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Baker sworn in as governor

Excerpts from inaugural speech

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Baker sworn in as governor
Governor-elect Charlie Baker has appointed several African Americans to his transition team, but no Latinos yet.

Today, Governor Charlie Baker delivers his inaugural address to a joint session of the Massachusetts state legislature. Remarks as prepared for delivery:

“On behalf of the people of Massachusetts, I thank Governor Deval Patrick for his service over the past eight years. And to wish him God speed.

“Our Commonwealth is filled with hard working, talented and inspiring people. We’re a global leader in health care, biotechnology, high technology, education, finance, energy efficiency and advanced manufacturing. And we’ve led the way for the nation on issues ranging from health care reform to marriage equality.

“But we’re nowhere near our full potential. Some of our toughest challenges have been ignored and lost amid the successes. Or have become the equivalent of kicking a can down the road because they’re not politically convenient or easy to fix.

“They range from having more than 1,500 homeless families assigned to hotels and motels. To dozens of lapses in performance that are frustrating for many. And in some cases devastating in their consequences.

“I know we can do better.

“The time has come to write the next chapter in the history of this great Commonwealth. To build on what makes us great. And get much better at what doesn’t.

“Lieutenant Governor Polito and I have recruited a talented, experienced, diverse and bipartisan cabinet and staff. They will approach their mission with a passion and thoughtfulness to make Massachusetts great. And they understand that policy pronouncements without follow through — amount to empty promises.


Government services

“Tom Menino taught us all many valuable lessons. He believed that government was about high ideals. But he also equally believed that basic services mattered and that every detail counted.

“When people have to wait for hours to conduct a simple transaction at the Registry of Motor Vehicles they’re not being served.

“And when thousands of families continue to be confused and let down by the Health Connector we’ve not paid attention to the details.

“Those are but two examples.

“We will challenge the status quo, look for and try new approaches and recognize they might not always work. When that happens, we’ll acknowledge it. Learn from it. And try again.

Budget deficit looming

“Our actions will be heard in many ways. But the loudest of these actions will initially be in dealing with an immediate budget deficit, building a job-creating economy, closing the achievement gap, confronting opiate addiction and revitalizing our urban centers.

“With respect to the state’s budget our Constitution requires that the budget be balanced. No one understands that better than I do. The responsibility now rests with us.

“History will record that a budget deficit exceeding half a billion dollars is being transferred to my administration.

“If we’re honest with ourselves then we can’t blame our deficit on a lack of revenue. We have to recognize that this is a spending problem. And that dealing with it now will make balancing next year’s budget that much easier.

“We will hold the line on taxes, we’re already demanding enough from hard working people. And we will protect cities and towns and fulfill our promise to end the cuts to local aid. Otherwise, every line item will be looked at.

“I look forward to working with House Speaker DeLeo, Senate President Rosenberg and the members of both legislative branches to close this gap.

“While there are efficiencies to be gained and structural changes to be made there’s no doubt that we have to make difficult decisions. We will do so with great sensitivity and careful judgment.

Unemployment

“Massachusetts has an unemployment rate of 5.8%. But that’s a cold-hearted statistic that ignores the 200,000 people seeking work, the hundreds of thousands of underemployed, and the tens of thousands who have dropped out of the work force altogether.

“There’s no single initiative that can start and sustain a job creating economy. But there is clear evidence that we’re too complex, too expensive, and too slow to move and make decisions. On this we must do better.

“Our administration will work to reduce red tape and streamline regulatory requirements on start-ups and established businesses. And we’ll report regularly on our progress.

Health care costs

“Healthcare costs are an enormous burden on everyone, dragging down our collective ability to grow and hire more people. We’ll pursue many paths on this challenge.

“But the simplest one — ensuring full price and performance transparency is long overdue. The same service in the same neighborhood, with the same outcome can vary in price by as much as 300 percent. This must change.

Energy supply

“There’s also a direct link between economic growth and a sustainable and affordable supply of energy.

“But as we begin the New Year, families and businesses across New England are being hit with unprecedented increases in their energy and electric bills. At exactly the same time energy prices across the rest of the country are falling. This increase is being driven in large part by inadequate delivery systems, the result of poor planning and coordination.

“I look forward to working with my colleagues here in Massachusetts and with leaders like Governor Raimondo of Rhode Island as well as the other New England Governors to solve this problem while we continue to reduce our carbon footprint.

Schools/charter schools

“I’m a proud product of the Massachusetts public schools. And to this day, I can still name almost every teacher I had growing up. They moved me, challenged me and made me feel like my opinion mattered.

“Across Massachusetts, there are many talented and inspiring educators doing for their students what their predecessors did for me.

“…There are exceptional schools in many of our most disadvantaged neighborhoods throughout the Commonwealth. Proving they can get it done for kids, no matter what their circumstances. But other schools really do need to step it up for the children and the families that they serve. Poor performance given the dramatic success of other schools can no longer be tolerated.

“And while traditional public schools will always be the backbone of our education, we need more high performing public charter schools in underperforming school districts to complement them. As I speak, there are more than 45,000 Bay State kids and their parents on waiting lists for these schools.

“It’s wrong for any of us to stand on a front porch or in a city neighborhood sympathizing with a mom or dad when they tell us their child is not getting the education to succeed in life and then oppose lifting the charter school cap or making the changes we need to ensure that every school is great.

Opiate addiction

“Last year, Governor Patrick called opiate addiction a public health crisis. He was right. It is an epidemic. One that cuts across every community in the Commonwealth.

“Several months ago I met John and Stephanie Green of Easton. After a routine medical procedure their 19-year-old son Evan was prescribed opiates for pain. Slowly and unknowingly, he became addicted to them. When the prescription ended he turned to heroin.

“Over a period of years, John and Stephanie tried as hard as any parents could to help their son. It was an agonizing, yet all too familiar story. Tragically, Evan fatally overdosed almost a year ago to this day.

“As a parent, my heart goes out to John and Stephanie for their devastating loss. As Governor, I intend to tackle this problem head on because too many families have gone through the grief and pain that John and Stephanie have.

“I look forward to working with Attorney General Maura Healey, Boston Mayor Marty Walsh and many others on this issue. Because without strong action many more individuals and families like the Greens will have the same terrible experience.

Communities of color

“When Lieutenant Governor Karyn Polito and I campaigned last year, we said we were chasing 100 percent of the vote. And we campaigned hard in many communities of color.

“We did so because we believe these neighborhoods have not benefitted from the economic success that has become more commonplace in other parts of our Commonwealth.

“But there are inspiring points of light in these communities. Because individual economic development, education, community development and social service entrepreneurs are turning so-called lost causes into definite winners.

Ferguson, crime, opportunity

“The tragic events in Ferguson and New York City speak loudly. And their message is a simple one. When people lose hope, bad things happen.

“I’ve said a thousand times I want every community to be a place where people believe tomorrow is going to be better than today. I say that not just because I believe it, but because I believe in it.

“The great writer and philosopher Samuel Johnson once said, “The natural flights of the human mind are not from pleasure to pleasure but from hope to hope.”

“Put another way, if you think things are heading in the right direction, then you believe in and can’t wait for tomorrow, no matter where you might be today.

“And that faith in tomorrow needs to be based on something beyond the word of our Lord. It has to include the here and now. The quality of the schools you send your kids to, the parks they play in, the main streets you can walk to from your house or apartment, the job you have and the future it offers to you and your family.

“If we are to avoid the tragedies that make the front page — like Ferguson, as well as the ones that don’t like the awful shooting death of Dawnn Jaffier, then it’s imperative that we renew our commitment and re-double our efforts to provide everyone, no matter where they live with the kinds of opportunities that exist across our Commonwealth.

(text provided by Governor’s Press Office)