Boston Herald

‘There should be some sort of discipline’

Walsh slams BHA message encouragin­g residents to leave Hub

- By JORDAN GRAHAM — jordan.graham@bostonhera­ld.com

A message from a Boston Housing Authority employee last week that implied residents’ children could have better lives outside of Boston was translated in two languages before it was sent to thousands of residents, officials said, and similar language was posted on the BHA website, as Mayor Martin J. Walsh called for the employee responsibl­e to be discipline­d.

“I’m certainly not happy about it,” Walsh said yesterday. “There should be some sort of discipline, there’s no question about it. We’ll see as we move forward.”

The Herald reported yesterday a letter signed by Jonathan Tarleton, director of the BHA’s Expanding Choice in Housing Opportunit­ies office, promoted the program to residents by implying Boston is an undesirabl­e place to live. Tarleton has been on the job only a few months.

“You may be eligible for ECHO if you: would like to move to a community in Greater Boston with good schools and low crime,” the letter said.

Residents said the letter was insulting, and seemed to suggest the BHA wants its residents to leave the city. Tarleton did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

The letter was first posted on bulletin boards and was quickly taken down, but Walsh said he and BHA Administra­tor William McGonagle did not know it was mailed out until late last week. Similar language was posted on the BHA’s website for the ECHO program.

Like many BHA communicat­ions to residents, the letter was translated into Spanish and Chinese before it was sent, according to a PDF that remained on the BHA website yesterday afternoon. The PDF was taken down last night. Language similar to the letter, which implied there are better options for parents outside of Boston, also appeared on the BHA’s official informatio­n page for the ECHO program. That was removed earlier this week.

Walsh said there should be consequenc­es for the letter, but declined to say what that should be.

“This is very sloppy work with an employee and I know that Billy is going to be handling that situation,” Walsh said, referring to McGonagle.

In a statement yesterday, the BHA said it has opened a review of the letter and will decide on potential discipline after that is concluded.

The Boston Housing Authority is undertakin­g a complete and thorough review of the recent release of the letter regarding the ECHO program,” spokeswoma­n Lydia Agro said. “This will include a review of whether or not personnel action, discipline and or a reorganiza­tion is warranted.”

Agro also said the BHA is reviewing its “communicat­ions policies and protocols” in an effort to avoid unauthoriz­ed communicat­ions.

Friday, McGonagle said the letter was sent without approval, calling it an insult to Boston residents.

“That letter was not properly vetted and not authorized,” McGonagle said Friday. “I would not have approved a letter that describes that program that inartfully or that distastefu­lly.”

The letter was sent to residents who have BHA Section 8 housing vouchers and have children under the age of 10, about 2,700 residents.

“It sends a bad message. That is not what the intent of that letter should have been and that’s not how the letter should have gone out,” Walsh said. “That’s not my message and that is not the Housing Authority’s message and that will not be the Housing Authority’s message.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY JEFF PORTER, ABOVE; MATT WEST, BELOW LEFT; AND ANGELA ROWLINGS, BELOW RIGHT ?? THAT’S A STRETCH: Mayor Martin J. Walsh responds yesterday to a letter saying the school system is failing and the crime rate is high. Below, Boston police on patrol and a school bus during the first few weeks of classes.
STAFF PHOTOS BY JEFF PORTER, ABOVE; MATT WEST, BELOW LEFT; AND ANGELA ROWLINGS, BELOW RIGHT THAT’S A STRETCH: Mayor Martin J. Walsh responds yesterday to a letter saying the school system is failing and the crime rate is high. Below, Boston police on patrol and a school bus during the first few weeks of classes.
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