Cambridge Civic Journal Forum

August 31, 2025

Campaign Tales – August 31

Campaign Tales – August 31

Robert WintersAug 31 – While other candidates are spending their Labor Day weekend handing out campaign literature and promising whatever it takes to win a #1 vote, I was down in the basement yesterday clearing the collected dust and debris out of a dryer vent. In addition to hair clips and mini-Lego pieces from my previous 1st floor tenants (who were great, by the way), I was able to pocket $1.37 in loose change. I guess I’ll use that to supplement the cost of the 3rd floor front porch deck that I will likely be replacing next month. Owning a triple-decker is great – except when it isn’t.

Back in my computer saddle, I updated several Candidate Pages yesterday and I’m sure I’ll be doing many more soon. It’s relatively quick and easy to do and it gives me an opportunity to read about all the other candidates for City Council and School Committee. I am planning to attend some of the upcoming candidate events – especially the School Committee candidate forums, in part because the Council events conflict with my teaching. Most of the City Council candidate forums are exercises in repetition – bike lanes, empty promises of housing affordability, and the action-reaction to rezoning Cambridge to be more like the ever-exploding downtown Flushing in Queens, NY (where I went to high school). I’ll be interested to hear more about how the Mamdani-inspired candidates will plan to cover the cost of their promises during a time of limitations in municipal finance and how they plan to Defund The Police while carefully employing euphemisms to convey that sentiment.

Also from my computer saddle, I set up an email account yesterday for the Membership Secretary of the Middlesex Canal Association. (I’m a Board member, webmaster, walk leader, and publisher of our Towpath Topics newsletter.) [By the way, is “webmaster” now a verboten word?] I have also been hearing from a few people about a “Not secure” message some people have been getting when going to the rwinters.com and middlesexcanal.org (and possibly other domains and subdomains). There are zero financial transactions happening on any of my websites, so there’s not really a problem, but I’m looking into fixing this for those who get scared off by the warning messages. It’ll cost me a few bucks, but I’ll just tell myself that the ample Social Security payments I’m now receiving will cover it. Hey, it’s better than blowing it at the Encore casino or on a fast red car.

Starting next week, I’ll be back in the mathematics teaching saddle. After Harvard Summer School wrapped up several weeks ago, it’s been great having some time to just walk the Earth like Caine in Kung Fu. That said, Harvard Extension School is calling and I have an all-time record enrollment in one of my two courses – currently 222 students, about 50% more than ever before. I suppose I can chalk it up to my boyish good looks, but there may be some other things going on in the wider world. Even though there has been a “distance option” in my courses going back to Fall 2017, in the semester after Covid first hit (2020) we had large increases in enrollments – all online that year. We have been doing the courses hybrid (in person or online) since then, so that doesn’t explain the big increase this Fall. For the Summer School course, there were as many students who registered and dropped before the start of classes as there were students who attended. This was true for many of the Summer School courses, and my theory is that many were scared off by shifting federal policies and the targeting of Harvard by the Executive Branch. Perhaps the gigantic increase in my Multivariable Calculus course, especially students attending remotely, is also an unexpected consequence of federal policies. Or maybe, mathematics has become the Taylor Swift of academic disciplines.

Having partially buried the lede, let me say a few more words about the municipal election season.

Municipal election campaigns didn’t used to pick up until after Labor Day and, being an old school kinda guy, I’ve been sticking to that schedule. Perhaps I’ll put up a few yard signs this week and do an email blast. I have plenty of yard signs, bumper stickers, and buttons (hint, hint). I also have to update my candidate website – primarily simplification. I’m also thinking of making a few short videos on various topics.

The questionnaires keep on coming – not so much sincere inquiries about the opinions of a candidate on various relevant (or irrelevant) issues of the day, but more of the “Do you agree with our rigid and inflexible ideology on Topic X?” type. The latest one came from a heretofore unknown group calling itself “Cambridge for Palestine (C4P)”. As expected, no names were provided for this new mystery group. I won’t be responding to their little push poll on topics having zero relevance to Cambridge municipal government, but it was good for a chuckle. [That said, I’m sure at least several current candidates will be providing enthusiastic responses.] I suppose it’s only a matter of time before C4P gets included in the “Cambridge Progressive Electoral Collaboration” list of “allies”.

Speaking of the Lefties, 7 Council candidates are now on the record saying they’ll support a Home Rule petition to bring back rent control to Cambridge (Al-Zubi, McGovern, Nolan, Rivkin, Siddiqui, Sobrinho-Wheeler, and Wilson). There may be others. Of course, barring a change in state law, that’s really just a hollow gesture. Besides, what exactly is the value in freezing rents at stratospheric levels? Perhaps that’s not really the point. It’s just the politics of promising something you can’t actually deliver – kinda like when “A Better Cambridge” promises affordable housing as they do every election. My personal platform may include free Internet, free ice cream (w/vegan option, of course), and free ponies for everyone!

Though I am spending less time on it than previous years, I have been watching the campaign finance reports for the municipal election. Perhaps most noteworthy is the (currently) $83,550 in receipts for new candidate Tim Flaherty who is apparently the candidate being backed by the players who have mobilized in the wake of Paul Toner’s decision to not seek reelection. I like Tim and consider him a friend, but there is something very unsettling about this. I’m also a bit puzzled about the criteria used by the various organizations who will be promoting candidate slates this year. Some of them seem primarily focused on ensuring the reelection of their favored incumbents with a few feeder candidates thrown in for insurance. I just wish there was a Reasonable Cambridge slate. I might request inclusion in that slate, but that’s just wishful thinking at this point. I think that’s the candidate slate most Cambridge residents would prefer. Unfortunately, the single-issue advocates are all that we hear from.

By the way, if you want to talk, give me a call (617-661-9230), send me email, or ring my doorbell. I have beer.

Robert Winters (in my role as a candidate)

August 19, 2025

Cambridge InsideOut Episodes 651-652: August 19, 2025

Episode 651 – Cambridge InsideOut: August 19, 2025 (Part 1)

This episode was broadcast on August 19, 2025 at 6:00pm. Topics: A Teacher’s Life – Harvard Summer School and Harvard Extension School; 31st Annual Oldtime Baseball Game; Significant Passings; 2025 Municipal Election – nomination papers, signatures, getting on the ballot (or not), political action committees, City Council and School Committee candidates; Cambridge Candidate Pages; campaign finance – receipts, expenditures, unions and incumbents. Host: Robert Winters [On YouTube] [audio]


Episode 652 – Cambridge InsideOut: August 19, 2025 (Part 2)

This episode was broadcast on August 19, 2025 at 6:30pm. Topics: Slates, factions, history, endorsements; candidate questionnaires; the self-anointed, self-appointed; housing vs. densification; alarm stemming from “multi-family housing” upzoning, loss of setbacks, loss of standing to object; even greater heights coming; radicals coalescing; East End House, contract zoning, community benefits, and Solomonic wisdom; Welcoming City vs. The Feds; Resolving the Vail Court eminent domain taking; Riverview condo expenditure/demolition. Host: Robert Winters [On YouTube] [audio]

[Materials used in these episodes]

August 18, 2025

Emerging and Converging Political Factions

Filed under: Cambridge — Robert Winters @ 10:47 pm

Emerging and Converging Political Factions

Aug 18 – Candidates continue to send me materials for their Candidate Pages and I generally get those posted soon after I get them. You all can thank me later.Robert Winters

I’m also a City Council candidate, and the usual barrage of questionnaires from advocacy groups have been arriving. I’ll be answering some of them but, quite frankly, some are simply not worth wasting my time answering such narrow-minded, self-serving interests that leave candidates little room for nuance, explanation, historical perspective, or much of anything else. It will be interesting to see which candidates dish out all the BS the advocates want to hear in their endless quest for endorsements from a handful of self-anointed, self-appointed activists. Yeah, you know who I’m talking about.

One of the more curious things I have seen emerging over the last few years and municipal election cycles is the coalescence of the left-wing activist groups – including several groups that have emerged relatively recently which are at least somewhat centered around particular candidates. In addition to the Our Revolution gang (ORC), the highly problematic local chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), and the Cambridge Residents Alliance (CResA) which has become indistinguishable from the DSA, we now have groups calling themselves the Cambridge Housing Justice Coalition (CHJC) and the Cambridge Housing Affordability Organizers (CHAO). In classic chicken-and-egg fashion, it’s hard to say whether the groups have grown around the candidates or if the candidates were spawned by the groups. Many of the same individuals are affiliated with several of these groups. Perhaps most interesting this year is that essentially all of the leftist groups have settled on a common questionnaire promoted by something known as the “Cambridge Progressive Electoral Collaboration”.

Personally, I won’t be answering that questionnaire for a number of reasons. First, there’s no way in Cambridge or on Earth that a centrist like me would ever be supported by the radicals behind this “collaboration”. Second, any group that wants to grill Cambridge candidates on their views regarding Israel and Gaza doesn’t really deserve a response from a municipal election candidate – though I’m sure some of the current candidates will be thrilled to express their views from the river to the sea. Our local socialist loonies are likely looking to Mamdani and New York City for inspiration. Could they add a City Council seat this year? Perhaps, but I really hope not. We are actually in a moment where fiscal restraint should be the call of the day, but we could end up with 5 votes calling for the City Manager to drain our “free cash” in order to fund every imaginable giveaway.

The “A Better Cambridge” faction will, no doubt, sell its slate on the usual promise of housing affordability, but all they really want to do is turn every parcel into a lucrative development opportunity – even if all of the neighbors object. [The ABCers will simply call them all NIMBYs or worse.] I do find it striking that during all the years when “affordable housing” has been the expressed goal of most aspiring City Council candidates, that train has been traveling steadily in the opposite direction. The current pitch is that increased supply will cure all ills, but my guess is that we’ll mainly see more investment vehicles where people (many of them non-residents) can store their wealth. So many landlords, so little time.

Just about every School Committee candidate says they want to narrow the “achievement gap” and provide for the needs of all children (they always italicize the all), yet that gap always seems to grow wider. Even though I am a candidate for City Council, I’m actually quite interested in what’s going on with the School Committee election. There are several matters that have motivated so many candidates to run for School Committee, e.g. the closing of the Kennedy-Longfellow School, the early firing of the previous School Superintendent, the current process to select the next Superintendent, and (at least I hope) the neverending hope for improved educational outcomes – especially in math and science. I don’t really get too jazzed about all the equity talk. Not surprisingly (considering what I do for a living) I just want to see everyone succeed in math and science.

Though I like most of the candidates under the “Cambridge Citizens Coalition” umbrella, they apparently have no criteria for candidate endorsement other than personal whim. I am actually more comfortable as a candidate being completely independent of all the factions.

Then there’s The Bike People, their irrational beliefs, and their total disregard for any residents who travel on more than two wheels.

We may or may not see the proposed new City Charter on this year’s ballot. The clock is ticking. I would love to have the opportunity to talk about the tortured process that led to the current proposal.

Enough for now. – RW

August 16, 2025

July 21, 2025 and July 23, 2025 Cambridge City Council Special Meetings – Vail Court, Riverview Condominiums

Filed under: Cambridge — Robert Winters @ 3:33 pm

July 21, 2025 and July 23, 2025 Cambridge City Council Special Meetings

City HallThere were two very significant Special Meetings of the Cambridge City Council in July 2025. The first meeting (July 21) featured a $4.3 million financial settlement appropriation relating to the City’s eminent domain taking of the Vail Court property on Bishop Allen Drive in September 2016. The second meeting (July 23) featured a $20 million appropriation relating to the Riverview Condominium (221 Mt. Auburn St.) emergency.

Vail Court (July 21)

Manager’s Agenda #1.Transmitting Communication from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to the appropriation of Four-Million-Three-Hundred-Thousand dollars and no cents ($4,300,000), from the General Fund Employee Benefits Department Salary and Wages account to the General Fund Law Travel and Training (Judgment and Damages) account for the settlement payment relating to Said S. Abuzahra, Trustee of Equity Realty Trust, et al. v. City of Cambridge (Mdsx. Super. Ct. Docket No. 2017- cv2459/J). (CM25#188)
Order Adopted 7-0-2 (Siddiqui, Zusy – Absent)

Manager’s Agenda #2. A communication transmitted from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to a request to move to Executive Session (if necessary) to discuss litigation regarding 221 Mount Auburn Street because discussing this in an open session may have a detrimental effect on the City’s litigating position. (CM25#187)
Placed on File 9-0


Riverview Condominiums (July 23)

Manager’s Agenda #1. Transmitting Communication from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to the appropriation of $20,000,000 from the General Fund Employee Benefits Department Salary and Wages account to the General Fund Reserve Department Extraordinary Expenditures account to fund expenses related to the demolition of 221 Mount Auburn Street. (CM25#186) [text of report][July 10, 2025 Presentation]
Order Adopted 8-0-1 (Wilson – Absent); Reconsideration Fails 0-8-1 (Toner Absent)

August 3, 2025

Cambridge City Council and School Committee Candidates – 2025

Filed under: 2025 election,Cambridge,City Council,School Committee — Robert Winters @ 5:19 pm

We will have the following lineups for City Council and School Committee:

Candidates who will appear on the November 2025 ballot
City Council: (19 candidates for 9 seats)   School Committee: (18 candidates for 6 seats)
Ayah Al-Zubi, 156 Magazine St. #5, 02139 LaQueen Battle, 86 Otis St. #29, 02141
Burhan Azeem, 96 Berkshire St. #3, 02141 Alborz Bejnood, 166 Auburn St., Apt B, 02139
LaQueen Battle, 86 Otis St. #29, 02141 Alexandra Bowers, 44 Pemberton St., 02140
Elizabeth Bisio, 22 Water Street #413, 02141 Anne Coburn, 117A Otis St., 02141
Dana Ray Bullister, 21 Brookline St. #105, 02139 Luisa de Paula Santos, 51 Walker St., 02138
Tim Flaherty, 103 Fresh Pond Pkwy., 02138 Caitlin Dube, 395 Huron Ave. #1, 02138
John Hanratty, 15 Mt. Vernon St. #7, 02140 Melanie Gause, 269 Broadway #3, 02139
Peter Hsu, 70 Gore St. #2, 02141 Jessica Goetz, 97 Pemberton St., 02140
Marc C. McGovern, 17 Pleasant St., 02139 Richard Harding, 189 Windsor St. #1, 02139
Ned Melanson, 163 Allston St. #3, 02139 Lilly Havstad, 32 Granville Rd. #2, 02138
Patricia Nolan, 184 Huron Ave., 02138 Jane Hirschi, 39 Rindge Ave., 02140
Stanislav Rivkin, 17 Channing Street, 02138 Elizabeth Hudson, 236 Walden St., 02140
Zion Sherin, 401 Washington St. #3R, 02139 Caroline Hunter, 23 Rockwell St., 02139
Sumbul Siddiqui, 283 Sydney St. #3, 02139 Arjun Jaikumar, 175 Richdale Ave. #210, 02140
E. Denise Simmons, 188 Harvard St., 02139 Jia-Jing Lee, 20 2nd St. #422, 02141
Jivan Sobrinho-Wheeler, 187 Brookline St. #3, 02139 José Luis Rojas Villarreal, 19 Cornelius Way, 02141
Ayesha Wilson, 305 Elm St. #1, 02139 Eugenia Schraa Huh, 259 Washington St., 02139
Robert Winters, 366 Broadway, 02139 David J. Weinstein, 45 S. Normandy Ave., 02138
Catherine Zusy, 202 Hamilton St., 02139 2025 Cambridge Candidate Pages

Notes:

(1) Louise Venden failed to submit nomination signatures but has indicated her intention to run for City Council as a write-in candidate. [Aug 1]

(2) Caitlin Dube qualified for both the City Council and the School Committee ballots but has decided to run only for School Committee. [Aug 2]

Summer Camp – August 4, 2025 Cambridge City Council meeting

Filed under: Cambridge — Robert Winters @ 8:35 am

Summer Camp – August 4, 2025 Cambridge City Council meeting

Incumbent councillors will take a break from their election-related fundraising and glad-handing to take up the following items and more:City Hall

Manager’s Agenda #1. A communication transmitted from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to a federal update including an update on relevant court cases. [text of report]
Placed on File 9-0

Manager’s Agenda #4. A communication transmitted from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to the appointments of members to the Commercial Parking Control Committee (CPCC).
Placed on File 9-0

Manager’s Agenda #5. Transmitting Communication from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to the appropriation of $704,800, received from the Massachusetts Gaming Commission Community Mitigation Fund …
Order Adopted 9-0

Manager’s Agenda #7. A communication transmitted from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to Awaiting Report Item #25-15 regarding the creation of plaque upholding the separation of church and state and gender equality.
Placed on File 9-0

Manager’s Agenda #8. A communication transmitted from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to the appointment of John Nardone as a member of the Community Preservation Act Committee (CPAC) for a term of five years.
Placed on File 9-0

Manager’s Agenda #9. A communication transmitted from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to Awaiting Report Item Number 25-28, regarding an update on the status of potential civilian flagger operations in the Cambridge Police Union contract.
Placed on File 9-0

Manager’s Agenda #10. Transmitting Communication from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to the appropriation of $30,000, received from the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health’s (DMH) Jail Diversion Program, to the Grant Fund Police Department Other Ordinary Maintenance account ($30,000). This appropriation if approved represents funding through the first quarter of FY26. These funds, if approved will enable the department to continue the current co-response program with one clinician through September 2025.
Order Adopted 9-0

Manager’s Agenda #19. A communication transmitted from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to Awaiting Report Item Number 25-26, regarding a list of public and private spaces available to the public, indoors and outdoors. [text of report]
Placed on File 9-0

Manager’s Agenda #20. A communication transmitted from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to the submission of the 2025 Affordable Housing Overlay Annual Report. [text of report]
Placed on File 9-0

Manager’s Agenda #21. A communication transmitted from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to Awaiting Report Item Number 25-35, regarding a request that the City Manager explore and establish a City of Cambridge Electronic Records Archiving Policy. [text of report]
Placed on File 9-0


Manager’s Agenda #22. A communication transmitted from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to Awaiting Report Item Number 25-36, regarding a further response to the request that the exception language in Chapter 2.129.040 Section J of the Cambridge Municipal Code be revised with language clarifying that Cambridge city employees shall not participate in federal immigration enforcement operations and that the sole role of Cambridge city employees during any action by ICE is only to protect public safety and not to assist or facilitate the work of ICE. [text of report]
Placed on File 9-0

Unfinished Business #7. A communication transmitted from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to Awaiting Report Item Number 25-36, regarding a request that the language of the Welcoming Community Ordinance be amended to clarify that City employees shall not participate in federal immigration enforcement operations and that the sole role of City employees during any action by ICE is only to protect public safety, and be amended to clarify that if Cambridge Police Department Officers respond to the scene of ICE action, CPD Officers should document the actions of ICE including their badge numbers. [Passed to 2nd Reading, Referred to Ordinance Committee June 30, 2025; Eligible To Be Ordained July 21, 2025]
Placed on File 9-0

Unfinished Business #9. An Ordinance has been received from Interim City Clerk Paula M. Crane, relative to Chapter 2.129 Welcoming Community. [Passed to 2nd Reading June 30, 2025; Eligible To Be Ordained July 21, 2025]
Ordained as Amended 9-0; Reconsideration Fails 0-9

Committee Report #7. The Ordinance Committee held a public hearing on July 28, 2025 to discuss updates to the City’s Welcoming Community Ordinance. The Committee voted favorably to forward the proposed amendments to the Welcoming Community Ordinance to the full City Council with a favorable recommendation. [text of report]
Report Accepted, Placed on File 9-0


Manager’s Agenda #23. A communication transmitted from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to a Planning Board report regarding the Marasao, et al., Zoning Petition (Religious Uses). [text of report]
Placed on File 9-0

Manager’s Agenda #24. A communication transmitted from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to Policy Order Number 25-101, regarding Marasao, et al., Zoning Petition. [text of report]
Placed on File 9-0

Unfinished Business #8. An Ordinance has been received from Paula M. Crane, Interim City Clerk, relative the Mushla Marasao et al Zoning petition in regard to Article 5.28.21, 8.22.1, 8.22.2, Tbl 5.1. [Passed to 2nd Reading June 30, 2025; Eligible To Be Ordained July 21, 2025; Expires Aug 18, 2025]
Ordained as Amended by Substitution 9-0; Reconsideration Fails 0-9


Order #1. That the City Manager is requested to direct the Community Development Department, in collaboration with the Finance Department, to conduct a comprehensive review of current permitting fees for residential development projects, with a focus on identifying opportunities to create a tiered fee structure that reduces or eliminates fees entirely particularly for smaller-scale and affordable housing developments.   Councillor Toner, Mayor Simmons, Councillor Wilson, Councillor Azeem, Councillor Nolan
Order Adopted as Amended 9-0

Order #2. That the City Manager is requested to allocate $25,000 in feasibility funds to support an exploratory process – potentially including stakeholder engagement, legal and technical assessments, and community outreach – to evaluate the creation of a Business Improvement District in Porter Square.   Councillor Toner, Mayor Simmons, Councillor Wilson, Councillor Nolan, Vice Mayor McGovern
Order Adopted as Amended 9-0

Order #4. Declaring August 9, 2025, as Rocky Horror Day in the City of Cambridge.   Vice Mayor McGovern, Mayor Simmons
Order Adopted 9-0

Order #7. That the City Council go on record urging Governor of the Commonwealth Maura Healey and the Massachusetts Legislature to act without delay to safeguard the constitutional rights of indigent defendants and preserve the integrity of the Commonwealth’s criminal justice system by increasing compensation rates for bar advocates to ensure adequate participation statewide, and establishing pay parity with neighboring states and competitive future rates to prevent recurring crises.   Councillor Siddiqui, Councillor Sobrinho-Wheeler, Councillor Wilson, Vice Mayor McGovern
Order Adopted 9-0


Unfinished Business #5. A communication transmitted from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to a revised draft of the “Eastern Cambridge Community Enhancements” Zoning Petition. [Placed on Unfinished Business, June 9, 2025]
Placed on File 9-0

Unfinished Business #6. An Ordinance has been received from City Clerk, relative to East Cambridge Community Enhancement Overlay District (“ECCE Overlay District”), which is governed by the regulations and procedures specified in this Section 20.1200. It is the intent of this Section that these regulations will apply to land within the ECCE Overlay District. [Passed to 2nd Reading, June 9, 2025; Eligible To Be Ordained June 30, 2025; Expires Aug 18, 2025]
Ordained as Amended 8-1 (Toner – No); Reconsideration Fails 0-9

Manager’s Agenda #25 (Late). A communication transmitted from Yi-An Huang, City Manager, relative to a revised Letter of Commitment dated August 4, 2025 submitted on behalf of BMR-320 Charles LLC that will be incorporated by reference in the East Cambridge Community Enhancement Overlay District (ECCE District) if the Council adopts the zoning petition. [text of report]
Placed on File as Amended 8-1 (Toner – NO)


Applications & Petitions #4. A Zoning Petition has been received from Martin Bakal in regard to Table 4.30, Sec. 4.40 Footnote with the intent of Restrictions on increasing pavement in Open Space Districts. [text of petition]
Referred to Ordinance Committee & Planning Board 9-0

Resolution #5. Condolences to the family of William Bruce “Bill” King.   Mayor Simmons, Councillor Toner

Resolution #6. Resolution on the death of Tom Lehrer.   Mayor Simmons

Resolution #9. Retirement of Dr. Lisa Dobberteen from the Cambridge Public Health Department.   Vice Mayor McGovern

Committee Report #4. The Neighborhood and Long-Term Planning, Public Facilities, Arts and Celebrations Committee and the Housing Committee held a joint public hearing on June 17, 2025 to discuss draft zoning recommendations for Cambridge Street and Massachusetts Avenue. [text of report]
Report Accepted, Placed on File 9-0

Committee Report #6. The Economic Development and University Relations Committee held a public hearing on June 23, 2025 for the purpose of inviting representatives from the 23 long term vacant properties (defined as has been vacant for more than five years) on the record, to share updates on their tenancy efforts, short and long-term plans, and to provide the community with an opportunity to weigh in on this important discussion. [text of report]
Report Accepted, Placed on File 9-0


Late Communications & Reports #3. A communication was received from Councillors Sobrinho-Wheeler, Nolan, Azeem, and Siddiqui transmitting a memorandum regarding shared questions and concerns regarding the recent incident at 243 Broadway involving the Cambridge Police Department on August 2, 2025. [text of report]
Referred to Public Safety Committee and City Manager’s Office 9-0

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