REVERE, MASS. (WHDH) – Revere Mayor Brian Arrigo is frustrated with a plan proposed by Boston officials to move homeless people from the area of Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Cass Boulevard into a hotel on Route 1.
“As of right now, it’s not happening,” Arrigo said, adding that Boston’s Acting Mayor Kim Janey never informed him of the proposal to transfer the homeless population that sits along Massachusetts Avenue and Melnea Cass Boulevard into rooms at the Quality Inn hotel.
“The folks that are struggling at Mass. and Cass need a lot of help,” Arrigo said Wednesday. “They need a lot of services and they need a lot of support. Putting them in a room, sending them to a hotel room isn’t what we know needs to happen.”
While Arrigo noted that he had been speaking with Boston officials about the region’s opioid addiction crisis, he says no specific plans were ever shared with him until the Revere Police Department were suddenly asked to provide help with security.
“The frustration comes from asking for a detail before anyone has even signed off on the use of the hotel,” Arrigo explained. “That’s just not how these things happen in an effective manner.”
Janey disputes that and claims the Boston Public Health Commission did review plans with Arrigo and his team.
“Municipal leaders who say that we need to do this work as a region but who fail to take responsibility in their own city or town may be making a good sound bite. But it does not solve the problem,” she wrote in a statement.
Arrigo says he is willing to work with Janey, as long as other cities around the area are included in solving the issue.
He argued that the Quality Inn is a bad location with little access to transportation and other resources.
“There had been no building inspections of the site, been no fire inspections, all of these procedural processes put in place were not done,” he said.
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