Projecting our Holiday Spirit in Jamaica Plain
September 16, 2019
Tags: Crowdfunding, Fundraising, Holidays, Jamaica Plain
Celebrate Jamaica Plain and support our community with holiday spirit, technology, and placemaking.
Celebrate Jamaica Plain and support our community with holiday spirit, technology, and placemaking.
Fields Corner Main Street is seeking a full time Director to lead the organization as we enter a phase of changes for the organization, neighborhood and city.
There was no place in Boston that sold Vietnamese dessert. While bubble tea shops abound in Boston, the fare Ly and Om now serve at Coco Leaf Dessert Café.
Greater Ashmont Main Street and Mandorla Music Series are beginning their Dot Jazz Series this week, a full season consisting of 5 jazz shows from September 2018 to May 2019.
The Boston City Council Committee on Small Business and Consumer Affairs held a hearing last Tuesday at the Bruce C. Bolling Building on the opportunities and challenges facing small businesses.
In Dudley Square, residents are organizing to ensure that the next round of urban renewal benefits them.
Mayor Martin J. Walsh and the Office of Economic Development today launched Boston's Small Business Center in Mattapan, designed to serve as a one-stop neighborhood resource for small businesses.
A tunnel cap that sits above the Red Line tracks as they run underground through Dorchester from Fields Corner to Ashmont station may see a new life as a biker and pedestrian greenway.
A program of the city of Boston’s Office of Small Business and Office of Women’s Advancement, WE BOS was launched in 2015 to help convene and support women entrepreneurs.
Joyce Stanley, Executive Director of Dudley Square Main Street, spoke with the Banner on two decades of promoting and supporting the Roxbury commercial district.
Monday’s meeting was the first of six scheduled before BRA officials hope to submit a finalized plan to the agency’s board in August.
Among the plans Boston Mayor Marty Walsh laid out at his second State of the City address was a push for the construction and expansion of parks using six acres of land across the city.