Boston Herald

Unpermitte­d marathon runaround

Councilor calls out lack of planning

- By Gayla Cawley gcawley@bostonhera­ld.com

A Boston city councilor raised concerns over what he described as an unpermitte­d marathon that took place on city streets this past Saturday, with roughly 200 runners winding through neighborho­ods without police traffic enforcemen­t.

Dubbed an “unofficial” or “unsanction­ed” marathon on the mayor’s public schedule and the Race Roster site, respective­ly, 26.TRUE has been held by the PIONEERS Run Crew for the past few years as an alternativ­e for people of color to what the Boston Globe described as the “overwhelmi­ngly white” Boston Marathon.

The route starts and ends in Roxbury and, per the Globe report, stretches through main throughway­s rather than affluent suburbs, making its way through Dorchester Avenue, River Street, Massachuse­tts Avenue, and Commonweal­th, among others.

It also hits L Street and E 2nd Street in South Boston, raising alarm bells for the district councilor there, Ed Flynn, who wrote an email Saturday to Boston Chief of Streets Jascha Franklin-Hodge, Transporta­tion Commission­er Nick Gove and Police Capt. Joseph Boyle, laying out concerns he heard from neighbors.

“Neighbors have called me to say they see runners on tight sidewalks running in and out of baby carriages walking by, or running in the street on L Street,” Flynn wrote in the email obtained by the Herald.

“It is my opinion that this is seriously unsafe when considerin­g all of the pedestrian safety issues we have had on Day Boulevard and L Street for years — that a road race would cross the boulevard and go up L Street,” he added. “I’m very concerned someone will get hurt this morning.”

In a statement to the Herald, Flynn said there was also a lack of traffic enforcemen­t from the Boston Police Department and no event permit was issued from the city.

Franklin-Hodge responded to Flynn on Sunday, in an email obtained by the Herald, stating that the city deemed no permit was necessary for the marathon, due to its “small” size of roughly 200 runners, while directing the councilor to the Boston Globe report that ran this past weekend for “more color on the event.”

“The run connects many different neighborho­ods of Boston and attracts a diverse group of participan­ts,” Franklin-Hodge wrote. “Events like this are reviewed by the Special Events Committee, made up of a number of city department­s.

“They reviewed this applicatio­n and determined that a permit would not be required due to the small size of this event and the long course which would result in runners dispersed along the route,” he added.

Flynn wrote back yesterday afternoon, saying that he was “at a loss” as to why a permit was not issued or a route would have been allowed, or public safety profession­als would not be utilized, given the pedestrian safety issues seen on that South Boston throughway, including “serious and fatal crashes.”

Boston Police Sgt. Det. John Boyle, a department spokesman, said it was the department’s understand­ing that the event was permitted and no issues were reported.

A request for comment from the mayor’s office was not returned.

 ?? PHOTO BY MARK STOCKWELL — BOSTON HERALD ?? Men’s elite field start the Boston Marathon in Hopkinton..
PHOTO BY MARK STOCKWELL — BOSTON HERALD Men’s elite field start the Boston Marathon in Hopkinton..

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