Cambridge Civic Journal Forum

November 2, 2015

The Eve of Decision – Nov 2, 2015 Cambridge City Council agenda

Filed under: Cambridge,City Council — Tags: , , — Robert Winters @ 12:04 am

The Eve of Decision – Nov 2, 2015 Cambridge City Council agenda

The City Council meets this week on the eve of the November 3 municipal election. [Tune in to CCTV any time after 8:00pm Tuesday for the live Election Night broadcast hosted by Susana Segat and Robert Winters.] Here are a few items of interest that our nerve-wracked city councillors will be considering as their thoughts drift toward the following day:

Manager’s Agenda #3. Transmitting communication from Richard C. Rossi, City Manager, relative to Awaiting Report Item Number 15-18, regarding a report on renaming the Area IV Youth Center as the “Dr. Robert and Janet Moses Youth Center.” [attachment]

It would be an even greater honor if "The Algebra Project" so closely associated with Dr. Robert Moses could be promoted and continue forevermore at the Youth Center soon to be renamed in honor of Dr. Robert and Janet Moses.

Applications & Petitions #3. A zoning petition has been received from the Friends of MAPOCO, to amend the Cambridge Zoning Ordinance by a new sub-district of the Massachusetts Avenue Overlay District along Massachusetts Avenue between Porter Square and Cambridge Common.

The delicious irony of this zoning petition filed on the eve of the municipal election is that one of the signers is Councillor Dennis “Not ’til there’s a Master Plan” Carlone.

Applications & Petitions #4. An application was received from the Boston Ballet, 19 Clarendon Street, Boston, requesting permission to hang twenty-three temporary banners on electrical poles on in Harvard Square. These banners will promote the Boston Ballet’s The Nutcracker. The temporary banners will be hung from Nov 23 to Jan 4, 2016. Approval has been received from the Electrical Department.

One has to marvel at the plans of the Boston Ballet to hang "Nutcracker" banners directly in front of the Jose Mateo Ballet Theater in Cambridge which also stages its own annual performances of "The Nutcracker".


Resolution #7. Happy 100th Birthday wishes to Floyd Freeman.   Councillor Simmons

Floyd Freeman was my favorite neighbor for a quarter century on our block of Broadway – until the night his house burned down and he was forced to move closer to his son and daughter. Many a day I headed down the street on the way to somewhere and never made it because it was just so much more interesting to talk with Floyd. On November 7 he will turn 100 years old and is still playing music and is as sharp as ever. I won’t be able to make it to Detroit for his birthday celebration next weekend, but I plan to honor him in other ways. Happy birthday, Floyd. You really are the best.

Floyd & Robert
Happy birthday, Floyd!
This photo was taken at Floyd Freeman’s 90th birthday party ten years ago.


Order #5. That the City Manager is requested to consult with the Community Development Department and other appropriate City departments to determine the feasibility of establishing an online database of “problematic landlords” modeled upon the databases of Chicago and New York, to determine what the criteria for establishing this designation would be, and to report back to the City Council on when such a database could be up and running in a timely manner.   Councillor Simmons

Why stop there? Perhaps we should also draft a list of "problematic tenants" who nobody would ever want to live in their building. Shop owners could team up to draft a "problematic customer" list. It’s not unreasonable to want to have such lists and I’m sure there are people who would be more than happy to gather the data and pass judgment. However, it may not be the wisest choice for a municipality to do this except in the most egregious cases.

Communications #15. A communication was received from Kim Courtney and Xavier Dietrich, regarding a package store with an invalid liquor license.

Order #8. That the City Clerk, in consultation with the City Solicitor, draft a response regarding the attached Open Meeting Law complaint for the City Council’s consideration, so that the draft response may be considered and voted on by the City Council at its next regular business meeting of Nov 9, 2015.   Mayor Maher

Communications & Reports from City Officers #1. A communication was received from Donna P. Lopez, City Clerk, transmitting an Open Meeting Law Complaint filed by Kim Courtney and Xavier Dietrich, 955 Massachusetts Avenue #259, Cambridge, regarding the Minutes of the City Council meeting of Aug 10, 2015.

Perhaps it’s time to present Cambridge’s First Annual Dirty Diaper Award to this dynamic duo of litigious, misinformed, and thoroughly annoying wannabe City Council candidates. They can hang it on the wall of the wine bar they may one day open after their retirement from political life. – Robert Winters

5 Comments

  1. The MAPOCO re-zone is just about the shittiest zoning petition I’ve read since the 2004 Harvard down zoning. It’s poorly written, doesn’t accomplish its stated goal, and reads like a NIMBY Christmas list. That Carlone signed it is embarrassing and invalidates everything he has stated thus far about the beloved master plan. If a five year public process was “Pearl Harbor” what the heck do you call a draconian zoning proposal dropped the night before an election?

    I’d Xavier and Courtney have lost their minds but I’ve no frame of reference. I saw Courtney and Xavier at the bza where Courtney was trying to hush little children at play so her recording wasn’t disturbed. They also put on a show at the alive and kicking lobsters hearing. They filmed the entire hearing and were asked their names and refused to give them. That precipitated a 15 minutes disruptive discourse.

    Comment by Patrick Barrett — November 2, 2015 @ 5:04 am

  2. Mr. Freeman is THE Foremost China Mender on the East Coast. Also, I agree that The Area IV Youth Center, soon to be renamed the Robert and Janet Moses Youth Center, should be offering ” the Agebra Project “. So important for youth to be exposed to Algebra asap.

    Comment by Bob Richards — November 2, 2015 @ 6:35 am

  3. I think the Algebra Project should be part of all Youth Centers, it would be a great testament to the work done by the Moses and others. Arts, Athletics and Academics are a great plan for action.

    Comment by Liza Paden — November 2, 2015 @ 9:19 am

  4. I don’t know either Courtney or Dietrich, but you can’t really blame their beef, can you? Clearly they were the victim of a bullshit process on behalf of a crooked business owner and landlord. I know they’ve gotten a bit full-on in their campaign, but clearly they’ve got a point. They’ve presumably lost quite a lot of money because of, on one hand, a known crook, and on the other, an inept city board.

    [Editor’s Note: This message was caught in the moderation queue. Sorry for the delay in posting.]

    Comment by Katja Amdahl — November 3, 2015 @ 4:26 pm

  5. Regarding Courtney/Dietrich, nobody questions the fact that there was a petition submitted filled with fraudulent signatures. At least one of those signatures had an address in my building and I was able to look at the petition when an officer came to my house investigating the fraud. The failure of this duo to get a license was not based on that fraudulent petition. If anything, that would have earned them some sympathy from the License Commission.

    Also, few are questioning the fact that the business owner who paid for the petition bent some rules or perhaps broke them so badly that administrative action is warranted. On the other hand, Cambridge is filled with nonconforming uses in buildings and other deviations of regulations that have been built up and tolerated over decades if not centuries. Such is the reality of an older city with residential and commercial activities coexisting cheek-to-jowl in an ever-changing city. It’s almost like an living organism.

    The problem here is that after running into some roadblocks Courtney/Dietrich then launched into a full-scale assault on every City department and have now firmly established themselves among the most annoying people in all of Cambridge. That will likely not translate into their becoming successful in any business proposition – whether it be a wine bar or a hot dog stand.

    Comment by Robert Winters — November 9, 2015 @ 9:15 am

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