Monthly Archives: June 2020

Day per week watering -odd Mondays / even Thursdays

water ban-2

From: Nicholas Milano <nmilano@medfield.net>
Date: Mon, Jun 22, 2020 at 12:21 PM
Subject: Water Restriction
To: Kristine Trierweiler <ktrierweiler@medfield.net>

 

The Board of Water and Sewerage just voted to request the BOS to approve a Tier 3 water restriction, which would limit nonessential outdoor water use to one day per week. 

  • Even numbered houses can water lawns on Mondays
  • Odd numbered houses can water lawns on Thursdays 

Per the by-laws, the Water and Sewer makes the recommendation, but BOS has to approve it.

 

They would like it to go into effect immediately and until further notice. They also asked about communicating it out and would like us to use the Reverse 911 system.

 

This restriction is due to increasing usage (usage has increased each day over the past week) and the extended dry spell.

 

Typical, daily use is 1.5 to 1.75 million gallons per day. We are at around 2.2 million gallons per day and climbing. Even since sending out notices about the odd/even usage restrictions, the total daily usage has continued to climb.

 

The pumps are running 20 hours a day. Typically they would run 14-16 hours a day.

 

In addition, we have a risk of not maintaining enough water in the storage tanks for fire suppression.

 

Thanks,

 

Nick

 

Nicholas J. Milano

Assistant Town Administrator

Town of Medfield

459 Main Street

Medfield, MA 02052

o: 508-906-3009

Water ban to tighten

water ban-2

The Water & Sewer Board will be asking the Select Board, in an emergency meeting at 3PM this afternoon, to institute a stricter water ban, given the amount of recent water usage.  I think Kris said we will be going from even odd watering to once a week watering.

This resident pleads guilty to being part of the problem – I watered my lawn twice this past week in order to try to keep it from dying.  I had to replace it twice and do not want to have to ever do so again – it was too much work.

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Event Details

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Date:
June 22, 2020
Time:
3:00 PM - 3:30 PM
Location:
This meeting will be held remotely on Zoom due to the COVID-19 state of emergency.
Address:
Medfield, MA 02052

SB 6/23

Board of Selectmen Meeting - 6.23.2020_Page_1

TOWN OF MEDFIELD MEETING NOTICE Posted in accordance with the provisions of MGL Chapter 39 Section 23A, as amended Due to the COVID-19 emergency, this meeting will take place remotely. Members of the public who wish to view or listen to the meeting may do so by joining via the web, or a conference call. 1. To join online, use this link: https://zoom.us/j/93643849894?pwd=OUxUR2lESWp5TmN4MjI5MGZZU25EUT09 a. Enter Password: 312718 2. To join through a conference call, dial 929-436-2866 or 312-626-6799 or 253-215-8782 or 301-715-8592 or 346-248-7799 or 669-900-6833 a. Enter the Webinar ID: 936 4384 9894 b. Enter the password: 312718 Board of Selectmen Board or Committee PLACE OF MEETING DAY, DATE, AND TIME Remote Meeting held on Zoom Tuesday, June 23, 2020 at 7:00 pm Agenda (Subject to Change) 7:00 PM Call to Order Disclosure of video recording We want to take a moment of appreciation for our Troops serving around the globe in defense of our country Appointments Maurice Goulet to discuss shared road concept Jean Mineo to discuss Medfield State Hospital Chapel lease/potential vote to approve lease MEMO/Russ Hallisey:  Request Discover Medfield Day be September 26, 2020 at Medfield State Hospital  Request Common Victualler license for September 26, 2020 Posted:  Request banner approval  Request that summer concert series begin in July at the Medfield State Hospital Discussion (potential votes) COVID-19 Status Update/Operations Action Items Chief Carrico requests the Board of Selectmen vote to sign the application for the Coronavirus Emergency Supplemental Funding Program (CESF) Interim Town Clerk James Mullen requests the Board of Selectmen to accept the resignation of Lee Alinsky from the Board of Registrars and appoint Donna Young as a Registrar for a threeyear term Maurice Goulet requests Board of Selectmen approve the Software User Agreement with Sensus USA Joy Ricciuto requests Board of Selectmen vote to sign one-year engagement with Powers and Sullivan for the FY21 Town audit Vote to authorize Town Administrator to sign application to the Massachusetts Shared Streets grant program Vote to accept budget earmark for West Street/Route 27 study and authorize Town Administrator to sign state the contract Fiscal Year 2021 Operating and Capital Budget 2020 Annual Town Meeting and Warrant Articles Town Administrator Update Next Meeting Dates June 27, 2020 Annual Town Meeting June 29, 2020 Annual Town Meeting (rain date) Selectmen Reports

Will Bento in TV 25 story on police academy at FSU

Medfield resident William Bento is featured in the Boston25News.com story below.  Will is enrolled in the police academy at the Fitchburg State University, and is on a list to become an officer in the Medfield Police Department.  Look carefully and you can see the MPD patch on his shoulder in this news story.

The Medfield Bento’s are a police family, as Will’s sister, Michelle Manganello, is an officer in the MPD, serving as the town’s School Resource Officer, and Will father, David Bento, is a Lieutenant on the Sherborn Police Department.

will Bento

Local police recruits learning new lessons in era of reform

Local police recruits learning new lessons in era of reform

 

FITCHBURG, Mass. — Just as police departments across the state are experiencing reform right now, so are the police academies, where future officers are learning what it takes.

Boston 25 News has been closely following recruits for months, and spent the day at the Fitchburg State Police Academy, to see how educators there are dealing with the civil unrest head-on.

The recruits recently got candid lessons from current officers on protecting and serving the community, including Harvard, Massachusetts Police Chief Edward Denmark.

“There have been times where I’ve used force in my past and a lot of that was anger,” Chief Denmark told the recruits. “I got so wrapped up in what my task was in that moment, as opposed to what my purpose was in the bigger picture.”

 

The recruits are also dissecting mistakes officers around the country have made in hopes of avoiding similar situations. For example, recruits had to write a two-page essay on what the four officers did wrong in the George Floyd incident.

“When we spend 15 weeks here, you do what you’re told here when you’re told to do it and nothing more. I think it can be challenging to get out on the street and confront a veteran officer, but those are the skills that we are learning here to be able to step up and make those tough decisions,” Medfield Police recruit William Bento told Boston 25 News reporter Wale Aliyu.

 

Fitchburg State University Police Academy has a model of training and educating the recruits simultaneously, which they say is the first in the country.

“Research has shown that educated officers have less ‘use of force’ incidents, they have less deadly force incidents, they are better problem solvers,” academy director Lisa Lane McCarty said. “To their credit, this is not a great time to be going through a police academy. And they have these faces on that say ‘they will be the change,’” she added.

 

 

In the five-year program, the 21 recruits will get a criminal justice bachelors, a master’s degree, a police certification, and first-hand lessons on the ethics and nuances of policing.

 

“They need to understand the limitations of some of the things that we have tried or even some of the things people are suggesting now,” Chief Denmark said. “How is a certification going to change the way someone feels in their heart and their mind? It’s not going to. It may help to make sure we have the right education. But at two in the morning when a fight starts in the middle of the street that doesn’t matter.”

 

Four of the recruits already have jobs waiting for them. Benjamin Torrence will be joining the short-staffed Haverhill Police Department, and says as an officer of Color, he feels the pressure to bridge the gap.

 

“I do feel the pressure, but I know I’m not alone,” Torrence said. “I’m excited, my fellow recruits are excited, to get out on the street to make a difference.”

With calls to defund, and dismantle entire departments, these recruits know their goal is to provide change, one interaction at a time.

 

“We want to be able to change peoples’ perspective if they have a negative outlook on this job,” Bento said.

 

“This is all fear-driven,” said Chief Denmark. “This is cops fearing people which causes them to have heightened fear and feel they need to use force. And communities of color don’t trust the cops based on the history of this country. This goes far beyond policing so they’re afraid.”

Melissa Coughlin, RN reflects

The following letter from Melissa Coughlin, RN, a Brigham and Women’s Hospital nurse and a Town of Medfield Board of Health member, appeared in the Medfield Patch –

Thank you Medfield

Today I reflected on all that we have been through and I am proud of us, Medfield.

I need to say, Thank You.

We still have a long uncharted road ahead of us, so it too early to say thank you. I do not think so. Would saying a premature thank you cause any harm? I think not. I believe it is never untimely to share appreciation and love.

So here it goes. On April 1st I sat in front of my laptop terrified for our future. I typed out this plea, “APRIL 2020 will define how this pandemic plays out. THIS MONTH. Please help by making the decision you will be proud to talk about in 10 years, 20 years, and 30 years from now. This is it; we are here. No second chances”

Today I reflected on this statement. So much has happened in the past two and a half months. I am left with an enormous sense of gratitude and pride for this town, my friends, my family, and my colleagues.

In April, we were prepared for the worst and hoped for the best. We were debriefed about how to triage patients by a certain metric to see who would get the ventilator and who would not. As health care workers, we did not get an extra point if it came down to it. They told us this. We lost sleep, we lost weight, we lost time with our loved ones. We were forging into the unknown. We were scared.

You cheered for us. You made us lunches. You dropped off signs that said “HOPE”. You paraded down our streets and honked your horns. You sent us cards. You sent us coffee. You sent us gifts. You took our pictures because we did not know what tomorrow would bring. You gave us an invisible armor that we will never forget. You gave us confidence to face the uncertainties and the fears.

You did what we all thought was impossible. You quarantined. You stayed in your homes. You survived over 60 cancelled school days. You home schooled. You became teachers and teachers became known as heroes that they have always been. You did not get to be in that play that you had worked so hard for. You postponed weddings. You cancelled trips. You missed COA events. You graduated from your cars! You did it.

You learned about ZOOM. You learned to a new way to communicate. You learned what an empty calendar feels like. You learned to have dinner around the table. You learned about few new Netflix’s shows. You learned to watch sunsets from the tailgates of your cars. You learned to slow down.

You made it possible for us to gather our PPE, make room for our ICU patients, and most importantly you made it possible to have enough ventilators so we never had to decide if that healthcare worker would or would not get one.

Medfield continues to hold onto to one of the lowest number of cases in the MetroWest because of you. https://www.mass.gov/doc/weekly-covid-19-public-health-report-june-17-2020/download.

As I said, we still have a new and unfamiliar road ahead of us, but I believe its okay to stop and reflect. Look at what we have done! We have done what once felt impossible.

We are writing the town’s history books Medfield, and I am proud of the story we are telling. What the next chapters will look like continue to be up to us. Let us maintain behaviors that we will have the privilege to talk about in the years to come.

*I am a Medfield Board of Health Member, a bedside nurse at The Brigham and Woman’s Hospital, and a Medfield “townie”. This article is my opinion and not that of the BOH or the BWH*

 

37 cases confirmed 1 active

COVID-19

 

The Board of Health has announced the following case numbers of COVID-19 in Medfield: 37 cases confirmed 1 active

Update

View all updates
June 19, 2020 06:58 AM

The Board of Health has announced the following case numbers of COVID-19 in Medfield: 37 confirmed 1 active Read on

Click here for our dedicated COVID-19 webpage

Street work scheduled

DPW sign

Public Works

Posted on: June 17, 2020

Pavement Maintenance Operations

The Town will be conducting pavement maintenance operations on Hearthstone Drive, Hillcrest Road, Ledgetree Road, Belknap Road, Wildwood Drive, Rollong Lane, Bow Street, Cranmore Road, Fieldstone Drive, Fairview Road, and Eastmount Road beginning Thursday, June 18, 2020. The contractor for this activity will be All States Asphalt, from Sutton, Massachusetts. There may be delays in the schedule if there is inclement weather or mechanical breakdowns.

The maintenance activity will be accomplished during the day. We apologize in advance for any inconveniences this may cause you. Please refrain from parking on these roadways and ensure that any sprinkler system is turned off while work is in progress.

If you have any questions or concerns, please contact the Medfield Department of Public Works at (508) 906-3003 during normal working hours. Thank you for your cooperation and understanding as we try to improve our roadway network in the Town of Medfield.

Click here for a letter from the Town here

$10.34 m. water treatment facility

A water treatment facility at a cost of $10.34 m. is needed to remove the iron and manganese from water the town gets from wells # 3 & 4 behind the Wheelock School.  This is the complete 147 engineering report.

20200617-Medfield Wells 3 4 WTP Preliminary Design Report – Final – May2020

This is the 6,000 sq. ft. building one gets –

filtration project bld.png

This was the email received yesterday transmitting the report.

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Dear Selectmen,

 

In case you did not know, we received the preliminary design report for the water filtration project.  As a refresher, this is to remove naturally occurring high levels of manganese in our well water, and to re-develop Wells 3 and 4.  It is a 147 page document, attached for your perusal in case it has not been forwarded to you yet.

 

We decided to get it on everyone’s radar, and we posted it to the Town website.

 

This is tracking to a $10.34 MM project, that will be presented at the ATM in 2021.

filtration project

 

All the best,

 

Bill Harvey

 

Chairman

Medfield Board of Water and Sewerage

Water ban

water ban-2

More details on the water ban

Dear Selectmen,

 

Just a quick note that pursuant to our water withdrawal permits and the measured low stream level on the Charles River, we hit a threshold that a triggered the Town of Medfield to go to our Tier 2 of our water conservation measures:

“Nonessential water use allowed every other day. Even numbered addresses will be allowed to lawn water on even numbered calendar days. Odd numbered addresses will be allowed to lawn water on odd numbered calendar days.”

 “Lawn watering allowed outside the hours of 9am to 5pm on designated day.

Maurice and his team will be putting up the appropriate signs on the street level, and this is also listed on the town website.

 

Stay cool,

 

Bill Harvey

 

Chairman

Medfield Board of Water and Sewerage

Even-odd water ban

water ban-2

From: Nicholas Milano
Date: Tue, Jun 16, 2020 at 12:54 PM
Subject: Water conservation restriction
To: Kristine Trierweiler

 

Effective June 4, Medfield is subject to a Tier 2 water conservation restriction. Tier 2 means that nonessential water use is limited to every other day (even numbered houses on even days; odd numbered houses on odd days).

 

We posted the restriction on the Town website to comply with MassDEP regulations and our water management act requirements on June 4.

 

Due to continued lack of rainfall, and high usage, we are planning to expand our efforts at letting residents know about the restrictions, including the website, social media, and the sign boards.

 

Thanks

 

 

Nicholas J. Milano

Assistant Town Administrator

Town of Medfield

459 Main Street

Medfield, MA 02052

o: 508-906-3009