Boston Mayor Menino, his popularity high, calls fifth term his last

Saying he's 'back to a mayor's schedule, but not a Menino schedule,' after recent health challenges, the mayor said his energetic style was 'the only way' he knew to lead Boston.

Boston Mayor Thomas Menino pauses during his announcement at Faneuil Hall in Boston, Thursday, March 28. The 70-year-old mayor announced today he would not seek an unprecedented sixth term.

Bill Sikes / AP

March 28, 2013

After some 20 years leading what he calls “the city I love,” Thomas Menino announced Thursday he would not seek a sixth term as Boston’s mayor.

The move came with his popularity high and passion undimmed. But health challenges, he said, have made it unlikely he could do the job with the all-in style he prefers.

Referring to a period of convalescence and physical therapy, he told a cheering crowd of colleagues at Boston’s landmark Faneuil Hall that “I’m back to a mayor’s schedule, but not a Menino schedule.”

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Dawn-to-dark workdays, traversing the city’s parks, schools and homeless shelters “may not be the only way to lead Boston, but it’s the only way for me,” he said.

Mr. Menino still has nine months to go in his fifth term as mayor, and his two decades on the job makes him one of America’s longest-serving big-city mayors. During a tenure free of major scandals, he presided over an era of economic revitalization and falling crime rates, and helped burnish the city’s image as an attractive place to live as well as work.

“Boston is the vibrant, welcoming, and world-class city it is today because of Tom Menino,” President Obama said in a statement about the news. “His efforts to revitalize neighborhoods, schools, and businesses, better integrate police officers into their communities, and reduce gun violence, [have] charted Boston on a course for a better future.”

Known for slurring his words rather than for adroit oratory, he surprised many with his staying power.

Some critics initially said he lacked vision. He earned the nickname “urban mechanic” for what seemed to be a small-bore focus on things like fixing streets or adding bike lanes. Amid a construction boom, Menino never met a ribbon cutting he didn’t like.

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But to him, little efforts were part of something big.

"What is a vision?" Menino asked in a 1994 Boston Globe profile. "Sometimes we get caught up in the grandiose. My vision is jobs, a better school system, community policing, health care. When I leave this job, I want the city to be in better shape than when I took it over."

The work remains unfinished – perhaps why Menino pondered the idea of seeking a sixth term.

Whoever succeeds him will have more work to do to improve the city’s schools, transportation, and economic opportunities.

And for his part, Menino pledged to stay involved. “I am not retiring, but just turning one page,” he said.