By Tom Nash
Somerville's
elected officials expressed optimism for the next year in the face of
likely budget cuts after being inaugurated at a Monday night ceremony
at Somerville High School.
Mayor Joe Curtatone, re-elected to a
fourth term after running unopposed in November, said in his inaugural
address the the push for development in Assembly Square and advocacy
for the Green Line extension stood in contrast to other cities
struggling with similar financial woes.
"We saw that in the
midst of the worst worldwide economic downturn since the great
depression, many communities stalled, or slipped backward," Curtatone
said.
"Because of the dedication and teamwork of the people in
this room, and thousands of people across this city, Somerville did not
slip backward in the face of these economic challenges … And today I
can report that our great city continues to move forward."
Among
the initiatives Curtatone named as priorities, he highlighted the fight
against the proposed Green Line maintenance facility in Brickbottom,
implementing a new recycling program and finalizing a master
development plan for the city.
After the School Committee was
sworn in, new School Committee Chair Mark Niedergang said that while
cuts and layoffs will likely be a part of the system's FY2011 budget,
the committee will do its best to keep programs in place and ensure
that the rebuilding of the East Somerville Community School begins in
2010.
"We will play whatever cards are dealt to the best of our ability," Niedergang said.
Ward
4 School Committee member Christine Rafal was the only new elected
official sworn in, having unseated Somerville News Editor James Norton
in November.
While the Board of Aldermen remains unchanged,
Alderman-at-Large Jack Connolly will move up from vice president to
president, replacing Ward 4 Alderman Walter Pero. Ward 6 Alderman
Rebekah Gewirtz, who ended Connolly's 22-year tenure in the seat in
2005, will serve as vice president.
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