Mayor Wu's 2023 State of the City Address
Mayor Wu delivered her first State of the City Address on Wednesday, January 25, 2023, at MGM Music Hall.
Watch the 2023 State of the City Address, listen to our event playlist, and read the text below:
WATCH: State of the City Address
State of the City Playlist 2023
Read: State of the City Address
Below, you can read an annotated version of Mayor Wu's State of the City speech, including comments from Ezra Zwaeli, Director of Speechwriting for the Mayor's Office.
To interact with the annotations, click on the yellow highlighted text and a sidebar will pop-up on the right-hand side of your screen.
To my whole family: Especially my husband Conor, and Blaise & Cass, watching from home—I love you and am grateful for you every day. To my partners in public service: Council President Flynn & Boston City Councilors, Chair Robinson and the Boston School Committee, Mayor Janey, Ambassador Flynn and Mrs. Flynn, Governor Healey, Attorney General Campbell, Treasurer Goldberg, State Representatives and Senators, county officials. Thank you so much for being with us. And to our interpreters, thank you for helping us reach all of our residents this evening, in seven languages.
A year ago this week, I was bundled up for my first
Our city is carried by so many people whose faces most of us never see. Who aren’t on the news, or on stage accepting awards, but after a full day of serving our constituents, still find time to coach softball at Charlestown High Field or pack meals for new immigrant families in Mattapan Square.
That’s why, on your way in tonight, you saw the beautiful portraits of just a few of these
It’s been three years since we’ve been able to celebrate—and reflect on—the State of our City in person. We’ve all felt the collective toll of these years and the continued impact on our hearts and minds, on local businesses and household budgets.
Boston has always been resilient.
But when resilience goes from a strength that we call on, to a constant state of being, it’s time to stop hardening ourselves against the world, and start changing the world we live in.
Real change comes from community, so I knew
The school lunch lady’s daughter, who found her calling as a teacher, then launched a nationally recognized high school in Dorchester, is now our Boston Public Schools Superintendent: Mary Skipper.
The boy from Roxbury who wanted to serve and protect, who—against all odds, and over nearly three decades—rose through every level of leadership at the Boston Police Department, is now our Boston Police Commissioner: Michael Cox.
The girl who watched her refugee parents wash dishes at restaurants so their kids could lead a better life—now leads our efforts to ensure that all workers, no matter where they were born or what language they speak, have health, safety, and dignity on the job, as our new
The toddler who took his very first steps in City Hall daycare, grew up to hold city leaders accountable for vast racial disparities in city contracting as President and CEO of the Black Economic Council of MA, and is now our Chief of Economic Opportunity & Inclusion: Segun Idowu.
Just like our communities, this team
When we took office with winter looming, and hundreds living in unsafe, unsanitary encampments—we didn’t look away:
When we learned the MBTA would finally make major repairs to the Orange line—but with just two weeks' notice—we didn’t back away:
Under extraordinary circumstances, our team has refused to settle. Over the last year:
We made three bus lines entirely fare-free. Now, we’re accelerating over two dozen miles of
We made the spaces and services of our City more accessible: opening a new, fully-accessible City Hall Plaza and senior center in Orient Heights,
We are looking to end community violence with new strategies to address trauma and provide essential supports—from our
We also graduated our first class of students from Boston’s PowerCorps program,
We’ve invested in longstanding Legacy Businesses and are helping new entrepreneurs fill vacant retail spaces to revitalize our neighborhood commercial districts. And we’re excited that Lego's North American headquarters is coming to Boston. We made progress on closing the supplier diversity gap, awarding contracts worth more than $100 million—from school lunches to snow removal—to businesses owned by women and people of color. Thanks to legislation passed by the City Council and approved by the state legislature last month, we’ll be able to do even more. And we did all this on top of filling
In so many other cities, none of this would have been possible. But Boston has never let anyone else define our possibilities.
It’s thanks to the people of Boston that I can stand here tonight and say—the state of the City is strong.
And we have the
Doing so will require that we reckon with—and rebuild—the systems that got us here. When the “Boston Redevelopment Authority” was created nearly 70 years ago, its purpose was singular:
Since 2016 it’s been called the Boston Planning and Development Agency, or “BPDA,” but the focus on
Over the last decade, Boston saw the largest building boom in generations: cranes in the sky and jobs on the ground. But that growth wasn’t harnessed for the benefit of all our communities. Not planning for community stability meant that even as our population grew, many were squeezed out. Not planning for affordability, and transit, meant that housing prices soared, and
Now, stronger storms and hotter summers raise the stakes. The pandemic has thinned our usual Downtown crowd, and inflation has forced many workers to balance two or three jobs just to keep milk in the fridge or make rent. In this moment of need, we have an opportunity and an obligation to change how we plan for Boston’s future.
Under the leadership of our Chief of Planning, Arthur Jemison, we’re charting a new course for growth, with people as our compass. Tomorrow I’ll sign an executive order establishing a Planning Advisory Council to fully integrate long-range planning, and begin modernizing our zoning code. It will be led by Chief Jemison and consist of Cabinet chiefs in capital planning, transportation, climate, housing, and the arts.
Over this next year, we’ll shift planning efforts from the BPDA to a new City Planning and Design Department—to expand planning and urban design as a coordinated effort that guides our growth. Our vision is for Boston to sustainably reach our peak population of
Next week we’ll file a
I’ve also charged our team with improving the uneven and unpredictable approval process that frustrates community members and developers. Next month, we’ll form a steering group of real estate and community leaders to
Of course, we can’t grow sustainably unless our residents are secure in their homes. Our housing crisis displaces children and families, drives down enrollment in schools, hurts local businesses, increases homelessness, and strains our public health and safety systems.
So, our housing plan must be just as comprehensive. We’ll deploy every tool, every strategy, and every resource to create more housing that residents can actually afford.
Last year, our Office of Housing permitted 3,800 housing units—the most since 2018, including 1,300 affordable units—the most in a generation. And we’ll do even more by directing the bulk of our federal recovery dollars to housing. In the coming weeks, we’ll be sending the City Council a Home Rule Petition on
And we’re putting City land to work.
Our neighborhoods must be climate resilient and community focused. This year we will launch a civic and green space master plan, and begin design for new community centers in Grove Hall and the North End.
And, we’ll help residents invest in retrofitting older homes, like triple deckers, to save money on utility bills and protect against flooding and heat. And we’ll walk the walk with municipal buildings, too.
Meeting our climate goals starts with ending our use of fossil fuels, so I’m signing an Executive Order requiring all new City construction and major renovations in our schools, municipal buildings, and public housing, to be entirely fossil-fuel free.
And
Which brings me to the next generation. As mayor, and as a mom, fighting for the future that my two boys—and all our kids—deserve is what drives the urgency behind all that we do.
Like our approach to planning, Boston’s approach to education has been deeply shaped by our history. The story is one that many of us know well—and it deserves telling—but that’s for next year’s State of the City. Tonight, I want to share a few of the things we’re doing right now to strengthen our schools, support our teachers, and do right by our students.
I’ll start with the spaces where learning happens: we know what world-class school facilities feel like. Just around the corner from here, is the brand new Boston Arts Academy—it’s beautiful, energy efficient, meeting the needs and the possibility of our young people. But we haven’t been moving fast enough.
We’re making changes to speed up not just individual schools, but our whole district. Our school design study will take a full year off the planning process for every new school in the City, and we’ll get more projects going at once than ever before.
Of course, our vision for our students goes beyond facilities: Superintendent Skipper and I won’t settle for anything less than academic excellence across all our schools, accessible to all our students. Under
We’ll follow through on our landmark agreement with BPS teachers to co-design and transform how we serve students with disabilities by investing $50 million in inclusion so every student gets the education they deserve. And, because we know our students are people and family members first, we are investing in social workers and counselors at every school, with dedicated bilingual social workers trained to meet the needs of our multilingual students and families.
Last spring, to prepare our students for tomorrow’s opportunities, we announced new early college and innovation pathways at five high schools across BPS where young people get real work experience and take college level courses in fields like finance, health care, and biotech. Tonight, I am announcing that—in partnership with UMass Boston—
If we expect our young people to be the leaders our world needs, then
We recently celebrated the creation of our new Office of Youth Engagement and Advancement—that’s right, OYEA—with a group of students from the Blackstone School and they didn’t hold back. They asked about plans for after school programming and when the pool would reopen. And a third grader in a pink puffy coat wanted to know: “Como se siente ser alcaldesa? How does it feel to be mayor?” And I didn’t know what to say. “Ocupada,” I told her. “Busy.” Which is true. But it’s also so much more than that.
It can feel surreal and stressful, exhausting and empowering—it feels like the most important work in the world. But more than anything, it feels like a gift: To be able to get up every day and go to work for the city I love with people who love it, too. People unafraid to do things differently—willing to meet crises with creativity, and reach deep in the dirt
Thank you, and God bless the City—and people—of Boston.