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By Gintautas Dumcius
Reporter Correspondent
Michael Coté's website touts a lone
endorsement: The Massachusetts ACORN Political
Action Committee.
"I think it is a long shot," Coté admits
of his second run at the District 3 seat held by
Boston City Council President Maureen Feeney.
"Whether I win or lose depends on whether people
are upset" about the issues in play, including
property taxes and the number of cops on the
street.
In the last local election in 2005, Feeney
retained the seat she has held since 1993,
garnering 80 percent of the vote to Coté's
19 percent. In the intervening two years, Feeney
has become president of the council, a leadership
post that brought her more staff and resources and
a much higher profile on the city stage.
Coté has no campaign staff and is relying
on postcards and ads in the Reporter in raising his
profile. ACORN is providing door-knockers, he
added.
Back in 2005, Coté, a Fields Corner
resident, ran on zoning code reform and getting
developers to recognize Dorchester residents in
negotiations. Now he points to rising property
taxes and public safety concerns, taking a page
from Gov. Deval Patrick's campaign notebook.
(Coté volunteered for Patrick in 2005, along
with other local campaigns.)
"I felt as though these things needed to be
talked about," he said in a phone interview, adding
later, "A lot of the concern I have comes from
having heard [Patrick] speak."
Earlier this year, Coté went to court
alongside Florida Corridor resident Barry Mullen,
suing the city of Boston to press them to keep
police staffing levels at 2,500 officers. The suit
was finally dismissed in July.
Coté said if elected, he will push the
Boston Redevelopment Authority to reevaluate the
buildings it's giving tax breaks to, like One
Beacon Street on Beacon Hill. The city can't wait
for casinos and meals taxes, he said, in reference
to two proposals Patrick is submitted to the
Legislature that are both awaiting movement.
Coté also accuses Feeney, a seven-term
incumbent, of not understanding how property taxes
work.
"I'm not an accountant, but I've written
software that's used by accountants," said
Coté, who holds a Computer Science degree
from UMass-Boston and works as a system analyst for
the Watertown-based Liaison International.
Coté added that she dismisses him whenever
he brings up the issue.
"He certainly doesn't get it right," Feeney says
in response. "How could I be at the State House
testifying?" she added, in reference to her support
for Patrick's plan to give cities and towns the
option of setting meals taxes. "I have no idea what
he's talking about."
Feeney, a resident of the Cedar Grove section of
Dorchester, points to her time at the Ward 16
Democratic Committee, along with her 14 years on
the city council, where she has served on its
government operations committee and chaired it,
worked through 13 city budgets, along with
participating in the merger of Boston City Hospital
that created Boston Medical Center. Before running
herself, she was a top aide for another Dorchester
councilor, Jim Byrne.
"It's hard not to be offended," she said.
Feeney also pointed to the city hiring 195
police officers and deploying them on walking beats
through the Safe Street Initiative, and the
implementation of the Shot Spotter system, which
detects where gunshots come from.
"In terms of public safety, I'm proud of what
we've done."
On property taxes, Feeney noted the city allows
seniors to be charged at a lowered tax interest
rate of 4 percent on deferred bills.
"The piece that is so critical to all of that is
the creation of a diverse revenue stream," she
said.
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