briv
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From yesterdsay's Herald:
The Boston Herald said:Leaders laud plan to move school headquarters to Dudley Square
By Jerry Kronenberg, Natalie Sherman and Marie Szaniszlo | Friday, March 4, 2011
A bold plan by Mayor Thomas M. Menino to revitalize beleaguered Dudley Square by relocating the Boston Public Schools headquarters yesterday was enthusiastically hailed by members of the community and school officials.
?With Dudley being in the dead center of the city, it makes sense,? said School Committee Chairman Gregory G. Groover Sr., who lives in Roxbury and noted the site is within walking distance of a dozen schools. ?What better way to make Boston Public Schools more accessible than to be located in the very neighborhood where so many of the district?s students live??
Construction at the site ? the old Ferdinand Furniture building, a once-grand structure long regarded as an eyesore ? will cost $100 million to $115 million and begin within 12 months, according to the mayor. The mayor said his plan will create 350 new jobs in construction, and will lead to a revitalized Roxbury corridor.
?We will never know how great Boston can be until Dudley Square is great once again,? Menino said.
The plan would also inject millions of dollars into the crime-plagued, economically struggling community from school department employees, who would be eating at local restaurants and patronizing other nearby businesses, Groover said.
The city plans to pay for the project by selling municipal bonds that will be paid back by selling or leasing five buildings, including the current fire department headquarters on Southampton Street, 152 North St. and 174 North St., 7 Palmer St. and 43 Hawkins St.
Dot Joyce, the mayor?s spokeswoman, said public-private partnerships and federal neighborhood stabilization grants would also likely come into play.
The city will relocate 400 workers from Government Center ? and another 50 from other programs ? to the Ferdinand?s building.
Asked whether the $115 million the mayor?s plan calls for could be better spent on the cash-strapped system, which is slated for 250 layoffs, Boston Teachers Union President Richard Stutman said no.
?If the city can afford it, that?s great,? he said. ?Better to house (the department) in a neighborhood, especially in one that needs revitalization.?
But some Roxbury residents were wary, noting the state has vowed investment in the neighborhood for years, only to let plans founder.
?My first concern is that it actually happen,? Roxbury resident Sarah-Ann Shaw said. ?This is not the first time that there has been a plan for rehabilitation and the building still looks the same.?
This time, at-large City Councilor Felix Arroyo said, he is optimistic.
?(The mayor) was very specific with how he was going to do it, where the money was, where people were going to move from,? Arroyo said.
?And where he did it today was a strong place to do it ? at one of the most important speeches of the year.?
Article URL: http://www.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view.bg?articleid=1320923