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Untapped: Redefining Hiring in the New Economy

Join a discussion to explore employer success in hiring workers in Boston who don't hold a four‐year college degree.

March 27, 2019
  • 8:30am - 10:30am
  • 4 Copley Place
    Floor 2
    Boston, MA 02116
  • Contact:
    Taylor Connolly
  • Price:
    Price
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Neighborhood
    Citywide
    Allston
    Back Bay
    Bay Village
    Beacon Hill
    Brighton
    Charlestown
    Chinatown/Leather District
    Dorchester
    Downtown
    East Boston
    Fenway/Kenmore
    Hyde Park
    Jamaica Plain
    Mattapan
    Mission Hill
    North End
    Roslindale
    Roxbury
    South Boston
    South End
    West End
    West Roxbury
  • Event Type:
  • Published Date
Event Date2019-03-27T08:30:00 - 2019-03-27T10:30:00

In 2016, Massachusetts became the first state where 50 percent of the workforce holds a four‐year college degree. In general, states with better-educated workforces have stronger economies with robust job growth and high wages. Yet, this prosperity has not been shared equally across all workers in the Commonwealth. This disparity is even greater in Boston, recently ranked first in income inequality among America’s largest 50 cities. What accounts for this continued growth in inequality across educational groups?

“Untapped: Redefining Hiring in the New Economy” seeks to examine this matter at its core. The report has been conducted by Northeastern University’s Dukakis Center for Urban and Regional Policy and Burning Glass Technologies, and commissioned by the Mayor’s Office of Workforce Development. Through an extensive analysis of worker resumes, job postings, and other data points, a new lens is applied to non‐BA workers in Greater Boston and the degree to which they align with employer demand.

Please join us as we hear from the report’s author and a panel of employers, each of whom have taken a specific approach to hiring non-BA workers in Boston. The panel will explore what actions City leaders, employers, and community institutions can take to support a more inclusive and productive workforce.

March 27, 2019
  • 8:30am - 10:30am
  • 4 Copley Place
    Floor 2
    Boston, MA 02116
  • Contact:
    Taylor Connolly
  • Price:
    Price
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Neighborhood
    Citywide
    Allston
    Back Bay
    Bay Village
    Beacon Hill
    Brighton
    Charlestown
    Chinatown/Leather District
    Dorchester
    Downtown
    East Boston
    Fenway/Kenmore
    Hyde Park
    Jamaica Plain
    Mattapan
    Mission Hill
    North End
    Roslindale
    Roxbury
    South Boston
    South End
    West End
    West Roxbury
  • Event Type:
  • Published Date
Event Date2019-03-27T08:30:00 - 2019-03-27T10:30:00

Fort Hill Tower open to public

Fort Hill Tower is the historic Cochituate Standpipe, a water tower that once served the entire City.

May 5, 2019
Event Date2019-05-05T15:00:00 - 2019-05-05T17:00:00

Come see this rarely opened landmark. You can climb the tower for fantastic views of the entire City and hear about its history.

May 5, 2019
Event Date2019-05-05T15:00:00 - 2019-05-05T17:00:00

The final voyage of Dr. Susan Dimock in 1875

In this illustrated lecture, author and photographer Susan Wilson shares images and tales from Susan Dimock’s life and final days.

May 5, 2019
  • 2:00pm - 3:30pm
  • Meet at Forsyth Chapel in the Main Office
    Jamaica Plain, MA 02130
  • Contact:
    Alison Yong
  • Price:
    Price
    $12 day of tour; $10 advance tickets
  • Neighborhood:
    Neighborhood
    Jamaica Plain
  • Published Date
Event Date2019-05-05T14:00:00 - 2019-05-05T15:30:00

In May of 1875, the citizens of Boston were shocked when a shipwreck off the coast of Cornwall, England, took the life of one of their youngest and most beloved surgeons, Dr. Susan Dimock.

In this illustrated lecture, author and photographer Susan Wilson shares images and tales from Susan Dimock’s life and final days, intertwining stories from her own 2018 research trip to the Isles of Scilly, where the disaster occurred, with new discoveries about Dr. Dimock and the heartbreaking shipwreck of 1875.

Following the lecture, guests are invited to walk with Susan Wilson to Dr. Dimock’s gravesite at Forest Hills.

May 5, 2019
  • 2:00pm - 3:30pm
  • Meet at Forsyth Chapel in the Main Office
    Jamaica Plain, MA 02130
  • Contact:
    Alison Yong
  • Price:
    Price
    $12 day of tour; $10 advance tickets
  • Neighborhood:
    Neighborhood
    Jamaica Plain
  • Published Date
Event Date2019-05-05T14:00:00 - 2019-05-05T15:30:00

Forest Hills horticulture and architecture walking tour

Anthony Sammarco leads you on a tour exploring the theme of horticulture and architecture at Forest Hills.

May 19, 2019
Event Date2019-05-19T14:00:00 - 2019-05-19T15:30:00

Many of the 19th century’s preeminent architects, including William Preston, Gridley Fox Bryant, and Van Brunt and Howe, designed Forest Hills Cemetery’s main gate, stone bridge, and 19th century buildings along with monuments and mausoleums for wealthy clients.

Forest Hills’ founder, Henry A.S. Dearborn, was a civic leader with expertise in law and politics, as well as in landscape design and horticulture. The first president of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, Dearborn, along with others, helped shape the rural garden cemetery movement in America.

This walking tour lasts up to 90 minutes, with frequent stops over varied terrain. Meet at the Visitor’s Circle just inside the main gate. Please wear comfortable walking shoes and bring water.

May 19, 2019
Event Date2019-05-19T14:00:00 - 2019-05-19T15:30:00

Historic Brighton Center walking tour

Ever wonder about how Brighton transformed from a rural farming community to today's bustling city streets?

May 18, 2019
Event Date2019-05-18T11:00:00 - 2019-05-18T12:30:00

Join us for a walking tour co-hosted by the Allston-Brighton Community Development Corporation and Brighton Main Streets, led by the Brighton-Allston Historical Society, on a beautiful Saturday morning! The tour is free and will last about one and half hours.

Please note:

If rain is in the forecast, the makeup date is June 1, 2019.

May 18, 2019
Event Date2019-05-18T11:00:00 - 2019-05-18T12:30:00

A history of Brighton and Allston's Cambridge Street

Join us as we delve into the history of Cambridge Street.

May 23, 2019
Event Date2019-05-23T19:00:00 - 2019-05-23T21:00:00

Cambridge Street in Brighton and Allston has a long history dating back to the early 1800s as the connection between Boston and Cambridge.

Join us as Brighton Allston Historical Society board member John Broderick delves into this history, looking at topics such as the cattle industry, St. Elizabeth's Hospital, the B & A rail yards, the Beacon Trotting Park, and much more.

May 23, 2019
Event Date2019-05-23T19:00:00 - 2019-05-23T21:00:00

Adventures at Sea: Bostonians in the Age of Sail

Join us for 10 memorable stories spanning Boston's first 200 years.

May 26, 2019
Event Date2019-05-26T14:00:00 - 2019-05-26T15:30:00

For Boston's first 200 years, "a flown sheate, a faire winde, and a boune voyage" were wishes at the heart of the City's life and economy. Travel under sail was commonplace and central to the culture, across classes.

Join us for 10 memorable stories spanning that era, drawn from first-person accounts by Bostonians capturing the experience in letters, diaries, and memoirs. Pirates, storms, sea battles, wanderlust, exotic lands, romance, and Revolutionary politics all come alive.

More than good stories, though, these accounts walk through the dramatic development of the Town Cove and Boston's changing relationship with sea travel. In a broad stroke, they illustrate the influence of our port on the growth of the nation.

May 26, 2019
Event Date2019-05-26T14:00:00 - 2019-05-26T15:30:00

Art Deco in the Financial District

The tour provides not only narrative on individual buildings and their architects, but also offers context and background on the design elements and influences of American Art Deco.

May 27, 2019
Event Date2019-05-27T10:00:00 - 2019-05-27T11:30:00

Art Deco is said to be one of the few architectural styles that most Americans can recognize and name, and its enduring popularity bears this out. Though Boston is less well-known for its Art Deco architecture than New York and Miami, it can claim examples of Art Deco design that would rival New York's finest.

Boston's greatest concentration of Art Deco is in the City's Financial District, an area substantially leveled by fire in 1872 and ripe for a second cycle of redevelopment 50 years later. Discover the downtown you often see, but rarely notice.

May 27, 2019
Event Date2019-05-27T10:00:00 - 2019-05-27T11:30:00

350th anniversary of Old South Church celebration

Three hundred and fifty years to the date of our first gathering, we’re throwing an all-church, family-friendly celebration.

May 12, 2019
Event Date2019-05-12T12:30:00 - 2019-05-12T14:30:00

Join us at 11 a.m. for a special festival worship service. No birthday is complete without a party, so after worship we will celebrate! At 12:30 p.m., we will hold an outdoor ceremony, including:

  • herald trumpets
  • speaking by dignitaries
  • an interfaith blessing, and
  • much more.

The party starts at 1 p.m. and will include food, games, music, crafts, and fun for all ages.

May 12, 2019
Event Date2019-05-12T12:30:00 - 2019-05-12T14:30:00

Bulfinch, Benjamin, Parris, and Bryant: A lineage of West End Architecture

Follow us on a walking tour through 50 years of architectural development in the West End, from 1796 through 1851.

May 5, 2019
Event Date2019-05-05T10:00:00 - 2019-05-05T11:30:00

When the West End was torn down and redeveloped as part of urban renewal in the late 1950s, a number of historically significant buildings were preserved. These buildings represent a lineage of early Boston architects: Charles Bulfinch, Asher Benjamin, Alexander Parris, and Gridley J.F. Bryant.

May 5, 2019
Event Date2019-05-05T10:00:00 - 2019-05-05T11:30:00
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