A tent city has sprung up in the area of Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Cass Boulevard in Boston. (Photo by Kathi Maio - Flickr: Fotosqrrl) field_54b3f951675b3

ACCORDING TO THE old adage, a conservative is a liberal who has been mugged.

That may not be exactly what’s happening with the shift in the city’s approach to the troubled area around Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Boulevard in Boston. But it nonetheless marked a striking turn to hear the city’s progressive mayor, Michelle Wu, declare last week that a “new level of public safety alarm” demands a different response to the troubled streets in that area that draw hundreds of people suffering from addiction, homelessness, and untreated mental illness.  

After several years in which public health outreach has been the centerpiece of efforts to deal with the problems there, Wu said last week that rising levels of violence and drug and human trafficking mean the city needs to take “a major step” focused on public safety around the tent encampment that has taken root along Atkinson Street. 

Yesterday she began to sketch out what that step could involve, suggesting in a briefing with reporters that her administration is drafting a city ordinance that will be unveiled in the coming days. City officials say such legislation would provide police with the clear legal authority they now lack to remove tents that have sprouted along the sidewalks in the area. 

The tents are “shielding a lot of the illegal activity that we’re worried about, whether it be violent actions, or human and drug trafficking,” said Tania Del Rio, director of the Coordinated Response Team, which oversees city efforts directed at the area.  

There have been multiple stabbings in the area in recent months. Del Rio said police have confiscated everything “from machetes to firearms” in their effort to address violence that has become so bad it has prompted several partner agencies to pull their outreach workers out of the area. 

There is a lot of support for Wu’s vow to ratchet up attention to public safety issues at Mass. and Cass. 

“I think that shows positive leadership from Mayor Wu, and I think that she’s doing her best to address a very difficult situation,” said City Council President Ed Flynn. 

State Sen. Will Brownsberger, who co-authored the state’s 2018 criminal justice reform bill that sought to turn away from some of the harsher penalties of the tough-on-crime era of the 1980s and 1990s, said there nonetheless has to be balance between the public health and public safety approach. 

“We absolutely want to be about harm reduction, we absolutely want to be about helping people with addiction,” said Brownsberger, a Belmont Democrat whose district includes a section of Boston. “But when you have a situation like Mass. and Cass, there is absolutely no alternative but to be aggressively enforcing our laws, because the situation is out of control. It has to end.” 

Leo Beletsky, a professor of law and health sciences at Northeastern University, said dialing up law enforcement activity with a crackdown on dealers will only exacerbate problems and lead to more violence if the city isn’t able to also address “the underlying demand for drugs.” He said disrupting drug markets without lessening demand only leads new dealers to enter the market and can set off violent turf battles. 

Calling the approach to Mass. and Cass “chaotic and not well-articulated,” Beletsky pointed to the impending closure of a program at the nearby Roundhouse hotel, which has provided 60 beds of transitional housing for those with addiction, as a move in the wrong direction. Boston Medical Center, which runs the initiative, said funding for the program has dried up. 

City officials say they are acutely aware of the need to pair any crackdown on the tent encampment with housing and other services for people at Mass. and Cass. Indeed, Del Rio said the growing size of the crowd now gathered there, and the violence and other problems that have worsened, are directly related to the shortage of transitional housing options to move people off the streets. 

“An ordinance on its own would not solve any part of this situation,” Wu said yesterday, emphasizing that it would have to be part of a “multifaceted” approach that includes a robust pathway to transitional housing. 

Wu said a city program providing “low threshold transitional” housing has been highly effective for those it has been able to serve, with more than half of those in the initial cohort of 200 people from Mass. and Cass who were referred to such placements, including at the soon-to-close Roundhouse, having transitioned to permanent housing. The problem now is the lack of more such slots. 

The housing supply crunch means the ordinance the administration is drafting that would allow police to clear away tents is the easy part of the new approach being hatched. Having transitional housing and treatment slots available for everyone now living on the streets will be the bigger challenge to the rollout of a new plan for the area. 

One helpful development: Suffolk District Attorney Kevin Hayden will soon announce a $1 million expansion, thanks to new state funding, of the office’s “Services over Sentences” program that has funded addiction treatment and other services as an alternative to prosecution for those arrested in the Mass. and Cass area. 

While Wu has suddenly drawn attention by calling for a crackdown on violence and other illegal activity, Del Rio said it’s not a question of pursuing either a public health strategy or a public safety approach. Both are key parts of what must happen, she said. 

“Even our team’s title — the Coordinated Response Team — communicates that,” she said, pointing out that the office works with 12 different city departments, including the Boston Public Health Commission and the Boston Police Department. “We strongly believe that has to be the approach.” 

MICHAEL JONAS

FROM COMMONWEALTH

CCC chair apologizes: Shannon O’Brien, the chair of the Cannabis Control Commission, apologizes to her fellow board members for her actions at the last board meeting, where she announced the executive director was retiring and the agency was in crisis. Read more.

OPINION

Ogletree remembered: Kevin Peterson of the New Democracy Coalition remembers Charles Ogletree, a legal giant at Harvard Law School and one of the most prominent civil rights attorneys in the country, who died last week due to complications from Alzheimer’s. Read more.

 

FROM AROUND THE WEB

BEACON HILL

Lawmakers are pushing legislation that would tax colleges and universities that use legacy admissions. (Salem News)

MUNICIPAL MATTERS  

Boston Mayor Michelle Wu announces plans to rebuild the Long Island Bridge and refurbish the treatment campus on the island. (GBH)

The Hyannis Public Library has begun stocking a “community fridge” of free pre-made meals, inspired by the similar system in Provincetown. (Cape Cod Times)

HEALTH/HEALTH CARE

Critics say proposed new state flu and COVID vaccination rules for health care workers have too many exemptions. (Boston Globe)  

WASHINGTON/NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL

Devastating wildfires in Hawaii prompted a state of emergency in Maui and introduced complications for people planning to visit or already in the state. (MassLive)

EDUCATION

A Globe editorial raises questions about whether the state should continue funding state Treasurer Deb Goldberg’s “baby bonds” program that offers $50 to every baby in the state when their family opens a tax-advantaged 529 college savings account, since the money is overwhelmingly flowing to higher-income households.  

After parents expressed concerns about violence inside Brockton High School, the administration now requires all students to pass through metal detectors on their way into the building. (The Enterprise of Brockton)

A bullying incident in New Bedford, in which a fourth grader claimed to be harassed by other students because of race, is under investigation by the US Department of Education Office for Civil Rights. (New Bedford Standard-Times)

TRANSPORTATION

The MBTA has seen a surge in hiring, but it hasn’t been enough to fill the worker shortage at the agency. (Boston Herald

CRIMINAL JUSTICE/COURTS

The US Supreme Court agrees to hear a challenge to the bankruptcy settlement deal with Purdue Pharma, the maker of Oxycontin. The challenge centers on whether the settlement can include a third party, the Sackler family, which is not bankrupt but which has agreed to pay $6 billion to shield it from future lawsuits. (NPR)

The US attorney’s office has dropped an investigation opened by former US attorney Rachael Rollins into allegations of racial and gender discrimination and sexual harassment by city employees in Everett. (Boston Herald

A Southampton couple is suing the Massachusetts Department of Children and Families, claiming religious discrimination during their evaluation to adopt a child due to their Catholic faith. (MassLive)

MEDIA

Northeastern journalism professor Dan Kennedy discusses the meaning of news as a public good. (Media Nation)