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By James Creamer at the Honan Apartment
Ground-Breaking, Dec. 4, 2003
Board Member, Chair of the Housing Committee
Community Development Corporation
Today we start to build housing on the remains of a fish plant. Boy,
that was a really tough sell in this neighborhood. Ha! But besides the
brick and mortar and all the money that it takes, what we are building
from are ideas based on our relationships--relations to our friends
and neighbors. Buildings are built on ground but forgive me if I say
they are grounded in this case on the people that have gone before,
the ideas and the ideals of the ordinary people who sit on committees,
like the Housing committee I chair, Jim Philip, Charlie Vasiliades,
Denis Garriepy, Nan Evans, Sandy Rose and others and our untiring staff
who put up with our foibles, all of whom who've been to so many committee
meetings they may themselves get committed. But seriously, there's nothing
new under the sun. We build our ideas from the germs of ideas planted
in us by the people before, ideas of fairness and justice and democracy,
from people like Anita Bromberg, Agnes Porter and Andy Davis, and many
others who are gone. People whose ideas made sense to us. Brian Honan
was visited by those ideas during his short but vibrant life and held
strongly to a commitment to make housing affordable to the neighbors
he grew up with and to our new neighbors. Many of these neighbors are
gone, driven out by high prices and high rents. Allston has the reputation
of being a transitional neighborhood, sort of a subway stop where people
pass each other on the platform but only connect to their trains and
not to each other ---but that notion is diminished today. Today we plant
another proverbial seed of an idea, that affordable housing can indeed
be built so that we can keep this a neighborhood made up of the neighbors
we grew up with, so our parents our children and our grandchildren can
know the idea of what a neighborhood is and keep that idea and pass
it on to others.
Great and beneficent institutions are gathered here to give support
both intellectually and financially for our project and we couldn't
do it without them but if we didn't have an idea, a concept then we'd
never see their money. So let's take a minute to gather strength from
the commitment and ideals passed down to us and to commit ourselves
to spread those ideas to others. Brian J. Honan Apartments will be a
physical manifestation of that commitment. I think Brian would like
that and we'll remember his ideas and commitment and we'll remember
him as we pass by.
My chief role today is to introduce Brian's brother Rep. Kevin Honan
who I've known since his mother told him to go stuff envelopes for his
predecessor Tom Gallagher. Those were some big shoes to fill and Kevin
has done admirably as an advocate for affordable housing.
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