In final major speech, Menino outlines challenges facing Boston and Mayor-elect …

Mayor Thomas M. Menino outlined the most significant challenges facing his successor as he delivered the final major speech Tuesday of his twenty year reign at Boston City Hall. In an address laced with self-deprecating humor, Menino trumpeted five-terms worth of accomplishments, talked about the transition to Mayor-elect Martin J. Walsh, and offered his assessment of the trials ahead. “I won’t be hanging around to critique his work. The job is hard enough already,” Menino told several hundred business leaders at a Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce breakfast at The Westin Boston Waterfront Continue reading >>>

Menino Delivers Last Major Speech As Boston Mayor

Tuesday, December 10, 2013, 11:43am Boston's longest-serving mayor, Thomas Menino, delivered his final major speech while in office to the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce Tuesday morning.  His prepared remarks were as follows:Thank you, Bob. Thank you, Paul. Thank you to everyone here. I have the best business community in the country.   The next time I give a big speech like this, it will probably Continue reading >>>

In His Final Speech, Mayor Menino Reflected on What’s Changed

He spoke to the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce. Tom Menino delivered his final speech as mayor of Boston to the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce Tuesday morning. He offered as a thesis that “the thing that makes a city most is change, the fact that something new is always just around the corner.” That was a convenient jumping off point for him to list what he sees as the most important changes he made as mayor in 20 years. (He’s not the only one reflecting on his tenure these days, by the way.) Among the accomplishments he listed were changes to Boston Public Schools, Continue reading >>>

30 years for Jewish Community Centers

The Jewish Community Centers of Greater Boston marked the 30th anniversary of its Leventhal-Sidman campus on Saturday night with a benefit at the InterContinental Boston. Businessmen and philanthropists Ted Cutler and Irwin Chafetz were honored during the celebration, which drew guests such as congressman Joe Kennedy III, Mark Sokoll, president and CEO of Jewish Community Centers of Greater Boston, and Barry Shrage, president of Combined Jewish Philanthropies. Continue reading >>>

New Boston Fund and Asian Community Development Corporation begin …

Submitted by New Boston Fund and Asian Community Development Corporation   New Boston Fund, Inc., a private equity real estate investment, development and management firm, and Asian Community Development Corporation (ACDC), a 26-year old community-based organization serving the Asian American community of Greater Boston, announced today that they have closed on the financing and ground lease for One Greenway, a 362-unit mixed-income development that will restore the vibrancy of Hudson Street by bringing housing back to both sides of the street, and Continue reading >>>

Devin Brown Honored With Gridiron Club Of Greater Boston Nelson Award

Dec. 9, 2013 AMHERST, Mass. - The Gridiron Club of Greater Boston announced that UMass football senior safety Devin Brown has been honored with the 68th Annual Nils V. "Swede" Nelson Award which is given annually to a New England football player who has demonstrated outstanding achievement in academics, athletics, sportsmanship and citizenship. Brown was one of the top performers for the Minutemen in the classroom and on the field this past season. A native of Piedmont, Calif., Brown ranked second on the team in tackles and was recognized as a member of the Capital One Academic All-District Continue reading >>>

Study: Boston area ranks high among ‘hottest’ housing markets in U.S.

Thomas Grillo Real Estate Editor- Boston Business Journal Email  | Twitter Home values in Greater Boston are expected to rise by 2.3 percent next year, ranking the region among the nation’s Top 10 hottest markets, according to a new study. Zillow (Nasdaq: Z), an online marketplace for homes, analyzed the 50 largest metro areas and scored each on unemployment rates and population growth while also Continue reading >>>

Questions trail state gambling commissioner

After Las Vegas casino mogul Steve Wynn toured the former industrial site in Everett where he was thinking of building a casino in November 2012, state gambling commission chairman Stephen Crosby didn’t mention that one of the land owners was his former business partner. A month later, when Wynn negotiated an option to pay an estimated $70 million for the land if Crosby’s commission approved a casino on the site, Crosby again said nothing about his four-decade relationship with Paul Lohnes, co-owner of the land. Even when Everett voters overwhelmingly approved Wynn’s proposal in June, leaving Continue reading >>>