10 Teens Compete to Become the Next Miss New Bedford’s Outstanding Teen and Win a $500 Scholarship, Saturday January 13th

On Saturday January 13th, ten young women will compete to become the next Miss New Bedford’s Outstanding Teen. The pageant takes place at 6:00PM at Greater New Bedford Regional Vocational Technical High School, located at 1121 Ashley Boulevard in New Bedford.

A local preliminary competition to the Miss Massachusetts’ Outstanding Teen and Miss America’s Outstanding Teen scholarship programs, the pageant emphasizes scholarship and service to the community. This year’s winner will receive a $500 educational scholarship, in addition to hundreds of dollars in additional prizes. Runners-up and special awards winners will also receive scholarship money and awards.

The pageant itself is a “little sister” program to the annual Miss New Bedford Pageant. Contestants compete in five stages of scored competition: a private six-minute Interview, Talent, Physical Fitness, Evening Wear, and On-Stage Question. Contestants are expected to exude confidence and drive, demonstrate academic excellence, and show a commitment to service. Each contestant has chosen her own personal ‘platform,’ or cause, which she will promote and advance during her year, in addition to serving as a role model for young girls in the Greater New Bedford area.

The reigning Miss New Bedford’s Outstanding Teen is Jordan St. Onge, 16, from Fairhaven. During her year, Jordan made more than 115 appearances throughout the community. Her year of service was devoted to raising awareness of lung cancer, inspired by her grandmother who developed lung cancer but never smoked. Jordan has educated the community on the dangers of second hand smoke, has engaged in various efforts of the American Lung Association, and has even spoken to legislators at the State House about related bills. Jordan also represented New Bedford in the Miss Massachusetts’ Outstanding Teen pageant where she placed as first runner-up.

Tickets purchased in advance are $20 for adults and $15 for children/seniors. At the door, all tickets for patrons of all ages will be a flat rate of $20. You may reserve tickets by contacting tickets@missnewbedford.org or 508-971-9564.

This year’s contestants are:

Marcie Araujo, a 13-year-old seventh grader at Normandin Middle School. She will perform an innovative ballet dance for her talent, and her platform is titled, “Elderly Veterans in Need.”

Emma Boudreau, a 15-year-old sophomore at Apponequet Regional High School. She will tap dance for her talent, and her platform is titled, “Arrive Alive: Promoting Safe Driving Practices.”

Destiny Capellan, a 15-year-old sophomore at City on a Hill Public Charter School. She will offer a poetry reading for her talent, and her platform focuses on anti-bullying efforts and bullying awareness.

Victoria Fernandes, a 14-year-old freshman at Greater New Bedford Regional Vocational Technical High School. She will tap dance for her talent, and her platform focuses on “Pancreatic Cancer Research Funding.”

Kieyana Fleming, a 14-year-old eighth grader at Normandin Middle School. She will play piano for her talent, and her platform is dedicated to raising awareness of brain tumors.

Victoria Kalisz, a 16-year-old sophomore at Fairhaven High School. She will sing for her talent, and her platform is titled, “Rise Up; Rise In Spite of Everything.”

Rachel Perry, a 15-year-old sophomore at Old Rochester Regional High School. She will play the violin for her talent, and her platform is titled, “Healing Song: The Power of Music to Heal the Brain.”

Erin Scott, a 15-year-old sophomore at Old Rochester Regional High School. She will sing for her talent, and her platform focuses on keeping music and art programs in schools.

Alexandra Soares, a 15-year-old sophomore at New Bedford High School. She will dance for her talent and her platform is titled, “Dance to Enhance: Creating a Better Version of Yourself Through the Performing Arts.”

Abigail Souza, a 13-year-old eighth grader at All Saints Catholic School. She will sing for her talent, and her platform is titled, “Hypertension Awareness in Today’s Youth: Educate, Diagnose, Conquer!”




VIDEO: The LGBTQ Voice discusses experiencing hate

During The LGBTQ Voice’s first episode, we asked our guests about their experiences with hate and if they are optimistic about 2018 and the future.

Full episode: https://www.newbedfordguide.com/the-lgbtq-voice-show-episode-1-introduction-to-the-organizations/2018/01/05

Catch The LGBTQ Voice on New Bedford Guide’s Facebook page every Tuesday at 7pm.




New Bedford cold weather overflow shelter open tonight, Jan. 06

Due to the continued brutal weather and low temperatures, the overflow will be opened again tonight. All inquiries can be forwarded to the Sister Rose House on 71 Division Street and 1-800-homeless.




The LGBTQ Voice show – Episode 1 – Introduction to the organizations

The LGBTQ Voice live with an introduction to the South Coast LGBTQ Network, NB-AGLY, LGBTQ Supper Club, Project Yes and Pride Cafe.

Catch The LGBTQ Voice on New Bedford Guide’s Facebook page every Tuesday at 7pm.

Want to sponsor the show? Email leo@newbedfordguide.com




Zeiterion presents High Powered Pulse of Japan’s Yamato Drummers, Jan. 21

The Yamato Drummers travel the world with Japan’s traditional Taiko drums, landing at the Zeiterion Performing Arts Center on Sunday, January 21, at 4:00 p.m. Combining riveting musicianship and high-energy movement, the troupe offers a spectacular family-family performance. Tickets range from $29 to $49 and can be purchased by calling 508-994-2900, online at Zeiterion.org, or at the Zeiterion Box Office. Group sales are available for groups of 10 or more and can be purchased by calling 508-997-5664 x123.

Named for ‘the land of Yamato,” the birthplace of Japanese culture, the Yamato Drummers put their very souls into the unusual instruments with extraordinary precision and stamina. These masters put on an extraordinary visual performance, with designed costumes and a remarkable assortment of Taiko drums made from ancient trees. Their sound evokes what the Japanese call “Tamashy,” translated as soul, spirit, and psyche – the basic elements of life. It is something that is invisible and intangible, but whose existence is certainly felt.

The troupe sets out to send audiences home after each performance with a new vitality and passion for life. As they continue to tour and perform throughout Japan and around the world, whether in concerts, classrooms, school assemblies or workshops, they cherish and uphold Yamato, the spirit of Japan. Their tour is sponsored by the Japan Foundation.

Yamato Drummers was founded in Japan’s Nara Prefecture in 1993. They have given over 2,500 performances in 51 countries and regions. Every year, Yamato tours the world for 6 to 10 months, creating and presenting original Yamato compositions and stages. As a result of this relentless tour schedule, pursued over more than 10 years, audiences around the world await their arrival every year in growing numbers, sustaining and encouraging their efforts.

Also happening at the Zeiterion on the week of January 21:

Dance Barre: How Ballets Come Together and Fall Apart
Wednesday, January 24, 7:00 p.m.
Free

Sit on-stage in a café setting with other dance fans for an engaging experience – like a book group for dance. Join Brown University professor, Sydney Skybetter, for a journey through ballet history to our contemporary moment, with digressions on the proper use of swords, why miming is the worst, how ballet stages were death traps until the 1980s and why choreographer Jessica Lang may be our best hope for the future of the art form.

An Evening with Patti Smith
Friday, January 26, 8:00 p.m.
Tickets: $30, including a copy of Smith’s book Devotion

Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee, iconic artist, and author Patti Smith reads from her latest book, Devotion, a deeply personal look at her creative process, inspirations, and unexpected connections.

The Soap Myth starring Ed Asner
Saturday, January 27, at 7 p.m.
Tickets: $18 / $36

The Soap Myth questions who has the right to write history – those people who have lived it, those who study and protect it, or those who would seek to distort its existence? This critically-acclaimed play by Jeff Cohen stars Emmy Award-winning Ed Asner and features Johanna Day, Blair Baker, and Ned Eisenberg in a staged reading directed by Pam Berlin. It’s presented in association with Jewish Federation of Greater New Bedford and Burke Cohen Entertainment on International Holocaust Remembrance Day. It will be followed by a moderated Q&A Session that includes playwright Jeff Cohen.




New Bedford cold weather overflow shelter open tonight, Jan. 05

Due to the continued brutal weather and low temperatures, the overflow will be opened again tonight. All inquiries can be forwarded to the Sister Rose House on 71 Division Street and 1-800-homeless.




New Bedford Mayor Jon Mitchell’s 2018 Inaugural Address

Mayor Jonathan F. Mitchell
January 1, 2018
Zeiterion Performing Arts Center, New Bedford, Massachusetts

[text as prepared]

Judges Veary and Fernandes, members of the City Council, School Committee and Board of Assessors, honored guests, citizens and friends of New Bedford:

Let me begin by thanking everyone for braving the cold tonight, and those of you who went the extra mile and recorded today’s college bowl games. The rest of us will have to do our part and refrain from sharing the updated scores with you.

Tonight, as we turn the page to a new calendar year and new term of office, we size up the challenges before us with the strength of confidence gained in recent success. And that confidence is well-placed.

In the last few years, New Bedford has achieved unmistakable progress along multiple fronts. The pace of job growth, the condition of the city’s physical environment, the stabilization of municipal finances, the purposeful operation of our schools, and the strength of the city’s reputation are unlike anything we’ve seen in a long time. Together we have done things once assumed to be out of New Bedford’s reach.

There are more achievements in the pipeline to celebrate — more ribbon cuttings and announcements that affirm the growing recognition that New Bedford is an ascending city.

Shaping the Strategy

But we’re not in it for recognition; we don’t play the game for the trophy; we don’t seek praise for its own sake. Our focus — our devotion — is to build a city that will be fertile ground for our children and grandchildren to live fulfilling lives. Our success will depend on our ability to think strategically in light of what lies ahead of us, and to have the discipline to implement our strategy faithfully — and together.

As we look ahead, we have to take stock in what I believe is the single most important trend in our national economy. America today is enjoying a prolonged period of economic growth that is disproportionately concentrated in its largest cities. America’s big cities are living in a golden age right now, driven by the presence of major research universities, international airports, and corporate headquarters. They are home to virtually all of America’s venture capital, new office construction, and foreign investment. Unemployment is negligible in these places, real estate prices are skyrocketing, and the gap between the haves and have-nots is growing. These places are marked by construction cranes, fifty-dollar-a-plate meals, and more recently, driverless cars. Boston and New York are the two closest of many examples, and their seemingly unabated growth may have profound implications for the rest of America.

So what does that mean for a mid-size city like us that is not part of a large metropolitan area, and doesn’t have the same cards to play?

It means that we have to compete. We operate in the same global economy as these cities after all. At the same time, we shouldn’t see ourselves as trying to be like them or beat them at their own game. But we can be something different. In an America where the biggest cities are becoming more congested, expensive and in some cases, more violent, cities our size offer a more manageable alternative. Here, and in other mid-size cities, one can have those things that people like in cities — the public spaces, the walkable streets, the cultural amenities, and so forth — but without feeling crushed and disconnected at the same time. Portland, Maine and Charleston, South Carolina are good examples of cities — one a little smaller than us and the other little bigger — that are succeeding along these lines.

My point is that a city doesn’t have to be a major metropolis to be successful in offering its residents an opportunity for a good life.

So how do we make that happen here?

Quality of Life

First and foremost, we have to focus relentlessly on making New Bedford, quite simply, a really nice place to live. This might sound like stating the obvious. Of course everyone wants to have safe neighborhoods, more pleasant parks, cleaner streets, and higher performing schools. Local government after all is set up to accomplish such things. But the point I’m making is that enhancing the city’s quality of life should be seen not simply as an end in itself, but also as a means of sustaining the city in the long run. We will attract more business and excite greater civic participation the more people believe that this is a place they’d like to be in. A high quality of life is a great selling point for any city.

We are proud of how we’ve been able to elevate the city’s quality of life these last few years. But there’s more to do.

We will continue to invest in those things that make living in New Bedford pleasant, interesting and rewarding. In the year ahead, we will continue to build and restore our public spaces, which in recent years has included the construction of five new parks and the HarborWalk and CoveWalk. A staple of a good city life is being able to walk to an inviting park, and that’s exactly what we are going to deliver, for everyone in this city.

To exalt New Bedford’s glorious past, we will invest in historic preservation more than ever before. To beautify our streets and clean our air, we will continue the most ambitious tree planting program in our lifetime. And to provide relief to shock absorbers, we will dedicate steady funding for road improvement so that they are not allowed to fall into disrepair again as they had for decades.

We will make our city cleaner and more put together than it has been in anyone’s memory.

We will make the most of our access to the water by working to connect the downtown and the waterfront, and begin constructing the RiverWalk with the goal of giving the North End what the same kind of waterfront amenities that the South End has had.

We will prioritize public safety. New Bedford is a safe city, but not every neighborhood is nearly safe enough. We will intensify our community policing and code enforcement efforts in our most distressed neighborhoods so they are not left behind as the rest of the city as a whole progresses.
Schools

To be successful, a city also must create pathways for its citizens to reach their full potential. More than anything else, that means we must offer our city’s children a public school education that enables them to thrive as adults.

Our schools have come a long way these last few years, because we refused to sit idly by while our kids were losing out on the education they deserved. The progress has been marked not only by the state’s recent decision to end its monitoring of the district but also the steady rise in test scores across many schools, and the significant rise in the four year graduation rate. It is a school district that is far more accountable to the public and parents alike, as it should be.

But make no mistake, the work is not done. Indeed, we should do everything in our power to accelerate school improvement. Each child has only one chance at a great education, and doesn’t have the luxury of waiting long for improvement.

The most important decision we will make for our school children these next few years will be to select a first rate leader for our school district.

In undertaking this task as a community, we must be crystal clear about one thing: the change in leadership should not be understood as an occasion to ease up on the pedal of reform. Our students cannot afford for us to lower the bar.

Similarly, we must resist the temptation to seek a school leader based on opinions about the current school leadership. The selection rather should be based solely on which candidate can lead the district most effectively toward its goals, namely to offer a high quality education to every child and to build a system of schools that attracts families to the city.

Achieving these goals will take energy and persistence. It will require the building and rebuilding of relationships that are necessary to support and nurture a strong school culture. For our kids and our city, we want to build a school system where kids are eager to go to school in the morning, parents are proud to send them there, and teachers and principals derive personal satisfaction from the hard and important work they do.

Finances

All of our efforts to improve our city will depend on our ability to manage our finances. Our heightened bond rating reflects that we have been effective at it, but it has not been easy.
The reality is that money is tight — very tight. We might all agree on our financial priorities, namely to sustain and improve the level of services our residents expect, invest in the city’s physical plant, attract talent to city government by offering competitive salaries, fully fund our schools, and ease the burden on tax payers. Under our current fiscal conditions, however, not all of these can be achieved. None of them can be achieved as much as we’d like.

We have made significant cuts to city government, and city government is considerably smaller and more efficient than it was ten years ago, yet the pressure on taxpayers has only increased.
And this is during a time of relative growth. What will happen when the national economy turns downward, as it inevitability will at some point, and state and local tax receipts start to fall.
Something has to change. I want to make very clear that I will not allow our city to be put in a precarious financial position when this happens.

Other cities might drift toward the waterfall, but not New Bedford. We will continue to make the tough decisions so that our city will be stable in even when the economy slows down.

There aren’t many painless options. We will continue to reorganize city government to increase efficiency, as we have done with considerable success. We will make every effort to expand the tax base by encouraging the development of underutilized parcels of public property. This is why the municipal golf course redevelopment project is important.

Unfortunately, these steps alone won’t do the trick. Spending has to be reined in.
The budget busters are pension, health care and charter schools costs. And you have heard me criticize the state for making it difficult on municipalities to control these costs because the expenses are largely dictated by state policy.

Although we have few options here, it’s harder to criticize state policy when we can’t credibly claim that we’ve exhausted all our options.

That’s why last year I proposed to the city council that we pull the one lever available to us that could materially help us reign in health care costs. Under state law, a city or town may adopt a provision that enables it to seek binding arbitration when the public employee unions refuse to accept changes in health care plans. Right now, we have no recourse when the unions say no, and we are effectively stuck paying for the health plans they want. It’s an unsustainably expensive approach to managing health care, and it’s no wonder the majority of city and towns in the state, including Fall River and just about every other community in Greater New Bedford, have adopted it. Each of these communities has enjoyed significant savings as a result, without compromising the health of their employees.

We can’t avoid tough decisions any longer. We must adopt this provision for the financial well-being of our city and for benefit of hard working tax payers.

I look forward to working with the City Council on these matters. I appreciate the thoughtful discussions we’ve had of late. It is a discussion this city must have.

Economic Competitiveness

A high quality of life is not possible without a diverse and vital regional economy. It bears emphasizing that we are competing in a global economy for investment and jobs, and if we don’t compete effectively, they will go elsewhere, as our city has come to realize the hard way over the years, as the city’s quality of life suffered.

We will persist in our effort to build a stronger regional economy centered around New Bedford and that makes the most of the region’s advantages.

Our top priority remains the full utilization of the Port of New Bedford. The Port is the primary economic driver of the region because for a variety of reasons, it offers the industries that call it home distinct competitive advantages. It generates a full two percent of the state’s gross domestic product, and I believe there is room for more growth still.

We will not let up in our support for the fishing industry. As the industry on the East Coast continues to consolidate here, it will be critical for New Bedford to make its voice heard in the halls of Congress and before fisheries regulators, and that is what I will continue to do.
At the same time, our port should continue to diversify the mix of industries that call it home. As we have seen, it is an advantageous place to bring refrigerated cargo, and the expansion of freight will yield considerable job opportunities.

This is especially true for the offshore wind industry. Just a few years ago, there was no shortage of folks who claimed that we were putting too many eggs in one basket by spending so much time on offshore wind, and many thought it would never materialize. Well, it is happening. Less than two weeks ago, the state’s three major offshore wind developers — all of whom now with offices here — made public bids to invest billions of dollars in wind farms off our coast, staged right from New Bedford.

As encouraging as this is, we need to continue playing our cards right. We are entering a key phase in our long cultivation of the offshore wind industry here. In the next few years, developers and their business partners will make decisions about where to establish facilities. And we want as much of it here as possible. It’ll be incumbent upon to us to anticipate the industry’s needs, work closely with the fishing industry so that both industries can thrive alongside one another, and pursue wise investments in port infrastructure.

We also must ensure that investment in these two industries helps to support our city’s marine science entrepreneurs, including those associated with the expanded SMAST facility, and enable our city to attract and retain talent, and energize our economy.

In the long run, the goal is this: we want businesses that have some connection either to commercial fishing or offshore wind to say, “We need to be in New Bedford.”

Every successful city has a vibrant downtown, and now that is becoming true here in New Bedford. We will continue to cultivate residential development in the downtown that can support the thriving restaurant scene, and nurture and support the growing entrepreneurship class there.

And like any other city, our downtown must have strong anchor institutions. We must support our existing anchor institutions, and seize every opportunity to develop or recruit new ones.

And finally, because it is incumbent upon to improve our links with the rest of the American economy, we will continue to develop the capacity of our airport, which just took a major step forward by restoring commercial air service for the first time in decades.

I have no doubt that we in city government can do our part to help make New Bedford a stronger, more vibrant, and sustainable city. I am eager to work with our City Council to advance the City’s long term interests, and I know that they feel the same.

The Imperative of Citizenship

I emphasize that in building a city, municipal government has a part to play. We here who were elected to our positions have an indispensable role in marshalling the power and resources of municipal government to advance the city’s interests.

But government cannot do it all, and maybe not even most of it. It should not be seen as the default solution to every problem, however minor. It will take the collective efforts of our community to make New Bedford a city that lives up to its full potential. Something is expected of each of us.
The notion of citizenship is rooted in the idea that we have obligations to others. It requires more than simply expressing an opinion about what someone else should do. Being a responsible citizen requires actual action — even when it’s not perfectly convenient, even when it’s not easy, and even when you think someone else should be doing it.

What’s expected may vary from person to person, but everyone has something to offer. If you are business leader, chances are that you have more to offer than most. Successful cities are invariably ones where business leaders own the problem of urban renewal, and work collaboratively with government toward that end. They recognize that it is their own enlightened personal interest, and as well as that of their organizations, to support the city’s long term prosperity. They have not only expertise and leadership skills to offer, but also the resources and prestige of their organizations.
We have had many business leaders who have stepped up to the plate and worked collaboratively with government, but New Bedford needs even more from its regional business community.

To our business leaders, if you aren’t on a non-profit board yet, please find one whose mission excites you. There many civic organizations that can use your help.

If you already serve on a board, serve actively. Ask yourself how can I move the needle of the organization?

And I ask every business leader in the region to view their bottom lines more strategically and less tactically. Consider whether a given business decision advances the city’s interests. This is not a call for altruism, although that is always welcomed. Nor is it a dismissal of the fact that businesses pay tax bills that we in government should be striving to lower. It’s a way of highlighting the importance of what is often referred to as “self-interest rightly understood.” Your organization will benefit in the long run if your city is improving in the long run.

But everybody has a role, not just people who lead big businesses. Everyone can pitch in. Constructive participation in the life of your city isn’t about simply venting the city’s problems on social media. Citizenship requires us to understand that we may have a role to play in addressing them. It recognizes the difference between posting a picture of a littered sidewalk on Facebook and lamenting the mess, and instead picking the trash and throwing it away.

Your city needs you to get in the game. If you have ideas, bring them forward, but also be prepared to say what you will do to support their implementation. Join a neighborhood organization and work with it to make your corner of the city a better place. Mentor a child; there are many who could sure use your support.

There are ample opportunities to work on a political campaign of someone you believe in, or better yet, run for office yourself. There’s no better way to connect with your community. If you believe you have something to offer, jump in with both feet.

My point is that if you’ve been sitting on the sidelines, I want you to know that your city — our city — needs you.

You will find that it is well worth the time and effort. A city is more than a place on a map. The city shapes and frames our relationships with one another, and is woven into our individual identity. It is part of who we are, and when we devote ourselves to making our city better, we’ve committed to improving ourselves.

On this New Year’s Day, let us resolve together to make New Bedford a better place for all of us.

Thank you, and God Bless the City of New Bedford.

– New Bedford Mayor Jon Mitchell




New Bedford Residents Invited to Attend Public Meetings on U.S. Department of Housing & Urban Development Federal Funding for Fiscal Year 2018

The City of New Bedford Department of Planning, Housing & Community Development will hold two public meetings to discuss the best use of federal funding to improve the quality of life for New Bedford residents. The public meetings will be held:

-Tuesday, January 9 at 6:00 p.m. at Sgt. William H. Carney Academy, 247 Elm Street, and;

-Wednesday, January 10 at 6:00 p.m. at the City’s Department of Planning, Housing and Community Development, 608 Pleasant Street (2nd floor conference room)

These public meetings are hosted by the City and designed to gather critical input from New Bedford residents. The public input will assist the City in formulating a strategic plan for the utilization of federal funding to address needs and priorities in the areas of housing, public facilities, public infrastructure, parks and playgrounds, community services, homelessness resources, and economic development. Input from the community is integral in shaping the priorities of these federal programs.

The City of New Bedford anticipates receiving approximately $2.4 million in Community Development Block Grant (CDBG), $674,255 in HOME Investment Partnership Program, and $224,092 in Emergency Solutions Grant (ESG) funding to serve low-and-moderate-income residents and neighborhoods in Fiscal Year 2018 which runs from July 1, 2018 to June 30, 2019.

Mayor Jon Mitchell said, “I encourage New Bedford residents to attend these upcoming public meetings so they can share their thoughts on how the City can best allocate its federal funding.”

The public meetings will include presentations by the City staff, an assessment of community needs and priorities, and a review the City’s recent Housing and Community Development accomplishments.

The meetings are an excellent opportunity for citizens to voice their opinions about how the City can best use its federal money to improve the quality of life in New Bedford and to suggest specific additions or improvements to facilities and services in its neighborhoods.

The Department of Planning, Housing and Community Development will also host two Technical Assistance Workshops on Friday, January 12 at 9:00 a.m. (CDBG) and at 10:00 a.m. (ESG) to assist with the request for proposals process and provide technical assistance. Both workshops will be held at the Department of Planning, Housing and Community Development Offices, 608 Pleasant Street, 2nd floor conference room.

Questions regarding the public meetings or the Annual Action Plan may be directed to Jennifer Clarke, DPHCD Deputy Director at (508) 979-1500 or by email at jennifer.clarke@newbedford-ma.gov.




New Bedford Regional Airport reopened for flights

New Bedford Regional Airport has reopened after closing Thursday afternoon due to the storm conditions.




Opinion: Use New Bedford’s parking ban ticket money to fund panhandler work projects

In preparation for snow storms the City of New Bedford institutes a citywide parking ban so their plow drivers can easily access the streets. New Bedford police issued 593 $50 parking tickets during yesterday’s parking ban totaling $29,650. $100,000 to $200,000 in total tickets wouldn’t be out of the ordinary in a full snow season. Last year, over 2,000 tickets were issued during the first four parking bans bringing the total money raised to $100,000 in a short time.

With late fees the money could be much higher. The city does offers 39 alternate parking areas and plenty of notice, so there is no excuse. Plus unless you are new to New Bedford, you can anticipate a parking ban for every major storm. The big questions is, what should this money be used for?

There are several pre-planned options that this money will likely fund. First, and most obvious, the money could go back into the fund used to maintain plows buy sand/salt and pay drivers. Winters are unpredictable and it makes sense to put money away for future storms, which also means tax relief for tax payers.

Another idea not really considered by the City is putting this money towards work programs for panhandlers and the homeless.

New Bedford has had a significant, growing panhandler and homeless population for several years now. It seems that every major intersection in New Bedford has a panhandler begging for money. The exact number is not known, but not all panhandlers are homeless. Many live in poverty, have a home and simply panhandle to get by – or feed their alcohol or drug addiction.

A hundred thousand dollars could go a long way to helping the homeless and panhandlers that want help. I’m talking about the folks that want to improve their situation.

Paying a wage could improve the situation of 50 people. $100,000 could fund 9,090 hours of work at $11 per hour. That means 50 people could get 181 hours of work. That’s 22 hours of work for 8 weeks/two month, or $1,000 of income per month.

$2,000 of total income doesn’t sound like much, but that’s first, last and security for an apartment, or two months of decent living for someone that already has a place to live. $2,000 could be the boost that gets dozens of people out of their terrible situation.

Work projects could include shoveling, street cleaning, landscaping and other low skilled jobs. The money would go right back into the local economy instead of sitting in a snow day fund. The City could institute a drug screening requirement to ensure the funds aren’t being used for drugs.

Parking ban tickets are funds that can’t be planned for, so they are not dedicated to critical needs of the city. $100,000 could significantly reduce homelessness and panhandlers each year. If these work projects succeed, more funds could be dedicated to future work projects and a real impact on the homeless and panhandler count would be seen.