The topic: How to build Asian American influence in Massachusetts civic affairs?

The Boston Little Saigon cultural district hosted its inaugural gala on Sat., Dec. 11 at IBEW Local 103 Hall in Dorchester. Mayor Michelle Wu and Councillor Frank Baker, both instrumental supporters in getting the Fields Corner area designated as a state-funded cultural district, were on hand as special guests. The event included dinner and performances. More info about the event and the organization can be found at bostonlittlesaigon.org.
Photo courtesy of the Mayor’s Office/Isabel Leon

The election last month of Mayor Michelle Wu showed what is possible for Asian Americans as they become a more active and influential bloc in Massachusetts, but, elected officials and advocates for the community said last week, more must be done to improve representation at all levels of government and fight racism and attitudes of “perpetual foreignness.”

Wu, the daughter of Taiwanese immigrants, is the first woman and first person of color to be elected to lead the city of Boston. Her position at the top of city government, however, is a rarity across Massachusetts, where, despite representing the fastest growing racial group in the state, Asian Americans are underrepresented on Beacon Hill, in municipal government, and in schools.

The Boston Foundation hosted an online discussion last Wednesday about how to build the civic power of Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (AAPI), turning to elected officials, community organizers, and leaders of the foundation’s Asian Community Fund for advice and insight.

Wu, in a message taped for attendees, said gentrification threatens to displace many in the Asian community in Boston, and the ongoing pandemic that has been “politicized” against Asian Americans has led to “targeted, hateful, senseless violence. We must come together to address these and many other issues that are impacting our communities,” she added.

Anne Calef, of Boston Indicators, said that the Asian American population in Greater Boston over the last 30 years has grown by 277,409, making it the fastest growing single racial group in the city and the region and trailing only Latinos in terms of total new residents.

Growth has been particularly strong in the suburbs of Boston, Calef said, where Asian Americans now account for more than 30 percent of the population in places like Lexington and Quincy. In Braintree, the town has seen a 151 percent increase in AAPI population over the last decade.

Calef, however, said Asian Americans continue to be underrepresented in municipal government, particularly in schools. In Quincy, for instance, 41 percent of students but only 5 percent of teachers are Asian American.

The AAPI community also now accounts for some 7.2 percent of the state population, but only 4.5 percent of the Legislature, where there are eight House members and one senator who identify as Asian American.

Paul Watanabe, a UMass Boston political science professor and director of the Institute for Asian American Studies, said a national poll conducted last spring found that 42 percent of Americans cannot name a single prominent Asian American.

“In Boston, I would suggest that now with the election of Michelle Wu, unless you’re under a rock or something, you can probably name a prominent Asian American and that’s the mayor of the city of Boston,” Watanabe said.

Watanabe said a “singular” way to empower the Asian American community would be to allow non-citizen residents to vote in local elections, a step the New York City Council took this month. Voter registration requirements and the lack of availability of bilingual ballots are also barriers to political participation, he said.

“In order to overcome the historic invisibility of AAPI communities, we need to build power, and this means not only expanding our representation in state and municipal leadership, but also sharing power, specifically broadening the base of residents who are involved in grassroots organizing and political engagement,” said Danielle Kim, the former director of public policy at the United Way of Massachusetts Bay and Merrimack Valley, who is now director of The Boston Foundation’s Asian Community Fund.

A graduate of Smith College, Kim earned a Fulbright Fellowship in South Korea and worked in the New Jersey legislature before coming to the Boston area to earn a master’s degree from Harvard Graduate School of Education. She then spent four years at Boston After School & Beyond, overseeing policy and communications for the organization.

Rep. Vanna Howard, a first-term Cambodian representative from Lowell, credited her success to her willingness to be in the community and to listen. “I devoted basically, simply my shoe leather to the community,” she said. “I’m here. I’m accessible. I always listen.”

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