Boston Herald

Migrants relocate to Roxbury

- By Gayla Cawley gcawley@bostonhera­ld.com Joe Dwinell contribute­d.

The state will begin to move migrant families, especially those sleeping overnight at Logan Airport, into a new overflow shelter at a Roxbury recreation center today, acting quickly on a decision that surprised the community.

In a letter to elected officials, Gov. Maura Healey said the “temporary safety-net site” at the state-owned Melnea A. Cass Recreation­al Complex can hold up to 400 migrants, or 100 families, and promised to close the shelter displacing the youth and senior programmin­g that runs out of the rec center by May 31.

Retired Lt. Gen. Scott Rice said the overflow site will focus particular­ly on the dozens of migrants who have been sleeping overnight at Logan Internatio­nal Airport in recent weeks and months, with emergency shelters at capacity.

“We appreciate the collaborat­ion of the city, Roxbury elected officials, and the community who worked with us to ensure we could provide families with a safe and warm place to stay while minimizing the impact to the Roxbury community,” Rice said in a statement.

He added, “We are continuing to relocate recreation programs, ensuring the recreation center and the pool can reopen in June, continuing to make improvemen­ts to the center for the long-term benefit of the community, and prioritizi­ng diverse and local vendors.”

A Healey spokespers­on noted that the state is operating other safetynet sites in Cambridge, Quincy and Revere, and United Way also has those types of sites in Greater Boston and Central Massachuse­tts.

The other sites haven’t prompted the firestorm that greeted last Friday’s announceme­nt that the governor was honing in on Roxbury’s Cass Center, criticism that came from the community and Boston’s mayor, Michelle Wu, who said taking resources from an underserve­d community was “painfully familiar.”

“I think it’s a normal response,” the Rev. Miniard Culpepper, senior pastor of the Pleasant Hill Missionary Baptist church, said of the pushback. “I think part of the concern was that it happened so fast.

“We had a listening session prior to the listening session last night and then they’re coming tomorrow. I think those concerns are justified,” he added.

Culpepper said there is a push-and-pull to the situation, where some people in the community are ready to welcome and help the migrants, and others are looking at how the Black and brown community has been treated “traditiona­lly and historical­ly,” and are “pushing back and saying, why the Black community?”

Not helping matters is the lack of developmen­t happening in Roxbury compared to the Seaport, said Culpepper, whose grandfathe­r Samuel H. Bullock Sr. founded the Pleasant Hill church and was active in the civil rights era.

Not only community members were caught off-guard, however, according to an email City Councilor-at-Large Erin Murphy sent to her colleagues and Council President Ruthzee Louijeune, requesting that the mayor provide the body with a private briefing about the overflow site plan.

“All my informatio­n has come from the media, so I am requesting that the Council is given a briefing on the situation so we have the latest, accurate informatio­n,” Murphy wrote.

Council President Louijeune did not return a phone call seeking comment.

Healey’s letter stated that on-site services at the Roxbury overflow site will include 24/7 staffing to oversee day-to-day operations and engagement with families, including three meals a day, case management focused on identifyin­g stable housing, around-the-clock security, laundry services, school enrollment for children, and transporta­tion to the complex from family welcome centers, as well as to and from medical, immigratio­n and court appointmen­ts.

The Healey administra­tion also plans to provide legal assistance for work authorizat­ions and support to identify potential employment, medical resources, and help for benefits enrollment for migrant families.

Louis Elisa, a past regional director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), said the governor missed the mark when selecting the Roxbury recreation center as an overflow site, however, and that the Shattuck Hospital slated for redevelopm­ent in Jamaica Plain would have been better equipped to deal with the migrant crisis.

Elisa, who has dealt with his fair share of humanitari­an crises, said the plan to put people in a gymnasium in Roxbury was a bad idea, and made him recall the illfated decision to place people in the Louisiana Superdome during Hurricane Katrina.

“I’m in support of housing those migrants, but not at that facility,” Elisa told the Herald. “This has not been thought through. This is not the best spot. … There are alternativ­es that would work a lot better.”

 ?? CHRIS CHRISTO — BOSTON HERALD ?? The state prepares to take over “The Cass,” Roxbury’s popular recreation center. Migrants will now be moving in from Logan Airport beginning today.
CHRIS CHRISTO — BOSTON HERALD The state prepares to take over “The Cass,” Roxbury’s popular recreation center. Migrants will now be moving in from Logan Airport beginning today.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States