decade to see the life return to our community that has departed since Harvard's buying spree began. Harvard already has total control over most of Barry's Corner and doesn't need to wait until Charlesview has moved to get started.

Christmas party & toy drive - Wednesday, December 19, 5:30pm to 9:30pm

This year in Allston and Brighton there will be approximately 413 children and teenagers that will not be receiving a Christmas Gift because the shortage of toys and gifts that are available from organizations like Toys for Tots and The Make a Wish Foundation. As a group, the Ward 22 Democratic Committee, Sen. Tolman, Reps Moran and Honan, and Councilor Ciommo decided to get together and solve this problem.

Tomorrow from 5:30pm to 9:30pm there will be a Christmas Party/Toy Drive at 21 Nickels Grille at 21 Nichols Ave, Watertown (not in Allston/Brighton but Rep. Moran is part owner so the price is right). Gift ideas: board games, stuffed animals, dolls, sports or educational toys, hand-held games, remote controlled cars.

Globe editorial rips BC master plan

Not a good neighbor policy - The Boston Globe

"A $1.6 BILLION bid by Boston College to be ‘the world’s leading Catholic university and theological center’ could add up to a 10-year headache for nearby residents in Brighton. College officials should be willing to adjust their ambitious vision if they hope to win local support and city approval for their plan...But what is good for BC is not necessarily good for its neighbors..."

If BU students can run a charitable foundation, so can we

There has been on going discussion about a community-based foundation in Allston/Brighton that would administer grants to local organizations and support projects in our neighborhood. I wrote back in September about Boston civic groups that raise and manage millions of dollars for similar improvements to their neighborhoods.

Friday's Globe writes about the Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund and its "effort to nurture a future generation of philanthropists." Fidelity is giving $15,000 each to Boston University and four other schools and will "put the students in the role of real-life philanthropists." The students "will have a chance to form boards of directors, create donor guidelines, research prospective grant recipients, choose which nonprofits should get money and how much they should receive."

The $15,000 fund will be managed by a class of 24 BU management students and overseen by Kristen McCormack, faculty director of the public and nonprofit management program at BU's School of Management.

Fidelity program aims to nurture future philanthropists - The Boston Globe

This is a great opportunity for the BU students and leads directly to the suggestion that if students at BU can manage a charitable fund with help from Fidelity and BU, the residents of Allston and Brighton should be able to do the same thing with assistance from Harvard. Certainly Harvard knows more than enough about philanthropy, law, and governance to provide the technical support help prudently launch such an endeavour.

Harvard Business School - Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness, Strategy for Philanthropic Organizations Harvard Global Equity Initiative - Philanthropy Social Enterprise in Action JFK School of Government, Harvard University
Harvard Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations: Philanthropy Classics Access Project The Competitive Advantage of Corporate Philanthropy by Mark Kramer and Harvard Professor Michael Porter, winners of a 2002 McKinsey Award for outstanding work published in the Harvard Business Review that are likely to have a major influence on managers worldwide

Brighton-Allston Heritage Museum new website/blog

The Brighton-Allston Heritage Museum has a new website at http://heritagemuseum.blogspot.com/ with general info about the museum, 2008 calendars, and more.

Harvard ceramics sale ends Sunday

Lots of beautiful and reasonably priced ceramics on sale at the Harvard Ceramics Studio on North Harvard St. More info at Shopping tip of the day - Boston.com or Ceramics - Office for the Arts at Harvard

Harvard leasing update

This week's BBJ tell us that "after talking with the affected neighborhood all summer, Harvard agreed to to sign 5- to 10-year leases". It would wonderful if it is true that Harvard has "gotten more aggressive about the leasing".

Because reading this article causes a bit of deja vu, remembering the November 2006 Globe editorial that wrote "University officials acknowledge the problem and say they are now prepared to give businesses leases ranging in length from five to 10 years".

And back in September 2006 Harvard presented a leasing policy for Western Avenue corridor and Holton St. properties that included 5+ year leases on Western Ave.

Good for Harvard if the third time is the charm. The Mahoney's on Western Ave would be a great place to start. It is a beautiful, locally owned business that would love to stay here and is cramped in its current location surrounded by vacant Harvard property.

Harvard makes moves to fill empty Allston spaces - Boston Business Journal

Harvard's Faust mischaracterized again

I'd bet we won't be hearing much from her for a while after how things went for her in the news this week.

The Harvard Crimson :: News :: Harvard Disputes Faust Quotations in BusinessWeek Article
A Harvard official yesterday accused Business Week of “mischaracterizing” comments by University President Drew G. Faust, which suggested that less wealthy universities should leave costly scientific research to Harvard and its peers.

In the magazine’s Dec. 10 issue, reporter Anthony Bianco wrote that Faust believes “it would be wise” for “lesser universities” to shift their focus away from hard science, given the fierce competition for federal funding.

More on what Faust did or didn't say

Faust Denies Rethinking Allston Plans - Harvard Crimson

Faust said that while there were no factual errors in the Globe’s story, it mischaracterized her approach to Allston as “a dramatic change of direction.”

Faust said that Harvard is now “moving from a phase where we were setting a big framework into a stage where we are refining those aspirations.”

“I think its natural that we consult more broadly with the...Allston community, with deans, and really make sure we have very full planning before we actually break ground on new projects,” said Harvard Provost Steven Hyman.

Boston Globe Correction: Because of a designer's error, a map accompanying a Page One story yesterday on a Harvard University expansion plan did not show properties more recently acquired by Harvard, including the 48-acre CSX rail yards and several smaller properties on Western Avenue.

Statement of Drew Faust, President, Harvard University

I was quite surprised to awake to a front-page headline in Wednesday's (Dec. 12) Boston Globe declaring "Harvard Rethinks Allston." Let me be clear: Harvard is not "rethinking" Allston. I am unequivocally committed to moving aggressively and ambitiously forward, and to making our unfolding plans a reality.

Our Allston properties represent a historic opportunity for both the University and the community. As we look forward, we are advancing from a high-level planning framework to a phase in which we will be making increasingly refined judgments about how to elaborate our ideas and make them real. We plan to start construction very soon on our first science complex, which will house vital new initiatives at the leading edge of discovery. We are stepping up our planning for other parts of our enterprise that we envision will make their future home in Allston, focusing on the same broad mix of uses - professional schools, the arts, science, housing, athletics, and so forth - that we identified several years ago.

We are working continually to ensure that our physical plans are driven by our most thoughtful and creative academic aspirations, not just for Allston but for the University more generally - and that we have a sound financial plan underlying them. We are intently planning for the transportation and other infrastructure improvements essential to having our extended campus thrive. And we continue to consult regularly with key constituencies, both inside and outside the University, as we move from concept toward reality. All these activities are just what one should envision for an undertaking so complex - and so extraordinarily important.

Harvard's extended campus in Allston will be built not in a day, but over decades. Our challenge at each stage will be to make progressive judgments that propel us forward while recognizing that this will be a decades-long process. Allston remains a paramount priority for me and for Harvard, and we are fully committed to making the most of it.

Jerry says goodbye

McDermott, Arroyo, bid Boston City Council farewell - The Boston Globe

"Jerry P. McDermott, a conservative who often found himself on the losing end of debates in the Boston City Council, joked in his farewell speech today that the hardest part of leaving office was giving up his prime parking spot in Government Center.

'We mixed it up pretty good, and I had a lot of fun,' McDermott said. 'We got to be like a big dysfunctional family.'"

Faust disputes Globe story - "There is no way in which we are slowing down"

WBZ NEWSRADIO 1030 - Harvard president disputes report that she's re-thinking Allston expansion

"Allston is an enormous priority for us. It is moving along very well. The story in the Globe this morning seriously misrepresents what we are up to. What I tried to say to the reporter is that we are now in a Phase 2 which is a natural evolution...

We are now involved in very detailed planning for two professional schools that are contemplating moves...

We also are preparing to file our revised master plan with the City, probably in the fall..

There is no way in which we are slowing down. We're just pursuing a thoughtful, deliberative process that has many stages, that this will take many years, and we're in a phase that is the right stage to be in. So for it to be represented as a change of course or a reversal is simply a misrepresentation."

Harvard - Maybe nothing is changing after all?

Harvard: Allston Plans Still On Track (from the WBUR Newsroom)

"Harvard: Allston Plans Still On Track BOSTON - December 12, 2007 - Harvard is denying a report that says the university plans to slow down and re-evaluate plans for an expansion into Allston. A university spokesman says the plans to expand into Allston remain on schedule, and that Faust's comments were misinterpreted. The Allston expansion plan may include moving undergraduate dorms to the neighborhood, as well as an art museum and a major science complex."