My rank in terms of what I actually want the city to try to provide:
1. C: Better transportation options. hopefully this means expanded/denser bike share and improved bus service where the city can intervene. I'd love for it to mean better rail transit, but it's hard to imagine the city having much of an ability to do anything about that.
2. E: A more environmentally-friendly city. I imagine this being similar to what I wrote for C, with the possible, hopeful addition of things like incentivized solar installation on homes, expanded bike parking, congestion pricing, neighborhood parking fees, and expanded and more efficient recycling programs.
3. I: More vibrant neighborhoods. I hope this means added density where there is demand, near transit, and along commercial corridors with single-story taxpayers. I also hope this means expanded liquor licenses and things of that sort.
4. D: Quality education for all. Oh yeah. With smart investments in BPS, the school system can improve. With an improved school system, families would slow the rate of movement to the suburbs when their kids reach school age. This would be great for the city.
5. A: Housing I can afford. I shy away from ranking this so highly as I know the city has it wrong. Ideally, this would be my #1 selection if I believed the city wanted to remove barriers to development, and even incentivize development in the highest-demand parts of the city, thus addressing our housing shortage and slowing the increase in market-rate pricing for housing. Sadly, I fear the city may actually continue to legislate the market (out of existence) by demanding that developers subsidize more housing on their dime, further disentivizing development, and making housing LESS affordable, by exacerbating the shortage of supply. If that's the case, then bump this one to the absolute bottom of my list. For now, I'll keep it around the middle of my ranking, and remain foolishly hopeful.
6. B: Safer neighborhoods. This is great, but I don't rank it as highly because I don't know if there is much that the city itself can do. Obviously, smart investments in police are a good idea. Crime is too often demographic and economically related, and not really something the city can do a TON about. Although, they definitely can help make some neighborhoods safer.
7. F: Great parks and public spaces. If this means improving our existing parks and public spaces, as well as improving our network (i.e. gaps in the Emerald Necklace, extending Esplanade into Allston), then you can bump this up a couple spots. If this is really what I fear it is: "you can't have too many parks! There's an unused parcel where residential demand is high. Well, I hate change and development, and parks are nice. Let's put a useless park there!" then you can drop this to the bottom.
8. G: A more innovative and creative city. This kind of seems like a bunch of corporate-mumbo-jumbo and I'm not entirely sure what they mean with these catch words. But, if they mean applying smart, technological solutions to public, city issues, then you can bump this up a couple spots. Such as, smart parking-meters like in Somerville or even incentivize the development of incubator spaces. If they are just using catch words with no substance ("oh hey! creativity! innovation!"), then you can drop this to the bottom.
9. H: Expanded job opportunities. Sounds great. Not the city's job. Incentivize development, both housing and commercial, and decrease tax burdens on companies who hire local employees.. That's about all the city can do.