2-4-2021

Page 1

GAMESTOP STOCKS, 2

WORK-STUDY, 4

PERSONAL IDENTITY, 5

GACHA GAMES, 6

Boston University students took part in GameStop and Dogecoin investments.

The work-study program has online and hybrid jobs for students.

International students discuss their identity in the U.S.

Online games pose more loss than gain.

THURSDAY, FEB. 4, 2021

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER AT BOSTON UNIVERSITY

YEAR LI. VOLUME C. ISSUE II

Boston adds affordable housing units with Boston 2030 initiative Taylor Brokesh Daily Free Press Staff The City of Boston permitted 1,023 new units of affordable housing in 2020, which is the largest addition in three years. The new units, located in neighborhoods across Boston, are part of Mayor Marty Walsh’s Boston 2030 housing initiative, which aims to add 16,000 units of affordable housing — for a total of 70,000 units — by 2030, the 400th anniversary of the city’s founding. “We are committed to creating a Boston that anyone, at any income level, can afford to live in,” Walsh said in a press release. Phil Giffee, executive director of Neighborhood of Affordable Housing, said the initiative is designed to support a diverse array of Bostonians with varying income levels and family sizes. “When one says affordable, that gives one a sense of, you’re aiming at people who don’t have enough to live in the neighborhood anymore,” he said. “But it doesn’t mean just really poor people in public housing, as much as that is needed.” He said Walsh and the City have made efforts toward increased housing production but housing development is a slow process. “The city is clearly aimed at the

right targets,” Giffee said. “Everybody’s aligned right now in terms of fair housing, in terms of equity, in terms of neighborhood distribution, in terms of looking at where funds come in from the private sector.” Russell Schutt, professor of sociology at the University of Massachusetts Boston, said the term “affordable housing” applies to an array of housing options aimed at households with different income levels below the region’s average. “In other words, ensuring that some units are available for people with incomes as low as 30 percent of the area median income, and less so, of course, for people who are home-

less,” Schutt said, “and then a portion for people with incomes up to 60 percent and 80 percent and so on.” In Jamaica Plain, where 44 units were approved in Jackson Square, the median household income was $76,968 in 2015, according to the Boston Planning and Development Agency. In Mattapan, where 135 units will be built at The Loop at Mattapan Station, that number was $43,256 — Boston’s median income sits at $55,777. Most income-restricted housing in Boston is distributed by a lottery system. Individual applications are available for specific buildings. Thirty percent of the housing units

permitted last year were income-restricted, meaning they were designated for homeowners within a certain financial bracket, according to the press release. Schutt added that ample affordable housing is especially critical because of the ongoing pandemic, which disproportionately impacts those without stable access to housing. “There’s just no question that there is going to be a lot greater difficulty affording housing for a great many people,” he said, “and it’s the people who have been disadvantaged to begin with.” Walsh’s Boston 2030 plan, which was put into place before the pan-

PHOTO COURTESY SARAH NICHOLS VIA FLICKR

A street in the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston. Boston Mayor Marty Walsh announced Tuesday that 1,023 new units of affordable housing were created last year in Jamaica Plain and other neighborhoods.

City Council proposes paid sick leave for city workers receiving COVID-19 vaccine Aaron Velasco Daily Free Press Staff

HANNAH YOSHINAGA | DAILY FREE PRESS STAFF

Boston City Councilor At-Large Michelle Wu introduced an ordinance Tuesday that would extend the paid sick leave of Boston employees so they can receive the COVID-19

The Boston City Council sent an ordinance to extend paid sick leave for city workers taking the COVID-19 vaccine to the Government Operations Committee during Wednesday’s meeting. The paid sick benefit would cover three working days. City workers would be allowed leave at any point during the two days following a COVID-19 vaccination — which applies to the first and second dose — and compensated fully for the time away, according to the ordinance

proposed by City Councilor Michelle Wu. “All employees of the City of Boston are eligible for this COVID-19 vaccine paid sick leave, regardless of the duration of their employment,” Wu wrote in the ordinance. Extending paid sick leave may increase the rate of vaccinations among Boston residents, according to the ordinance. COVID-19 vaccines can cause side effects such as headaches and fever. Granting employees paid time off may increase their likelihood to get vaccinated, according to the ordinance. nsion of paid sick leave to workers during the 2009 H1N1 outbreak increased their likelihood of receiving an influenza shot, according to a 2018 study conducted by researchers from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “Nationwide, more than one-third of the civilian workforce lacks access to any form of paid sick leave, and low-income workers and workers of color are particularly likely to hold jobs that do not offer employee benefits,” the ordinance states. This measure for paid sick leave would be necessary for fostering trust in medically disenfranchised com-

munities of color by offering accommodations for any side effects of the vaccine, according to the ordinance. Wu said at the meeting Boston must build trust within communities about the vaccine’s safety to ensure all Bostonians are safe and healthy, which means being transparent about the side effects the vaccine may induce. “We from the city level should be modeling what we are encouraging other employers and other parts of the community to do,” Wu said. “We should make it possible to accommodate and mitigate the burden of these side effects however possible.” Wu added that workers can use their time away to rest and recover from any side effects in the days following a vaccination. “We can use our voice and our example to make sure that everybody is protecting our community as quickly as possible and lifting each other up in the process,” she said. City Councilor Julia Mejia said at the meeting Boston must start implementing rules and regulations to ensure residents’ safety and include advocates in these conversations. “I look forward to sitting in and following alongside closely as we discuss this ordinance to see what could be done to make it even stron-

ger and more effective,” Mejia said. Councilor Ed Flynn, who added his name in support, stressed the importance of providing medical information to immigrants to encourage them to take the vaccine. “Many of them may not be on social media, but we have to expand our outreach to our immigrant neighbors,” Flynn said, “to make sure that we reach them with a positive message about vaccinations.” Councilor Michael Flaherty also added his name, and said prominent hospitals and medical centers in Boston are working in partnership with the city government on vaccine rollout. “It’s up to us to make sure that we’re looking after our elders, making sure that they get the vaccine,” Flaherty said. “Obviously, as we continue to do the rollout and the age limit drops, make sure that the word gets out there in as many different languages as possible.” Wu’s ordinance was sent out to the Committee of Government Operations for review. All but Councilor Frank Baker — who was not present at the meeting — added their names. Tali Robbins, policy director for Wu’s office, said the ordinance would cover the roughly 18,000 city employees, who work in different occu-

demic began, is even more important now than when it was introduced, Schutt said. “Like many very forward-looking and economically vibrant cities, Boston is facing a real paradox of increasing demand for higher income housing, at the same time as there are decreasing opportunities for people to earn a sufficient amount to afford housing within the city,” Schutt said. “I think that creates potential for both sharpening disparities and also tremendous unfairness.” Boston is projected to house approximately 759,000 residents by 2030 — around a 65,000 person jump — according to the plan. Over 50,000 units of market-priced housing will be permitted by the city in that time. Schut added that rising housing costs can force long-time residents out of their neighborhoods, despite having contributed to their economy and culture. “That kind of paradoxical situation is exactly when you need government intervention,” he said. Government housing plans like Boston 2030, he said, are a necessary foundation for social and economic progress. “These kinds of standards are a floor, and not a ceiling,” Schutt said. “They’re really essential and are tremendously important, both for creating more housing opportunities but for also symbolizing a commitment of the government to supporting all its residents.”

pations all over the city. She added that the ordinance would not change the state’s already established vaccine priority order. “This is just about making sure that fear or anxiety or concerns about the side effects don’t serve as a barrier to getting the vaccine,” Robbins said. Three working days total can be taken off at workers’ discretion, allowing them to take a day off for their first injection and two following their second — when people tend to feel side effects — Robbins said. “While this only obviously applies to city employees, we hope to serve as an example for all other employers in the city of Boston to follow that lead,” Robbins said. “And make sure that we’re making all combinations possible for workers in the city to be able to access the vaccine quickly.” With the ordinance now out of City Council’s hands, the next step to its passage is a hearing with the Committee of Government Operations headed by Councilor Lydia Edwards, Robbins said. Edwards added her name to the ordinance at the meeting. “It’ll follow the same process as everything else,” Robbins said, “but we hope to move it forward as quickly as we can.”


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