Acting Mayor Kim Janey embraces Danny Rivera as Museum of African American History president and CEO Leon E. Wilson looks on.

Acting Boston Mayor Kim Janey delivers her
address during a celebration marking her first 100 days in office at the
Museum of African American History on Beacon Hill in Boston on July 2,
2021.
Hosts gathering at African Meeting House
Family, friends, cabinet members, elected officials and press were among the invitees filling the pews at the Museum of African American History on Beacon Hill, a meeting house where Frederick Douglass had held an audience.
The National Anthem, sung by Boston police officer Kim Tavares, and Danny Rivera’s rendition of “Lift Every Voice and Sing” bookended the event that included a video of highlights from Janey’s first months in office and a musical spoken-word piece performed by Ashley Rose and Danielle the Buddafly.
During her address recapping her office’s achievements, Janey made some announcements. The city will offer up to $40,000 in down payment assistance for homebuyers; the Board of Health has appointed Mass General Brigham’s Dr. Bisola Ojikutu as the next executive director of the Boston Public Health Commission to
take over from Rita Nieves, who served in the position on an interim
basis since December 2019; Boston Public Schools Superintendent Brenda
Cassellius and Chief of Policy and Planning Mary Churchill will lead
efforts to form a Children’s and Youth Cabinet.
Not
discussed at the celebratory event was Janey’s firing of Dennis White,
who was appointed as Boston’s police commissioner without vetting, then
quickly put on suspension by former mayor Martin J. Walsh, who became
the U.S. Labor Secretary in March. However, Janey later stressed the
need to update some police department policies, including the domestic
violence policy.
“We
have made strategic investments in this budget when it comes to
reimagining the police, everything from the mental health pilot to
making sure we’re investing in racial equity, building up the cadet
program so we can have more diversity on the force, as well as investing
in the office of police accountability and transparency so that we are
dealing with these issues when they arise, and hopefully creating a path
forward and a culture where these issues will become fewer and fewer,”
she said.
Janey said
that though Roxbury and the South End are where she was raised, she
loves visiting all of Boston, from Little Saigon in Fields Corner and
the Latin Quarter in Jamaica Plain to Roxbury’s Nubian Square and
Charlestown, where she experienced busing and racism as a child but now
sees a strong community where children have more positive educational
opportunities than what she had.
“Roxbury
is my home. I grew up in Roxbury. I love Roxbury. It is where I live
now, but what has always been clear is that I love my city. This city,
you know, has given me so much,” Janey told the Banner.
“There’s
a lot of power having a mayor who comes from and lives in this
neighborhood, and a mayor who experienced and — current tense —
experiences many of these challenges that are still with us to this
day,” she said.
“I’m
grateful that I get to bring that lens to this work as I help people all
over, because one thing that you will find out is that the things
people in Roxbury care about are often the things that people in West
Roxbury care about. Everybody wants the opportunity to buy a home, to
have great parks, to send their kids to great schools. These things are
not different depending on what neighborhood you’re in. That’s what
people want, that’s part of living out the American dream.”