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By Katie Trojano, Reporter Staff
March 10, 2021
Katie Trojano, Reporter Staff
From left in photo taken last week at the Engine 16 stationhouse: Baby Safe Haven New England spokesperson Mackenzie Lee Clement, Boston firefighter Sheila Leahy, Fire Commissioner Jack Dempsey, and Chantelle Stallworth, Ladder 29 Boston firefighter. Katie Trojano photo
A non-profit that seeks to promote child safety joined with Boston Fire Department officials last week to promote the ‘Baby Safe Haven’ law during an event at the Engine 16 station house on Gallivan Boulevard.
Boston Fire Commissioner Jack Dempsey joined volunteers from Baby Safe Haven New England as they affixed signage near the station’s front door. Two dozen such signs were installed around the city last week including 20 at BFD locations and one at the Carney Hospital in Dorchester.
Group distributes baby safe haven signs after newborn found in Dorchester trash can Marie Szaniszlo © Provided by Boston Herald WOBURN, MA - MARCH 4, 2021: Mackenzie Lee Clement of Baby Safe Haven New England outside her home in Woburn, Massachusetts. (Staff photo by Nicolaus Czarnecki/MediaNews Group/Boston Herald)
A Marlboro-based group is supplying all fire stations and hospitals near the Lower Mills section of Dorchester with bright yellow signs identifying them as “baby safe havens” one week after a newborn was found alive there in a trash can.
“Because I’m a young woman and sympathize with other young women who are struggling, I want them to have access to information to make the right decision in a case like this,” said Mackenzie Lee Clement, 19, of Woburn, a spokeswoman for Baby Safe Haven New England. “If I was in a crisis, I would want someone to do the same for me.”