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This week, Councilor Lara called for her first hearing order to discuss restoring municipal voting rights to immigrants with legal status.

During this week’s Council meeting, the Council voted to adopt a resolution condemning the unprovoked invasion and egregious act of aggression against Ukraine by the Russian Federation.

Fees On Property Sales Over $2 Million Will Provide Substantial Funding For Affordable Housing Including Property Tax Relief for Low-Income Seniors

The City of Boston is currently reevaluating the Rutherford Avenue design to better align it with its Go Boston 2030 goal of increasing transit use citywide, and to create a corridor that is equipped...

The John D. O’Bryant School of Math & Science’s Anjalequa Leynneyah Verona Birkett is Boston’s second Youth Poet Laureate.

Jacob Lacey has been appointed as the neighborhood liaison for West Roxbury and Michel Denis was appointed as the liaison for the Haitian Community.

The collaborative process includes a nine-person search committee.

Masking is still recommended to minimize the spread of COVID-19 and for those with heightened risk factors

The Boston Human Rights Commission is concerned with the increased activity of overt racist activities in the City of Boston.

The Boston Landmarks Commission (BLC) has received an application to demolish the religious building at 920 Centre Street in Jamaica Plain.

The Boston Landmarks Commission (BLC) has received an application to demolish the building at 300 The Fenway in Fenway / Kenmore.

The Boston Landmarks Commission (BLC) has received an application to demolish the residential building at 16 Whitby Street in East Boston.

All 14 plans are currently set to expire on April 22, 2022.

The ordinance seeks to protect the quality of residential life in Boston.

Our weekly photography clinic has weekly challenges to help you hone and improve your photography skills.

This includes $14.6 million in affordable housing projects; $6.1 million in historic preservation projects; and $6.4 million in recreational use and open space projects.

The Boston Parks and Recreation Department (BPRD) and Boston Harbor Now (BHN) held the second annual Winter Warmer community engagement event at the Moakley Park Fieldhouse in South Boston on February...

Among the 50,000 women who registered to vote in Boston in 1920, a large number living in the South End were women of color.

This month, we explore events and organizations promoting disability awareness and how to support the disabled community.

Mary Eliza Mahoney registered to vote in Boston’s Ward 13 on August 18, 1920, the very same day that Tennessee ratified the women’s suffrage amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

Applications for the 2022 outdoor dining season are now open.

The change reflects efforts to increase opportunities to grow and access locally grown food.

The annual count of Bostonians experiencing homelessness, guiding the allocation of City resources.

The landscape of Mount Hope Cemetery is dominated by the State Rock of Massachusetts, Roxbury Puddingstone. Learn more about this wonderful natural element.

The Mayor also announced findings from the 2021 Childcare Census Survey report.

Maria L. Baldwin, a prominent African American educator, civil rights activist, and suffragist in Boston, signed up to vote in the fall of 1920.

Our weekly photography clinic has weekly challenges to help you hone and improve your photography skills.

Mayor Michelle Wu and Dr. Bisola Ojikutu today announced that the City’s B Together policy, which requires patrons and staff of certain indoor spaces to show proof of vaccination against COVID-19...

Mayor Wu also announced additional climate resiliency planning for East Boston waterfront.

We've finished transcribing our Ward 13 Women's Voter Registers from 1920 and have added them into an easily accessible, searchable, and sortable dataset.

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