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Ashmont TOD -Globe Editorial

GLOBE EDITORIAL

Ashmont opportunity

THE MODERNIZATION of the Ashmont MBTA Station in Dorchester offers an outstanding opportunity for the kind of transit-oriented development touted by the Romney administration. But a promising proposal by a local developer to build affordable apartments and commercial space between the T station and an adjacent stretch of Dorchester Avenue has fallen close to the third rail.

Last June, many Dorchester residents were disappointed to learn that the state had rejected an application for $3.2 million in state tax credits from Trinity Financial, which sought to build 105 units of mostly affordable rental housing simultaneously with the reconstruction of the station. The developer had argued in numerous neighborhood meetings that the six-story apartment complex would not only provide needed housing but reconnect the T station to Peabody Square, filling in an area that Dorchester City Councilor Maureen Feeney describes as a ''missing tooth" infected with crime and blight.

The T has been largely supportive of the initiative, seeing that an upgrade in the adjacent area would protect its roughly $35 million investment in the reconstruction of Ashmont Station, a connector serving 17,000 daily commuters. But the state's Office of Commonwealth Development balked at providing transit-oriented grants or significant tax credits for a development it deemed too costly at $48 million.

The Ashmont setback points to a potential weakness in the state's ''smart growth" policy of encouraging denser development along transportation routes. It is more costly to build in Boston than in the suburbs, a function of land values, oddly configured sites, union labor demands, permit requirements, underground parking, and other urban costs. Any sensible state policy should take such matters into account during the competition for smart growth grants. And Boston's willingness to site affordable housing over many decades without the kinds of incentives demanded by elected officials in the suburbs should also count for something.

The Trinity developers are responding to cost concerns. They propose raising the number of units to 116, which would include 42 condominiums, reducing some of the need for subsidies while still leaving 74 affordable rental units for families earning up to 60 percent of Boston's median income. But tax credits will still be needed for the developer to generate the equity to build the project.

The Romney administration is focused on exciting efforts to promote affordable housing through zoning reform in the suburbs. It's a great goal, but not one that should squeeze out a signature smart growth development along Dorchester Avenue.

Dorchester Reporter Editorial

It is to be hoped that the Boston Globe, whose neighborhood coverage has waned over the years,    will someday live up to the hype suggested by a new marketing campaign launched recently. However, a story in last Sunday's Globe about the debate over which community can lay claim to the first public school in Massachusetts, is symptomatic of the paper's continuing myopia when it comes to city neighborhoods- and Dorchester in particular.                    

Disgruntled Dorchester residents who challenged the Globe's failure to include Dorchester's       historic claim to having launched the first taxpayer  supported school in a story last weekend were told that Dorchester was important, but didn't make the article for space reasons. However, a shooting outside another Dorchester schoolhouse- the Winthrop- on Monday presented no such dilemma.

City violence belongs on page one, for certain. But some local readers are dismayed with  the         paper's posture towards the neighborhood in general, which too often invokes a negative tone.

An otherwise positive report in last Sunday's paper about the Epiphany school next to Shawmut MBTA station began with an anecdote about an alleged drug house next door. Throughout the piece, the Globe's pictured the school as an island outpost amidst a sea of crime and degradation. 

Another recent "puff" piece on the new Ashmont Grille restaurant  described it as being set in a "gritty" neighborhood. Earlier this year, a Globe-produced, online guide to the city, aimed at new college arrivals, excised the entire Dorchester neighborhood, leaving the clear message that there is nothing worth seeing, doing or buying in this part of the city.                    

It's no wonder that the most recent omission of Dorchester as a place with a serious claim as the birthplace of public education set off bells in our community.

Ashmont Station Photos

  • Peabody Square Plan February 2007
    The pictures in this album chronicle the physical changes at Ashmont Station as well as the growing community effort to revitalize the station and Peabody Square. Please feel free to e-mail me pictures of the area.
Peabody Square Events

February 2007

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