Author Archives: Select Board member Osler "Pete" Peterson

MSH arts/cultural center financial analysis

msh-lee-chapel-by-jt

Jean Mineo, Medfield’s arts and cultural guru, notes this morning my failure to include the Louise Stevens financial analysis of an arts/cultural center at the Medfield State Hospital site, when I posted a link to the DBVW Architects design concept report yesterday afternoon.  So here is the link to Louise Stevens’ financial analysis of an arts/cultural center at the Medfield State Hospital site from last October, that was updated this month –

20170406-ArtsMarket-Medfield Feasibility Report April REV.pdf

I had intended to post it with the DBVW material, but ran short of time.  The DBVW report has the stunning visuals with a new glass connector between the Lee Chapel and the Infirmary, while the Louise Stevens analysis says that it can work financially.

My major take away from hearing Louise Stevens present and reading her report last fall was that the arts/cultural center can be financially self-sustaining, mainly by means of rental income as a wedding location.  However, the benefit to the town is having a robust arts/cultural center all the other days of the year.

These studies were spearheaded by Jean’s efforts, and were funded partly by monies voted at the annual town meeting a year ago and a state grant Jean secured for the town.

Cultural/arts center proposal for MSH

Lee Chapel at msh

At the Medfield State Hospital Master Planning Committee meeting last night, Douglas Brown of BDVW Architects from Providence presented his analysis of the potential for using the Lee Chapel and the adjoining Infirmary building as a cultural arts center.  Mr. Brown indicated that those two buildings were in good condition.  His plan has them being connected by a glass addition, which would become the entry way and also house the rest rooms.   The written report is available via the link that follows.

20170406-DBVW Architrects-1624_Existing-Conditions-Report_17-0403-Email(1)

An earlier economic analysis found that such a proposal was generally close to being economically self-sustaining.  Also, most of the construction costs appeared to be covered by selling the naming rights and fund raising.

One of the most intriguing suggestions was to have the new arts/cultural center be melded into and run as part of the Medfield Park & Recreation Commission, so that the town would have a Parks, Recreation, and Arts Commission.  The Medfield Park & Recreation Commission members present last night wanted to get the results of their new building feasibility study this June before they consider any such change.

Office hours tomorrow 9-10AM

Center_and_sign

Office hours tomorrow 9-10AM

I hold regular monthly office hours at The Center on the first Friday of every month from 9:00 to 10:00 AM (litigation schedule permitting).

Residents are welcome to stop by 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 eterson can be reached via 508-359-9190 or this blog about Medfield matters  https://medfield02052.wordpress.com/https://medfield02052.wordpress.com/, where any schedule changes will be posted.

 

ZBA approves Hospital Road 40B

40b

The Zoning Board of Appeals of the Town of Medfield yesterday approved and today released its decision on the Larkins’ 49 units (with 13 affordable units) Country Estates 40B project, granting approval subject to pages of conditions.  This link goes tot eh full decision – 20170406-ZBA-1300 – Country Estates – Hospital Road – Comp Permit

I know that blasting was a special concern of the neighbors, especially given the amount of ledge, and this is the blasting condition and the final conclusion:

=================================================================

G.l 7. Blasting – Pursuant to 527 CMR 1.00, Chapter 65, a licensed blasting professional
shall perform all blasting on the Property after proper pre-blast inspections and
surveys have been conducted and all required permits have been obtained from
the Medfield Fire Department, and such work shall be performed in accordance
with all local, state and federal requirements. Prior to any blasting or rock
removal, the Fire Chief shall review and approve a plan, including a schedule, for
such drilling, blasting, and hammering. No blasting shall take place before 10:00
a.m. or after 4:00 p.m., Monday through Friday. The plan and schedule shall be
provided to the Board two weeks before commencement of drilling, blasting, or
hammering.
G.18 Rock Crushing. No onsite rock crushing shall be conducted except for that
necessary for use onsite from 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. ,Monday to Friday. All
other rock shall be crushed offsite.

===================================================================

V.       CONCLUSION

For all the reasons stated above and pursuant to the Board’s authority found in G.L. c.40B, §§ 20-23, the Comprehensive Permit application is hereby APPROVED WITH CONDITIONS by a vote of 3 to 0.    The Board reserves the right to cause this Decision to be recorded at the Norfolk County Registry of Deeds.

Dr. Potee on May 2

MCAP Logo_1C_300

Dr. Ruth Potee at 7PM on May 2

Just checked and my notes from our 2/10/17 Medfield Cares About Prevention (MCAP) meeting and the Superintendent said that that Dr. Ruth Potee will be speaking in Medfield at 7PM on May 2 – someone asked me when it was going to be.

MEDFIELD AFFORDABLE HOUSING WORKSHOP

town seal

MEDFIELD AFFORDABLE HOUSING WORKSHOP

TUESDAY, APRIL 11, 2017 AT 7PM AT THE CENTER

Please join the Town of Medfield and Community Opportunities Group, Inc. at a public workshop to discuss issues related to affordable housing in Medfield.

 

The purpose of the workshop will be to:

·        Provide information regarding Affordable Housing Trusts and Inclusionary Zoning

·        Obtain feedback on affordable housing goals

·        Provide the public with the opportunity to ask questions and comment on upcoming warrant articles at Annual Town Meeting

 

The workshop is open to all members of the public.

Questions? Please contact Sarah Raposa, Town Planner, at (508) 906-3027

 

ALS discussion 4/10

ambulance

The Warrant Committee and the Board of Selectmen just confirmed arrangements for a joint meeting at 7:30 PM on Monday April 10 to discuss the pending Advance Life Support (ALS) town meeting warrant article and the town’s ALS situation and its solution.

The town’s private ALS service providers ceased supplying ALS services on short notice to the town last year, and the town now relies on mutual aid from Westwood, Walpole, and Norfolk to supply ALS intercept services as needed.

On average, the Medfield Fire Department has two ambulance runs per day and where about 25% of the runs require ALS services, therefore the town averages one ALS run every other day.

Before announcing his retirement, Chief Kingsbury had recommended the hiring of six full time firefighter-paramedics to provide the ALS service, at a present cost of close to $500,000 a year, which was exclusive of the retirement pension and retiree health care costs the town would eventually pay later.

Other possible alternatives include:

  • hiring a private service to provide the needed ALS service (estimated at $600,000/year); and
  • seeking a regional solution with the surrounding towns that also do not now provide ALS services – Dover, Sherborn, Millis, and Medway.

It really comes down to a policy decision of both how much the town is willing to pay to have the paramedic answer the calls when the ALS services are needed, and how best to have the paramedic there when needed from among the various options that are available.

Green Community recognition 4/12

The Medfield Energy Committee was tenacious, working hard over many years to position Medfield to become a Green Community, by satisfying the five required criteria, most recently by crafting a five year plan for a further 20% reduction by the town government’s energy use – that was filed and accepted by DOER over the winter.  The DOER invitation to the Green Community designation event appears below.  The five year plan was a “further” reduction, because the Medfield Energy Committee already had affected over a 30% energy use reduction since MEC first started its work.

It turns out that saving the planet also helps to save the town money.

And, don’t forget that qualifying as a Green Community also gets the town a $148,000 DOER grant, as well as access to future ongoing competitive DOER grants. So doing the right thing also earns the town money.

Westwood used one of the DOER competitive grants ($250,000) to buy and convert all its streetlights to LED fixtures.

Our own streetlight purchase ($1) and LED conversion (in round numbers, about $100,000) is a warrant article at our upcoming town meeting.  In general terms the town would spend about $100,000 to buy and convert to LED’s, get a now available, time limited $30,000 DOER grant to do so, and save about $30,000/year in future reduced electricity charges, for a pay back of the cost to convert in less than three years.

20170412-DOER-GC Event Invitation Medfield

Selectmen breakfast

Mike and Emily Marcucci hosted Gus, Steve, and Mike, as well as Mark and me for a breakfast this morning – families included. The town is luckily to have such talented and interested residents working to make the town better.

Marijuana policy issues

MCAP Logo_1C_300

Medfield Cares About Prevention (MCAP) (www.MedfieldCares.org) circulated the email they below that they got  from the Massachusetts Prevention Alliance, about the hearings on marijuana that the legislature is holding.

Dr. Ruth Potee (see below) is coming to Medfield to speak (in May, I think).  I heard her speak over a year ago at Weston High School and I was so impressed with both her information and her delivery, that I asked her if she would come to Medfield to speak, and she agreed that she would.  I passed that information along to Medfield Cares About Prevention (MCAP) and the Superintendent arranged to have her come.  She lives and practices medicine as a primary care physician in Greenfield, Massachusetts, including treating addicts.  When we spoke, she was booking dates a year out, as she needed to come on the nights when her husband could do child care.  Plus she does not charge.  She is impressive. –

MAPA

THIS TOOK PLACE AT THE SECOND HEARING ON MARIJUANA POLICY 

 

We had a good showing for addiction and substance abuse prevention at the West Springfield public hearing on Marijuana Policy this past Monday (March 27).  Here are brief notes on a few of the statements that were made:

—  Greenfield physician, Dr. Ruth Potee said the minimum age to legally purchase marijuana should be 25, the age at which the brain is done developing.  She called for the committee to limit the psychoactive chemical THC in retail marijuana to 15 percent at most. Some marijuana edibles and concentrates are 90 percent THC. (To learn more about Dr. Potee’s important work, click here >> )
—  A business leader presented the math:  the optimistically projected $100m state revenues from marijuana taxes, at .002 percent of the $40 billion state budget, is less than one day’s operating budget for our state government. Associated costs for a new marijuana regulation bureaucracy plus compliance and enforcement costs will dwarf the proceeds for the people and taxpayers of the Commonwealth.

— Hampden County District Attorney Anthony Gulluni offered thoughtful input about law enforcement resource requirements.

— Attorney John Scheft of Law Enforcement Dimensions addressed negligent provisions in the law by offering specific legal language recommendations that would make the existing marijuana law at least consistent with alcohol law in regard to access and penalties for breaking the law. As currently written, the marijuana law is more lax than alcohol law in the Commonwealth.

—  West Springfield Mayor Will Reichelt said a majority of his town’s voters opposed the ballot initiative, called Question 4, and there is concern that the Town Council cannot stop retail pot shops from opening. The law requires a ballot initiative in each town that wants to opt out. Mayor Reichelt made the point that no other zoning is mandated to go on a town’s ballot to opt out; that is a decision made by local governing boards.

— There was strong cannabis industry representation advocating for the broadest possible access to building and growing marijuana production, sales and customer-base.

— Holyoke City Mayor Alex Morse expressed enthusiastic support for a 200,000 square foot marijuana grow space planned for a vacant Holyoke factory space.

— One “expert” freelance journalist cited a study on Jamaican babies born to heavy Cannabis using mothers saying the children were brighter and better socialized.  “Stoner babies”, he called them. (NOTE: Pediatricians are needed to get accurate pediatric health and toxicology information to these lawmakers.)

— Another woman testified that use rates should not be raised to age 25 because she is actively recruiting young women into her Amherst area practice of psychedelic feminism, promoting expanded conscious through hallucinogenic drugs.  She criticized the committee for not having diversity, particularly in their views of cannabis use. Legislative committee members, specifically Rep. Rogers speaking for others on the committee as well, expressed an openness to her views on marijuana use.

Thank you to all those who have submitted testimony and have carved out time to participate in this hearing process.  Our prevention network of cooperation and emerging partners must continue to unite and bring strong voice from all sectors and stakeholders to help this legislative committee shape a marijuana law that protects public health and safety.  We must continue vigilant presence and testimony to protect our children, families and communities from substance abuse and addiction – and all the costly corresponding problems that emerge from building state economy off drug use.

TAKE ACTION
Please offer specific recommendations for improvements to the Massachusetts Marijuana Act of 2016.

1) ATTEND THE REMAINING PUBLIC HEARINGS AND SUBMIT TESTIMONY

Final two hearing dates, times and locations:

APRIL 3RD, 11 AM, STATE HOUSE, RMS. A-1, A-2:   At this hearing a list of bills will be considered.  Your position statement on specific bills would be most helpful.  The Committee needs comments on these bills: offer context, amendments, support, support with changes, or oppose. You do not need to present detailed analysis of any of the bills.  For example, it is perfectly fine to say something like “I support H3183 and S1073 because we need to better understand the impact of high potency marijuana products” etc.
To view the hearing agenda and list of bills, click here >>

APRIL 10th, 4 PM, SHREWSBURY HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM

  • To download a template letter with suggested changes to help get you started with testimony, click here >>
  • For a simple document on best practices for state marijuana policy, click here >> 
  • For an excellent public health analysis of marijuana policy that was released in February 2016, click here >>

 

Committee Email Addresses to submit written testimony
Patricia.Jehlen@masenate.gov (Chair Representing the Senate)
Jason.Lewis@masenate.gov
James.Eldridge@masenate.gov
Linda.DorcenaForry@masenate.gov
James.Welch@masenate.gov
Vinny.deMacedo@masenate.gov
Mark.Cusack@mahouse.gov (Chair Representing the House)
Dave.Rogers@mahouse.gov
Tackey.Chan@mahouse.gov
Michael.Finn@mahouse.gov
Aaron.Vega@mahouse.gov
john.velis@mahouse.gov
RoseLee.Vincent@mahouse.gov
Adrian.Madaro@mahouse.gov
Stephan.Hay@mahouse.gov
Hannah.Kane@mahouse.gov
Nicholas.Boldyga@mahouse.gov
2) MEET WITH SENATOR JEHLEN AND REPRESENTATIVE CUSACK
It is critical that the Chairs of the Committee understand the data-driven, research-based facts, and why it is important to mitigate the harms and consequences with specific policy measures (see links above for suggestions). Visits from the following sectors are particularly important:

  • Health: Hospitals, Doctors, Pediatricians, Nurses, Hospital Administrators
  • Mental Health: Behavior and Cognitive Health Advocates
  • Business: Business owners, Chambers of Commerce, Business Groups
  • Municipal and Civic Organizations
  • Education: Administrators and Teachers
  • Medical and Health-related Associations/Societies
  • Public Health: Prevention, Recovery and Treatment Professionals 
  • Child and Family Welfare & Protection: Parents, Agencies & Associations
  • Community and Youth Serving Agencies
  • Public Safety and Law Enforcement
  • Parents and Youth

LEARN HOW TO OPT OUT OF RECREATIONAL MARIJUANA
On Wednesday, April 12th 5:30-9pm at 17 Willow Street, Westborough, MA Westborough Concerned Citizens will be holding a workshop on the OPT OUT process.  All Massachusetts citizens – official and volunteers – are welcome and encouraged to attend. Seating is limited. To register, email optoutwestboro@gmail.com with subject line: “Reserve Seating for 4/12 Workshop.” Please include your name, names of guests and your community.

IN THE NEWS THIS WEEK:
We are pleased to report The Town of Medfield successfully voted to opt-out of recreational marijuana this past week.  To learn more, click here >>

Growing number of towns ban pot sales – Boston Herald | Click here >>

Head spinning marijuana questions – Cape Cod Times | Click here >>

Chelmsford Police: Bus driver set to take kids on field trip was high on marijuana – Fox 25 Boston | Click here >>

State marijuana committee hears testimony from mayors, citizens in West Springfield – Mass Live | Click here >>

As pot industry ramps up in Mass., get the rules right – The Boston Globe | Click here >>

Thank you for standing with us to protect the health and wellness of all youth in the Commonwealth.

The Team at the Massachusetts Prevention Alliance

 

 

Thank you for taking action on this very important drug policy issue in Massachusetts.  MAPA continues as an all-volunteer organization working to provide information and resources helpful to all stakeholders in the Commonwealth working to address and prevent drug use and addiction. You may learn more about the Massachusetts Prevention Alliance here: www.mapreventionalliance.org

Promoting drug-free communities and lifestyles in the Commonwealth requires everyone to play a part in prevention. Thanks to generous donors, we continue to advocate, educate and collaborate to protect Massachusetts’ young people from drug use and addiction.  Every dollar donated goes directly to our advocacy efforts and is tax-deductible. Please make a donation today to help build our capacity to promote primary drug prevention in the Commonwealth.

 

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