As far as I can tell, the BRA still largely exists as it has for years despite Wu saying that would be abolished. There is still a fairly low height ceiling making lots of projects not built as of right. The design/review/approval process needs to be streamlined and fast tracked. The city could create a new economic improvement district downtown to create its own rules distinct from the other neighborhoods. It could create a marketing campaign to highlight how far downtown has fallen and positive steps to create new housing there. Lots of possibilities. One thing I'm sure of is Wu will never oust affordable housing requirements and nor should she.
I voted for Wu the first go around but its very clear her priorities are not focused downtown, backbay, seaport, south end, fenway, south boston, north end etc etc. Last time I checked there's still an eyesore of a bridge waiting to fall in the channel in the heart of the city. There are early closing times, lack of happy hours, lack of affordable options downtown, lack of public bathrooms, park renovations that take years instead of months. The parks department has been terrible since covid, grass doesnt get cut for weeks. There's an ocean of issues that should be addressed in what should be the most important part of the city.
What I see here/from Wu is representative of a much larger trend in the U.S.: a refusal to see (either at present or aspirationally) the heart of large city downtowns as a true
community in/of themselves. They're, instead, almost viewed like a piece of infrastructure, as opposed to a 24/7 home/backyard for humans. The stereotype is somewhat understandable, given the 9am-5pm "Banker's" office underpinnings. But if one harbors the stereotype (especially a mayor), it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. Treat it like a cold, boring piece of back-office and it becomes that (till it dies).
I would definitely push back on the notion that downtown Boston is dead, though. Yes, it is slow many times of the week (however,
not so 9am-7pm, Tues - Thurs). But it is nowhere near dead. I was just in Portland, OR. My gosh. And I love Portland, which still has lots of bright spots in the surroundings and pockets of the city, but as a whole, that place is (presently) in SO much worse shape than downtown Boston. Boston is (relatively speaking) clean, safe, with most buildings at least partly occupied (some very much so), many storefronts occupied; it is actively being utilized.
In other words: there are good bones in Boston, and still time to act. IF businesses can stay open later, and the ~few hundred residential conversions can become ~few thousand, then it will be fine. But we need a mayor with vision.
Wu is smart, but has too many concurrent priorities, many of which involve serving the outlying neighborhoods and city-wide issues. A smaller agenda balancing a few city-wide issues with a few core neighborhood issues would (IMO) make her more effective. I had thought appointing Jemison might help (and am still willing to give him a bit more time in my mind).