Monthly Archives: June 2014

Odyssey House bye bye

Kristine Trierweiler’s email notice this afternoon (a copy of the email appears below) advises that the Odyssey House by the sledding hill at the Medfield State Hospital site will be coming down tomorrow.  There is already a fence around the property that appeared this last week.  Typically Kris would be getting her information from DCAMM.


6/23/2014 2:51PM
Odyssey House
Trierweiler, Kristine
===========================================================
Just an update they are planning to take the Odyssey House down tomorrow.

Kristine Trierweiler

Assistant Town Administrator

Town of Medfield

459 Main Street

Medfield, MA 02052

508 906 3011 (p)

508 359 6182 (f)

MSH purchase update

John Nunnari follows the legislature closely, and provides the town insights into what is happening there.  This email came from John this afternoon to update the Medfield State Hospital legislation status, and John now says “A floor vote this week is certainly more of a possibility now.”

The current full bill that John forwarded is attached at the end below.


Mike,

It looks like H W/M’s amended the bill by striking Section 1 of the previous version of the bill which established the Commonwealth’s Health and Human Services Capital Projects Trust Fund (see attached).

The bill is still lacking an emergency preamble (added onto bills that need to take effect on the day it’s signed into law), but I believe Section 8 makes clear the contents of the bill go into effect upon a successful (majority) vote of the Selectman.

 

Provision which was struck by H W/M’s:

SECTION 1. Chapter 29 of the General Laws is hereby amended by inserting after section 2KKKK the following section:- Section 2LLLL. There shall be established and set up on the books of the commonwealth a separate fund, to be known as the Health and Human Services Capital Projects Trust Fund, hereinafter in this section referred to as the fund, administered by the commissioner of the division of capital asset management and maintenance at the direction of the secretary of health and human services. The fund shall be credited: (i) the portion of any net cash proceeds from the conveyance, lease or other disposition of any facilities vacated by any agency within the executive office of health and human services and determined to be surplus by the commissioner of the division of capital asset management and maintenance; (ii) any appropriations; (iii) bond proceeds; or (iv) other monies authorized by the general court and specifically designated to be credited thereto. The comptroller shall disburse amounts in the fund at the direction of the commissioner of the division of capital asset management and maintenance, in consultation with the secretary of the executive office of health and human services, without further appropriation, for the purpose of paying costs of, or paying down any portion of any debt incurred to pay costs related to the acquisition, construction or improvements to health and human services facilities. The comptroller shall establish procedures necessary to effectuate this section, including procedures for the proper transfer, accounting and expenditures of funds. The comptroller may make payments in anticipation of receipts and shall establish procedures for reconciling overpayments and underpayments from the trust fund. The commissioner shall report semi-annually to the house and senate committees on ways and means on the revenue and expenditure activity within the fund. The fund shall be an expendable trust fund and shall not be subject to appropriation. Money remaining in the fund at the end of a fiscal year shall not revert to the General Fund.”

john

 

From: “John Nunnari”
Sent: Monday, June 23, 2014 1:35 PM
To: “Michael Sullivan”
Subject: Re: HB4216

Also, forgot to mention, the bill had a new number because H W/M’s amended the bill.

I’ll work on getting you a copy of the amendment for later today.

John

On Jun 23, 2014, at 1:31 PM, “John Nunnari” >> wrote:

Looks like the Rep. got the bill moving.

It has a new number, and is in Third Reading.

A floor vote this week is certainly more of a possibility now.

John


HOUSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . No. 4216
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
_______________
In the Year Two Thousand Fourteen
_______________
An Act authorizing the commissioner of Capital Asset Management and Maintenance to convey
certain parcels of land in the town of Medfield.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in General Court assembled, and by the authority
of the same, as follows:
1 SECTION 1. Notwithstanding sections 32 to 37, inclusive, of chapter 7C of the General
2 Laws, chapter 269 of the acts of 2008 or any other general or special law to the contrary, the
3 commissioner of capital asset management and maintenance, hereinafter referred to as the
4 commissioner, may convey 1 or more parcels of land located at the former state hospital in
5 Medfield to the town of Medfield. The parcels are shown as parcel A and parcel B on a plan
6 entitled “Compiled Plan of Land, Medfield State Hospital, Medfield, Massachusetts, prepared for
7 Division of Capital Asset Management”, dated June 14, 2005, prepared by Judith Nitsch
8 Engineering, Inc., on file with the division of capital asset management and maintenance. The
9 exact location and boundaries of the parcels to be conveyed shall be determined by the
10 commissioner, in consultation with the town of Medfield. The use of the parcels to be conveyed
11 to the town shall not be restricted to use for municipal or other specific uses; provided, however,
12 that the town may so restrict the parcels at a later date, in accordance with applicable general and
13 special law. The parcels shall be conveyed by deed without warranties or representations by the
14 commonwealth.
15 SECTION 2. As consideration for the conveyance of the parcels described in section 1,
16 the town of Medfield shall pay the commonwealth an amount equal to certain costs related to the
17 closure of the former state hospital in Medfield including, but not limited to, the costs of
18 removing combustible materials, disconnecting certain utilities, and otherwise closing those
19 buildings located on the parcels conveyed, routine security, and other capital expenditures and
20 operating expenses incurred by the commonwealth in preparation for or following the closure of
21 the former state hospital, as determined by the commissioner and agreed to by the town. The
22 town of Medfield may pay the amount so determined by the commissioner and agreed to by the
23 town upon its purchase of the parcels described in section 1 or the town may pay the amount so
24 determined in 10 annual payments pursuant to section 20A of chapter 58 of the General Laws. If
25 the town’s payment of consideration pursuant to this section so requires, the town may seek voter
26 approval pursuant to subsection (k) of section 21Cof chapter 59 of the General Laws.
27 SECTION 3. Notwithstanding chapter 269 of the acts of 2008, or any other general or
28 special law to the contrary, parcels A-1 and A-2, as shown on the plan referenced in section 1
29 shall be maintained as open space or used for agricultural and passive recreation purposes,
30 subject to those subsurface utility easements on parcel A-1 serving the town’s water system.
31 Notwithstanding the foregoing, but subject to such subsurface utility easements, the
32 commissioner of capital asset management and maintenance may transfer the care and custody of
33 parcels A-1, A-2 or C, or portions thereof, to the department of conservation and recreation for
34 open space and passive recreation purposes. Such transfer shall be without consideration and
35 shall not be subject to chapter 7C of the General Laws.
36 SECTION 4. In the event that the town of Medfield sells or leases any portion of the
37 parcels described in section 1, the net proceeds from such sale or lease as determined by the town
38 and agreed to by the commissioner, shall be allocated between the town of Medfield and the
39 commonwealth in equal shares; provided, however, that the commissioner may agree to reduce
40 the share of the commonwealth’s proceeds to not less than 30 per cent of net proceeds in order to
41 provide certain incentives to the town of Medfield to sell or lease some or all of the parcels
42 described in section 1 expeditiously or to facilitate the development of some or all of the parcels
43 in accordance with smart growth principles promulgated from time to time by the governor and
44 the secretary of energy and environmental affairs. In the event that the net proceeds, as so
45 determined, is a negative amount, the commonwealth shall not be required to make any
46 payments to the town of Medfield.
47 SECTION 5. Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, the town of
48 Medfield shall pay for all costs and expenses of the transactions authorized in this act as
49 determined by the commissioner including, but not limited to, the costs of any recording fees and
50 deed preparation related to the conveyances and for all costs, liabilities and expenses of any
51 nature and kind related to the town’s ownership of the parcels; provided, however, that such
52 costs shall be included for the purposes of determining the net proceeds of the town’s sale or
53 lease of any portion of the parcels described in section 1. Amounts paid by the town of Medfield
54 pursuant to section 2 shall not be included for the purposes of determining the net proceeds from
55 a sale or lease.
56 SECTION 6. (a) In the event that the town of Medfield does not complete its purchase of
57 the property described in section 1 on or before December 31, 2015, notwithstanding sections 33
58 to 38, inclusive, of chapter 7C of the General Laws or any other general or special law to the
59 contrary, the commissioner may sell, lease for terms up to 99 years, including all renewals and
60 extensions, or otherwise grant, convey or transfer to purchasers or lessees an interest in the
61 property described in section 1 or portions thereof, subject to this section and on such terms and
62 conditions that the commissioner considers appropriate; provided, however, that the purchase by
63 the town of Medfield shall be considered complete upon the transfer of title to the parcel or
64 parcels described in section 1 to the town. The commissioner shall dispose of the property, or
65 portion thereof, using appropriate competitive bidding processes and procedures. At least 30
66 days before the date on which bids, proposals or other offers to purchase or lease a property, or
67 any portion thereof, are due, the commissioner shall place a notice in the central register
68 published by the state secretary pursuant to section 20A of chapter 9 of the General Laws stating
69 the availability of the property, the nature of the competitive bidding process and other
70 information that the commissioner considers relevant, including the time, place and manner for
71 the submission of bids and proposals and the opening of the bids or proposals.
72 (b) Notwithstanding any general or special law to the contrary, the grantee or lessee of all
73 or any portion of the property described in section 1 and subject to this section shall be
74 responsible for costs and expenses including, but not limited to, costs associated with deed
75 preparation and recording fees related to the conveyances and transfers authorized in this section
76 as such costs may be determined by the commissioner.
77 (c) No agreement for the sale, lease, transfer or other disposition of the property
78 described in section 1 and subject to this section, or any portion thereof, and no deed executed by
79 or on behalf of the commonwealth, shall be valid unless the agreement or deed contains the
80 following certification, signed by the commissioner:
81 “I, the undersigned commissioner of capital asset management and maintenance, hereby
82 certify under penalties of perjury that I have fully complied with the relevant provisions of
83 general and special law in connection with the property described in this document.”
84 SECTION 7. In any disposition pursuant to section 1 or section 6, the commissioner
85 may retain, accept or acquire by purchase, transfer, lease, eminent domain, pursuant to chapter
86 79 of the General Laws or otherwise, and may grant by deed, transfer, lease or otherwise any
87 rights-of-way or easements, in, over or beneath any parcel or portions thereof, or any other
88 portions of the former Medfield state hospital, as the commissioner deems necessary and
89 appropriate for the continued access to, egress from and use of portions of the former Medfield
90 state hospital including, without limitation, parcels A-1 and A-2, by the general public or other
91 state agencies or to carry out this act; provided however that in any disposition pursuant to
92 section 1, such retention, acceptance, acquisition, or grant of any rights-of-way or easements in,
93 over or beneath parcels A or B shall be subject to the approval of the town of Medfield.
94 SECTION 8. Sections 1 to 7, inclusive, shall take effect upon their acceptance by a
95 majority vote of the board of selectmen of the town of Medfield, but not otherwise.

 

My goals for selectmen

The three selectmen each drew up his goals for our board for the upcoming year.  These were mine,originally drawn up in mid-May and updated with he addition of #5 two weeks ago:



Goals: Selectmen
Osler L. Peterson
June 13, 2014

I.  Communication
1.    Implement a push system to get residents town government information
2.    Improve the town’s web site.

II.  Medfield State Hospital
3.    Lead  the re-development process

III.  Planning
4.    Develop a town master plan
5.    Arrange for a consultant to do a town government wide review and analysis of current functioning and to make suggestions for changes
6.    Get five year plans from department heads and committees
7.    Implement an affordable housing plan
8.    Get by-laws concerning future development at the former Medfield State Hospital.
9.    Adopt Green Community Act
10.    Install solar PV sites and issue RFP’s to buy solar power
11.    increase recycling rates

IV.  Finances
12.    Create a business office for the town
13.    Implement a three-year financial forecast
14.    Implement property tax relief for senior citizens
15.    Examine opportunities for additional revenue streams, such as:
a.    Housing can be the “business” of Medfield (e.g. – Old Medfield Square)
b.    Power purchase agreements for PV power
c.    Selling Medfield bottled water
16.    Complete union contract negotiations before contracts expire
17.    Analyze overtime
 

People want street repair schedule

I do not often look at the statistics about visitors to my blog, but WordPress posts a bar graph of past visits atop the page where I add new posts, and so I noticed today that there appeared to be a major spike last Thursday.

When I just looked to see why, I learned that a record number of visitors, by far, by a factor of about 2-3 times the next greatest number, had clicked through from a Patch article about planned road repairs.  Patch had picked up my blog post, but did not list the streets, so people had to click through to see which streets were being worked on this summer.

What this tells me is that there is a huge thirst for town information about what departments are planning that directly impacts people.  FYI, my fist two goals on my list for the selectmen this year are to develop a system to push town information to people and to improve the town’s website.

These are the statistics for my blog from last Thursday:


Thursday, June 19, 2014

Views: 805Help
Visitors: 448

Views per Visitor: 1.80

Search Engine Terms

These are terms people used to find your site.

2014-06-19

Search Views
medfield blog peterson 3
pete peterson blog 2
medfield state hospital 1
medfield music assoiciation 1
pete peterson medfield blog 1
pete peterson blog medfield 1
Unknown search terms 3
Total search terms 12

Solarize coach needed

Medfield residents could all benefit from a coordinated effort to install solar photovoltaic electrical generation panels on residences.  There are systematic efforts already available to towns to group its residents together to enable savings for each separate homeowner by virtue of the group buying power.

For Medfield residents to get those reduced cost benefits, some resident(s) would need to be the town coach(es) to make it happen.

This would be a great time limited volunteer opportunity for an individual or two with an interest in green energy, solar PV, and/or just saving people money.  The volunteer would coordinate what is needed to be done with the extremely knowledgeable individuals on the Energy Committee.

The Energy Committee is also interested in a few new committee members who  would be interested in working with them to reduce the town’s carbon footprint, and to also save the town money on its energy bills.  Interested parties should contact the Chair, Marie Nolan, or me and I will funnel the information along.

New Life’s summer hours

From Susan Maritan –


New Life Seeking Donations of Bed Frames and
Household Items for Families in Need

Walpole/Medfield, MA – June 21, 2014: New Life Home Refurnishing, a non-profit organization that accepts donations of gently used furniture and household items for individuals and families in need, is asking the public for help. They are especially in need of household appliances such as toasters, coffee makers and small microwave ovens, twin, full and queen bed frames, as well as gently used mattresses and box springs with no stains, tears or visible marks.

New Life HR will begin summer hours on alternating Wednesday nights from 6:30-8:30 PM starting June 25th and will continue on the following evenings: July 9, July 23, August 6, and August 20. They will resume Saturday morning operations starting Sept. 6. Donated items can be brought to the New Life HR warehouse at 102 Elm Street, next to the railroad tracks in Walpole, during the Wednesday evening hours only. Alternatively, a pickup can be arranged during the same time frame. (A voluntary donation is appreciated for pickups.)

Historical Society

Still time to see the really interesting old maps and relics this morning.  Every Saturday morning.

On the 1888 map, Harding St. was Railroad Street and Hospital Road was Canal Street, later to become Asylum Road.

‘Dilbert Quotes’ contest

A magazine recently ran a ‘Dilbert Quotes‘ contest, looking for people to submit quotes from their real-life Dilbert-type managers. These were voted the top ten quotes in corporate America :

‘As of tomorrow, employees will only be able to access the building using individual security cards. Pictures will be taken next Wednesday, and employees will receive their cards in two weeks.’
(This was the winning quote from Fred Dales, Microsoft Corp in Redmond WA )

‘What I need is an exact list of specific unknown problems we might encounter.’ (Lykes Lines Shipping)

‘E mail is not to be used to pass on information or data. It should be used only for company business.’ (Accounting manager, Electric Boat Company)

‘This project is so important we can’t let things that are more important interfere with it.’ (Advertising/ Marketing manager, United Parcel Service)

‘Doing it right is no excuse for not meeting the schedule.’  (Plant Manager, Delco Corporation)
 
‘No one will believe you solved this problem in one day ! We’ve been working on it for months. Now go act busy for a few weeks and I’ll let you know when it’s time to tell them.’ (R&D supervisor, Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing/ 3M Corp)

Quote from the Boss: ‘Teamwork is a lot of people doing what I say.’ (Marketing executive, Citrix Corporation)

My sister passed away and her funeral was scheduled for Monday. When I told my Boss, he said she died on purpose so that I would have to miss work on the busiest day of the year. He then asked if we could change her burial to Friday. He said,‘That would be better for me.’
(Shipping executive, FTD Florists)

‘We know that communication is a problem, but the company is not going to discuss it with the employees.’ (Switching supervisor, AT&T Long Lines Division)
 

The world is a dangerous place to live; not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don’t do anything about it.
Albert Einstein

MBTA’s granite blocks are ours

The MBTA has just licensed the town to take its granite blocks to use as seats at Straw Hat Pocket Park.  Small details remain to be accomplished, like getting the MBTA a certificate of insurance.  However, we are well on our way to having historic seating with a relevant town connection to use in Straw Hat Pocket Park.

blocks photo 1

Sen. Timilty opposes cell tower bill

I had written to Senator Timilty to ask that he oppose the bill before the State Senate that had already passed in the House that removed local control over the siting of cell towers.  This morning I got his reply, indicating that he is working to sop passage of that bill.

Thank you for contacting me regarding your opposition to Senate bill 2183, An Act updating mobile broadband coverage in the commonwealth.  I appreciate your concern about this important matter.


 

Please know that I am also strongly opposed to this bill.  I have serious concerns about its impact on the local control of the siting process for telecommunications equipment and what that would mean for the towns I represent. I will be working with my colleagues to ensure that the bill will not be engrossed by the Senate in either its current form or as an amendment. I am hopeful that I will be able to convince them of the dangerous impact of this legislation.

Once again, thank you for your input.  Please do not hesitate to call or email should you have any questions or require more information.

With every good wish,

Senator Jim Timilty

Bristol & Norfolk

Chairman, Public Safety and Homeland Security
State House, Room 507
Boston, MA 02133
(617) 722-1222