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North End restaurant owners revive charge the mayor hates Italians in new suit over pandemic-related patio fees and bans

The owners of 21 North End restaurants and the North End Chamber of Commerce yesterday sued the city over its 2022 fees for restaurants in the neighborhood that wanted to use public sidewalks and streets for patio seating - and its ban on such patios last year - alleging the Wu administration and a local residents' groups hate Italians for some reason.

The 168-page complaint, filed in US District Court in Boston, echos similar complaints raised in an earlier suit by the owners of five North End restaurants, which they withdrew earlier this year, but adds the North End/Waterfront Residents Association to its list of people who, for some reason, want to crush the very life out of the North End's Italian restaurants, in a move they charge has forced them to lay off workers and led to the decline of the North End as a tourist destination.

The ban was discriminatory because it treated Italian American restaurants differently than similarly situated restaurants in other parts of Boston. The ban also was facially discriminatory because it targeted a white ethnic group for disparate treatment and was not keyed to a legitimate state interest. ...

The City's policies, which are contrary to law, have tarnished its image, its culture, and its sense of citywide community by discriminating against Italian American citizens who own and operate most of the North End's restaurants. The reputational damage to the City is both immense and ironic, as the City's policies clash with a host of anti-discrimination policies and laws on its books.

Part of their proof of the mayor's Italian hatred beyond the patio issue:

On October 6, 2022, days before Columbus Day, Mayor Wu issued a Proclamation that October 10, 2022 - Columbus Day - would now be celebrated in Boston as Indigenous Peoples' Day. While the celebration of a new City holiday to recognize an ethnic group is commendable, the Mayor decided the City's new holiday would be celebrated in Boston on the same day as the only longstanding federal Italian holiday. The Mayor easily could have chosen one of hundreds of other days of the year on which Bostonians could celebrate Indigenous Peoples' Day but intentionally chose Columbus Day and made her announcement four days before Columbus Day. Many North End Italian Americans, including the plaintiffs, considered the Mayor's act as a deliberate ethnic affront meant to overshadow or symbolically replace the only federal Italian holiday.

Plus, there was Wu's "problems that are expensive, disruptive and white," crack at the 2022 St. Patrick's Day breakfast, an event at which Boston's elected officials have been cracking bad jokes for decades.

The suit alleges that Wu and her minions tightly controlled news of the impending $7,500 North End-only fee and then ban - to the point of excluding angry restaurant owners from a press conference at which she announced the fee - rather than letting North End restaurant owners and their supporters in the neighborhood have their say, and that they ignored repeated requests from the neighborhood for input into the proposal.

The restaurant owners also allege that money from the 2022 fee - which city officials said was necessary because of the unique sanitation, parking and policing issues in the tightly packed North End - went to buying a $552,000 battery-powered street sweeper, which would be used all over Boston, not just in the North End. Why, the city's own Public Works Department tweeted a photo of it sweeping Causeway Street one night..

It got even worse as the city was getting ready to announce a ban on the use of public spaces for patios in the North End for 2023, the suit alleges:

Importantly, the process by which the City made its decision was highly irregular, unfair and the product of political favoritism. The City gave no advance notice to the plaintiffs that it was investigating or even contemplating the ban. The City did not organize or hold a single public meeting to collect comments or opinions on the ban. The City afforded no process or opportunity by which the North End restaurant owners could present evidence and advance arguments in support of their position. And the City provided no process to appeal or challenge the imposition of the ban.

By contrast, the City provided biased and favored treatment to NEWRA, which it knew was antagonistic to the North End restaurants. It maintained continuous communication with NEWRA’s leadership, engaged in back-channel decision making with NEWRA, and even hosted private meetings with NEWRA leaders at City Hall.

The suit alleges that NEWRA is only a small group of people and mainly represents ultra-rich people living in luxury condos along the downtown side of the waterfront, not the family-oriented "tight-knit bonds between generations of neighbors" - Italian-American neighbors - that represents life in the North End.

Numerous NEWRA members, including members of its leadership, are not Italian Americans. Some reside in waterfront luxury condominiums along Commercial Street. Although several influential NEWRA members have been largely unaffected by the City’s outdoor dining program, they have steadfastly opposed the concept of outdoor dining in the North End.

And the city's stated reasons for banning patios on public sidewalks and streets in 2023 were mere ruses - the closure of the Sumner Tunnel was really only an issue for East Boston and the city had never before raised concerns about traffic due to the ongoing replacement of the North Washington Street Bridge - the suit alleges. The sheer density of restaurants in the North End? Please; not all North End restaurants sought permits and other neighborhoods had a lot of restaurants with patios on public property, the suit claims. Sanitation? The North End has far less complaints than other neighborhoods, the restaurant owners say, pointing to statistics which show far, far more complaints from Dorchester, which the suit does not note also has more than ten times as many residents. There is also no evidence that more outdoor patios made North End streets harder to navigate for people with mobility issues, the suit says.

The suit formally claims a violation of the restaurant owners' rights to equal protection and due process under the 14th Amendment and alleges discrimination against people because of their ethnicity. The restaurant owners seek a court declaration that the city's fees and ban were "arbitrary, capricious and contrary to law" and that the fee was an illegal tax. They also want the city to return of any fees they paid in 2022, pay damages for the money they say they lost without patio dining in 2023 and reimburse their three attorneys for their work.

Among the restaurant owners: The Mendoza family, owner of Monica's restaurants, and Carla Gomes, owner of Antico Forno and Terramia Ristorante, who were involved in the first suit. New to this suit is Frank DePasquale, who owns a number of North End restaurants named as plaintiffs, including Umbria, Mare Oyster Bar, Dulce, Aqua Pazza, Trattoria Il Panino, Brico and Frank and Nick's, a restaurant he co-owns with Nick Varano, whose Rina's and Strega are also listed as plaintiffs.

The complete list of restaurants bringing the suit: Ristorante Euno, Antico Forno, Aqua Pazza, Assaggio, Casarecce, Dolce, Mare Oyster Bar, Quattro Ristorante, Trattoria Il Panino, Nico Ristorante, Monica's Trattoria, Monica's Trattoria, Monica's Restaurant, Vinoteca di Monica, Strega, Carmelina's, Rina's, Terramia Ristorante, Tresca, Umbria, Bricco Ristorante & Enoteca, Ristorante Villa Francesca.

Complete complaint (2.1M PDF).

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Comments

These fucking people. Just give it up.

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@ "federal Italian holiday"

What will they come up with next?

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Exactly. If (for whatever reason) you're still on-the-fence about these restaurant owners, know that they routinely & flagrantly violated every covid protocol the city & state implemented back when things were scary. Also, none of these owners actually live in Boston, so they're just bitching because they make a fortune from their tourist trap restaurants but can't impact the mayoral election.

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Not liking someone is not hatred. Can we stop with exaggerations already.

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The complete list of restaurants bringing the suit: Ristorante Euno, Antico Forno, Aqua Pazza, Assaggio, Casarecce, Dolce, Mare Oyster Bar, Quattro Ristorante, Trattoria Il Panino, Nico Ristorante, Monica's Trattoria, Monica's Trattoria, Monica's Restaurant, Vinoteca di Monica, Strega, Carmelina's, Rina's, Terramia Ristorante, Tresca, Umbria, Bricco Ristorante & Enoteca, Ristorante Villa Francesca.

This is a complete list of restaurants that will never get a dime of my business anymore. A good chunk I would never go to anyways, over priced, over produced, over exposed places.

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N/t

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,,, that I have never eaten at ANY of THESE restaurants. So I can safely go to any of the ones I've been to in the past....

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I went to Strega with a friend last weekend. Really disappointed. Overpriced, no coffee/dessert (Just a shotglass of affogato), and the ambience with 50,000 TV screens all playing The Godfather was a bit much. The worst part perhaps was when the schlocky tenor who forced the whole restaurant to listen to him warble Funiculi Funicula and That's Amore (really??) came over to our table to beg for a donation to his venmo. Really classless. (And the two of us are both musicians!)

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The 168-page complaint

No thanks. They should have brought in Shiva Ayyadurai to jazz it up with some cool conspiracy graphics.

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the 4 North End spots I even bother with aren’t on here.

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.

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La Familia Georgio’s — You’re gonna wait a while. It’s worth it. The only spot in the city I rank above it is Rino’s in Eastie.

Tony and Elaine’s — Don’t let the location fool you. Best marinara I’ve ever had, I always bring a pint home.

Al Dente, and Beneventos — Right next to each other and pretty sure they have the same owner. Surprisingly easy to walk right in, in my past experience. Solid food, great staff, always consistent.

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I love Rino's so that quite the high praise, tyvm

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is the absolute best. I lived right up the hill for years, used to call for takeout and grab it on my way home.

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Without specific evidence they will have a hard time proving the Mayor "hates Italians." The mayor could hate the restaurants for all sorts of reasons that are not because they are Italian. Maybe she does not like pasta. Unless there is discovery showing an email from the Mayor or her staff stating "lets screw over those Italians" that seems like a dead end.

The bigger issue, is the treatment of these restaurants signifignatly different than other restaurants in the city. That is what i think the court will ultimatly rule on.

As for the fees, the court could look at if the fees were misallocated other than the stated promise, but again that seems like a long shot.

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Come-on!
Even the UHub crowd has to admit that there is a pattern here:

  1. Exhibit #1 -- the recent snafu over the No White elected officers invited attend Mayor's "Holiday Party"
  2. Exhibit #2 singling out the North End in banning outdoor eats not associated with special events
  3. Exhibit # 3 using relatively minor traffic disruption involved with construction on the N. Washington Street Bridge and Summer Tunnel as an excuse after the North End surviving the Big Dig
  4. Exhibit # 4 -- what happened? to the statue of Christopher Columbus formerly located in "Indigenous Peoples Park"
  5. the Holiday formerly known as Columbus Day
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1. That event has been going on for more than a decade with no complaints. Why this year, I wonder.

2. Are you referring to the basis of the suit, or something else?

3. The North Washington Street Bridge closing was one of several reasons cited, not the only one. Little things can add up into a bigger mess.

4. Yeah, the statue went away. Yeah, the city couldn't protect it from getting bashed in repeatedly.

5. So? Even some Italian-Americans wish we could celebrate somebody on the second Monday in October other than a genocidal lunatic. There are no shortage of Italian people more worthy of honoring, if your goal is to celebrate Italian heritage. Da Vinci. Garibaldi. Dante. Even Sacco and Vanzetti if you're looking for somebody local. Or if they're too controversial, A. Bartlett Giamatti (sure, most connected to Yale, but he was born here) or Foster Furcolo, the state's first Italian-American governor (or even, given our Sox love, Tony Conigliaro or Dom DiMaggio, and, yes, I know he was born in San Francisco).

The suit gets into the whole Indigenous Peoples Day thing, like how DARE the mayor announce that for the same day as Columbus Day. In the unlikely event you don't know why she might've chosen that day specifically, no, it's not because Columbus was Italian, but because Columbus was Columbus and really brought nothing but slavery and death to the New World and its inhabitants.

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the statue remains in north end and you can see it there today.

https://www.boston.com/news/local-news/2020/10/07/italian-american-group...

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It was the Spaniards who followed Columbus who did the damage.

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...he was so bad he got carried back to Spain, in chains, for his abuses.

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I have taken the head of the murderous Christopher Columbus and I'm not giving it back! bwahaha!!!!!

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you started listing and realized you only had two points, heh

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The ban was discriminatory because it treated Italian American restaurants differently than similarly situated restaurants in other parts of Boston.

I have two questions:

1)Did the ban cite specifically "Italian-American restaurants", or did it (as I suspect) just cite "restaurants" that were located in a specific area? There are, or at least used to be, restaurants in the North End that weren't "Italian-American".

2)Were any specific instances of "similarly situated restaurants in other parts of Boston", and were they, in fact "similarly situated"? Or might it be the case that "other parts of Boston" don't have the same issues and constraints as the North End?

I think I can guess the answers, but just putting it out there.

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I can think of at least two decent sushi restaurants in the North End, even. I'm sure the litigants would argue that only Italian restaurants should be allowed in "their" neighborhood that they haven't set foot in for decades.

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While the North End restaurant scene is largely Italian restaurants due to the area's heritage, it's hardly only Italian and it's not like the non-Italian locations got different rules than the Italian locations in the lawsuit....so...plonk.

Italians may have pushed for and latched onto Columbus Day, however when LBJ signed the Uniform Holiday Bill (that established "always on Monday" for most federal holidays as well as creating Columbus Day as a federal holiday), he had this to say:

The bill also establishes Columbus Day as a Federal holiday--to be celebrated on the second Monday in October. Thirty-four of our States have already established a day honoring Christopher Columbus. It is fitting now that we give national expression to our faith in the spirit of discovery embodied by this great adventurer. This new holiday will henceforth honor one of our finest and most cherished national characteristics--our ability to live and work together, men and women of all national origins, as one united and progressive nation.

Note, he didn't mention Italian-Americans...and even specifically called out "our ability to live and work together, men and women of all national origins". The plaintiffs need to revisit the spirit of that statement if they care so much about the day's purpose.

The mayor doesn't give two rats fucking in a North End alley about Italian Americans above or below anyone else in the city. However, these plaintiffs give North End restauranteurs a bad name and I can imagine she's made some decisions simply to not have to deal with their griefing and their monopolization of the city's resources. They decided that she's the enemy and now any time she's going to refuse to play ball with them, they can make it a slight against (insert convenient classification here) to claim discrimination when it's really just she doesn't like to do favors for malcontents.

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deliberate ethnic affront meant to overshadow or symbolically replace the only federal Italian holiday.

Because of course other ethnic groups all have federal holidays, so it's discrimination to get rid of the Italian one. I guess we have a UK one if we count the holiday celebrating kicking out the Brits?

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Their argument isn't that the city didn't listen to Italian-Americans. They object to the city listening to people who lived in the neighborhood, regardless of ethnicity or where their grandparents came from.

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They are throwing a pity party because they can't use the threat of violence to control local politics anymore.

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While there may be no good evidence that the mayor's policies are based on anti-Italian sentiment, there are indeed some people who deminstarte a prejudice against Italian-Americans by assuming this group of Italiains must support organized crime. Thanks for reminding us some hurtful stereotypes are alive and well.

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.

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… North End restauranteurs and other small businesses. Nobody wants them back.

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This needs to be kept quieter than Tania Fernandes-Anderson taking her oath of office.

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Mafia members knew enough to not bring unnecessary attention to themselves. if the Mafia still existed and had members in the North End my guess is that they would tell the restaurant owners to shut up, enjoy the profits they rake in and learn to play well with all the other boys and girls.

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… the Mafia would have extorted money from the mayor and city council in exchange for getting the loudmouth restauranteurs off their backs by breaking a few storefront windows and busting some bones.

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If you at least skim it, you will see it goes into the Italian-American issue at great, great length, even to pointing out that nobody in the leadership of NEWRA (one of the neighborhood's two resident groups; the other goes unmentioned) is Italian-American and they all live in luxury condos on the water, unlike the North End, which consists of tightly knit multi-generational Italian-American families, which is, if one were being unkind, might be the point where a reader goes "So this was written by somebody who hasn't visited the North End since 1982," since, while, yes, there are Italian-American families who have lived in the neighborhood for generations, come on, it's now full of luxury condos, both on and away from the water, many of them owned by people who are not Italian-American.

And then, if you skip to the bottom, where the six formal counts are enumerated, you'll see that one of them is about the mayor's alleged antipathy, her illegal ethnic discrimination against, Italian-American restaurant owners specifically.

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How many of those places are owned by people who are residents of Boston?

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Approximately zero

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I do not think the Mayor is racist towards Italian-Americans, but I do think treating the North End differently than other neighborhoods regarding outdoor dining rules and regulations was a mistake. I think the restaurant owners are correct that the additional fees and then the one-year ban on outdoor dining imposed only on the North End were inappropriate and largely due to politicking by so-called neighborhood groups. I know you cannot make everyone happy, but the way that outdoor dining was handled by the City administration for the North End certainly managed to upset everyone. The point of having clear and consistent rules is so that people cannot claim that the process is unfair. That is sadly not at all what occurred here.

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…By “politicking by so-called neighborhood groups”, do you mean “residents of the neighborhood”? Because that is exactly what neighborhood groups do, and the residents seemed overwhelmingly against outdoor dining the way it was tried during the pandemic. There is no other neighborhood in the city with this kind of density and housing layout bumping up against commercial interests and rare outdoor space. There just isn’t. Sorry, but residents matter here, too. I’d argue they matter more than people using the neighborhood for a revenue stream without having to live with any of the consequences the experiment brought.

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There is no ban on outdoor dining in the North End. This past season there were at least 15 outdoor dining venues in the North End, more than most neighborhoods. The issue is "in-street outdoor dining" which the neighborhood does not have the infrastructure to accommodated. There is no other neighborhood similarly situated (approximately 100 restaurants in a very small area). Therefore, you can't compare the guidelines applied in other neighborhoods. By the way, if you want to understand what happened to the Connah Store, here is your answer.

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...that perhaps it wasn't a neighborhood thing but a "you have tiny sidewalks and nowhere else for pedestrians to safely walk" thing?

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Actually all they need to do is lease the sidewalk from the city.

Roslindale's Main Streets leases Birch Street and all of the restaurants get to use it for outdoor seating all year long. I don't think they have table service but you can take stuff out and eat there as well as have alcoholic beverages. Part of it is even posted as a beer garden.

Maybe that is their solution?

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Between the little bit of Rozzie Square road they shut off for the plaza and the main streets of a neighborhood that draws zillions of tourists, though.

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I'm against privatizing public spaces in any neighborhood, but patio dining in the North End made walking around the neighborhood and absolute nightmare. No room to walk on the sidewalks because of people eating or waiting to eat, and if you walked in the street there was no way to get out of the way when a car came because of the barriers around the damn patios.

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Sounds like a great reason to pedestrianize Hanover St during outdoor dining months and only allow delivery or other limited traffic during certain hours. There are solutions to the "sidewalks are too crowded" problem other than "ban in-street outdoor dining."

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"Most are small, family-owned businesses that have been independently operated for generations."

The weaker the evidence and argument the greater the puffery. As the news about the Connah store revealed Frank DePasquale owns lots of properties. From the Northland.page site:

"DePasquale's business interests in the North End which include eight restaurants, two sandwich shops, and furnished short-term rental suites:"

Compared to national chain of restaurants ownership of only 8 restaurants could be considered small. But that would be a false comparison. Therefore the implication that these restaurants are owned by little ole ladies and the ancient families is rubbish. It is a lie.

One of the advantages of life-time judicial appointments is the ability to quickly sort the trash from the reality. I imagine the judge's office as this complaint is read. A big trash barrel for the pages of whining, false claims and other waste of court time and a single manilla folder for the cover sheet and page or 2 that isn't puffery.

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