星期三, 4月 13, 2016

紅十字會 4/30 免費為摩頓市民安裝煙霧警報器

摩頓市消防局和美國紅十字會,摩頓市童子軍,以及社區義工將於4月30日(週六)為市部分居民安裝免費的煙霧及二氧化碳警報器。該活動是紅十字會為期五年的全國性居家消防活動。
4月16日時,紅十字會都會居家消防隊將與摩頓市童子軍合作,巡走摩頓市,在居民家門前留下通知,邀請民眾和該會預約安裝時間。有意安裝者可電洽781-322-2311。

Free Smoke Alarms & Carbon Monoxide Detectors

Wednesday, April 13, 2016
On Saturday, April 30, 2016 the American Red Cross along with the Malden Fire Department, Malden Boy Scouts and other neighborhood volunteers will be installing free smoke alarms and carbon monoxide detectors in parts of Malden. This event is part of the Red Cross's five year national Home Fire Campaign (http://www.redcross.org/get-help/prepare-for-emergencies/types-of-emergencies/fire/prevent-home-fire) to reduce fatalities and injuries from home fires by at least 25% by 2019.
On Saturday April 16th the Red Cross Metro Home Fire Team along with Malden Boy Scouts will be canvassing a section of Malden, leaving door-hangers inviting residents to call for appointments. Residents may call 781-322-2311 to register for free installation or for further information.

羅德島華協頒獎學金 國會議員劉雲平談從政路

羅德島華人協會2016年獎學金得主與嘉賓合影。(周菊子攝)
(Boston Orange 周菊子羅德島州報導)羅德島華人協會(RIACA)與國際領袖基金會(ILF)紐英崙分會合作,日前邀華裔國會眾議員,來自加州的劉雲平做主講嘉賓,在羅德島州普塔基市中國飯店頒發獎學金給12名學子,鼓勵他們關懷社區,傳承中華文化。
國會議員劉雲平訪問羅德島,出席國際領袖基金會活動,
為羅德島華人協會頒發獎學金。(周菊子攝)
國際領袖基金會執行長董繼玲特地從華府趕來,在這有逾百人出席的盛會上,頒發證書給新一屆紐英崙分會董事,並送上總統義工獎,表揚陳本生醫師、前任波士頓僑務委員馬滌凡。
羅德島華人協會從2013年起,迄今已連續四年頒發獎學金。支持該會的路加慈善基金會,今年再度撥款兩萬,由9人組成的獎學金委員會審慎評選出12名高中生,每人發給1000至3000元獎勵。
羅德島僑領葉超,子平與熱心人士合組的路加基金會,為以身作則的強調關懷、服務社區之重要,還另外捐款七萬元給布朗大學與浙江大學及成功大學醫學院合作的學生交流項目,羅德島大學中文旗艦項目,中華頤養院,國際領袖基金會等五個項目或機構,感謝他們扶持社區成長、壯大。
羅德島華人協會獎學金頒獎典禮,由該會董事東格林威治鎮學校委員會委員孫琰擔任司儀,2014年得獎學生,目前在紐約大學就讀的萬樞(Jerry Wan),2016年得獎的巴靈頓(Barrington)高中學生代表Vivian Tian致詞。頒獎之後的午餐會,還由獲獎學生們做臨時侍應生,藉以體會為社區服務的必須放下身段。

國會議員劉雲平任頒獎禮主講嘉賓

當天應邀做頒獎禮主題演講的劉雲平,在台灣出生,美國俄亥俄州克利夫蘭長大,2011年當選為美國國會眾議員,締造了華裔第一代移民當選為國會議員的歷史紀錄,也成為美國國會中,繼趙美心,孟昭文之後的第三位華裔國會議員。
他在會中簡述自己的成長經歷,上任後的工作成績及未來方向,笑言自己和每個移民後代都差不多,小時候都是父母的幫手。他對美國提供移民實現夢想的機會,心存感激,早年選擇加入空軍當儲備軍人,迄今已服務20年,再過幾個月就可以升任為儲備空軍上校了。
他當選為加州州議員後,就已開始和董繼玲等人合作,推動亞裔關注政治,時事,參與選舉,如今再進一步當選為國會眾議員,加入預算委員會,通過設立進出口銀行法案,為期五年的高速公路經費法案,目前他的工作重點在網路安全(cyber security),以及防止因種族樣貌引發的歧視(racial profiling)。他認為近年發生的諸如美國國家氣象局水文專家陳霞芬,天普大學教授超導專家小星等許多人無端被懷疑為間諜,逮捕後不出實證又釋放事件,對無辜的華裔科學家們很不公平。
當天應邀到會嘉賓除了國會眾議員劉雲平之外,還包括羅德島州副州長麥基(Daniel J. McKee),羅州州務卿葛碧雅(Nellie Gorbea),克蘭斯頓市市長馮偉杰(Allan Fung),普塔基市市長桂必安(Don Grebien),中央瀑布市市長狄奧沙(James_Diossa)。
            今年的羅德島華人協會獎學金得獎學生,有4人來自巴靈頓高中,4人來自麻州高中。3人獲3000元,2人獲2000元,其餘得獎者各獲1000元。九名獎學金委員會委員中有三名羅德島華人協會董事,萬寅生,章賢信,饒彬。其餘六人為Lei Wei, Gongqin Chen, Nina Rao, Yaohua Zhang, Shhong Li, Yan Shen。
路加慈善基金會主席葉超(右起)與國際領袖基金會執行長
董繼玲,代表中華頤養院的紐英崙中華公所主席陳家驊。(周菊子攝)
代表各機構領取路加慈善基金會捐款的,有布朗大學醫學院副院長葉茱莉(譯音,Julianne Y. Ip, MD)代表該院與浙江大學的醫學院學生交流項目,布朗大學醫學院教授羅德島婦幼醫院主任宋建仁代表與成功大學醫學院學生的交流項目,依序各獲一、二萬元捐款。
羅德島大學何文潮博士負責的中文旗艦項目,紐英崙中華公所新任主席陳家驊當年參與創辦的中華頤養院,各獲捐款一萬元。
董繼玲代表國際領袖基金會獲得捐款三萬元。(更新版)



美國國會議員劉雲平(左起)與羅德島州副州長麥基,克蘭斯頓市
市長馮偉傑,中央瀑布市市長狄奧沙,以及羅德島州眾議員等政要
同桌,相談甚歡。(周菊子攝)

政要,嘉賓合影。

政要、嘉賓合影。

羅德島華人協會董事與國會議員及嘉賓合影。

國會議員劉雲平(右一)與羅德島州副州長麥基(左二)聯袂頒發獎
學金。

國際領袖基金會執行長董繼玲(左)頒發總統義工講給陳本生醫師。

加州國會議員劉雲平應邀訪羅德島州,談從政經歷。

At White House Science Fair, President Obama Calls on this Generation of Students to Tackle the Grand Challenges of Our Time


At White House Science Fair, President Obama Calls on this Generation of Students to Tackle the Grand Challenges of Our Time

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, President Obama will host the sixth and final White House Science Fair of his Administration and celebrate the student competitors and winners from a broad range of science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) competitions. The event will be the largest White House Science Fair to date, with more than 130 students from more than 30 states, as well as student alumni from each of the prior five White House Science Fairs.

Highlighting the powerful stories of ingenuity, social activism, teamwork, and civic engagement evident in the projects, President Obama will call on this generation of students—those in elementary, middle, and high schools today—to actively participate in solving the toughest challenges facing our world, from combating climate change to setting foot on Mars.

President Obama established the tradition of the White House Science Fair at the start of his Administration to personally celebrate our Nation’s top young scientists and innovators. The President created the Science Fair with a simple credo“If you win the NCAA championship, you come to the White House. Well, if you're a young person and you produce the best experiment or design, the best hardware or software, you ought to be recognized for that achievement, too.”

The President will also highlight the growing community of education, business, and nonprofit leaders who have responded to his State of the Union call to give every child the opportunity to learn computer science (CS), as well as his overall “Educate to Innovate” campaign to ensure all students have the tools to be innovators and problem-solvers. Today’s announcements include:

·         New Department of Education guidance to states, school districts, and other education organizations on the many ways they can use existing Federal funds to advance Pre-K–12 STEM and CS learning.
·         A $200 million investment by Oracle to support CS education for an additional 125,000 students in the United States.
·         More than 500 K-12 schools committing to expand access to CS, with support from Code.org.
·         Commitments to expand STEM learning for more of our youngest learners, from family engagement to innovative use of media.
·         A new online matching platform, supported by US2020, to help more STEM professionals who want to volunteer and mentor.

Today’s STEM announcements also mark progress on the President’s My Brother’s Keeper Initiativeand the efforts of the Council on Women and Girls to build ladders of opportunity for all young people, including populations underrepresented in STEM; incorporate STEM into the Administration’s push to expand high-quality early-childhood education; and advance the Climate Education and Literacy Initiative to help connect all American students and citizens with the best-available, science-based information about climate change. Full details on all of today’s announcements can be found here.

The White House Science Fair is part of a week of Administration activities celebrating science and technology, featuring the President’s participation as a guest presenter throughout this week on the Science Channel’s nightly science news segment. In addition, the White House Science Fair will be immediately followed by the USA Science & Engineering Festival, the nation's largest celebration of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, with more than 350,000 students and adults expected to engage in more than 3,000 hands-on activities over 3 days. More than 70 Federal agencies will participate in the Festival.

A Generational Call to Action

Students today have the potential to be one of America’s greatest generations. Though each generation of Americans brings with them new ideas and energy, today, because of unprecedented access to cutting-edge physical and digital tools, online and in-person communities, and information about the grand challenges we face, American students are even better equipped to harness their passions towards developing solutions that confront our toughest challenges.

They can be the Mars generation, the explorers who first step foot on another planet. Their skills, perseverance, and collaboration can help seed new technologies and solutions to tackle the climate crisis. They can collaborate to harness rapid advances in information technology and nanotechnology to understand the human brain, forge new solutions to cancer, and embrace the American spirit of discovery, invention, and entrepreneurship.

As the President highlighted in this year’s State of the Union Address, everyone in the United States can harness technology to help solve our toughest challenges. The 2016 White House Science Fair shines a spotlight on the contributions that the Nation’s students are making now, and the potential they have to help make our country and our world a better place.

The more than 130 students at the 2016 White House Science Fair will represent more than 40 different STEM competitions and organizations. Approximately 40 student teams will have the opportunity to exhibit their projects at the White House, and the President will personally view some of these projects. Additional information on the projects, students, and competitions being recognized at the Fair can be found here.

A Sustained Record of Accomplishment

This White House Science Fair is only the most recent example of President Obama’s sustained and historic focus on giving every child the opportunity to excel at STEM education. In the past 7 years:

·         The Administration has secured more than $1 billion in private investment for improving STEM education as part of the President’s Educate to Innovate campaign.
·         Our Nation is more than halfway towards achieving the goal the President set in 2011 of preparing 100,000 new math and science teachers by 2021.
·         Compared to when President Obama took office, 25,000 more engineers are graduating each year from American universities.
·         STEM education has been incorporated into the priorities of the Department of Education (ED)—as illustrated by the Administration’s signature Race to the Top competition—and into the bipartisan Every Student Succeeds Act that the President signed last year.
·         This White House has announced more than 350 commitments from college and university leadership and others to provide pathways for students underrepresented in STEM to attain degrees.
·         President Obama has started traditions such as the White House Science Fair to honor young people using STEM to improve their communities and the world.

And in his final budget announced in February, the President sustains this impressive track record with an investment of $3 billion for STEM-education programs, as well as a historic $4 billion proposal in support of CS education for all students.

New Steps Being Announced by the Administration Today

Federal agencies are announcing new steps to empower local communities with the tools, people, and support they need to expand their STEM efforts. These include:

·         Federal guidance on advancing STEM education. Today, the Department of Education (ED) Office of STEM is releasing a Dear Colleague Letter providing guidance for states, school districts, and other education organizations on how they can use Federal funds to support innovative STEM-education strategies and ensure equitable STEM-education opportunities and outcomes for all students in the 2016-17 school year. In particular, this guidance outlines how Federal money can be used to support high-quality, hands-on active STEM learning.

·         The Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS), along with the STEM Funders Network and the Afterschool Alliance, are collaborating to support vibrant STEM ecosystems in as many as 14 communities, where local schools, out-of-school programs, business, higher education, museums and local institutions will work together to expand STEM learning opportunities for local students. To support the effort, CNCS will place up to 28 AmeriCorps VISTA members, who will be full-time staff on the ground. In addition, CNCS is expanding STEM AmeriCorps VISTA through a new partnership with the New York Academy of Sciences that will place more than 10 AmeriCorps VISTA members over the next 2 years in afterschool STEM-mentoring programs, which will serve students who reside in 60 of the poorest neighborhoods in New York City, NY, and Newark, NJ.

·         The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), in collaboration with the YMCA of the USA, will help 10 new host cities around the country expand Thingamajig, a program developed by the YMCA of Metropolitan DC. These cities will create programs, seminars, and tools that assist students in connecting STEM education with real-world problem solving skills. This partnership builds on the last 2 years of expansion across YMCA of the USA, which reaches over 100,000 youth—with a focus on low-income and underrepresented youth—in 48 states and Washington, D.C. Additionally, this year, USPTO will expand its collaboration with the JAMTECH program to more sites across the country. JAMTECH is a hands-on educational experience that gives students with little or no exposure to computer programming the opportunity to build and program their own video games over the course of a day—teaching the principles of game design, coding, and programming in a way that allows students to expand their competencies in areas such as math, physics, analysis, logic, and strategy.

·         Over 200 Federally supported citizen-science projects for students and adults are now accessible from a single place—CitizenScience.gov. The General Services Administration (GSA) is collaborating with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars (WWICS), a Trust Instrumentality of the U.S. Government, to launch CitizenScience.gov, a new central hub for citizen science and crowdsourcing initiatives in the public sector. CitizenScience.gov will provide information, resources, and tools for government personnel, students, and adults who are actively engaged in or looking to participate in citizen science and crowdsourcing projects. The development of this catalogue follows the September 2015 memorandum to Federal departments and agencies issued by the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP).

·         ED, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), and Too Small to Fail (TSTF)are releasing a series of tip sheets entitled “Let’s Talk, Read and Sing about STEM!” These tip sheets provide concrete resources and recommendations for families, caregivers, and educators of infants, toddlers, and preschoolers on easy ways to incorporate STEM concepts and vocabulary into everyday routines, and suggestions for activities to engage young children in STEM learning. These new resources build on an existing suite of materials co-created by ED, HHS, and TSTF focused on early brain and language development.

·         The National Science Foundation (NSF) will celebrate a Day of Active Learning. A robust foundation of evidence shows that while active engagement enhances learning for students of all demographics, it has an especially beneficial effect on women and underrepresented students, likely due to a greater sense of belonging that can be achieved in active classrooms. Today, NSF is announcing that it will hold an Active Learning Day later this year, with the goal of empowering and encouraging educators nationwide to use active learning in their classrooms.

Private-Sector Commitments in Response to the President’s Call to Action

Today, more than 100 different organizations are announcing new commitments, showcasing the strong response to the President’s State of the Union call to give every child the opportunity to learn CS, as well as his overall “Educate to Innovate” campaign to ensure all students have the tools to be innovators and problem-solvers. These announcements include:

·         New partnerships to train teachers and help more than 500 K-12 schools expand access to CS.Code.org has established partnerships with seven local organizations to deliver professional-learning programs aimed at preparing up to 550 new high-school and middle-school CS teachers over the next 2 years. In addition, Code.org will help support more than 500 K-12 schools expand their CS offerings. This includes:
o   Nine school districts surrounding Chicago have grouped together to begin offering AP CS Principles in 21 high schools.
o   Dallas Independent School District will be offering beginning CS courses districtwide for the first time in the majority of their high schools and all of their middle schools in the 2016-17 school year.
o   Georgia’s Department of Education and Governor’s Office of Student Achievementcommitted to expand AP CS Principles to 60 high schools and integrate CS into preexisting courses at 60 middle schools across the state.
o   Mississippi’s Department of Education will host 6 summer workshops this year to prepare approximately 170 new CS teachers in grades K-5.
o   Northeast Florida School Districts, representing Clay, Duval, Nassau, and St. Johns Counties, have combined efforts to spread opportunities for CS instruction to over 200,000 students served collectively by their 330 schools.
o   In Washington State, Educational Service Districts 123, 171, and 112 (serving 82 school districts) have partnered with Code.org to bring CS professional-learning opportunities for elementary- and middle-school teachers as well as for middle-and high-school counselors and administrators.

·         A $200 million investment from Oracle over the next 18 months in direct and in-kind funds to support CS education in the United States. The investment will allow an additional 125,000 K-12 students to learn CS through the free Oracle Academy program. Oracle is also expanding access to emerging CS fields for interested teachers and students, through opportunities such as their free Big Data Science Boot Camps. To complement its direct CS offerings, Oracle will invest more than $3 million in nonprofit organizations focused on inspiring young girls and engaging other underrepresented students in pursuing STEM and CS degrees.

·         A new online matching platform, created by US2020, to connect more STEM professionals to volunteer opportunities, setting an initial goal to serve 20,000 students this year. The new platform will enable any nonprofit organization or classroom teacher to connect easily with a STEM professional. In 2016, US2020 will use the platform as a central hub to engage more than 1,000 corporations and civic organizations and serve more than 20,000 students with a focus on girls, traditionally underrepresented minority students, and children from low-income families.

·         Commitments to expand STEM learning for young learners nationwide. In response to the Administration’s broader push to expand early-childhood education, private-sector organizations are stepping up and making new commitments to build statewide early STEM programs, equip every Head Start center across the country with STEM tools, and engage families with new media and cultural options. A full list of new commitments will be released as a part of a White House event on early learning and STEM later this month. These include:
o   100Kin10 is awarding $1.7 million to partners in New York State and has leveraged additional support from Motorola Solutions to develop ways to increase the reach and quality of engineering and CS teaching in Pre-K–12 schools.
o   Common Sense Education will produce a set of early STEM-education resources and tools,covering themes like Coding for Early Readers. These resources have the potential to reach more than 300,000 teachers in 100,000 schools, and 65 million households across the country.
o   The Heising-Simons Foundation will partner with The Fred Rogers Company to support the production of 25 episodes of “Odd Squad,” a math-focused television show airing on PBS Kids, create games and an app, and hold free week-long summer math camps in 14 U.S. cities serving more than 400 children.
o   The Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network (HITN) will donate 10,000 STEM-focused Spanish/English Family Kits to informal learning settings (libraries and museums), community-based organizations, and national organizations—including home visitation programs—that serve low-income families in order to help expand young children’s access to STEM at home.
o   Learning Point Alaska, Inc. is partnering with multiple Alaska Native organizations to deliver informal, technology-based STEM programming to elementary-school students and build capacity for local teachers in Native Villages throughout Alaska.
o   The Museum of Science, Boston is launching a 3-year initiative to create a research-based Pre-K-Kindergarten engineering curriculum, which will build on the museum’s Engineering is Elementary curriculum, for schools to use to teach children ages 3-5.
o   The National Head Start Association and Lakeshore Learning will set a goal to reach the one million children who are enrolled in Head Start programs with their “Recycle Your Way to STEAM” program.
o   Sesame Workshop, the creators of Sesame Street, will develop “Make Believe with Math,”a research-based Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) for educators, which, along with other training resources, will be made freely available online

MAYOR WALSH'S BUDGET PROPOSAL BUILDS ON STRONG RECORD OF PROACTIVE FISCAL MANAGEMENT

MAYOR WALSH'S BUDGET PROPOSAL BUILDS ON STRONG RECORD OF PROACTIVE FISCAL MANAGEMENT
Balanced budget supports education, public safety, economic growth 
BOSTON - Wednesday, April 13, 2016 - Mayor Martin J. Walsh today presented his Fiscal Year 2017 (FY17) budget proposal, a balanced and responsible plan that is responsive to the needs to Boston's residents.  The budget builds on the Administration's strong and proactive fiscal management practices, implements department audit recommendations to achieve operational efficiencies and modernize processes, employs data-driven decision making, and continues to address long-term systemic challenges affecting the residents of Boston that have built up over many years.  Through thoughtful reforms that achieve savings, and improved utilization of existing funds, Mayor Walsh's FY17 budget is able to make targeted investments toward achieving a thriving, healthy and innovative City.

"I am proud that this budget reflects our shared commitment to strong fiscal management-in the savings we have achieved, and in the new investments those savings make possible," said Mayor Walsh. " This is a forward-looking budget that puts us on the cutting edge of both policy vision and operational excellence. Together, by strong collaboration and bold reform, we can fight inequality and ensure that our city's prosperity is shared widely."

boston.gov/recommendedbudget.
Strong Fiscal Management

Mayor Walsh is able to present a balanced budget that maintains high levels of support in critical areas because of the Administration's achievement of efficiencies and savings.  The City's data-driven managerial approach was recently validated by the affirmation of Boston's triple A bond rating. In its first two years, the Administration has systematically engaged in independent operational reviews and other planning efforts aimed at making government more efficient in order to address areas needing renewed attention.

In order to invest in the areas that will keep Boston thriving,  the City has implemented a number of cost saving reforms in FY17:
  • Public Safety and Streets departments will cut employee overtime hours in FY17, saving the City $11.6 million.
  • City departments are saving about $4.7 million by inactivating over 100 vacant positions without impacting service levels.
  • The City is achieving nearly $1 million in utility savings from reduced usage and lower rates, and almost $400,000 in savings by tightening waste and other contracted services budgets.
  • The Public Health Commission is saving $1.4 million through a number of budget tightening measures.
  • As part of its reform to cut public safety overtime and give public safety departments meaningful spending limits, this budget fully plans for public safety overtime for the first time in over 15 years.
Through operational reviews, data-driven initiatives, and other planning efforts, the Walsh Administration has identified need for investment in key areas ranging from access to quality early childhood education, to addressing chronic and veteran homelessness, to reducing Emergency Medical Services (EMS) response time.

Education

The School Committee approved a $1.027 billion budget for the Boston Public Schools (BPS),  an appropriation amount that could go up when the next round of collective bargaining agreements are negotiated. Total education spending (including district and charter schools) will be 40% of the city budget. According to a report by the US Census Bureau, the Boston Public Schools invest more money per student than any of the 100 largest school districts in the nation.  

Increasing Access to Quality Early Childhood Education
This budget includes $3 million to expand BPS K1 programming by 200 seats, building on the 200 new K1 seats added in BPS schools over the last two years.

Investing Thoughtfully in Special Education
BPS will invest in special education in three critical areas: support teams to work directly in schools with teachers and school staff, a new data system that will give parents timely and accurate access to IEP information, and transition services for students as they prepare to move on from BPS.

Housing

Implementing Boston's Homeless Action Plan
To support the Mayor's Action Plan committed to ending chronic individual homelessness by 2018, the FY17 budget includes an increase of $1.3 million in general funds and $2 million in federal funds to provide front door triage staff at Pine Street Inn, rapid re-housing rental assistance, additional emergency shelter to families, and low barrier permanent supportive housing for the homeless.

Improving Homeless Shelter Service and Safety
The budget improves services and safety at Southampton Street and Woods Mullen homeless shelters by   better assisting Boston's most vulnerable population with career counseling, job training, substance abuse prevention, and transitional and permanent housing support services. It will also allow for the full implementation of a front door triage department that enables shelter staff to meet with every new guest entering the shelters to conduct an in-depth assessment, and to develop a client-centered plan to exit the emergency shelter system as quickly as possible.

Basic City Services and Safer Streets

Delivering Exceptional Basic City Services
This budget increases Boston's street resurfacing and sidewalk repair program by nearly $4 million and bridge repair by over $6 million.

Helping People Move Through the City Safely and Reliably
In FY17, City is investing $3.1 million in Vision Zero - a campaign Mayor Walsh launched in 2015 to eliminate serious injuries and fatalities in our roadways.

Parks First

With operating and capital investments, Mayor Walsh is launching Parks First, a comprehensive initiative ensuring that Boston's open spaces are among the Nation's most accessible and equitable. Mayor Walsh has dedicated $47.6 million in capital funds to Boston's parks, and the FY17 operating budget will be the largest in the department's history.

Improving Access and Equity
A two-year, $5 million dollar investment in pathway and entrance improvements to Boston's largest open space, Franklin Park, will increase usage and safety. Park renovation projects at Smith Playground in Allston, Noyes Park in East Boston, and Garvey Playground in Dorchester will create more inclusive parks, and FY17 will see the beginning of a comprehensive redesign of the 45-acre Harambee Park in Dorchester and Mattapan.  

Striving toward Excellence
Parks First will expand the department's seasonal park ranger and maintenance workforce to ensure that Boston's neighborhood parks receive an increased level of care and safe spaces for residents and visitors.

Health and Safety

Increased EMS Resources
To meet the heightened demand for emergency medical services fueled by an increasing population and to ensure Mayor Walsh's vision for Boston as the healthiest city in the nation, the Administration is investing in additional EMTs and new ambulance vehicles for FY17.

Improving Addiction Services through Boston 311
As a result of the opiates crisis in Boston and across the nation, the City is adding resources to the Public Health Commission's PAATHS (Providing Access to Addictions Treatment, Hope and Support) program, a one-stop shop for those seeking information about, or access to, addiction treatment services. Individuals will now be able to reach the PAATHS program through Boston's 311 service.

Enhancing Community Center Hours and Programming
BCYF will dedicate the Grove Hall Community Center as a senior center, expand Saturday evening hours, enable five centers to operate 7-days per week, and allow 17 centers to operate 6-days per week, resulting in centers that are better equipped to provide quality programming for all residents, especially seniors and youth. This expansion will come at no additional cost to the taxpayer, as BCYF will realign operations and focus its resources on sites with uninterrupted access and increased demand for more programs.

Revitalizing Fire Engines and Ladders
Based on recommendations from the Fire department's independent operational review, Boston will launch a revamped fire engine and ladder replacement plan to replace 48% of the fleet within 4 years, and 78% within 8 years. In FY17, the department will acquire 15 new fire apparatus and improve vehicle maintenance.  

Expanding Access for All

Connect all Boston Public Schools to the City's fiber network
The City will expand its fiber optic network to connect approximately 90 additional public schools reducing costs and making more bandwidth available.

Enhancing Translation and Interpretation Services
Boston will launch new methods of engagement with the non-English speaking residents of Boston. Starting in FY17, Boston 311 call takers will have the ability to interact with Bostonians through interpreters. The City will also be able to translate more newsletters and other notices in a variety of languages. 
 
Building Thriving Community Libraries
Boston will launch the reinvigoration of the Adams Branch Library, begin replacement of the Uphams Corner Branch Library, begin design and construction at the Dudley Branch Library, and continue construction on the renovation of the Jamaica Plain Branch.  Branch library projects not only improve library services in neighborhoods, but can also assist with local economic development efforts as well.