Kendra Hicks, currently director of radical philanthropy at Resist, and a former Boston street worker, says she is running for the District 6 City Council seat now held by Matt O'Malley.
Whether it be organizing against a highway, fending off the construction of a Kmart, or calling for the city to prioritize Youth First in Jackson Square, the story of District 6 is the story of ordinary people coming together to make their neighborhoods better for everyone. Kendra Hicks is a part of that story.
The district includes Jamaica Plain and West Roxbury and a small strip of Roslindale. O'Malley was first elected to the seat in 2010.
Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!
Ad:
Comments
LOVE LOVE LOVE
By Kenneth Johnson
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 11:38am
Love x3 Kendra, very excited in seeing her on this elevated platform.
What ?
By Anon.Y.Mouse
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 11:45am
What is a 'street worker'??
An Honorable Job
By Citygirl
Thu, 09/03/2020 - 11:14am
Street workers, not to be confused with sex workers, are people who walk around the community and talk to and mentor at risk youths. They walk up to drug dealers, prostitutes, etc and talk with them about why they do what they so, how they can make better choices and give resources available to change their lives. They are the people on the ground who try to curb violence and gang involvement through mentorship and just good old listening. Not everything is a joke....
Sounds good but....
By Anon
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 12:28pm
What did she recommend would replace the highway and Kmart projects and why? This report is incomplete. Being against something is easy.
She wasn't involved in those fights
By adamg
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 10:26pm
I hadn't heard about the KMart, but I suspect she wasn't even here for the highway fight (which happened when Tom Menino was a young man). She was giving them as examples of JP's fighting spirit.
Kmart
By Observer
Thu, 09/03/2020 - 10:29am
Background
Good.
By Jay Pee
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 12:58pm
When my neighbors and I have run into issues with the city, O'Malley has been nowhere to be found. The at-large councilors, especially Michael "Five Car" Flaherty, stepped up to fill his boots. I'd vote for Althea Garrison before voting O'Malley.
While i agree with you regarding O'Malley
By anon
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 2:54pm
It's hard to imagine someone with her current title is going to be a Frank Baker.
The council as a whole needs to get back to serving it neighborhoods and resolving daily issues for constituents. 99% of their time is currently spent grandstanding.
What sort of problems did you
By anon
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 11:10pm
What sort of problems did you have with the city? I'm curious if maybe Councilor O'Malley was doing the majority of his constituents will by leaving you be.
O'Malley is a do-nothing hack!
By Anon
Thu, 09/03/2020 - 12:26pm
The only thing I can think of that he has done in his tenure is put sunscreen dispensers up at Millennium Park (and they are gone now). He is an idiot. Time to move on Matt, brush up that resume for your next hack job. He does NOTHING for his constituents! What a loser! West Roxbury will be glad to see him go - don't let the door hit you in the *ss on your way out!
Extra Good!
By Residente
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 1:36pm
It's about time. O'Malley has also been bad when it comes to issues of racial justice. He voted to support the Mayor's budget which only called for a 3% cut to police overtime pay instead of 10% of the total budget that the other councilors were asking for. I also haven't heard him publicly state whether he supports suspending the exam school exam this year as the NAACP and others have called for. I think he voted to suspend the test, but he should be more vocal about it and speak up at school committee hearings.
Maybe unpopular to disagree, but....
By Anon
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 2:55pm
Without studying his whole record, I don't think these two items are proof of a lack of commitment to racial justice. There were some passionate feelings about the mayor's budget, and it was hard to come out in favor of the budget, but I remember that there were reasonable arguments to vote for the mayor's budget even with a strong commitment to racial justice.
He voted to support the Mayor's budget which only called for a 3% cut to police overtime pay instead of 10% of the total budget that the other councilors were asking for.
Nope
By tmrozzie
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 3:05pm
There is 0% chance Matt will ever vote for anything that takes away the privileges of his voters, and that means he's unmovable on BPD budgets and BPS exam schools.
Isnt that the point
By anon
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 3:30pm
Of electing a representative?
Racial Justice
By markk
Thu, 09/03/2020 - 3:13am
He also endorsed Greg Henning for Suffolk DA.
And JK3 but that wasn't a racial justice issue.
Really??
By JohnAKeith
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 1:38pm
Who announces a run for city council 14 months prior to the election?
Plywood Doug disagrees.
By bulgingbuick
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 1:47pm
It's never too early to build signs. If a certain candidate consulted with Plywood Doug last year, Murph would be eating lunch in Naples right now instead of sleeping at the Brooke.
As an extra bonus
By erik g
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 2:59pm
if you paint enough plywood signs, then when you lose by 80 points, you can fashion them into a crude shelter. Win-win!
Someone who needs time to fundraise and build support?
By tmrozzie
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 3:04pm
If we only expect candidates who can start a race with $50,000 that really limits who can legitimately run.
O'Malley has $160k sitting around after being unchallenged last cycle.
Andrea Campbell, I think
By dpalomares
Thu, 09/03/2020 - 12:07am
I think she announced September in '14, and started door-knocking early in '15, correct me if I'm wrong. I remember this because years ago Yancy only started campaigning in the summertime, just before the election and Campbell had campaigned for over six months.
EDIT: Grammer
Great.
By Mont
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 2:56pm
Matt doesn’t stand for anything. He goes and scores “yay progressive” points on things that don’t impact anyone’s lives. He’ll talk and talk to constituents. But even when he knows what’s right he won’t stand up.
He certainly must be perplexed.
By bulgingbuick
Thu, 09/03/2020 - 8:21am
Expert at political hide and seek and now, dammit, he's been found.
She sounds interesting and qualified.
By Lee
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 3:36pm
I look forward to hearing more about her.
Agreed, however it is still an uphill climb.
By bulgingbuick
Thu, 09/03/2020 - 4:16pm
Conservative West Roxbury gets its vote out and cannot be looked upon as the progressive bastion the JP part of the district represents. It's a pure bellybutton contest.
What's a street worker?
By anon
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 4:53pm
What's a street worker?
An anti-violence worker, basically
By adamg
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 10:31pm
Somebody who works on, well, the street, to try to keep things from boiling over, by working with young people in general and gang members in particular. BCYF is better known for its community centers, but it has a street worker program, for example.
Oh this is great
By eeka
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 5:19pm
I've been very impressed with her work.
Freelance copy editor
By Freelance copy ...
Wed, 09/02/2020 - 10:42pm
Hey Universal Hub, thanks for all your very up to date local coverage. Would you consider changing StreetWorker to be capitalized and written as one word, maybe adding BCYF before it to clarify for readers that it is one of the city's youth programs? It is not clear as written what a (lowercase) street worker is to folks who are not up on names of Boston's youth programming.
Few more details needed
By Optimistic
Thu, 09/03/2020 - 7:39pm
Yeah. I’ll be that person but I’m just curious about her educational background. English High, exam school, college, major, focus? This will help folks understand where her other strengths lie. Her youth activism, art background and non-profit leadership is all mentioned and extremely interesting. I’d just like to hear more about her educational background. Being a City Councilor requires knowledge in economics and accounting, zoning, public health, local law, education, public and municipal services etc. These are items one can learn through academia either in a cursory fashion or intensely.
Add comment