Monthly Archives: June 2014

Swap help

From Medfield Green’s Megan Sullivan –


Have you been to the swap at the transfer station yet this season? It is a busy place…busier than last year.

There is a dedicated group of volunteers who work to keep it neat and at the end of the day work to minimize the number of items that are put in the trash for incineration. All items that can be are sorted for a few charities or recycling.

This week in particular they are short staffed for the clean-up on Saturday. It starts around 2:30 and they are usually done in an hour. Can you help?

Volunteers help all day but the clean-up time is particularly important.

If volunteers aren’t available to do the clean-up, EVERYTHING ends up in the TRASH. And that is a bummer for so many reasons.

It’s going to be a beautiful afternoon tomorrow. Why don’t you come meet some new friends!

You can stop by anytime and help. Just look for a volunteer. If you can’t help this week, could you or a family member volunteer another time? For more info contact N.nancyirwin@verizon.net

Megan Brott Sullivan

DLS on OPEB

The Division of Local Services’ e-newsletter today has an excellent article on how Needham is dealing with its Other Post Employment Benefits (OPEB) liability.  OPEB is mainly future health insurance costs for town employees, in their retirement.  Medfield’s OPEB liability has been estimated by our actuaries at about $40 m.  The town started to fund the liability in the past two years, but still at a level way below the estimated $1.5 m. per year that Medfield’s OPEB liability grows each year, so we are continuing to fall behind and our OPEB liability continues to get larger.  The state has a study committee looking into solutions, but none that have been mentioned get around the need to pay what has already been incurred.


Best Practice: How is Needham Addressing OPEB?
Rick Kingsley – Municipal Data Management and Technical Assistance Bureau Chief

With many local officials struggling to understand and plan for looming liabilities related to Other Post-Employment Benefits (OPEB), we thought it would be beneficial to explore the approach that the Town of Needham has taken to address these future obligations. A community that fails to act on its OPEB liabilities runs the risk that future health insurance expenses will become so large that they eventually overwhelm other budget priorities and have a detrimental impact on municipal services.

Background

For those that may not be familiar with this topic, other post-employment benefits refer to benefits other than pensions that employees receive after they retire. By far, the most significant of these is health insurance, but may also include life insurance, dental or other benefits paid after an employee’s retirement. In 2004, the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) issued directives concerning how these liabilities must be presented in a municipality’s financial statements going forward (Pronouncements 43 and 45).

Similar to an employee’s pension benefits, OPEB are earned during the employee’s active working career, but are not actually paid until after the employee retires. GASB directed that these future costs no longer be accounted for on a pay-as-you-go basis, but rather these liabilities must be recognized as they are earned or accrued. In other words, employees earn the right to receive health insurance and other benefits upon retirement incrementally over their active working career. Therefore, on an accrual basis, the annual cost of an employee’s health insurance includes both the municipal share of the actual premium paid on the employe’s behalf plus a portion of the projected post-retirement benefit earned in the current accounting period.

These projections are done by actuaries who look at several variables to estimate these future costs. These variables include a projected rate of inflation for future medical costs, assumptions about employee turnover, age at retirement, Medicare eligibility, election rates for various plans at retirement, and mortality. Factored in as well are the respective cost sharing agreements for splitting benefit costs between the municipality and retirees. To attribute these future costs to current accounting periods, it is necessary to calculate a present value of these future benefits using a discount rate. As we will discuss later, the discount rate has a tremendous impact on the calculation of OPEB liabilities.

The important estimates that emerge from an actuarial analysis include the total present value of future OPEB benefits and the required contribution that must be appropriated annually to address this liability over multiple years. The projected cost of future benefits discounted to a present value is referred to as the Actuarial Accrued Liability (AAL). This amount is then attributed to the current and prior fiscal years based on when these benefits were earned. The amount of the AAL is reduced in cases where there are OPEB reserves set aside. The Annual Required Contribution (ARC) is the portion of projected benefits earned in or attributable to the current fiscal year (normal cost), plus an additional amount necessary to amortize the unfunded actuarial accrued liability for prior years. The amortization period cannot be more than 30 years.

Needham’s Experience

Well before the formal issuance of GASB’s OPEB pronouncements, Needham was among the first municipalities in the state to recognize the need to take action regarding OPEB liabilities. In January of 2002, the Legislature approved the Town’s special act to establish a post retirement insurance liability trust fund. The act was modeled after similar legislation that had been approved earlier for Bedford.

An initial appropriation of $380,000 was achieved through savings that arose in the contributory pension appropriation and a favorable actuarial analysis of the retirement system. An additional $380,000 was appropriated to the trust fund in each subsequent year from FY2002 through FY2007. In FY2005, when the town converted its health insurance coverage to the West Suburban Health Group, it saved more than $1 million. Half of the savings ($500,000) were also appropriated to the trust fund.

By 2007, with a modest amount set aside in the trust, the Town reviewed its pay-as -you-go retiree health insurance appropriation in relation to its Annual Required Contribution. It found that with the retiree health insurance appropriation, plus the annual set aside of $380,000, that the town was only about $120,000 away from appropriating its full ARC. The important message here is that retiree health costs can be paid as part of the annual appropriation of the ARC with the difference between the ARC and retiree health costs reserved in the trust for future liabilities.

Through a second special act approved by the Legislature in 2008, the Town amended the investment standard for assets in the trust from investments that are legal for savings banks to the more flexible prudent investor standard. This change opened the door to more lucrative investment opportunities and put the fund on equal footing with the investments allowed for a pension fund. It also made it far more likely that the town could achieve its targeted rate of return on these investments of eight percent.

As noted earlier, the discount rate used to calculate the present value of future OPEB costs plays a significant role in the size of the liability. For communities contributing their full ARC, GASB allows a discount rate of eight percent based on the estimated long-term yield on plan investments needed to pay future benefits. For plans that are pay-as-you-go and not funded at all, a discount rate of four percent or less is required, reflective of the much lower rate of return on general assets. For partially funded plans, a blended discount rate can be used.

To illustrate the importance of this discount/investment rate in these actuarial calculations, Needham’s unfunded actuarial accrued liability as of July 1, 2007 was $76.4 million using a four percent discount rate and it dropped to $43.6 million with the use of an eight percent discount rate.

Investing with PRIT

With the adoption of the prudent investor standard, Needham began analyzing its options for investments and investment advisory services. For many years, the Town’s pension assets had been invested with state pension assets in the Pension Reserves Investment Trust (PRIT). Through this long-standing relationship, Town officials were aware that the PRIT fund had an average annual rate of return of more than 9.6 percent since its inception in 1985.  At the time, however, there was no legal mechanism to combine the Town’s OPEB funds with its pension assets or otherwise invest these funds with PRIT, so the Town was forced to invest its OPEB trust on its own.

With the approval of Outside Sections 50 and 57 of the FY2012 state budget (Chapter 68 of the Acts of 2011), cities, towns, districts, counties and municipal lighting plants were authorized to invest their OPEB trusts with PRIT. To do so, entities must accept MGL c.32B, s.20 to establish a trust fund and seek approval from the Board of Trustees of the state’s Health Care Security Trust (HCST) to invest in the State Retiree Benefits Trust Fund (SRBTF, MGL c.32A, s.24). The SRBTF is invested in the PRIT Fund’s General Allocation Account (GAA), also known as the PRIT Core Fund. This fund contains about $58 billion in state and local pension assets, as well as the state’s OPEB assets. For communities like Needham with existing OPEB trusts authorized by special act, similar permission to invest in PRIT was contained in an amendment to MGL c.32A, s.24.

To receive approval from the HCST Board to invest in PRIT requires that a municipality submit several documents as part of the application process. This documentation includes evidence of adoption of MGL c.32B, s.20 or special legislation, acknowledgement of investment risk and an investment agreement and a designation of a custodian. The custodian can be either the municipal treasurer or the HCST. If the treasurer is to be the custodian, the SRBTF should be identified as an authorized investment vehicle for the treasurer. Lastly, the Board requires indication of the commitment to fund these liabilities. The Board has set a minimum initial investment requirement of $250,000 and a non-binding goal for qualified governmental entities to reach $1,000,000 over three years.

Earlier this fiscal year, Needham liquidated its OPEB investments and transferred the resulting cash balance to PRIT. The town now has about $15 million in assets invested with PRIT, or roughly 20 percent of the total municipal OPEB assets invested with PRIT.  Needham officials identified several factors that influenced their decision:

  • The Town’s longstanding, successful relationship with PRIT to invest the Town’s pension assets provided a comfort level with moving OPEB funds to PRIT.
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  • Investing with PRIT eliminated the need for Needham to procure investment management services through the MGL c.30B procurement process.
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  • The PRIT fund is one of the best performing state pension funds in the country and serves as an excellent vehicle for attaining the town’s targeted rate of return on OPEB investments.
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  • Professional investment management is provided at a lower cost due to economies of scale than the Town of Needham would have realized by going out on its own for the services.
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  • A highly diversified portfolio that makes use of investment vehicles not available to smaller investors (e.g., private equity, direct hedge funds, timber, and private real estate).
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  • PRIT understands the investments that are legal in MA where an outside investment advisor might not be aware of various prohibited investments.

Conclusion

Needham’s experience provides several important takeaways for other cities and towns that might not be as far along with OPEB. Although GASB has not mandated a funding requirement for OPEB liabilities, it is important for municipalities to start saving for these costs as soon as possible. Through the adoption of MGL c.32B, s.20, a community can establish an OPEB trust, use the prudent investor rule for trust assets and invest these funds with PRIT. Even if your community is not in the position to contribute the full ARC each year, modest and manageable contributions are better than nothing. Strategies to set aside one-time revenues, appropriation balances or other windfalls and appropriate them to the trust as available or identifying an appropriate recurring revenue stream can make a significant difference.

Once funding sources have been identified, it is important that these assets are invested with a long-term outlook similar to pension assets. A simple, low cost way to meet these long-term funding needs is to apply for authorization to invest these funds in the state?s PRIT fund. The tremendous diversification of investments, the annual performance of this fund over time for pension assets and the similarities between the long-term investment horizons for pension and OPEB liabilities make the PRIT fund an excellent vehicle for the investment of OPEB trusts. For additional information about PRIT, please contact Senior Client Services Officer Paul Todisco at 617-946-8423 or ptodesco@mapension.com.

Needham Town Manager Kate Fitzpatrick, Assistant Town Manager/Finance Director David Davison and Treasurer/Collector Evelyn Poness contributed to this article.

BCRT status update

Christian Donner kindly updated me yesterday in a lengthy call on the status of the Bay Colony Rail Trail:

  • Newton has built its section, from Rte 9 to the Charles River
  • Needham is proceeding with its section from the Dover line more than half way across town
  • Dover is working through with a local citizen group what it will be doing
  • Christian recently walked the Medfield section with Joe Hattum who runs Iron Horse Preservation, a nonprofit company that builds rail trails in exchange for the right to salvage the metal from the rails.  The good news learned from Joe was that the Medfield section has mostly heavier gauge tracks, meaning there is more iron, meaning there is more salvage value, and meaning Joe says that Iron Horse can provide Medfield with a stone dust trail for no cost to the town at all, whereas other towns have had to pay something to get their rail trails.
  • Christian reports that while Newton and Needham opted to pay the approximate $25,000 cost for the insurance against third party liability for those being injured by the environmental hazards along the rail trail, many more towns by far have opted to proceed without that insurance due the the exceedingly low risk that the towns would ever have to indemnify the MBTA under the contractual obligations that the MBTA requires towns to accept as part of the 99 year lease of the right of way.  Christian and I agree that the Medfield section probably is unlikely to have been heavily polluted with hazardous wastes, and that it is highly unlikely that a rail trail user would ever be harmed by hazardous waste while using the Medfield section of the Bay Colony Rail Trail.  Therefore, if Medfield decides to forgo the insurance, Medfield could have its own section of the Bay Colony Rail Trail without cost if a future town meeting opts to proceed.

Selectman office hours tomorrow 9-10

Office Hours Tomorrow 9-10 at The Center

Tomorrow I hold my regular monthly office hours at The Center (on the first Friday of the month) from 9:00 to 10:00 AM (my litigation schedule permitting).  Residents are welcome to stop by without appointments to talk in person about any town matters.  Residents can also have coffee and see the Council on Aging in action (a vibrant organization with lots going on).  I can be reached via my cell at 508-359-9190 or my blog about Medfield matters  https://medfield02052.wordpress.com/, where any schedule changes will be posted.

 Mini-Town Hall Neighborhood Meeting 6/12

I am hosted a week from tonight on Alder Road for one of the monthly mini-town hall neighborhood selectmen meetings that sees one selectman each month meeting in a different neighborhood.

Medfield.TV 6/23

I appear with the editor of the Medfield Press. Max Bowen, on Jack Peterson’s Medfield Update show on Medfield.TV, which has one selectman each month appearing to discuss current town issues.

On being a selectman

This week seems to have had me spending large amounts of time during the day at work on selectman tasks, especially the Medfield State Hospital.  I made many calls and exchanged emails (1) about getting things ready for the Tuesday evening meeting and the BoS discussions about people to be appointed to the committee that will craft the redevelopment plans, and (2) to learn about the status of the ongoing clean up and purchase.

It was reported by John Thompson that a virtual trove of engineering drawings and plans of the Medfield State Hospital and its systems will soon be moved to a site with a less leaky roof.  John also reports from his having been in a few of the buildings and spoken with DCAMM and the security personnel that

  • the state intends to just leave everything behind that is there
  • that one of our first tasks should be to inventory what is there
  • that the security guards need to be interviewed before they depart, so that we can learn their understanding of patterns learned from having been on site 24/7 for more than ten years

Brothers Marketplace

Roche Bros. says it will open its new Brothers Marketplace in mid-July, per Selectman DeSorgher in his report at the Board of Selectmen meeting last night.  He said the basement kitchen area is already complete.

MSBA pays 40% of Wheelock boiler

The Superintendent, his management team, and the School Committee got the Mass School Building Authority (MSBA) to pay for 40% of the needed new boiler at Wheelock School.  Congratulations and thank you to them!  This was the email this afternoon from Jeff –


 

Dear Pete,

I wanted to let you know that I have just returned from the Mass School Building Authority (MSBA) board meeting in Boston and they voted to approve our boiler replacement project for the Wheelock School. This project will replace the 45 year old boilers currently in use at the Wheelock School.  As you may remember, I went before the Board of Selectmen in February to ask for your support to apply for this grant program. The School Committee also voted to support this project on January 27,2014. This is an exciting opportunity for us as the MSBA will reimburse the Town of Medfield 40% of the project cost; saving the citizens of Medfield thousands of dollars in capital costs. MSBA will be sending along a project timeline that will outline key dates for the project, including when funds need to be allocated. In addition, the School Committee and I did not submit an application for a new Dale St. School during this round of grants as we believed it would negatively impact the other building project priorities in town. Lastly, I think its important for the Selectmen and you to know that Mike Sullivan was a great help during the Statement of Interest (SOI) process and gave the application his full support.
On behalf of the School Committee, the students and staff of Medfield, I want to thank the entire Board of Selectmen for their continued support.
Best,
Jeff


Jeffrey J. Marsden, Ed.D

Superintendent
Medfield Public Schools
508-359-2302

Follow me on Twitter @JeffreyJMarsden

New sidewalk

Seen this morning, when going to the Library for Cultural Council press station on community branding, cement being poured for the new sidewalk. Bobby Kennedy and Ed Hinckley said the four new trees that can be seen are ginkgo trees. It is good for the businesses there that this is getting finished.

BoS calendar – updated

Mike Sullivan this afternoon circulated an updated versoin of the Board of Selectmen’s annual calendar –


 

Proposed Calendar for Board of Selectmen

May 20, 2014 to December 31, 2014

Selectmen’s Meetings: May 20 & 27, June 3 & 17, July 1 & 15, August 5 & 19, September 2, 16 & 30, October 7, 21 & 28, November 4, 18 & 25, December 2 & 16

May 20 – Mike Francis from Trustees of Reservations to discuss policy on mosquito applications on Trustees land. Open Space & Recreation Committee five-year plan & survey update.

May 27 – State Hospital Advisory Committee to discuss composition and skill set of Hospital Committee going forward, mission statement for hospital committee, hospital master plan and time frame for acquisition and redevelopment.

June 3 – Mission Statement and Appointment of Hospital Redevelopment Committee

June 17 – Water & Sewerage Board, Supt of DPW & Cemetery Commission to discuss role of Water & Sewerage Board in policy & budget oversight, DPW Supt to explain Chapter 90 Highway Fund, sidewalk & road maintenance and construction and sidewalk from Robert Sproul Road to Medfield Shops Plaza, Tree City program, and Cemetery Commission to discuss role in policy & budget oversight and cemetery expansion. Discussion of FY15 budget goals, review Selectmen’s and Town Administrator’s goals and evaluate Town Administrator.

July 1 – Medfield State Hospital Redevelopment Committee give mission statement and discuss goals; Medfield Energy Committee update on Energy Manager position and goals

July 15 –August 5 – Aesthetics Committee, Downtown Cultural District, Dwight-Derby House Trustees, Historical Commission, Historical Society , Historic District Committee and MEMO Planning Board, Sign Bylaw Committee & Zullo Gallery Committee to review downtown redevelopment progress

August 9 – Tour new public works garage.

August 19 – Town Accountant and Treasurer/Collector to review FY14 year end revenue and expenditure results and to discuss borrowing plans. Update from Selectman DeSorgher on meetings with area Boards of Selectmen to discuss regionalization

September 2 – Economic Development Committee to discuss RFP for Lot 3, Ice House Road and other potential economic development initiatives.

September 16 – Permanent Town Planning 7 Building Committee to discuss Public Safety Building

September 30 – Water & Sewerage Board to discuss Water Tower construction program & Supt of DPW to discuss road and sidewalk maintenance & construction

October 7 – Personnel Board & Asst Town Administrator to review Personnel Bylaw update progress

October 21 – Council on Aging to review Respite Care Program and rental polices

October 28 – Senator Timilty, Representatives Garlick and Dooley & State Hospital Committee for update on hospital acquisition and redevelopment

November 4 – Warrant Committee, Capital Budget Committee, Dept. Heads, Boards and Commissions for Initial Budget meeting FY16 budgets

November 18 – Conservation Commission, Park & Recreation Commission, School Department & Bay Circuit Committee to discuss field usage, trail development & Open Space & Recreation Plan implementation

November 25 – Board of Health, Lyme Disease Committee and Norfolk county Mosquito Control District to discuss deer culling, beaver control & mosquito control.

December 2 – Submission of budgets for FY16. Schedule budget meetings with Departments. Update from Outreach Director

December 16 – Open Warrant for Annual Town Meeting and request submission of warrant articles

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

New planting island at Rte 27 & Hospital Road

From the Medfield Garden Club –


 

Dear Fellow Residents of Medfield,
As you enter the north side of Medfield on route 27, The Medfield Garden Club hopes you will take note of a new garden site we have just installed at the Hospital Road island. It is a lovely example of collaboration between the Selectmen’s office, the Dept of Public Works, and the Medfield Garden Club with the common goal of beautifying the Town of Medfield.
With the support of the Selectmen, the MGC planned the site and with the tremendous assistance of the men of the Highway Dept, it has become a reality. Under the direction of Ken Feeney, Bobby Kennedy and his crew pulled up the ugly green asphalt, dug up the soil, placed a couple of large stones as focal points and then edged the island site with river stones and mulch. Even without the plants it was beautiful!! The garden has just been planted and mulched and will hopefully develop into a pretty roadside garden to welcome folks as they enter our town.
Please enjoy, and thanks again to all involved in this effort.
Sincerely,
Nancy Tella

Fox on cat

Yesterday I was first attracted by an unfamiliar screeching noise coming from the back of our yard, then I saw two blurs racing from the back woods towards the house, then I realized the first black and white blur was my cat and the second blur was a grey fox right on its tail.  The fox was clearly out for dinner, but left without our cat when I both yelled and ran.

This cat came to us as a stray from Bridge Street, and much as we have tried to make it into an indoor cat, it still aggressively seeks to get outside, crouching by the door and bolting past our feet when we come home.

Be careful about letting any small pets outside.