We are South End residents and area allies advocating for neighborhood interests and reality-based solutions on Mass and Cass.

We oppose plans and programs that shift more services into the South End.

Bringing more drug use into the South End and transforming Mass and Cass into “Mass and Albany” not the answer.

Mayor Wu’s new 4-point plan for Mass and Cass: What’s in Wu’s Plan, why she is proposing it — and what’s wrong (and right) with it.

In August 2023, Boston Mayor Michelle Wu announced a plan for changes at “Mass and Cass”, in response to escalating violence and danger that have caused key City social services partners to pull staff from Atkinson Street, the heart of Boston’s concentration of homeless shelters and addiction/mental health services and host to the region’s biggest number of people contending with addiction or unmanaged mental illness—and those who prey on them. We support and commend Mayor Wu in recognizing the need for a major course correction in Boston’s Mass and Cass strategy, one with far greater emphasis on everyone’s safety and public order.

Mayor Wu’s announced plan has four key elements, outlined below. Unfortunately, her new plan amounts to a fire drill on one siloed issue, how to take down the latest tent encampment on Atkinson Street, while making other Mass and Cass problems even worse in the process. It’s the same recipe for failure we’ve seen time and again: Mass and Cass deteriorates, a crisis is perceived, and the City responds with narrow actions that are supposedly “temporary” to address an “emergency.” Sometimes, taken in isolation, the actions sound as if they may help on some particular piece of the issue, but very often they prove to have all sorts of negative downstream consequences and/or just push old problems into new places—and usually turn out to be permanent.

While we share and respect Mayor Wu’s concern for eliminating tents and providing safety on Atkinson, a plan like hers with the foreseeable effect of shifting even more drug use into the South End, opening up yet another shelter and additional services here and transforming Mass and Cass into “Mass and Albany” is not the answer. If Mass and Cass is truly a crisis—and it is—then it is time for others to step up and be part of the solution, as for years we already have.

The four key elements of Mayor Wu’s plan —and why it’s a recipe for creating “Mass and Albany” in the South End.

(To see more detail about each element, just click on it)