Monthly Archives: November 2011

Ticks are abundant this year

Dr. Sam Telford is an entomologist at Tufts Veterinary School, who has spoken twice at past Lyme disease educational forums in town.  He emailed the chair of the Medfield Lyme disease study committee as follows:

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I am pleased to hear that Medfield is taking some steps to reduce the burden of Lyme disease.  I was just out at Rocky Woods a couple of days ago…and noted that there is a sign up about hunting.  By the way, in case people complain that there are lots of ticks this year, this is a regional observation.  Adult deer ticks are up probably 3-5 times over what we have seen over the last 2 years.  This extends down to RI and the Cape and I see it here in Grafton.  Rocky Woods was very good collecting for me, I may have gotten 300 ticks in an hour.  So people should take care to use personal protection right now.  (My guess is that the wet and cool summer increased tick survival; and the number of grey squirrels was tremendous this summer, and because they feed a lot of nymphal ticks there may have been better feeding success to make all the adult ticks.)

Town election is 3/26/12

The town election is on 3/26/12, but starting 12/5/11 it is time to take out your nomination papers from the town clerk.  Fifty signatures from registered voters are required.  The nomination papers are due back to the town clerk by 2/6/12.

The town election is always the last Monday in March, per the charter.  I have been wondering whether it might make more sense to have the town election on the first Tuesday in November, in order to benefit from the larger turn out the state and national elections get.  The Charter & Bylaw Study Committee is already looking at those sorts of issues

Maps of the proposed new legislative districts

See the maps of the proposed new Massachusetts Congressional, legislative, and senate districts at http://www.malegislature.gov/District/ProposedDistrictMaps

Globe article says Keating and Lynch are in the same Congressional district. http://www.boston.com/Boston/politicalintelligence/2011/11/new-congressional-districts-announced-this-afternoon-could-pit-lynch-against-keating/L3g62l04q3NKuWwvMmEb2H/index.html?p1=News_links

Medfield moved back to Barney Frank’s Congressional District

The Medfield Press just called me for a comment on the fact that Medfield has been re-assigned to the congressional district covered by Barney Frank.  Barney was our congressman when we moved to town in 1989.

Underground utility lines

Banker & Tradesman published an article today title Digging For Truth On Why We Can’t Bury Power Lines.  The article notes studies have said that underground lines mean 35% fewer outages, that Massachusetts municipal utilities generally seem to have fewer outages, and points to the muni in Concord burying lines each year, and now being up to 40%.  From the article –

“A few municipal utility companies, including Concord’s, have begun to put their local power lines underground – taking away, in one fell swoop, the danger of massive outages after snow, ice and wind storms. “The key is you don’t have these massive outages because the network is protected,” said Patrick Mehr of the Massachusetts Alliance for Municipal Electric Choice.

No Big Dig

OK, it’s great that the good folks in upscale Concord can spring for this, but what about the rest of us?

Well yes, it’s an extra cost, but hardly a crazy one – about $600,000 to put a mile of lines underground each year. Even so, Concord residents still pay 40 percent less on their electric bills than neighboring towns that get their power from big utility companies, according to Mehr.

And this is far from a crazy idea – in fact, New England and our country as a whole is a backwater when it comes to power delivery, with many European companies having put much of their electric grids underground.

No one is advocating another massive Big Dig, this time to bury all the region’s power lines. But Concord has hardly done it overnight – it is slowly but steadily doing it on a decades-long timeline, with 40 percent of the town’s power lines now running underground.

Interestingly, the idea invoked a less than enthusiastic response from a spokesman for National Grid, one of the state’s trio of big power companies. He cited the expense of putting lines underground, while also noting that if there are problems, it’s much more difficult to fix, since you have to dig up the lines to make repairs.

Still, he acknowledged an industry study that found a 35 percent decrease in outages when lines were put underground.”

Medfield Day 2011 cost town $5,472.24

Medfield Day cost the town a total of $5,472.24 this year – $4,373.76 for the services of police and $1,098.48 for overtime of DPW employees, per the Chief and Superintendent.  I had asked if either department received anything in return and did not get any figures ( I heard that MEMO did pay the police $1,000 a year ago).

Since MEMO makes ten of thousands of dollars from the event, my simple suggestion has been that MEMO reimburse the town for the costs to the town for town employees to assist, that Medfield Day be “revenue neutral” to the town.  In 2010 my BoS colleagues originally agreed with the logic of MEMO doing, only to return at the next meeting to indicate that MEMO would not agree to pay the costs, and so my colleagues then changed their votes – and so the town residents continue to pay MEMO’s tab.

Weekly Political Report – Week Ending November 4, 2011

Massachusetts Legislature and Gov. Patrick Approve Redistricting Plan
On Tuesday, both the House and Senate voted in favor of the revised legislative maps drawn by the Joint Redistricting Committee, and on Thursday Governor Patrick signed the redistricting bills into law. According to the House and Senate Chairs of the Redistricting Committee,  Representative Michael Moran (D-Brighton) and Senator Stanley Rosenberg (D-Amherst), the committee is still considering how to merge the state’s 10 Congressional districts into 9.

 

Gambling Bill Negotiators Close Meetings to Public
On Tuesday, the six members of the conference committee tasked with negotiating a consensus gambling bill voted unanimously to close their meetings to the public. The committee members are hoping to complete all negotiations before the seven-week legislative recess that begins on November 16th. Representative Joseph Wagner (D-Chicopee), Chair of the conference committee, indicated on Tuesday that he will oppose the Senate proposal to prohibit lawmakers from working in the casino industry for up to a year following their departure from public office.

 

House Passes Pension Reform Legislation

On Wednesday, the House voted unanimously in support of major pension reform legislation. The bill aims to save the state $5 billion over the next 30 years by raising retirement ages and reducing benefits for future public employees. The Senate’s version of the legislation, which passed in mid-September, differs substantially from the House version, and will require a conference committee process to reconcile the two versions. The House appointed Reps. John Scibak (D-South Hadley), Brian Dempsey (D-Haverhill) and Ryan Fattman (R-Sutton) to the six-member conference committee that will try to reach agreement on the legislation.

 

House and Senate Pass Supplemental Budget

This week the House and Senate passed nearly identical versions of a $52 million supplemental spending bill. The budget bills allocate an additional $39 million to the state’s “housing first” homeless shelter program, $10 million for Tropical Storm Irene assistance and $308,000 for veterans services to prepare for troops returning home from Iraq and Afghanistan. The bill also includes a provision requested by Secretary of State William Galvin that moves up the date of the 2012 state primary election from Sept. 18 to Sept. 6. The bills are based on a $161 million spending bill proposed by Gov. Patrick but do not include many of the spending initiatives sought by the governor.

 

Massachusetts Business Confidence Slips again
According to an index calculated by the Associated Industries of Massachusetts, business confidence in Massachusetts continued to decrease in October. The index shows weak consumer spending, problems in the housing market and a lack of confidence in national political leadership. The results were compiled before positive economic developments in Europe and the United State were reported. This year, Massachusetts has gained 37,900 jobs dropping the unemployment rate to 7.3% compared to the national rate of 9.1%.

 

John Nunnari, Assoc AIA
Executive Director, AIA MA
jnunnari@architects.org
617-951-1433 x263
617-951-0845 (fax)

MA Chapter of American Institute of Architects
The Architects Building
52 Broad Street, Boston MA 02109-4301
www.architects.org

 

Medfield’s committee to study BCRT – volunteer by 11/15

Medfield’s Board of Selectmen will appoint to its own committee to study the Bay Colony Rail Trail at our 11/15 meeting.  Interested individuals should submit expressions of interest to Evelyn Clarke and/or me, along with a description of their qualifications and/or a CV.

This was what appeared in the Globe’s West Weekly about the Town of Dover seeking people to serve on its similar version of the same sort of committee:

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Trail panel seeking members

  November 06, 2011

The town is looking for volunteers to serve on a committee overseeing plans for a local recreational trail. According to Carol Lisbon, who chairs both the Board of Selectmen and the Rail Trail Committee, the panel already has three citizen members but could use three or four more members, including some skeptics. “I firmly believe that on an issue like this we need to have people who are neutral, who are proponents, and opponents,” Lisbon said. The committee will be explore having Dover link with Medfield and Needham along the proposed Bay Colony Rail Trail. The 7-mile stretch is owned by the state, and leased by the MBTA to the Bay Colony Railroad, which no longer uses the tracks. A citizens group has been pressing for the creation of the regional recreational path since 2009, and Lisbon said she recently met with Medfield and Needham officials to discuss collaborating on the project. “Why should we all reinvent the wheel on this?” she said. “We need to get this committee together to work out the issues, which are many.” Interested applicants should contact the Board of Selectmen at 508-785-0032, ext. 221, or e-mail selectmen@doverma.org. – Jose Martinez

“First Thursdays have started!”

The Library reports “First Thursdays of the month are a time to come downtown and check out the Zullo Gallery, restaurants and the library for events and activities. The Library is open until 10 so you can see the Zullo gallery artworks and get half off any fines you may have. Come on down!”

Library invites whole town to read the same book

The Medfield Memorial Library has initiated a plan to have the whole town read the same book, and to build programs off of that shared experience right through the spring.  Details are at http://medfieldpubliclibrary.org/2011/11/medfield-reads/

Have people noticed how many things the library seems to be doing all the time now?