星期六, 6月 13, 2015

中華耆英會慶雙親節 吳弭初為人母欣喜同慶

波士頓市議員吳弭(左二)昨日和助理王芳菲(右二)出席中華耆英會雙親節
活動,送上表揚狀給白禮頓樓主任梅麗梨(左起),行政主任
梅伍銀寬,副主任張昆。(
周菊子攝
(Boston Orange 周菊子波士頓報導) 中華耆英會白禮頓樓昨(十二)日在天天自助餐廳慶祝雙親節,為四名耆英祝壽。初為人母的波士頓市首名華裔市議員吳弭,抱著兒子出席,年逾七十的山東老鄉孫振華表演做拉麵,會場氣氛熱絡非常。
            中華耆英會白禮頓樓主任梅麗梨一身紅的為節慶增添喜氣,與中華耆英會行政主任梅伍銀寬,副主任張昆,以及抱著剛半歲的兒子鮑凌樞(Blaise Francis Pewarski)出席的波士頓市議員吳弭,以及她的助理王芳菲,聯袂祝賀耆英們節日快樂。
            吳弭表示,今年是她過的第一個母親節,能夠出席耆英會活動,和那麼多母親一起慶祝,讓她感到格外有意義。
唱歌的耆英們,年齡一個比一個高。黃氏宗親會主席黃國瀚的夫人黃華(左四)
已七,八十,來自廣東開平的周玉韶(前右二)更是已八十八歲。(周菊子攝)
 孫振華(左四),杜民响(左三)送上他倆做的拉麵和炸醬,給中華耆英會的
梅麗梨(左起),梅伍銀寬,張昆(右一),以及波市議員吳弭(右三)
,其助理王芳菲。(周菊子攝

            擔任司儀的樂趙令瑜,黃永耀在會中以普通話,廣東話的雙聲帶,介紹母親節與父親節的由來,指出美國母親節,最早源自一位名叫安娜賈維斯(Anna Javis)的女士,1908年時在西維琴尼亞州一個衛理公會的聖安德魯教堂,為她母親舉辦了一場紀念會,1914年時,威爾遜(Woodrow Wilson )總統簽字後,母親節成為美國的國定假日。
            昨日的壽星有四人,分別為曾經當選中國小姐的樂趙令瑜,七十四歲來自香港的關以民,現年七十七歲,1990年才從廣東台山移民來美的伍培銳,以及白玉相。其中兒子伍藝昇也特地出席了的伍培銳,在切蛋糕時笑得尤其開心。
            為慶祝雙親節,向耆英祝壽,白禮頓樓中華耆英會昨日安排的節目特別豐富,不但有樂趙令瑜率領的不下十餘人唱歌班,高歌“念親恩”,“媽媽好”,“甜蜜蜜”等歌,還有曾經在山東蓬萊開班授課教人做拉麵,在當地小有名氣,二年前才移民來美的孫振華親自示範。
            司儀之一的黃永耀看著心癢,探問能不能在波士頓也開個班,教人做拉麵。孫振華高興地咧嘴笑說,可惜兒子不准。
 四名壽星切蛋糕。右起,樂趙令瑜,關以民,伍培銳,白玉相。(周菊子攝)
            現年七十六歲,來自重慶的杜民响配合孫振華的拉麵,特地用豬肉沒,甜麵醬,做出有重慶特色的拉麵調配醬料,由耆英會配上孫振華做的拉麵,送給到會嘉賓每人一份。
        慶祝會中的另一高潮是年逾八十的鄧東慧指導,和徐勤傑,何佩榮,楊遠青,羅予禮,張秀蘭等人一起表演的“今生相愛”,“北江美”舞蹈。這些年齡都在六十五歲以上的耆英們,穿上色彩豔麗服裝表演的舞姿,一點也不比年輕人遜色。
            慶祝會最後在李積秀,羅振聲主持抽獎,嘉賓送鮮花給出席者中結束。
山東老鄉孫振華(右起)示範做拉麵,黃永耀訪問。張秀蘭(左一)
看著丈夫展現手藝,笑得開心。(
周菊子攝)
            活動籌辦人員李正銀在會末提醒老人家們,該會新增的象棋班,現代舞班以開課,有興趣者可到該中心參加活動。
 年逾八十的鄧東慧(左一)指導耆英們跳舞。(周菊子攝)
           

浙江省訪波士頓覓才 創新團隊最高獎勵一億元

浙江省人才辦日前率逾百家企業抵波士頓舉辦“海外人才政策發佈高層次人才洽談會”,出“一億元省級財政資助”獎勵,要吸引具國際水平創新創業團隊,呼籲人才到浙江創大作為。
浙江省代表團由浙江省省委組織部副部長姚志文率領,包括溫州等十一個浙江縣市,共約130家企業隨行,包括128華人科技企業家協會在,約69家企業,團體或個人,在洽談會中簽署了合作意願書。
姚志文在開幕式中指出,浙江全省生超過四萬億元,GDP質量指數全國排名第三,目前正在培育發展信息,環保,健康,旅遊,時尚,金融,高端裝備製造等七大萬億級業。中國國家主席習近平五月廿六日到浙江杭州視察海康威視數字技術公司,讓浙江省大感激勵。
姚志文表示,過去這些年來,浙江發展很快,成就很多,包括國家千人計畫人才丁列明創辦的貝達藥業,研發出中國第一個靶向抗癌藥,浙江省千人計畫人才景揮創辦的寧波創潤新材料公司,生出純度高達99.8%的中國第一爐超高純鈦,都讓浙江在創新創業上,備受全國矚目。
如今,浙江全省有三百多萬家企業,自實施浙商回歸工程以來,從全球投資回浙江的到位資金,也已達2236億元。
他強調,為吸引人才,浙江制定了極具吸引力的政策,還新組建了十只創投基金,以解決人才創業融資難,融資貴等問題。
在人才方面的獎勵優惠包括入選省級千人計畫者,可得浙江省每人發給一百萬元獎勵,加上縣市獎勵及配套跟進,每人最高可得六百萬元。領軍型,創新型團隊首個資助週期為三年,資助期對每個團隊投入經費不低於兩千萬元,具國際頂尖水瓶的團隊,最高可獲一億元省級財政資助。
從美國回浙江創業,創辦了寧波江豐電子材料姚力軍,當天上台分享經驗,力勸有心者把握機會,創一番事業。
這場洽談會的波士頓協辦單位包括紐英崙美中醫藥開發協會,浙江大學校友會,哈佛大學中國學生學者聯合會,依序有前會長鈄理強,會長倪繼紅,會長孫陸等人代表列席。倪繼紅與美中藥協候任會長梁桂清獲邀上台見證簽約。

圖片說明:

            浙江省省委組織部副部長姚志文(左)感謝紐英崙美中藥協前會長鈄理強(右)協辦活動。(菊子攝)

            右起,孫陸,倪繼紅,鄒曉東,鈄理強,姚志文等人坐在第一排。(菊子攝)

            寧波江豐電子材料姚力軍。(菊子攝)
CC061215C-4

            浙江省人才洽談會簽約。(菊子攝)

Baker-Polito Administration Expands Greening the Gateway Cities Program to Include Revere and Chicopee

Baker-Polito Administration Expands Greening the Gateway Cities Program to Include Revere and Chicopee

REVERE – June 12, 2015 – Today, at a tree planting ceremony at Fredericks Park in Revere, Energy and Environmental Affairs (EEA) Secretary Matthew A. Beaton announced an initiative to expand the Greening the Gateway Cities Program (GGCP) to include the cities of Revere and Chicopee. The program, which targets the Commonwealth’s 26 Gateway Cities, is designed to utilize tree plantings as a way to reduce energy use in urban neighborhoods and lower heating and cooling costs for residents and businesses.

“By extending the Greening the Gateway Cities Program to include the communities of Revere and Chicopee, our Administration continues its commitment to work closely with cities and towns across the Commonwealth to provide resources that benefit municipalities and improve the state’s environment,” said Lieutenant Governor Karyn Polito.

“Increased tree canopy will provide our communities with the first, and best, line of defense from excessive urban summer heat, and the biting winds of winter,” said Secretary Beaton. “In addition to benefiting the Commonwealth in terms of energy efficiency, the Greening the Gateway Cities Program will provide the residents of Revere and Chicopee with cleaner air and water, reduced noise pollution, and the beatification of homes and neighborhoods within their community.”

With a defined goal of a 10 percent increase in urban tree canopy in selected neighborhoods within Gateway Cities, the increase in tree cover is expected to reduce heating and cooling costs in the selected areas by approximately 10 percent, with an average homeowner saving approximately $230 a year, once the trees reach maturity. Over their lifespan, the trees are expected to lead to $400 million in energy savings for residents and businesses.

Aimed at improving the often low tree canopy found in the Commonwealth’s Gateway Cities due to their urban character and history of manufacturing, the programs benefits are not isolated to energy efficiency. By planting trees, communities will see a reduction in storm water runoff, higher air quality, an increase in property values and tax receipts, and a safer, healthier environment for residents.

Under the program, the Department of Conservation and Recreation (DCR) is spearheading tree planting efforts and is in the process of planting up to a combined 15,000 trees in Chelsea, Holyoke, and Fall River. Agency staff, working in partnership with local municipalities and grassroots organizations, have developed a successful approach to planting the number of trees required to have an energy impact, focusing on high-density urban neighborhoods, where planting on average 10 trees per acre will provide benefits to 15 to 25 households. Planting this number of trees will increase canopy by an estimated 1 percent in eight years, and 10 percent in 30 years.

“The Greening the Gateway Cities Program (GGCP) is not only an important tool in our overall urban forestry plan, but will be an engine for job creation and energy sustainability in these communities,” said DCR Commissioner Carol Sanchez. “DCR is proud to continue the long standing partnership between the Bureau of Forestry and the cities of Chicopee, Revere, Chelsea, Holyoke, and Fall River.  With the help of local community and grassroots organizations, GGCP will pay dividends in these high density urban communities where green space is needed most.”

“We are pleased to support tree planting in Gateway Cities, as trees are long term contributors to our efforts to meet Massachusetts’ energy and climate goals,” said Department of Energy Resources Commissioner Judith Judson.

To implement the expansion of the Greening the Gateway Cities Program, the DCR will partner with the city governments of Revere and Chicopee and community groups to plant approximately 100 trees this June, and thousands more to come. The program will also benefit the local economies of Revere and Chicopee by creating jobs for local residents. DCR will hire local workers for tree planting teams in each city, and every tree being planted will be purchased from Massachusetts nurseries. 

“We are grateful to Secretary Beaton and the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, along with the Baker Administration, for providing the city of Revere with the resources needed to increase our inventory of trees,” said Revere Mayor Dan Rizzo. “Increasing tree canopy and green space is vital to continue to make Revere a great place to live, work and raise a family.  This has been and will continue to be a crucial priority for my Administration.”

“Greening the Gateway Cities program is an innovative program that addresses a multitude of critical issues facing Massachusetts while making our cities better places to live and raise a family,” said House Speaker Robert A. DeLeo (D-Revere). “I’m proud of how Revere has flourished as a Gateway City and I thank the Baker Administration, our partners in the federal government and the local groups that are so committed to our community’s environment.”

“I want to thank Governor Baker, Lieutenant Governor Polito and their administration for providing the City of Revere with a ‘Greening the Gateway Cities’ grant,” said State Representative RoseLee Vincent (D-Revere).  “It is important that as an urban community, we make investments in our green spaces so that that families and children have a place to retreat from the bustle of the city.  Through the Baker-Polito Administration’s generosity, Revere will be able to use this funding to continue to green our urban area.”

“I’m very pleased to see the efforts of the Greening the Gateway Cities initiative come to fruition right here in Revere,” said Senator Anthony Petruccelli (D-East Boston). “The program is an effective way to best ensure environmental and energy efficiency with our constituents seeing benefits both esthetically and fiscally.”

“The City of Chicopee greatly appreciates the Commonwealth’s commitment through our City and its neighborhoods by providing us with a number of replacement trees,” said Chicopee Mayor Richard J. Kos. “As a Gateway City, positive impact on neighborhoods and our community as a whole will be measured.”

"Greening the Gateway Cities is a great fit for Chicopee, and I am pleased that its residents will benefit not only from the energy-saving and environmental aspects of the program, but also from the beautification of their neighborhoods as the tree-planting progresses,” said State Senator James Welch (D-West Springfield).

Boston Mayor's Garden Contest


FREE SUMMER MEALS FOR BOSTON CHILDREN

FREE SUMMER MEALS FOR BOSTON CHILDREN

 
BOSTON – Boston Public Schools Summer Food Service Program will provide free breakfasts and lunches to Boston children under the age of 19 from July 1 through Aug. 28 at over 140 locations throughout the city. This is the 20th year of the program.

The Summer Food Service Program sites are an easy, reliable and safe source of free and nutritious meals for kids.  Local organizations that host the free meals include:  Boston Public Schools, community centers, day camps, churches, and pools.  To find the sites and hours of meal service, visit http://schoollunchboston.wordpress.com or call 1-800-645-8333.

The Boston Public Schools Food & Nutrition Services Department sponsors the program in conjunction with the USDA and Project Bread. 

RED SOX TO OFFER FREE SKIN CANCER SCREENINGS TO FANS ON SATURDAY


RED SOX TO OFFER FREE SKIN CANCER
SCREENINGS TO FANS ON SATURDAY
Play Sun Smart Day at Fenway Park is Presented by Banana Boat


BOSTON, MA – As part of Major League Baseball’s Play Sun Smart campaign, the Red Sox will offer free skin cancer screenings to all fans attending the Red Sox-Blue Jays game on Saturday, June 13.  The screenings, presented by Banana Boat, the official sunscreen of the Boston Red Sox, will take place in the Champions Club presented by ALEX AND ANI (located in the Kids Concourse) from 12:05 p.m. through the 7th inning. 

Dermatologists from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and the American Academy of Dermatology will be on site for the screenings. All participating fans will receive a free sample size Banana Boat sunscreen.

All fans attending the game will be able to get free samples of Banana Boat sunscreen at the Fan Services booths and the First Aid station.

Play Sun Smart is one of several cancer-related initiatives supported by Major League Baseball.  The league-wide program raises skin cancer awareness in conjunction with the Major League Baseball Players Association and the American Academy of Dermatology. 

MAYOR WALSH ANNOUNCES RFP FOR IMAGINE BOSTON 2030 LEAD CONSULTANT AND OUTREACH COORDINATOR

MAYOR WALSH ANNOUNCES RFP FOR IMAGINE BOSTON 2030 LEAD CONSULTANT AND OUTREACH COORDINATOR
Seeking firms with experience in citywide planning to support initial phase of public engagement

Mayor Martin J. Walsh announced the release of a Request for Proposals for consulting services to support Imagine Boston 2030, an effort to create Boston’s first citywide plan in fifty years. The RFP calls for a lead consultant as well as public outreach and communications services. The ideal respondent will have experience managing citywide planning projects, including expertise in land use, urban design and comprehensive urban planning. A communications consultant will be tasked with advising on the extensive public engagement and outreach process that will take place over the next two years with residents and community members across the City of Boston.

More information about the RFP is available at Imagine.Boston.gov. Responses will be due no later than noon on July 20, 2015.

“This is the first step in a multi-year process of reimaging Boston and engaging with all residents across the City,” said Mayor Walsh. “Boston is a thriving, healthy and innovative city that can only get better. Through this RFP, we want to establish a partnership that will make work with the city and residents to make Boston stronger, more equitable and more accessible for all."

The RFP accurately reflects the multitude of planning efforts that are currently underway across city departments. The citywide plan generated through Imagine Boston will cover issues related to mobility, housing, land use, prosperity and equity, environment and adaptation, parks and open space, arts and culture, and public health.

Working with subject area experts, the lead consultant will coordinate the diverse, multi-disciplinary team spearheading Imagine Boston. The lead consultant will help the City of Boston define in greater detail the approach, scope and content required for a successful citywide plan. Drawing from experience supporting citywide planning efforts in other locales, the consultant is expected to bring energy, creativity and a breadth of knowledge to engage community members in envisioning the future of Boston while helping City staff meet planning milestones. The lead consultant will also be responsible for supporting the online presence for Imagine Boston. The RFP is deliberately open-ended with regard to specific tasks for the consultant so as to encourage a wide variety of approaches to accomplishing the goals described.

Mayor Walsh has challenged both citizens and city employees to embrace creative public engagement strategies that go beyond traditional community meetings. The outreach consultant will work with the Mayor’s Office, particularly the Chief of Civic Engagement, the Chief of Economic Development, the BRA  and other City departments to reach constituents that would not ordinarily attend traditional community meetings. Hearing from non-English speaking populations, economically disadvantaged residents and young Bostonians will be a special priority. The Imagine Boston team hopes to break the mold of traditional neighborhood-focused meetings and plans by fostering a citywide conversation about Boston as a whole, not individualized among neighborhoods.

Before launching an outreach strategy, the City has already begun reaching out to residents to hear how they would like to participate in Imagine Boston 2030. Residents are asked to fill out a short survey, which will help the City and its consultant craft strategies for engagement throughout this process.  

The successful bidder may be a single firm or a lead consultant with one or more firms as sub-consultants. The City of Boston expects that additional consultants will eventually be added to the Imagine Boston team to address specific subject areas that are outside the expertise of the lead consultant.

Mayor Walsh launched Imagine Boston 2030 last month in a speech delivered at Faneuil Hall as part of the Innovative Design Alternatives Summit. Starting with an evaluation of baseline conditions, the City expects to begin a robust public visioning process this fall where community members will be able to contribute ideas to shape Boston’s future. A final citywide plan is expected to be adopted in Summer 2017. For more information on the RFP, click here.

Join Boston’s HIV Health Services Planning Council

MAYOR WALSH ANNOUNCES $200,000 GRANT TO HARNESS DATA AND TECHNOLOGY FOR YOUTH SUMMER JOBS

MAYOR WALSH ANNOUNCES $200,000 GRANT TO HARNESS DATA AND TECHNOLOGY FOR YOUTH SUMMER JOBS 

BOSTON -  Friday, June 12, 2015 - Mayor Martin J. Walsh today announced that the City of Boston, in conjunction with the Metropolitan Area Planning Council (MAPC) , Code for Boston and the Boston Indicators Project has been selected for a $200,000 grant to “hack” the city processes around youth summer employment, with the goal of enabling Boston to place more young people in jobs each summer.

"In order to prepare our young people for success, we must create pathways to meaningful summer jobs and opportunities," said Mayor Walsh. "This funding creates yet another opportunity to use data to better serve our residents and I thank our partners for their support." 

Under Mayor Walsh's leadership, Boston currently places more than 10,000 young people annually in meaningful summer jobs. This grant will fund the development of a more modern application and placement process for this program.  Data the City captures from this process will help better understand the program’s clients and how to enhance the program over time.

“Summer employment helps young people develop the skills and experiences that support long-term career success,” said Jascha Franklin-Hodge, Chief Information Officer for the City of Boston. “Thanks to this project, our staff will be able to focus on recruiting young people and businesses rather than processing applications.”

Boston was one of only a handful of regions nationwide to receive this grant, which is a tribute to the region’s innovative civic institutions and strong civic coding constituency. Boston has taken a leadership role in the emerging field of civic technology field, which brings technology, design, and civic players together to solve problems for the public good.

“Data and innovation are ‘sweet spots’ for MAPC,” said Holly St. Clair, Director of Data Services at MAPC. “It’s an extremely important part of our work to use these core capabilities to solve problems with such profound implications neighborhoods, for equity, and indeed for the Greater Boston region as a whole.”

The project is part of a national Living Cities, Code for America, and National Neighborhood Indicators Partnership initiative to use data, design, and technology to improve the lives of low-income residents, which is a prime example of a key goal for the burgeoning field of civic tech.

“This is the type of project that our volunteer community gets really excited about,” said Harlan Weber, Brigade Organizer at Code for Boston, “It will provide our members with an opportunity to use their design and technology skills to make a real difference in the lives of young people across Boston, and will deepen our organization’s relationship with MAPC, the City of Boston, and the Indicators project.”

“The Boston Indicators Project has always looked to innovations in data and technology that allow us to better understand the trends, challenges and untapped assets at play among Boston’s residents and neighborhoods," said Jessica Martin, Director of the Boston Indicators Project at the Boston Foundation. "This project is an exciting opportunity to harness the capacity of civic technology to move the needle on a key indicator and build on fifteen years of partnership with MAPC and the City of Boston.” 

BRA Board approves over $75 million in new projects at June meeting

BRA Board approves over $75 million in new projects at June meeting
Approvals make way for housing in the South End and Dorchester and public charter school in Hyde Park

BOSTON – The Boston Redevelopment Authority’s Board of Directors approved three new development projects at last night's meeting that, together, represent an investment of $75.3 million in the local economy. A new public charter school was approved for Hyde Park, and two new housing projects are set to move forward in Dorchester and the South End.
While the residential projects are relatively small in scale, creating a combined total of 45 units, they are unique in what they bring to their respective neighborhoods. Brookview House III in Dorchester will result in twelve affordable units for very low-income residents, and the South End project will transform a former church that has set vacant for several years into 33 units of housing.
The three developments are expected to create nearly 250 construction jobs. Below is a summary of the projects that are set to move forward.

Boston Preparatory Charter Public School to build new facility in Hyde Park

Total Project Cost: $24,000,000
Total SF: 48,800
Construction Jobs: 35
Having operated out of leased space at a former parochial school in Hyde Park since being founded in 2004, Boston Preparatory Charter Public School (BPCPS) received approval to construct a new facility in the neighborhood to accommodate its growing student population. The school, which serves grades six through twelve, has 400 students and over 60 teachers and staff members. The majority of students come from Dorchester, Mattapan, Roxbury, and Hyde Park, with a smaller number coming from other neighborhoods, including South Boston and Jamaica Plain.
The 48,800 square foot, three-story new facility will include landscaped areas, outdoor recreational facilities, an internal drive with a bus loading zone, parking for 54 vehicles, and related site improvements. Students and staff will benefit from new instructional, support, and large common spaces, as well as a gymnasium wing. Unlike the leased property that the school currently operates from, the new building will have dedicated science labs, a library, cafeteria, and seamless technology integration.
Studio G Architects designed the school. The $24 million project is expected to break ground by October and be completed by March 2017.

Former Holy Trinity German Church in South End to be rehabbed and expanded for housing

Total Project Cost: $47,000,000
Total SF: 57,904
Construction Jobs: 195
Developer David Goldman will transform the former Holy Trinity German Church and Rectory in the South End to make way for 33 units of new housing. The adaptive reuse and expansion of the church, located at 136 Shawmut Avenue, will involve demolition of the existing interior space in order to accommodate a new eight-story building with 28 basement parking spots. The church has been vacant for about five years.
Feingold Alexander & Associates’ design attempts to marry modern steel and glass elements while preserving the historic character of the existing structure and exterior masonry. Lighting features will enhance the church’s spire and highlight the classic architecture of the building.
The developer will voluntarily contribute $500,000 to support Inquilinos Boricuas en Accion (IBA), a non-profit community-building organization in the South End, in addition to providing $20,000 to the Friends of Peters Park as community benefits.

Brookview House III will create twelve new units of affordable housing low-income residents in Dorchester

Total Project Cost: $4,316,000
Total SF: 22,316
Construction Jobs: 16
The BRA board approved a proposal from Brookview House Development Corporation to construct an all-affordable development at 35 Hansborough Street in Dorchester. Brookview House III will consist of twelve residential rental units within a three-story building. Beyond providing housing for low-income residents, the project is unique in that it will include over 4,000 square feet of programming space for residents and members of the adjacent community. This space will accommodate classrooms for afterschool enrichment programs as well as space for adult education, training, and counseling services.
There will be nine two-bedroom units and three three-bedroom units. One of the two-bedroom units will have handicap accessible features.
All twelve units will be made affordable to households earning up to 30% of area median income, which equates to less than $30,000 per year for a family of three. The developer will seek public funding to ensure that all units can be restricted as affordable in perpetuity.

Plumbing and HVAC company J.C. Cannistraro to develop new facility in Marine Industrial Park

Watertown-based J.C. Cannistraro received a tentative designation to redevelop Parcel N at 25 Fid Kennedy Avenue in the Boston Marine Industrial Park (BMIP). The plumbing and HVAC company plans to re-use much of the existing, but currently vacant, two-story structure to construct a new facility for storage, fabrication, assembly, and distribution of HVAC and fire suppression systems. While the company’s corporate office will remain in Watertown, the facility at Parcel N will include supporting office space. Cannistraro expects to close its suburban manufacturing facilities and relocate over 100 jobs to the BMIP.
The six-month tentative designation will allow Cannistraro to gain access to Parcel N in order to conduct further due diligence before redeveloping the site. Once this process and the lease negotiation is complete, the company will be eligible for final designation.

About the Boston Redevelopment Authority
As the City of Boston’s urban planning and economic development agency, the BRA works in partnership with the community to plan Boston's future while respecting its past. The agency’s passionate and knowledgeable staff guides physical, social, and economic change in Boston’s neighborhoods and its downtown to shape a more prosperous, sustainable, and beautiful city for all. The BRA also prepares residents for new opportunities through employment training, human services, and job creation. Learn more at www.bostonredevelopmentauthority.org, and follow us on Twitter @BostonRedevelop.