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John Keith

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

John Keith

I Want To Live Where the Hip People Live!

Is Boston losing its young people to other US cities because we're dull and boring? Are we just too uptight? How come it's so hard to have a good time in this town?

Last week, the Boston Globe sponsored a discussion as part of its Building a Better Commonwealth series, Loosen Up, Boston?, where a group of panelists was asked its opinion on how to make Boston a more creative, dare I say “hip”, place to live. "How can we work together to find the right balance between maintaining Boston's character and needs of local residents while enhancing urban vitality and giving new nightlife venues a chance to take root?" It’s nothing new to hear a person here or there talking about Boston not being the most interesting, exciting place to live. But, an audience of ~400 assembling to share their thoughts on it? That is something new. People are looking for change. Here is what I heard people talking about and what…

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Boston's Drug Epidemic IS a Crisis Situation

Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino says the drug problem in Boston isn't at a crisis level. But, it is.

Two weeks ago, South Boston resident Barbara Coyne was killed in her own home. Last fall, Barbara Tagen, also from Southie and also in her 60’s, was killed. Police believe both attacks were drug-related. The response to these tragic events has been an outpouring of expression from residents telling tales of a neighborhood reeling from drug addiction and violent crimes committed as a result. Not everyone seems to be taking the problem as seriously, unfortunately. Boston Herald reporter Ted Fitzgerald asked Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino last week if the situation was “worse than usual”.  The Mayor responded that he couldn’t speak to “hearsay” and that he hadn’t seen any “actual numbers”. Is it at a crisis level? “No, it’s not at a crisis …

BH Resident

11:20 am on Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Yes I agree not enough is being done! Yes it is in crisis level! Why would a politician admit his city is going down the pan. There is a definite rise in drug addicted people in this city. Its clear as day. I see it daily in my professional career and just plain walking around in the city. Just today walking in the Public Garden were dirty needles on the path. I reported them but who knows if …   more ›

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

John Keith

Dogs in Parks, Columnist Barks

Who doesn't love having dogs running unleashed in our public parks? Only one person, I guess.

I hate it when people act arrogantly. Drivers cutting off other drivers in traffic, guys throwing Frisbees that end up banging parents in the head while sitting having picnics – you get the idea. I encountered my worst pet peeve last week while sitting in Blackstone Square, on Washington Street in the South End. The square is busy most days. Men with bottles hang out there, talking and arguing with one another (and themselves). Mothers with babies mingle about, sunning themselves. And pet owners bring their dogs there to poop on the lawn and run up on unsuspecting people’s laps. Previous comments to the contrary notwithstanding, I do like dogs. I love them. But the scene here was overwhelming. I mean, like, 12-15 dogs off leashes. Swear …

kiera

12:15 pm on Friday, April 20, 2012

Dog people are stinky like the aroma in their home...ewwww...nasty.   more ›

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

John Keith

All Hail To Our Chief!

It's time to give the man his due: Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino has worn out his opposition. It's no longer worth fighting against him. Just give up.

Dear Mayor Menino: You win! On behalf of all city residents who have been holding out for a better Boston than you’ve provided for us, I concede. A few of us (a dwindling few) have always thought Boston could be better – that you could do better. We’ve seen the city grow and prosper during the past twenty years, but felt it was being held back from being a truly great American city. Not that we aren’t happy to live here, just that you could help us make Boston a better place to live by building badly-needed schools in our neighborhoods,  by recognizing, respecting, and responding to residents’ complaints about over-zealous developers and under-utilized zoning, by using the city's ever-increasing property tax revenue to give us safer, …

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

John Keith

In The Bathroom At The Westin

John Keith may or may not have been at the "Romney for President" event last night at Boston's Westin Copley Place hotel. The following conversation may or may not have taken place.

Last evening, high on a lethal mix of cold medicine, Zolpidem, and Yuengling beer, I headed to the Barnes & Noble in Back Bay to pick up a copy of Hunter S. Thompson’s “Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail ‘72”. On the way back home thought I'd stop by presidential candidate Mitt Romney’s Super Tuesday celebration at the Westin Copley Place. If I couldn't crash it, I hoped I'd get a good story out of it. But, before I could reach the party, I was overcome with nausea, so I beelined it to the closest men's room. After several dry heaves in the only open stall available, I heard the sobbing of what I assumed to be a man from the stall beside me. Knocking on the door, I was stunned and shocked when the candidate himself, Mitt Romney, …

Phyllis Browne

2:46 pm on Friday, March 9, 2012

Many thanks!!! This is certainly one of your best. More, more-please   more ›

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

John Keith

Why Does It Cost So Much to Live in Boston?

It is expensive to rent or buy a home in Boston. This isn't news to any of us who live here. But, why does it cost so much and how can we change this?

According to a recently released study from the Center for Housing Policy, 24% of Massachusetts families are spending as much as 50% of their incomes on housing. This will come as no surprise to those of us living here in Boston. Housing is expensive? This, we know. But, why does housing cost so much and, even more important, how can we fix this? How we got here Boston hasn’t always been a great place to live. Between the 1950’s to 1980’s, the city’s downtown neighborhoods were in decline as the middle class moved to the suburbs.  Things got worse when the busing crisis of the 1970’s led many families with kids to abandon the city. It wasn’t until the late 1980’s and the 1990’s that the city started getting its mojo back. Major crime …

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Building Blocks

Boston Schools: Doomed to Failure?

Are the Boston Public Schools about to improve? The odds are stacked against it happening.

As a companion piece to , I thought I’d provide a deeper analysis of the Boston Public School student assignment policy and the challenges the city’s schools face going forward. Boston could end busing, today. It was instated in 1974 because the public school system was deemed "unconstitutionally segregated” and students were bused to schools outside their neighborhoods to create a better balance. That was 34 years ago, when out of approximately 100,000 students, 51 percent were white. Today, we have just over 57,000 students, and 13 percent are white. Hispanic (41%), Black (36%) and Asian (9%) make up the majority of the rest of enrollment. So, there’s no legal reason to continue busing. Nor is there a logistical reason. Every child from …

Thursday, February 2, 2012

Building Blocks

What's Next for Boston's Future?

Boston's changed a lot since Kevin White was mayor. What's going to happen during the next couple of decades and is our city prepared for its future?

Upon hearing that former mayor Kevin White had died, I started thinking about how Boston has changed during the past 40 years. Who would have thought Boston would be where it is, today? Looking forward, what will Boston be like 40 years from now, or even in just 10? Based on the pattern established over the past several decades, Boston’s population will probably grow around 5 percent (although some predict much higher numbers). If so, the city will be home to 648,473 residents in 2020, an increase of 30,879 people. Meanwhile, Greater Boston will most likely grow, too, with over a hundred thousand more people moving in and around our city, every day. Where will all these people work? Well, during the past half century, our local economy has…

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Building Blocks

12 Predictions for 2012

It’s a brand new year. Say good-bye to that miserable 2011 and look forward to these events I’m predicting take place in 2012.

My predictions for 2012. 1. Willard ‘Mitt’ Romney Starting with the most-timely prediction, by the end of day today, the results of the Iowa caucus will be in. My prediction is a virtual tie between ex-Governor Mitt Romney, current US Congressman Ron Paul, and ex-US Senator Rick Santorum. It doesn’t matter. In my opinion, all of the candidates stink like garbage, which is why I’m going out on a limb in predicting the Republican nominee for US President won’t be decided until August’s GOP convention. There will be a brokered convention and, in an incredible turn of events, Newt Gingrich will be nominated. He’ll end up losing to President Obama. People fear change. 2. Local real estate market / economy The downtown Boston residential real …

Friday, December 23, 2011

Building Blocks

Home And Holiday Memories

It’s Christmastime, and I’m thinking about home. Maybe you are, too.

What does “home” mean to you? A place to lay your head at night? Where your parents live, and you and your children? Or, is it much more than that? How do you feel when you’re home? Safe? Secure? A home, physically, is nothing more than a house - four walls and the roof over our condo, or our apartment. Home, emotionally, is quite a different thing. Childhood Memories I have fond memories of waking up Christmas mornings as a child and sneaking downstairs to check out my presents. I can barely remember anything I got; instead, I remember spending time with my mother and father and my brother and sisters. Our old  Polaroid prints (well, the ones that came out …) and slides (remember slides?) show us around the Christmas tree. I can remember …

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