The Delaneys (seated in back) at a Boston City Council meeting.Daniel Delaney always had a strong desire to work on issues that he saw as important to the Black community.
However, he was not always able to make this his number one priority while working for 25 years as the legislative and policy director for the Department of Public Health.
“When I worked at the Department of Public Health, they talked about racial and ethnic health disparities a lot, but when you had the day-to-day business of what the Department of Health is paying attention to, health disparities were never their number one priority. And when there’s limited resources, you never get to your second, third priority. And so what I wanted to do was be in a position where I could advocate for issues facing my clients, to be the number one priority,” he said.
This passion to work directly and advocate for important issues for the benefit of the Black community is why he decided to create The Delaney Policy Group, a Boston Black-owned lobbying firm in 2012, which he runs with his wife, Andrea Delaney.
As a contract lobbying firm, the Delaneys help corporations, nonprofits and other organizations negotiate with the city, the state and the federal government either on policy issues or in trying to get public funds.
Daniel also shared their experiences as Black lobbyists, saying that they have a unique lens on how they are able to understand power and how they work with legislators or government officials.
“A lot of what we try to do is make sure that voices that aren’t normally heard or aren’t taken seriously are really heard, and for our Black clients, they’re able to speak for themselves, instead of being told what they should expect, and being grateful for whatever comes across,” he said.
“We’ve been, for the past 12 years now, serving a wide range of clients, really just trying to make sure that their voices are elevated and that their concerns are addressed in an impactful way,” he added.
Recently,
the Delaneys shared that they have had success with the economic
development bond bill that passed in the Legislature, where they were
able to get authorizations for $4 million for their different clients to
do capital improvement both in the city and for Boston’s communities of
color.
“That wouldn’t
have happened, I think, if they didn’t have someone at the table and
engaged early,” Daniel said. “A lot of what I really enjoy, and I know
my wife enjoys, about having our own business, is we can really pick the
groups we want to work with and the priorities that we want to
elevate,” he said.
Daniel believes in the importance of having Black lobbyists on the ground, especially at the local level.
“It’s
a critical time now…with the impending change at the federal level,
local and state politics are going to have a huge impact, because the
things that are going to be distracting. Donald Trump and the people
fighting in D.C. might not have to do with the dayto-day lives of people
in Dorchester, Roxbury or Mattapan or across the state of
Massachusetts,” he said.
“When
we talk about education policy, violence prevention, or working with
racial and ethnic health disparities, none of those things are going to
be addressed meaningfully at the federal level, while they sort out what
the impact is of a President Trump,” he said.
Looking ahead
Many people are nervous about what will happen in the
future and it potentially providing an excuse for elected officials not
to address many issues — due to having to deal with the Trump
administration. For Daniel, the upcoming political events are what makes
the Delaney Policy Group’s role even more important.
“So,
if you have a concern about fair jobs and fair construction
redevelopment in your neighborhood, we’re going to have,‘It’s important,
but it’s going to have to wait until next year.’ What we know is that
the big businesses and the firms that retain lobbyists on a regular
basis—they have someone in the State House all the time to make sure
that as the leaders are making a decision about what’s a priority and
what’s not, they are in the conversation early. Our clients don’t have
to wait until the budget debate in April to run around and ask for
money, because we’re already having those conversations now,” he said.
“We’re
already letting legislators and city officials know we anticipate, in
this policy environment, that the city is going to need to reassess its
priorities (and) as you reassess, you need to know that the issues our
clients are addressing need to stay on the top of your importance list,”
he said.
He said what
often happens when it comes to politics and policy for communities of
color and other smaller groups is that they will hear an announcement or
see something in the press about the city no longer being able to fund
something of importance to them and then will reach out to stop this.
“The
importance of the role we play is that we stay in the policy
conversation all the time—so we don’t have to react to changing
narratives from the outside,” he said.
While
the Delaneys are proud to be the only Minority Business Enterprise
lobbying at the State House, Daniel says that he would like to see more
Black and Latino lobbyists join them.
“I’d
love to see another dozen Black and Latino lobbyists in the State House
and in City Hall, making sure that when people talk about education
policy or health policy, there’s someone around all the time who speaks
for the communities that have been kind of overlooked and cut out for so
long,” he said.
Besides
their firm, the Delaneys have an online platform,
blackonbeaconhill.com, where they talk about their experiences as Black
lobbyists on Beacon Hill.
The
blog is authored by Andrea, whose latest post talks about her journey
as a Black woman lobbying in Massachusetts. She talks more about this.
“You’re
a woman, you’re Black, and you’re a lobbyist, so (there are) challenges
that come with that,” she said. “But I think what’s great about us is
the unique lens that we provide being Black lobbyists, and how we’re
able to use that to position people to engage directly more with the
legislators,” she said.
“My
frustration is where you would have people go in, speak for the client,
and not really get the voice of the client. It’ll get diluted. So we
try to really emphasize and focus on what their mission is, and making
sure it’s communicated (and) conveyed correctly,” she added.
Andrea
encourages others to research the rich history of Black people and
communities of color, who have always been present in Beacon Hill.
“One
of our clients is the Museum of African American History. (It’s a)
surprise (for) so many people that come up on the Hill and don’t realize
that this is really important. Part of our history is right behind the
State House on Beacon Hill on 46 Joy Street,” she said.
“The
first Black settlement… they started in the North End, moved to Beacon
Hill, and then to the neighborhoods. … So you had (Black) people living
and working in the North End. … (They) moved, lived, worked, thrived on
Beacon Hill. I’m really surprised, especially coming from Texas, of the
amount of Bostonians that don’t know about them. It’s so important. It’s
so easy during times like this for things like that to totally be
erased from the history,” she added.