

- #LYRICS AARON HALL I MISS YOU FULL#
- #LYRICS AARON HALL I MISS YOU PRO#
- #LYRICS AARON HALL I MISS YOU SERIES#
and presides over a Governor's Council meeting at noon. Karyn Polito speaks at the MARPA/DLS conference at 9 a.m. in Sutton and at the North Shore Chamber of Commerce's annual dinner at 6 p.m. Charlie Baker speaks at the Blackstone Valley Chamber of Commerce's annual meeting at 8:30 a.m.
#LYRICS AARON HALL I MISS YOU SERIES#
Youth For Michelle Wu, a group of young activists supporting the mayor, last night tweeted a series of "policy solutions" for public health and protecting human rights in the "Mass and Cass" area. Marinell Rousmaniere, CEO of EdVestors, part of the All Children Thrive Boston coalition: "ACT Boston urges Mayor Wu in the first 100 days to publicly publish a preK-12 'Education Vision' with objectives and outcomes, align the BPS budget with this and appoint a Cabinet-level education lead in City Hall to oversee implementation." Roxbury resident Shaikh Hasib: “Analysis and expansion of youth employment and engagement opportunities, which includes strengthening and building public/private/non-profit partnerships.”

I really would love to see how expanding the pilot program in other parts of the city … could help improve ridership and save us money in the long haul.” South Boston resident Scott McCarty: “Ensuring that bus lines run on time and have capacity is important. Here’s what Playbook readers said they want Wu to focus on in her first 100 days: working." Walsh was in Boston yesterday to receive a leadership award at the The Ireland Funds’ annual gala. Asked whether she'd extended an invitation, Wu replied: "I received a text message from him earlier, but I'm sure he was in D.C.

Wu didn't invite Walsh, with whom she's had a fraught relationship over the years, according to a source close to the labor secretary. But inviting the governor to her swearing-in ceremony was a good overture. Wu isn’t as chummy with Baker as he was with Marty Walsh during the latter’s tenure as mayor. But she’s got a key ally in House Ways and Means Chair Aaron Michlewitz and a bevy of State House endorsers who are pushing policies that align with her aims. Charlie Baker and Democratic legislative leaders have so far been cool toward Wu’s loftiest goals. Rent control and fare-free MBTA service will face political headwinds on Beacon Hill, where GOP Gov.
#LYRICS AARON HALL I MISS YOU PRO#
“Michelle has built some deep and strong and successful partnerships and relationships and friendships with all of us and the new councilors,” City Council President Pro Tempore Matt O’Malley told me. That should continue once the newcomers ( who each got a nod from Wu in her speech) take their seats. Wu’s starting out with a fairly friendly city council. But they're looking forward to that collaboration. She said delivering both basic city services and generational change is not just possible, but "absolutely necessary." Her supporters, who lauded her campaign-trail calls to stabilize rent and expand access to public transit, know some of her "reach goals" will "take time and work to build support at other levels” of government, Boston Ward 4 Democratic Committee Chair Jonathan Cohn said.
#LYRICS AARON HALL I MISS YOU FULL#
Wu told reporters she’s not starting the counter on her first 100 days in office until January, when she’s planning a full inaugural fête with the incoming city council. She’s also giving herself some leeway after a rushed transition. Some of her initial priorities seem more granular than grandiose - hiring to fill the hundreds of open positions across city government, preparing for winter weather and continuing to tackle the public health and housing crises at Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Cass Boulevard. Wu vowed to tackle "the big and the small” in her first speech as mayor. Elizabeth Warren hailed Wu’s “great vision.” Ayanna Pressley called Wu the “mayor that will meet the moment." Sen. Ed Markey told reporters that she “is going to be a historic mayor because this is going to be the Green New Deal city for the United States and for the whole world. MAYOR WU’S MANDATE - Minutes after Michelle Wu was sworn in as the third person to lead Boston in less than a year, Sen.
