Monthly Archives: January 2012

BoS support Bay Colony Rail Trail

Last night the Medfield selectmen voted, without much discussion or issues being raised, to accept the recommendations of our town’s Rail Trail Study Committee to

  1. send the expression of interest letter to the MBTA – it was signed last night and should go out today, and
  2. put a warrant article forward to the annual town meeting inquiring whether the town wants to proceed with development of the Bay Colony Rail Trail and also to appropriate $1,000 for those purpose.  The money was added just to avoid the lack of clear status of warrant articles without any spending attached.

Teen alcohol use

I wrote this as a comment to an article on Medfield.Patch.com this morning, and Patch told me it was way too long (“Easy there, Tolstoy. Your comment cannot exceed 1500 characters.”), so I have posted it here instead.

What I took away from the MCAP meeting last November, and from prior similar ones, was both the high incidence of binge drinking amongst the juniors and seniors at Medfield High School, but even more importantly, the research that clearly documents a direct correlation between the onset age at which alcohol use begins and the eventual rate of alcohol related problems later in life.  It is apparently both well researched and well documented that the earlier in one’s life that one starts to use alcohol, the more likely it is that one will have alcohol addiction problems later in life.   So every year we can get our kids to postpone alcohol use makes later addiction problems that much less likely for them.

Given that there is such a well documented cause and effect relationship between the earlier onset age of drinking and later increased alcohol related problems, and given too that those adverse results can be avoided by the current choices being made by our youth, it strikes me that we as a society should be doing whatever we can to assist our youth to:

  1. first, fully understand and appreciate the increased risk and the potential long term consequences of their present choices and actions surrounding drinking, and
  2. second, learn the strategies and gain the confidence to avoid current choices that have potential to start severe long term effects for such a significant number of them.

It was at a prior similar meeting that the speaker noted that they now know that the brain is not fully developed until we are about twenty-five years of age.  As a result, the effects of alcohol use by those younger brains differs from its effect on the fully developed brain.  One of those differences seems to be the greater susceptibility to addiction.  If we so clearly know both that fact and those risks, how can we as a society not try to influence our youth away from  behaviors that will cause then long term problems and greater grief.

I do not claim to know the answer as to how this gets done, but I do know that it is not enough to just say that we all drank when we were young, that the kids now will all continue to do it too, and as a result to do nothing.  There is just too much to lose to not try to make more of a difference.  I also know that society has been able to successfully change attitudes and behavior towards both smoking and seatbelt use during my lifetime, primarily by the education of our youth on the associated risks and consequences.  Now it is our children who chose not to smoke and chose to wear seatbelts, and in turn teach and shame we parents into following suit.  As a society, we cannot afford to risk the loss of one more of our youth to alcohol, so we must do something.

I posted at my blog, https://medfield02052.wordpress.com/,  the materials from that MCAP meeting last November, which can be found at https://medfield02052.wordpress.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=1158&action=edit&message=6&postpost=v2.

Calling all Medfield volunteer nominations!

Deadline is Feb. 10

Stringing thousands of holiday lights downtown each year…

Keeping Medfield’s planters overflowing with flowers…

Saving a beloved historical house from demolition…

Organizing Medfield High School volunteers to support a variety of causes…

These are just a few of the hundreds of tasks that Medfield volunteers take on in a given year to give back to the community. Each day, quietly and without fanfare, our residents do remarkable things to help support Medfield causes. That’s why we need you to shed some light on Medfield’s many unsung heroes by nominating them for a Medfield Foundation, Inc. (MFI)  volunteer award.

This year, you can nominate Medfield residents for any of these three honors:

  • Volunteer of the Year,
  • Youth Volunteer of the Year, and
  • Lifetime Achievement Award (a new category for 2012).

Nominations for the 2012 volunteer awards are due Feb. 10. While the volunteers being nominated must be Medfield residents, those submitting nominations are not required to live in Medfield.

Do you have someone in mind who you’d like to nominate for a Medfield Foundation volunteer award?  Just go to www.medfieldfoundation.org/volunteer.html to learn more and download the official nomination form.

In 2011, the Volunteer of the Year award recipient was Bob Luttman, and the Youth Volunteer of the Year Award recipient was Deirdre Walsh. Information about their community service efforts (and many others) can be found at http://www.medfieldfoundation.org.

The Medfield Foundation will recognize award recipients and nominees at a community event at 4 p.m., Sunday, March 18, at the Center at Medfield on Ice House Rd.

If you have questions about the MFI volunteer awards, or need additional information, just send an e-mail to mfivolunteeraward@gmail.com.

Thermal Imaging – 1/17/12

Medfield Energy Committee presents:

“Medfield’s Thermal Imaging Project: Public Information Meeting”

January 17 7:00 pm, Medfield Pulbic Library


Medfield Energy Committee and Medfield Green have worked with Sagewell, Inc. to conduct drive-by thermal imaging of most Medfield houses this winter, and Medfield’s Board of Selectmen have endorsed the project.

 

Sagewell’s President Pasi Miettinen will make a presentation at a public information meeting, followed by a Q&A period, in the public library Tuesday evening, January 17, 2012, at 7 pm. 


Imaging will enable homeowners to see if and where excessive heat is being lost through insufficient wall and roof insulation and windows. The imaging will be performed at no cost to homeowners or the town. Heat-loss images will be made available to homeowners at Sagewell’s password-protected website, www.sagewell.com/medfield. Home owners will be able to register to see the analysis of their home (and only their home) this spring.  Reports are free, and building owners are under no obligation to buy any products or services from the contracting companies that sponsor the free reports.

 

Any building owner who wants to be included in the program can send an email to request@sagewell.com, and Sagewell will prioritize the imaging of those buildings whenever possible. Building owners can request to be excluded from receiving an analysis report by sending an email to optout@sagewell.com.

Transformer moves through at 2-3 AM Sunday

Subject: NSTAR Transformer Transport Schedule

Mr. Sullivan;  Wanted to let you know that we are on schedule to move the
NSTAR transformer through the town of Medfield very early Monday morning
(2-3am).  I will contact the police department prior to us arriving into
Medway.  Please respond that you have received this email and let me know if
you have any questions.  Best regards, Andy

Andrew J Lawyer

Project Manager

Edwards Moving & Rigging, Inc.

Transformer moving out Rte 109 this Sunday evening

This from the mover –

Subject: Transformer Wide Load Transport Scheduled for Conley Terminal in Boston to NSTAR substation in Medway, MA – Scheduled to Start 1am Sunday January 8th, 2012

 

NSTAR Transformer Transport Update – We are still on schedule and will be planning to start our move on Sunday morning as outlined below.      

 

Schedule: 

First Leg:              Start at 1 AM Sunday, January 8th from Conley Terminal in Boston  / Stage Sunday morning:  South of Dedham at intersection of Washington St and Gay Street until evening

Second Leg:        Start 9pm Sunday January 8th and arrive at Medway early Monday morning

 

Support Services:

Stop Light heads and poles that need to be moved during this move will be handled again by Republic ITS (They were the contractor that assisted with the exact move in February of 2011)

 

                Police Escorts:

First Leg:  Boston Transportation Police will be escorting us along with MA State Police.    Dedham police will assist with traffic control through the town and to our staging area south of town

Second Leg:  MA State Police will escort the remainder of the trip.  We will have support services from Dedham, Westwood, Millis, and Medway as we pass through these jurisdictions.

 

 

Please let me know if you have any questions regarding this move.   We will be contacting each of you to see if you have any questions prior to the move.

The route can be found at the end of this message.   I thank you in advance for your support.

Weekly Political Report – Week Ending December 30, 2011

The Weekly Political Report is prepared by a political consulting group, Rasky/Baerlein, and shared with me by John Nunnari.

Economic Development Planning Council offers Five-Step Plan

The Economic Development Planning Council, chaired by Housing and Economic Development Secretary Greg Bialecki, submitted a plan to the Legislature on Wednesday, to support innovation and entrepreneurship and address the state’s cost competitiveness issues. The plan was developed over eight months and was submitted to meet a mandate included in an economic development law approved last year. Initiatives in the plan include advancing education and workforce development for middle-skill jobs through coordination of programs and supporting regional development through infrastructure investments and local empowerment. Also included in the plan are steps to simplify the tax structure making it more competitive and predictable while establishing standards for of existing tax credit programs that are more effective.

 

Loans Approved for Three Life Sciences Companies

Life sciences companies based in Cambridge, Waltham, and Wellesley were approved for state loans under the Accelerator Program, an investment program that matches other capital sources for life science companies looking to advance and create jobs. The Massachusetts Life Science Center Board voted to authorize loans of $710,000 to Paragonix Technologies of Cambridge. Paragonix is working to commercialize a single-use, portable organ preservation and transport device. The board authorized a loan of $750,000 to Intelligent Bio-Systems Inc. of Waltham, a DNA sequencing company.  A loan of $750,000 was authorized to Allurion Technologies of Wellesley. Allurion is developing and testing a weight loss method that accomplishes results by displacing volume in the stomach.

 

Cape Wind Encouraged in Power Purchase Case

Cape Wind president, Jim Gordon, is hopeful that the awaited offshore wind facility will be up and running and producing energy within a year. The Supreme Judicial Court rejected an effort to reopen a decision by state regulators to permit National Grid to purchase half of Cape Wind’s power. The Supreme Judicial Court also rejected claims that the Department of Public Utilities decision approving the National Grid contract violated the U.S. Constitution’s commerce clause by restricting out-of-state bidders from the Project. The remainder of the Cape Wind project’s power is yet to be bought. The Associated Industries for Massachusetts and some lawmakers have argued that Cape Wind could create billions of dollars in new energy costs for Massachusetts ratepayers. The Cape Wind project to build 130-turbines in Nantucket Sound has been under development for over 10 years. It is estimated to create 1,000 jobs and generate 420 megawatts of electricity, enough to power three-quarters of Cape Cod.

 

Corporate Tax Cut Schedules, Business Prevent Unemployment Insurance Increase

Business owners will receive a tax relief on January 1, 2012. However, these savings could be offset by a spike in the unemployment insurance tax. The corporate tax rate will decrease to 8% from 8.25%. This is the last of a three-step process of lowering the rate from 9.5% as part of a law in 2008 that Governor Deval Patrick signed aimed to bring additional revenue to the state from Massachusetts companies. Business would collectively save about $15 million in 2012 as a result of the corporate tax reduction. Gregory Bialecki, Secretary of Housing and Economic Development, stated that the reduction to an 8% corporate tax rate could improve Massachusetts’ status as a business-friendly state.

 

 

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

290 Congress Street, Suite 200, Boston MA 02110

http://www.architects.org

 

Respite care at The Center

Roberta Lynch, Director of the Council on Aging, reported to the Board of Selectmen at our meeting last night that the COA received a grant from the MetroWest Health Foundation for $32,676 to implement a respite program at The Center.  She hopes to open the program by 2/1, operating on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 9 AM to 3 PM, providing care to up to eight individuals, in order to assist both the care givers and the care recipients.

If the initial phase works well, and if there is both a greater need and demand, she said that she hopes to ultimately expand the service.  Preference will be given to Medfield residents.

State budget #s pick up

I am reading the Massachusetts Municipal Association’s January Beacon with my lunch, and it says that the state’s 12/12/11 annual consensus revenue hearing  agreed that FY12 revenues will be up an additional $53m. (revenue estimates were already raised $395m. in October), and that state revenues are expected to increase 3% in FY13 ($560m. – $683m.).  Better state revenues should assist Medfield’s state aid expectations, and therefore relieve our reliance on our property taxes.

Interestingly, Mike Sullivan reported to the contrary at the Board of Selectmen meeting last night.  Mike’s information may be newer, or it may just factor in that the state’s costs/expenses may rise faster than the revenues.

Recognize extraordinary volunteers

Medfield Foundation now accepting volunteer award nominations

Do you know Medfield residents who dedicate countless time and energy to a worthy community cause or initiative?  If so, now is your chance to nominate someone for a Medfield Foundation volunteer award. This year’s nomination form, due Feb. 10, is now available on the Medfield Foundation Web site.

To help determine award recipients, the Foundation seeks to capture information about the volunteer’s work using these general criteria:

* Action — What does the nominee actually do in his/her capacity as a volunteer?
* Need — What community need(s) does the nominee address?
* Impact — How is nominee’s volunteer work making a difference?
* Inspiration — What makes the nominee unique or special?

* Verification – Who else can serve as a reference for the nominee’s volunteer work?

Anyone interested in submitting a nomination for one of the 2012 Medfield Foundation volunteer awards can download the official form from http://www.medfieldfoundation.org/volunteer.html. Completed nomination forms should be e-mailed as Word or PDF attachments to MFIVolunteerAward@gmail.com no later than Friday, Feb. 10.

In 2011, Bob Luttman received the Volunteer of the Year award, and Deirdre Walsh received the Youth Volunteer of the Year award. Additionally, more than 20 other nominees also received recognition at last spring’s reception.

The Foundation’s 2012 volunteer recognition event is scheduled for Sunday, March 18 at The Center at Medfield on Ice House Road. More details will be available in the months ahead.

Questions or requests for more information can be sent to the committee at MFIVolunteerAward@gmail.com.  To learn more about the Medfield Foundation, go to www.medfieldfoundation.org.