
Looking back at its operations and its persistence through a unique time last year, the Beacon Hill Civic Association (BCHA) acknowledged the efforts of the members and volunteers for 2020 at its annual meeting on Moinday.
Patricia Tully, executive director, appreciated the organization’s work to help Beacon Hill residents during the pandemic.
“We have reached out to neighbors with our mask initiative, and clothing and food drives,” she said. “We have also taken the time to make improvements to our donor management database by migrating to a rolling membership system, which I think will be much easier for everyone.”
Along with celebrating past achievements, the BHCA, during its 99th Annual Meeting, also resolved to celebrate its centennial year with renewed energy and positivity.
Founded in 1922, the BHCA is a volunteer organization dedicated to preserving and improving the quality of life of the Beacon Hill community.
Even with the pandemic, the last year was no different.
The
organization was committed to its goals, and in her address BCHA
President Meghan Awe highlighted the accomplishments of its committees.
The
Zoning and Licensing Committee (ZLC) processed eleven proposals last
year. Six of them were residential and five were commercial. Even with
an increased attendance last year, Awe said that the ZLC negotiated the
proposals magnificently.
“They
[ZLC] led nearly all discussions to positive win-win outcomes as the
ZLC voted not to oppose in most cases with a good neighbor agreement
negotiated with the applicant,” she said.
Awe
noted that the Neighborhood Services Committee began working with an
arborist to preserve the neighborhood tree canopies and health. Among
other important projects the BHCA committees worked on last year were
the virtual community engagement activities of the Development and
Outreach Committee and the approval of a diversity and inclusion
taskforce proposed by the Governance Committee.
The
BHCA also organized a community meeting this spring to discuss the
concerns of a possible tobacco smoke shop coming to Charles Street with
concerned authorities. Awe mentioned that hundreds of members attended
the meeting.
“Together,
[they] shared with the potential proprietors of Beacon Hill, given the
density of population in the proximity to schools and Massachusetts
General Hospital, was not at an appropriate location for the business,”
she said. The lease for the shop was dissolved.
The BHCA also made donations to 11 nonprofits.
“For
the third consecutive year, the BHCA Beacon fund awarded nearly $30,000
to deserving nonprofit African neighbors to help finance projects and
programs that promote and enhance the quality of life in Beacon Hill in
our neighboring communities,” Awe said.
The
last part of the meeting was a vote on upcoming year’s officers and
directors. The members unanimously approved all the nominated
candidates.
The
event’s keynote speaker was Joseph Bagley, the city’s archaeologist. He
spoke about the formation of Beacon Hill and a 2016 excavation at
Pinckney Street.
He
ended with a University of Massachusetts report on the excavation of the
African Meeting House, one of the oldest archaeological sites in Beacon
Hill.