星期二, 1月 25, 2022

Governor Baker Delivers 2022 State of the Commonwealth Address

 Governor Baker Delivers 2022 State of the Commonwealth Address

BOSTON — Tonight, Governor Charlie Baker delivered his State of the Commonwealth address from the Hynes Convention Center. Remarks as prepared for delivery:

 

Madame President. Mr. Speaker. Leaders Tarr & Jones. Members of the House and Senate. Members of Congress. Fellow Constitutional Officers. Members of the Governor's Council.

Chief Justice Budd and Members of the Judiciary. Members of the Cabinet and our Administration.

Mayor Wu. Secretary Walsh. Sheriffs. District Attorneys. Mayors. Local Officials. Reverend Clergy. Distinguished Guests.

 

Thanks so much for being with us as I deliver my eighth and final State of the Commonwealth Address.

 

To Lieutenant Governor Karyn Polito - you are one of the finest public servants and finest people I have ever had the opportunity to work with.

Your work with local governments has forever changed the way people in public life think about the responsibilities of the Lieutenant Governor

.

There’s a reason a lot of people are running to serve as the next Lieutenant Governor. They’ve seen the way she’s done the job, and they believe that they can follow in her very large footsteps. They can try, but they’ll be wrong. She broke the mold and the new one belongs to her.

To Lauren Baker, my wife of 34 years, and the vision behind the now spectacular Wonderfund. You are simply meverything.

 

You gave me a chance to run and serve these past seven years. And you and your team of 4 made the Wonderfund the one place foster families, social workers and kids can go where the answer is always YES.

To prepare for this, I did something I’m sure no one else has done. I went back and read all seven of my previous State of the Commonwealth speeches. They were…brilliant.

 

They were all different, given the times and the work to be done.

But they were positive and optimistic. They touted the special qualities of our people, our communities, and our institutions. They marveled at our success as a Commonwealth. They spoke about our challenges and our setbacks.

 

But mostly, they focused on our opportunities to be better, to do better, together.

 

Each one asked us to find the courage to compromise. To engage. To seek what John F. Kennedy once called, “The Right Answer --- Not the Republican answer or the Democratic answer.”

 

And for the most part, we’ve done just that.

 

Led by the Lt. Governor, we brought last mile broadband service to the people of 53 Western Mass communities.

 

We brought care and compassion to Bridgewater State Hospital after decades of national embarrassment.

 

We created the first Section 35 treatment beds for women in state history and became a national leader in the fight against opioid addiction.

 

We eliminated the widespread use of hotels and motels to shelter homeless families.

 

We fixed a very broken Health Connector and made it a national model.

 

We made deep water offshore wind a booming, affordable reality in America.

 

We created the first municipal vulnerability planning program in the country and over 95 percent of our communities have participated.

 

We modernized local government by updating 50 years’ worth of mostly useless statutory busywork. There were so many happy local officials with us when we signed that bill into law.

 

We enacted long overdue changes to our exclusionary zoning laws to unleash much needed housing production.

 

We rescued a bankrupt, unaccountable public transportation system. Created an oversight board and invested over $6 billion to modernize its operations and infrastructure.

 

We delivered the Green Line Extension into Somerville, and finally, after 30 years of broken promises, we funded and began building commuter rail service between Fall River and New Bedford, and Boston, which will begin operations in 2023.

 

We increased public school spending by $1.6 billion, and fully funded the game changing Student Opportunity Act.

 

We invested over $100 million in modernizing equipment at our vocational and technical programs, bringing opportunities to thousands of students and young adults.

 

We dramatically expanded STEM programming, and we helped thousands of high school students from Gateway Cities earn college credits free through our Early College programs.

 

We enacted criminal justice reform legislation that emphasized rehabilitation, treatment and reintegration and we enacted a forward looking, comprehensive and balanced police reform law.

 

In 2015, we inherited a billion-dollar budget deficit and a depleted Rainy Day Fund.

 

Over the next seven years, we never spent more than we took in. Increased local aid to schools and communities. Cut taxes for working families. Invested hundreds of millions of dollars alongside billions of dollars of private sector investments in housing, downtown development, waterfront and port operations, and job-creating business expansions.

 

And that Rainy Day Fund grew from $1 billion to $5 billion among the largest fiscal safety nets in the country.

 

As we rolled into calendar year 2020, we had the highest number of people working in state history, wage gains at every level of the economy, and hundreds of thousands of new jobs. It felt like the world belonged to us.

 

And then came COVID.

 

We all know the past 22 months have been tough. We’ve all suffered some degree of loss, disruption, confusion, anger and isolation.

 

But the people of Massachusetts did what they always do. They collaborated, created, reimagined, and made the unbearable bearable.

 

On so many issues, Massachusetts led the way.

 

We had the largest small business grant program in the country.

 

Constructed with the state legislature, this program funneled $700 million to over 15,000 small businesses. The vast majority were owner-operated. Half were owned by women and almost half were owned by people of color.

 

Our eviction diversion program, which began before the feds stepped in, has pumped almost $500 million into rental and mortgage assistance programs, making it one of the largest in the country. Eviction hearings are down dramatically and so is demand for emergency shelter and temporary housing.

 

Our food insecurity programs served millions of residents across the Commonwealth and brought together partners and providers, ranging from foundations to farmers markets to food banks. The knowledge gained has created new, permanent investments and better approaches to supplying and distributing food to those who need it.

 

To stop the spread of COVID, we worked with local labs and dozens of community partners to create one of the most expansive free COVID testing programs in the country.

 

To keep kids and adults safe and in school, we partnered with colleges and universities, K-12 schools and child-care providers to create a first in the nation COVID testing program.

 

We invented Shared Streets to help cities and towns transform their downtowns into beehives of outdoor activities. Dining. Shopping. Street theater. Farmer’s markets. Walking. Biking. Pop Up Stores. You name it.

 

And the people of Massachusetts got vaccinated.

 

Over 80% of our eligible population is fully vaccinated, and those over the age of 65 approach 100 percent. 5.2 million people are fully vaccinated, and about half of them have already received a booster shot. We are a national leader.

 

Throughout this pandemic, there’s been no shortage of things we just don’t know, and it’s easy to get lost in that.

 

But we should also remember what we do know. Vaccines and all the other resources we have now work. The chance of suffering serious illness if someone is vaccinated is very, very small.

 

Special shout out to the vaccinators from across the Commonwealth who stepped up to support their fellow residents.

 

Thousands of people got this done and made it possible for Massachusetts to be a national leader in this critical effort. It’s the most reliable and fastest path toward normal.

 

I asked former East Boston Neighborhood Health Center CEO Manny Lopes and Gladys Vega, Executive Director of La Collaborativa in Chelsea, to join us tonight.

 

Their partnership, and the trust they’ve earned over many years in Chelsea, Revere and Everett, made a major difference there. Vaccination rates in all three communities, despite some early challenges, now come close to or exceed our statewide averages.

 

We’re so grateful for all the work your teams have done to keep people safe. Thank you.

 

There’s an old expression about what you learn about people when they are truly tested.

 

Well – for the past two years, the people, institutions and communities of this Commonwealth have most definitely been tested. Time and time again you have adjusted, and you have responded.

 

Together, we set the course for a comeback– and it’s working.

 

Our unemployment rate is below 4% for the first time since March of 2020, and we’ve gained back over half a million jobs.

 

And because of all you’ve done, and all we’ve done together, I can stand here tonight and say the State of our Commonwealth remains strong.

 

As we enter the new year, there are many important opportunities to build on the collaborative work we’ve done over the past seven.

 

Two of those opportunities are closing loopholes that threaten public safety.

 

The first loophole allows those charged with violent crimes, who may also have lengthy criminal records, to walk free before trial.

 

And the second leaves residents, many of them women, with little recourse when an ex-partner attempts to violate them and destroy their lives.

 

We've filed bills to deal with these issues three times, to no avail. The time to do something about this is long past.

 

The Lieutenant Governor and I recently listened to several women tell us their survival stories. It was one of the most difficult conversations we’ve ever been part of.

 

One after another, these women described, in graphic detail, how they survived multiple physical and psychological assaults, and how these loopholes actually protected the men who were terrorizing them.

 

It was awful.

 

Current law is clearly not working. These women were bothered, battered, bruised and beaten time and time again by their abusers, and nothing changed. We felt their desperation.

 

It would be impossible to listen to their stories and walk away believing the Commonwealth is serious about protecting these women.

 

Another woman came forward to detail how an ex-partner, unbeknownst to her, had taken dozens of lewd pictures of her and posted them on the internet.

 

And if it couldn’t get any more awful, she then saw the note from him on the website: “video coming soon.”

 

A lifetime of relationships, a small business she owned, a basic sense of privacy we all take for granted, were shattered by one man’s despicable actions.

 

Massachusetts is one of only two states that doesn’t treat this as a crime. 48 other states treat this as a crime. Because it is a crime.

 

These women had the courage to come forward and publicly tell their stories. They deserve to be heard. And they and the women they speak for deserve a vote on these two pieces of legislation.

 

As we come out of the pandemic, we know we have a mental health crisis.

 

Like many things, it was there before Covid arrived. But the anxiety, disruption and the isolation that came with Covid has made it worse and more visible.

 

Before the pandemic, we filed a health care reform bill that would improve access to mental health services.

 

Some pieces of it, like telehealth, became important parts of our effort to expand access to care during the pandemic. Since that time, the legislature has written telehealth into state law. But many other parts of that 2019 proposal have not been addressed.

 

The message remains the same: the healthcare system doesn’t value behavioral health services, primary care and geriatric services. As a result, there are enormous staff and clinician shortages in exactly the areas of care that we need most.

 

We know the legislature cares deeply about this issue, and we look forward to working with you to finish this work during this legislative session.

 

We also appreciated the chance to testify recently before the Joint Committee on Telecommunications, Utilities & Energy on our fourth climate proposal. This one builds on our very successful offshore wind agenda and includes the creation of a $750 million Clean Energy Innovation Fund.

 

There are big ideas looking for a chance to test themselves in our academic institutions and our cutting-edge research organizations. This fund can create the ground-breaking solutions we need to get to net zero.

 

We’re also working to put the ARPA funds appropriated by the legislature and signed into law about 6 weeks ago to work across the Commonwealth.

 

Housing. Health care. Skills training. Cultural investments. Small business support. Water and sewer improvements. Port development and a host of other investments, all to help us adjust to the changing nature of life and work in a post-pandemic Commonwealth. We know there is much to do, and we need to move quickly.

 

In addition, we’ll soon file a transportation bond bill to ensure we get the full benefit of the federal Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.

 

As you know, accessing these federal dollars requires state government to authorize the funds that will pay for our share of federally approved projects.

 

Smart, disciplined fiscal management has made it possible for us to maximize federal participation in dozens of projects. There’s a long list of opportunities here, but a big piece of these funds will be awarded through a competitive process.

 

We need to move quickly to secure these dollars.

 

Fiscal discipline also makes it possible for us to make strategic decisions about tax fairness and our competitive position.

 

The pandemic has proven that we now live in a new world where people have more flexibility about where they live and work.

 

To encourage our citizens to continue to call Massachusetts home and to help those struggling to make ends meet because of rising inflation, we’ll file several tax breaks in our budget proposal later this week.

 

First, let’s support parents.

 

The past two years have been very difficult ones for families. Our budget doubles the tax break for children and dependents, because every Massachusetts family deserves a break. 

 

We’ll also ask lawmakers to eliminate income taxes for the lowest paid 230,000 taxpayers here in the Commonwealth. Instead of paying income taxes, these people should be able to use their earnings to pay for necessities, like food, housing and transportation.

 

Rents are also rising while wages remain relatively flat. It’s time to give renters a bigger tax break on their monthly payments.

 

It’s also been a tough two years for seniors. We’ll ask the legislature to give them a break on their property taxes and make our estate tax more competitive with the rest of the country.

 

We’ve asked the people of Massachusetts to do a lot these past few years. 

 

It's time for us to invest in Massachusetts families. To give them back some of the tax revenue they created through their hard work.

 

Before I close out my remarks tonight, I want to thank a few more people.

 

It’s been a very long two years for everyone, but it’s been an especially difficult period for anyone who has to “go to work.”

 

Many people have been able to work from home and continue to get the job done.

 

But our friends and neighbors in health care, senior care, education, retail, hospitality, emergency response, public works, public safety, restaurant, food service, grocery, transportation, and a huge number of other fields had to show up. And they did every single day.

 

Their work and commitment, their patience and their grace, throughout all this has been extraordinary. Can we give all those folks the round of applause they so richly deserve?

 

Thank you.

 

As most people know, we’ve been calling on the National Guard since our first month in office. Whether it was Snowmaggedon, bomb cyclones, tornadoes, hurricanes, ice storms, natural gas explosions or forest fires, the Guard has been an amazing partner.

 

But they became a godsend during the COVID pandemic. They did it all.

 

Transporting medical gear. Testing residents and staff at long term care and other congregate care facilities. Vaccinating people at locations big and small, including here at the Hynes, where I got vaccinated. Driving school buses so kids could return to in person learning. Filling in for absent workers across almost every kind of health care institution. Helping us right the ship at the Holyoke Soldiers’ Home. And protecting our nation’s capital in the aftermath of January 6th.

 

All that, and they continue to deploy to hot spots all over the globe.

 

General Gary Keefe, on behalf of the people of Massachusetts, I want to thank you, your team, and all members of the Guard for your service. You make us so much better than we would be without you.

 

Earlier tonight, several members of our Gold Star Family community led us in the Pledge of Allegiance.

 

We’ve gotten to know these families quite well over the past seven years. You represent yourselves and the cause you stand for with grace and dignity and you honor us with your presence here tonight.

 

Five months ago, we were horrified when we heard the news that a suicide bomber had attacked a checkpoint outside the airport in Kabul, Afghanistan. Over 200 Afghan civilians were killed in the explosions, along with 13 members of the U.S. military.

 

One of those lost that day was Massachusetts’ own Marine Corps Sergeant Johanny Rosario Pichardo.

 

She volunteered for that mission. She was there because she wanted to be there to evacuate women and children from the increasingly dangerous streets of Kabul. And she paid for it with her life.

 

Lieutenant Governor Polito and I spent time with her family when she returned home. They are kind and decent people. Proud to be from Lawrence, proud of Johanny, and heartbroken that she's gone.

 

I'd ask for a moment of silence tonight to honor those we’ve lost and the Gold Star Families they’ve left behind. They are the very best among us.

 

Thank you.

 

Let me close with this.

 

In the fall of 2018, we were rocked by a natural gas explosion that shut down Lawrence, North Andover and Andover.

 

18 year-old Leonel Rondon tragically died that day, and many others were severely injured. Everything in most of Andover, Lawrence and North Andover ground to a halt.

 

Many members of our team practically lived in makeshift command centers alongside hundreds of emergency response and construction personnel for several months as we worked feverishly to repair the damage.

 

It was an avalanche of issues, problems and decisions that didn’t stop for weeks, but we worked through it.

 

To this day, I think a big part of our success was due to the relationships we already had with most of the key leaders who were involved.

 

The Lieutenant Governor and I knew the local officials and the state legislators. We knew the utility companies. We knew the contractors. And they all knew us.

 

We trusted each other. And that trust made much of what we got done over the next three months possible.

 

There’s no collaboration without trust.

 

If we’ve tried to do anything over the past seven years, we’ve tried to build trust. Others can debate whether we’ve succeeded or not. I believe we have. And I believe it shows in the work we’ve done during good times and difficult ones over the past seven years.

 

Today, it’s clearly more difficult to build trust, to collaborate in public life than it once was.

 

The explosion of social media, the arrival of hundreds of news channels and information distribution platforms. And the ongoing churn of information have made it almost impossible for anyone in public life who wants to collaborate to build trust.

 

Facts are often fungible and curated. Missteps play out in real time and can go viral in the most bizarre and unusual ways. Context is non-existent. And in many cases, history and current events get twisted to support whatever point of view someone is advocating for.

 

But the answer to the swirl and chaos of modern life is not more of the same poisonous brew.

 

The answer is to stand up and accept the responsibility that comes with the work. To understand that trust is earned and collaboration is how difficult things get done.

 

Many of the projects we’ve worked on with our colleagues in local government would never have happened without trust. Many of the most important pieces of legislation we’ve enacted over the past seven years would not have happened without trust.

 

Trust is where possibility in public life comes from.

 

If you can’t tell someone you work with, partner with, or collaborate with, what you really think it’s very hard to do small things. Much less big ones.

 

Here in Massachusetts, we’ve done big things and small ones.

 

At a time when so much of our public dialogue is designed to destroy trust, to manipulate facts, and to pull people apart. We’ve partnered with one another, and shared success and blame along the way.

 

We should continue to focus on building and maintaining positive, collaborative relationships. Because they work for the people we serve and it’s what most voters expect from us.

 

They want us to work hard and collaborate the same way they do. To listen to them as if they were our neighbors, because they are. To appreciate their life stories the same way we expect them to appreciate ours.

 

They want us to knock off the noise and focus on building better, stronger communities from one end of the Bay State to the other.

 

Me too.

 

And honestly, when I think about what I’ll miss most come this time next year, it will be that opportunity to continue to partner with so many of the great people in this room.  And with the great people across this amazing state. Who want nothing more than to leave it better than they found it for those who come after them.

 

But before that time comes, we have a responsibility do just that for the next twelve months.

 

Let’s get to work.

 

God Bless the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

 

And God Bless the United States of America.

波士頓僑社揮毫迎虎年 盼虎威壓病毒

左起,波士頓僑教中心主任潘昭榮、民俗文化老師林賢琪,書法家伍振中,牛頓高地社區主任John Rice,波士頓經文處處長孫儉元,波士頓
僑務諮詢委員蔣宗壬,中華書法會會長黃周麗桃、林卓培等人以春聯向僑胞拜年。(周菊子攝)

             (Boston Orange
伍振中 (左二起)和中華書法會會長黃周麗桃一起把「山林雪蹤」的虎畫,送給經文處
由處長孫儉元代表接受。(周菊子攝)
周菊子麻州牛頓市報導
) 在跨向2022農曆寅虎年之際,波士頓僑教中心和紐英崙中華公所、中華書法會等僑團,趕在21日的農曆新年前,舉辦聯合「迎春揮毫」活動,廣邀僑民到波士頓僑教中心會址,在海外傳承中華文化,揮灑墨香,寫幾幅春聯,帶喜氣回家。

紐英崙中華公所主席雷國輝(右二)撥冗到場,和波士頓經文處處長孫儉元(左起),僑務
諮詢委員蔣宗壬,僑教中心主任潘昭榮等一起向僑胞拜年。(周菊子攝)
波士頓僑教中心工作人員章小慧,李美慧與鄭玉春,曾正泉,曾政明,鄭雪卿,陳玉瑛等志工,122日把波士頓僑教中心張羅得格外有氣氛,不但張燈結綵,活動大廳擺出有著「竹報平安福,富貴春花開」對聯的壁飾,一張張揮毫桌,鋪上紅布,拿出筆、墨,備妥事先裁剪的紅紙,還在牆邊桌上,擺出僑委會每年發行一款的12生肖燈籠,年曆,送給僑胞的便利貼,鳳梨酥,巧克力,讓到場的人收穫濃濃年味。

駐波士頓台北經濟文化辦事處處長孫儉元,牛頓高地社區發展主任John Rice,波士頓僑務諮詢委員蔣宗壬,中華書法會會長黃周麗桃,林卓培,以及伍振中等人在波士頓僑教中心主任潘昭榮敦請中,分別為活動致詞,為迎春揮毫。民俗文化老師林賢琪特地製作了虎年版畫,在會場教小朋友拓印。

黃周麗桃等人在會場即席揮毫。(周菊子攝)
新上任的紐英崙中華公所主席雷國輝當天雖然忙著辦公室的重新規劃工作,仍撥冗出席,到場拜年。

              孫儉元處長指出,隨著時代變遷,手寫春聯越來越少見,在這新年伊始之際,波士頓僑教中心能夠請到這麼多書法老師到場,為僑胞寫春聯,傳承中華文化,十分有意義。

             John Rice表示,自從僑教中心舉辦迎春揮毫活動以來,除了2015年之外,他一年也沒錯過,很高興今年再度應邀參加。希望疫情趕快消失,大家可以在  牛頓台灣日活動時一起好好慶祝。

波士頓僑教中心主任潘昭榮也即席揮毫,寫了個行書體的虎字。(周菊子攝)
              甫卸下僑務委員職位的蔣宗壬笑說,小時候練習寫書法,來美國後,頂多一年提筆一次,所以雖然他有很多好筆,卻還真是難得一用。這天他特地帶了一枝筆桿用景泰藍做的毛筆,好好發揮一下。

              黃周麗桃指出,新年是華人以毛筆書寫詩詞,傳達祝福的有意義日子,這天她也要以最美好的詩詞來祝福所有壬有個美好的一年。林卓培及伍振中也分別簡短致詞。

鄭玉春、曾正泉夫婦招呼到場的小朋友。(周菊子攝)
              精擅書畫,創辦有「神筆小孩」基金會,每週五發獎金,鼓勵青少年學習書畫的伍振中,還特地繪製了一幅「山林雪蹤」,送給經文處及僑教中心。

                          從香港移民來美已十幾年的僑胞張灝舟、郭朗婷,輾轉得知波士頓僑教中心的「迎春揮毫」活動,特地帶小孩來出席活動,體會一下在海外難得一見的春聯處處場面。

         123日,波士頓僑教中心和各合作機構還在紐英崙中華公所另外辦了一場迎春揮毫活動。

波士頓國民黨換屆 年輕世代江文玲接任常委

駐波士頓經文處處長孫儉元 (前右一),波士頓僑教中心主任潘昭榮(前左一)應邀出席
國民黨波士頓分部新舊任常委交接儀式。前排左二起,張韻蘭,江文玲、李伍綺蓮,
王競芳,後排左起,袁建業,陳家驊,蔣碧如,李若蘭,薛劍童,蘇麗萍。
(波士頓國民黨提供)
                    (Boston Orange 周菊子波士頓報導) 中國國民黨波士頓分部122日在波士頓華埠乞臣街 (Hudson)會址舉行第56屆常委交接儀式,本業會計,年甫60的江文玲,從已在位7年的張韻蘭手中接下常委職務。

                        國民黨波士頓分部選舉委員會按修訂的黨章規定,今年的委員會從7席擴增為9席,原有的2席評議委員席位撤銷。2席候補委員將有權出席會議,但在會務決策上無投票權。

駐波士頓經文處處長孫儉元 (右二),波士頓僑教中心主任潘昭榮(左一)為卸任常委
張韻蘭(左二)交棒給江文玲(右一)做見證。(波士頓國民黨提供)
                       根據該分部黨員名冊,現有投票權的96人以書面方式投票後,當選為本屆委員及候補者依序為張韻蘭、王競芳、周仙梅、薛劍童、蘇麗萍、馬滌凡、江文玲、李若蘭、李伍綺蓮、袁建業、陳家驊 、蔣碧如。

                  周仙梅因私人因素,獲悉當選時就已請辭,其席缺空位由同票的袁建業及陳家驊兩人於122日在交接儀式舉行前,以現場抽籤方式來決定由誰遞補,結果為袁建業加入委員行列,陳家驊和蔣碧如列為候補。

當選的9名委員,除馬滌凡因事請假未出席外,其餘的出席委員互選後,由江文玲當選為常務委員。

駐波士頓台北經濟文化辦事處處長孫儉元,波士頓僑教中心主任潘昭榮當天應邀出席,見證常委交接。

李伍綺蓮曾擔任國民黨波士頓分部常委多年,如今年逾90,身體健朗,
依然熱心參與黨務,為社區服務。(周菊子攝)
波士頓國民黨的新任常委江文玲,畢業於逢甲大學會計系,1986年來美,在2個小孩還僅一到三歲時,決定繼續進修,幸好先生袁建業支持,不但幫她找資料,還在她忙著上學時幫忙照顧小孩,讓她順利拿到碩士學位後,還又幫她找了份工作。

江文玲記得當年遇上經濟不景氣,在波士頓找工作十分不容易,袁建業在薩福克大學的佈告欄上看到,當年名稱為昆士社區服務中心,如今是士波士頓華埠社區中心 (BCNC)的機構需要會計,她去應徵後竟在BCNC一做16年,所以她對波士頓華埠的發展變遷,可說是有近距離的了解。

                      大約是2006年的時候,波士頓國民黨選舉完畢,需要一名書記協助常委李伍綺蓮處理文書事務,由於袁建業很早就參加活動,也入了波士頓國民黨,於是把高中時就曾參加枝傾倒部活動的她拉來服務,當了24年的常委書記,她對波士頓國民黨的黨務工作,因此也有一定的認識。

她後來離開BCNC,到林肯鎮政府當了9年會計,因為之前也曾在市政府工作,累積的年資足夠,於是2018年退休,回台灣陪伴母親3個月。2020年,他們夫婦兩人都退休後,又去台灣,本來只是回台過年,為支持韓國瑜投票,沒想到遇上新冠病毒疫情,竟待了一年半,幾個月前才終於回到波士頓。

江文玲表示,她和袁建業認為,探望、照顧家人的心願已達成,倆人既然都已退休,就出來服務僑社,奉獻心力,這才參加了執委選舉。

由於袁建業已於去年當選為波士頓榮光會理事長,江文玲的當選為波士頓國民黨常委,為波士頓僑社締造一段夫妻同時擔任社團首長的佳話。