Monthly Archives: August 2016

Bike paths & hiking trails

20160729-MAPC-Medfield

The ad hoc group met with David Loutzenheiser, Senior Transportation
Planner at the Metropolitan Area Planning Council (MAPC) this morning about bicycle and hiking trails in Medfield.  Attending were Town Planner, Sarah Raposa, Town Administrator, Mike Sullivan, Bay Colony Rail Trail Committee chair, Christian Donner, BCRT committee member, George Hinkley, interested resident Alec Stevens, and interested selectman, me.

Per what the MAPC person told Sarah before the meeting, he is working on two rail trail feasibility projects: (1) Wrentham/Norfolk/Walpole/Norwood and (2) Bellingham/Medway/Millis/Medfield.  Apparently, he has funding to begin work on these projects and depending on the communities’ levels of interest would like to do so either this fall or next spring.

At the meeting he focused on

  • the Bay Colony Rail Trail (in yellow on the above map),
  • the possibility of running a rail trail along side of the active north-south rail line (also in yellow on the above map), and
  • hiking trail connectors
    • from downtown to Rocky Woods (needs a boardwalk North of Hinkley Pond)
    • from Elm Street area over to the Bubbling Brook area
    • from Rocky Woods to the Blue Hills

The Bay Colony Rail Trail will probably proceed.  The North South rail line trail would link many of the main features and sites in town in ways that would dramatically improve the town.  Alec Stevens has proposed this in the past, based on his experience with a successful one he knew while growing up in Philadelphia.

It is going to be a long process, requiring lots of work and planning, and it has started.

Vetoed MSH road money

charles river overlook

Current access to the Charles River Overlook is via the Town of Medfield land, but the Land Disposition Agreement that the town negotiated with the state gives the town the option to require the state to build a new access road to the park area across the land the state kept to the west of the Medfield State Hospital site, if the town feels continuing the easement would depress the value of the town land, and so notifies the state.

Some worked to have Senator Timilty add $150,000 to the budget this year to go towards that new road, but the Governor vetoed that earmark and it was not one that was overridden.  Below is an explanation in an email exchange by Bill Massaro and Senator Timilty’s staff person.


The Governor’s veto of the $150K earmark intended for DCAMM design/construction of the Overlook Parking Lot access was not overridden.

As I had stated in my previous  background info e-mail on the Governor’s veto, loss of the earmark does not change DCAMM’s obligations under the LDA, and does not affect the Town’s deadline to notify DCAMM by 1 Dec 2016 if the town wants the permanent general public access to the State-owned Overlook on State-owned land and not on Town-owned MSH land.

Given the loss of the earmark and given their 3 year (by 1 Dec 2019) construction window  under the LDA , there is no immediate incentive for DCAMM to begin design/engineering and construction in FY 2017… but likely  pushing it out closer to the end of into  the 3-year window and  uncertainties of 2019’s  budget

Accordingly, I  have asked that the Senator’s office consider trying again when the FY 2018 budget process starts..

Bill

———————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————-

From: “Molly Sullivan (SEN)” <Molly.Sullivan@masenate.gov>
Sent: Monday, August 1, 2016 4:59:21 PM
Subject: RE: Override Status– Medfield Access Earmark

Hi Bill,

Sorry it took me a bit to get back to you. The Senate was in very late last night, as you saw in the Globe, so I took today off, but I wanted to get you an answer!

Unfortunately, the veto by the Governor was not overridden. Senator Timilty did file a similar amendment in for the roadway in the Senate’s Economic Development bill as well. We got it in the Senate bill but it looks like it did not survive the conference committee.

Senator Timilty and I know how important this is, and we will keep trying to get some funding anyway we can! But of course we can keep it on the radar for FY18 as well. Even though we didn’t get the funding this year, its great for it to be on the legislature’s radar.

Let me know if I can do anything else for you all! Hope you are all having a great summer!!

Best,

Molly

From: wmassaro@comcast.net [wmassaro@comcast.net]
Sent: Monday, August 01, 2016 12:35 PM
To: Sullivan, Molly (SEN)
Cc: Harney, John; Thompson, John
Subject: Re: Override Status– Medfield Access Earmark
Hi Molly,

 

Saw in the Globe that the FY 17  budget veto override efforts completed late last night and that several earmarks had been re-instated.  I would like to be able to tell the Medfield Selectmen and the Hospital Reuse Committee what happened to Medfield’s $150K for the Overlook Access road.

 

With or without the earmark the Town ‘s & DCAMM’s responsibilities under the December 2,  2014 Land Disposition Agreement are unchanged:

–  The Town must notify DCAMM by 1 December 2016 if it wants the permanent access road built on State Land

–  If notified DCAMM must construct the road by 1 December 2019

 

If the override has failed for FY 2017,  I suspect that when the Town makes the Dec 2016  “relocate the road” notification DCAMM will likely  delay design/construction as far into 2019 as they can.  Keeping an FY 2018 earmark on the radar would still be beneficial

 

Thanks,

 

Bill

Legal case update

This is from my daily legal news update from the American Association for Justice.  This case makes one appreciate the government regulations that keep us safe, as that chemical cannot be used here.

 

Family sickened by pesticide in Virgin Islands may receive $87 million payout.

ABC News (8/1, 4.15M) reports that “a Delaware family severely poisoned by pesticides while on a vacation to the Virgin Islands could receive as much as $87 million in a settlement from ServiceMaster, the parent of pest control company Terminix, according to the company’s recent financial filings.” ABC adds that “teenagers Sean and Ryan Esmond both suffered seizures and landed in the hospital in critical condition after exposure to methyl bromide – a powerful, nearly odorless neurotoxin that was banned from indoor residential use by the Environmental Protection Agency in 1984 – according to the agency.” Their parents, Stephen Esmond and Theresa Devine, “were also severely injured from the exposure and required rehabilitation therapy, according to a statement last year by the family’s lawyer.” ABC notes that “in financial statements filed July 28,” ServiceMaster “noted that it entered into a plea agreement on July 21 after a Department of Justice investigation.”