Sunday, June 7, 2015

Whoop, There It Is

Last January Boston's Department of Neighborhood Development invited its four developers to present their proposals for the Cote Ford site to the Mattapan community. Three of them did so; all three proposing mixed-used, transit-oriented developments. 

Then, through some magical (back-channels) process, it now appears ("heard it through the grapevine") that the group chosen to develop the site was the one with the most under-developed proposal.  Curious.  

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Fast Forward the Journey

Backstory

Wow!  It feels like Advance Mattapan's already covered a lot; even tho, it's clear we haven't even touched, let alone, 'scratched the surface.'  


Six months ago it looked like this season was shaping up to be about Mattapan's political economy: it's leadership, especially it's interaction(s) with community residents, businesses, etc.; and the very few community-based groups that public- and private-sector institutions recognize as speaking for the neighborhood of Mattapan. 


Since community members are, for the most part, kept 'in the dark,' this season's design concept had to be 'outside in.'  


It was a relatively easy decision to make because Advance Mattapan made very little headway by taking an 'inside (Government) Center' approach last season.



All Mattapan 'power centers' ignored us: politicians; community-based service and economic development centers placated, but largely ignored requests to appear on the show.  On occasion, neighborhood community leaders even 'trashed' us at public meetings--as if our show was not of, by, or for [#thePeople of] Mattapan; and so, by implication, lacked legitimacy somehow.

The Journey

We began this season talking about the BRA's push to add a zoning overlay to "Greater Mattapan" that would permit urban farms.  Edith Murnane, Mayor Menino's Director of Food Initiatives and John "Tad" Read of the BRA made the case for the Mayor's pilot project.  

City Councillor Charles C. Yancey was a vocal opponent of the City's urban farming proposal when the Zoning Commission held hearings. So we invited him on the show.  But his standard platform about the need for a high school in Mattapan displaced discussion about zoning to permit urban farming; at least the word, "redistricting" came up. 

Then came the killing of Trayvon Benjamin Martin (may he rest in peace); and the horrible discovery that Florida's #StandYourGround law allowed his killer to roam free in the interim.  Outrage. Protests. Petitioning governments for redress of grievances. Questions emerging.  Answers disturbing; connecting dots previously just 'data points.'

The "Habitual Offender" law aka "Three Strikes" was only one in a series of moves being made in the MA General Court "relative to the common defense" (S00661).  The local lobbying arm of the NRA--namely, the Gun Owners Action League (GOAL)--had moved State Senator Stephen M. Brewer (D-Barre) to introduce a version of #StandYourGround right here in Massachusetts.  

The more we scratched at this scab, the uglier it got.  Pending bills purporting to provide for "the common defense," coupled with push/pull for the implementation of ICE's "Secure Communities" Program (S-Comm), revealed something greater at work--in "quiet rooms;" behind the scenes.  The feint outlines of a pattern, suggesting the prison industrial complex (#PIC) wasn't a figment of an overactive imagination after all.  

The watchword had been CORI reform.  So we invited Aaron Tanaka of the Boston Workers Alliance to come on the show to talk about it; more specifically, to update our audience about breakthroughs in this regard.  After 'a long, hard slog' the broad coalition of activists pushing for CORI reform had moved the state legislature in a positive direction; and we wanted (needed, really) to hear more.

Building segments about "Three Strikes," "Stand Your Ground," and CORI reform, coupled with ongoing protests related to the #TrayvonMartin case brought awareness and calls to action about the American Legislative Council (aka #ALEC) to the fore, however; most especially its, "Public Safety and Elections Task Force." (See earlier blogposts for more detailed discussion).   

These "common defense," prison-pipeline bills and programs were obviously fraught with racial, ethnic, and class disparities.  Less apparent is the particular way they impact Black and Latino people who happen to be #LGBTQ as well.  The Hispanic Black Gay Coalition-Boston's Corey Yarbrough helped us connect these 'data points,' however.

ALEC's "Public Safety and Elections Task Force" was something of a conundrum, until #StandYourGround and #VoterID 'data points' came together.  Voter ID bills had also spread rapidly across the nation; and a variety are pending here in Mass as well.  Nineteen (19), in fact, at last count.  


Stephen R. Canessa, who represented the 12th Bristol District (New Bedford) for a few short months before resigning to become the top lobbyist for Seacoast Health Systems, made #VoterID legislation his one substantive charge will there.  Fascinating, isn't it?

All to say, the nationwide push for #VoterID requirements brought MassVote into view.  Our segment featuring Cheryl C. Clark allayed several concerns about registering to vote and voting this year.

Flash Forward

So, this Friday night @AdvanceMattapan goes #LIVE at on BNNtv to wrap up the season of topics just outlined. Tune in to Comcast Ch 23/RCN Ch 83, or watch online here on June 22nd at 8 PM.  


You can even join the discussion by calling Studio A during the show (617.708.3280) or tweet us using #LIVE @advanceMattapan.


At least let us know if you think we should continue next season.  Boycott of Facebook is on, but you can holla back via Twitter @advanceMattapan or email: advancemattapan@gmail.com.


Looking forward...

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Hiatus is Over

Next month Advance Mattapan will return to BNN's Studio A.  We'll go #live2tape on the following dates and times:
    • Monday, Apr 9th    2-4 PM
    • Friday,   Apr 20th  1-3 PM
    • Monday, May 7th   2-4 PM
    • Friday,   May 25th 1-3 PM
    • Friday,  Jun   8th   1-3 PM
    • Friday,  Jun  22nd  8-10 PM  LIVE
Join us in the studio anytime you're available.  

Of course, if you'd like to actually be on air to discuss a particular issue, advance notice is recommended. You can 
  1. email us: advancemattapan@gmail.com
  2. tweet us @advancemattapan using #IwantOn, or
  3. leave a comment below
so we'll expect you.

Some of the topics already 'in the hopper?'
  • Re-districting: process and potential outcomes
  • Vote 2012:     "who's on first" and what's at stake
  • Mobilizing Mattapan: vision of an action network
  • Housing, Homes, and Foreclosures
  • "Three Strikes:" a boon for the prison industrial complex 
  • iAM Watch: updates from community-based organizations and neighborhood associations.
Again, these are just a few of the ideas that have already been tossed around in our editorial board meetings.  There's still time to weigh in.

In the meantime, watch Advance Mattapan
Mondays  @ 4 PM
Thursdays @ 9 AM
on BNNtv's community access channels--Comcast Ch. 23 and RCN Ch. 83.  If you don't have cable you can watch it online every Monday and Thursday at these times.

One way or another then, we hope you join us as we continue to look for ways to advance Mattapan.










Monday, February 27, 2012

(Dis)Crediting Advance Mattapan?


It's been a year now since Advance Mattapan launched a show on public access TV at Boston Neighborhood Network.  Although we made initial overtures to public officials, community-based organizations, and people we know 'around the way,' for the most part Mattapan 'movers' and 'shakers' were not willing to come on the show.


Now that Advance Mattapan is beginning to gain ground through broadcast and social media, we're getting feedback suggesting that we're still missing our primary target audiences.  Most people with ties to Mattapan are unaware that Advance Mattapan exists.  Others who purport to know claim (erroneously) that Advance Mattapan lacks any direct ties to the community.  


Word is, when our name surfaced in a community meeting recently, for example, one of facilitators dismissed us out-of-hand.  Apparently she is not alone in circulating the unsubstantiated claim that Advance Mattapan is not a part of the Mattapan community.  


Nothing could be farther from the truth.  Both the producer and the associate producer of our public access show live in Mattapan, and have multiple ties to community-based organizations in Mattapan, MA.  


See for yourself:  Advance Mattapan airs Mondays at 4 PM and Thursdays at 9 AM on BNNtv.  The show explores issues effecting life in Mattapan today.  We're open to suggestions:  

  • email us advancemattapan@gmail.com 
  • post a comment below. 



Advance Mattapan exists to encourage civic engagement through broadcast and social media.  So let us know if there's something you want us to cover.


Hopefully this answers the sixty-four thousand dollar question.   

Saturday, February 18, 2012

The (Under)Development of Mattapan

When Europeans first idled up alongside the North American continent in the 16th century, the word "Mattapan" referred to all the lands south of Long Wharf.  By some accounts, Mattapan then reached from what is South Boston today all the way to Providence, RI.


After centuries of whittling away at its geographical heft, Mattapan has come to refer to a relatively small swath of area at the southernmost tip of Boston, MA.  


While Advance Mattapan doesn't expect to reverse this trend, it does want to take issue with a number of key memes associated with this historically important Boston neighborhood.  


When Mattapan does capture media attention, more often than not, it's in reference to  some pathology: shootings, stabbings, murder, foreclosures, etc. From the outside looking in, that is, it's easy to see why people think of Mattapan as a dangerous, crime-ridden ghetto.  


Of course it's not enough to say such things happen in other Boston neighborhoods too.  Indeed Advance Mattapan has found that many of the negative events attributed to Mattapan actually happened elsewhere; a drift due, perhaps, to fluid neighborhood boundaries.  


Problem is, such events provide a rationale for the ongoing underdevelopment of Mattapan; relative to other Boston neighborhoods, that is. For example, while the Mattapan Economic Development Initiative (MEDI) commanded a great deal of the BRA's attention for a time, our neighborhood doesn't get the kind of follow-through such detailed city planning warrants. More often than not, such comprehensive plans are quickly abandoned in favor of a more piecemeal, 'tactical' approach.


Now we hear a Main Streets initiative is afoot in Mattapan--likely directed at the commercial strip along Blue Hill Avenue known as Mattapan Square.  This will receive lukewarm support, however, from other commercial pockets in and around Mattapan.  So we'll see how this goes; and Advance Mattapan will do its best to cover this issue on broadcast and social media.  Thus far, all we have to report are 'smoke signals,' tho.


The City of Boston is not alone in the (under)development of Mattapan.  Where is the Mattapan Community Development Corporation in all of this?  It would appear to be "MIA;" and those who have been elected to represent Mattapan stand mute in this regard.  


Advance Mattapan exists to challenge the three monkeys who continually see, hear, and say nothing despite the social, environmental, and health disparities that mark our neighborhood.  We'll continue to question the pathologies, including the contexts that give rise to them; all the while, challenging the frames would define Mattapan solely by these lights.


Of course the truth always paints a much more complex picture:  Mattapan is a relatively quiet, bedroom community; replete with urban wilds that afford many opportunities to commune with nature. (But that's our best-kept secret!)