Imperial Valley Press

Boston turns historic page with 1st Black, 1st female mayor

- AP Photo/Elise Amendola

BOSTON (AP) — Kim Janey, who as a child had rocks hurled at her school bus during Boston’s desegregat­ion era, marked her historic elevation as the first woman and first Black person to serve as mayor of the city with a ceremonial swearing-in event Wednesday.

Janey replaces fellow Democrat Marty Walsh, who resigned Monday to become President Joe Biden’s labor secretary. She was the City Council president and will serve as acting mayor until a mayoral election in the fall.

Janey hasn’t said whether she’ll run. But she embraced the groundbrea­king nature of Wednesday’s transition.

“Today is a new day. I stand before you as the first woman and the first Black mayor of Boston, the city that I love,” Janey said during the City Hall event. “I come to this day with life experience that is different from the men who came before me.”

Janey, 55, promised to bring urgency to the job. She said her administra­tion will be open to those who have felt disconnect­ed from the city’s power structure.

Helping the city emerge from the pandemic and creating a more equitable economy will be among the top goals of her administra­tion, according to Janey, who pledged to boost testing and vaccine access in neighborho­ods hardest hit by COVID-19.

Janey also promised to address food, housing and public transporta­tion insecurity and work to close the city’s wealth gap in part by ensuring that minority-owned businesses have a fairer shot at city contracts. She also pledged to work to ensure that police in the

city serve all residents fairly.

“Over the past year, the same communitie­s hardest hit by the public health crisis have experience­d the highest rate of housing and food insecurity,” Janey said. “I will address these economic disparitie­s with new urgency to reopen Boston’s economy with equity.”

Justice Kimberly Budd, who administer­ed the oath, was named chief justice of the Massachuse­tts Supreme Judicial Court in 2020, the first Black woman to lead the state’s highest court.

U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley, who presided over the ceremony, was the first Black woman both to serve on the City Council and to be elected to Congress from Massachuse­tts.

Pressley described Janey as “a proud fourth-generation daughter of Roxbury,” the heart of the city’s Black community.

“She will lead with clear eyes, a full heart, and a steady hand,” Pressley said. “She will make a profound difference.”

The Rev. Willie Bodrick, II, senior pastor at the Twelfth Baptist Church, delivered the invocation.

Janey’s grandfathe­r, Daniel Benjamin Janey, was a member of Twelfth Baptist Church, where Martin Luther King Jr. worshiped while attending Boston University. Her father was one of only eight Black students to graduate from the city’s prestigiou­s Boston Latin School in 1964.

During the second phase of Boston’s tumultuous school desegregat­ion era, Janey was bused as an 11-year-old girl to the largely white neighborho­od of Charlestow­n.

 ??  ?? Former Boston City Council President Kim Janey, 55, speaks after being sworn in as Boston’s new mayor at City Hall, on Wednesday in Boston.
Former Boston City Council President Kim Janey, 55, speaks after being sworn in as Boston’s new mayor at City Hall, on Wednesday in Boston.

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