JohnCostello
Active Member
- Joined
- May 14, 2008
- Messages
- 289
- Reaction score
- 266
You do realize that the chair of the CLF's Board of Trustees, Sara Molyneaux, is married to Don Law. Don Law as in I control or have portions of control at The Paradise, Brighton Music Hall, The Opera House, and the House of Blues, right?FWIW, there was a hearing today about the bill to rezone this spot to allow the stadium. From the parts I heard, basically everyone was in favor. That included elected officials, businesses, unions, various other stakeholders, and 90% of the members of the public who spoke. Even people and orgs with criticisms generally wanted to see it go forward. Criticisms were pretty much all traffic and public transit related. A couple of Boston officials spoke with concerns, didn't take a hard position, but still sounded generally in support.
The only* outright opposition I heard was from CLF. Their reasons have been the same: We should have a uniform plan for handling our waterfronts and port areas, instead of doing this one-off spot zoning. Also, the proposed stadium really needs some transportation study, at the very least, and ideally actual commitments to public transit funding. CFL seems correct there. Whether or not that should be enough to hold up the project is debatable.
*other than one or two concerned citizens
"Mr. Kraft" is stepping closer to the very lucrative 25,000 person concert level which puts him in direct competition with John Henry and the Jacobs Family as well as a person who has controlled a lot of concert revenue in the area for decades.
Any objection from CLF over a "working port" being lost should be taken would a massive grain of salt.