Selectman Office Hours on 1/8

COOA's Center_and_sign

Selectman Office Hours on 1/8

This month my regular monthly office hours at The Center will be from 9:00 to 10:00 AM on January 8, since The Center it is closed New Years Day, my usual first Friday.  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).

Peterson can be reached via 508-359-9190 or his blog about Medfield matters  https://medfield02052.wordpress.com/, where any schedule changes will be posted.

2015 in review

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2015 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

The concert hall at the Sydney Opera House holds 2,700 people. This blog was viewed about 22,000 times in 2015. If it were a concert at Sydney Opera House, it would take about 8 sold-out performances for that many people to see it.

Click here to see the complete report.

Pete’s comment = First, I liked the Syndey Opera House comparison when WP used it the first time – not so much this year.  Second, the thing the jumped out at me was seeing a March post highlighted about a new juice shop and knowing that juice shop only just opened – I will check to see if that delay was due to town permitting, as if so, we need to figure out how to make the permitting move faster.

Congress in January may reduce consumer & worker rights

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This holiday season, tell Congress: Protect Workers and Consumers, Not Wall Street Corporations!  Take Action Now!

When the House of Representatives returns to Washington on January 5, one of the first items of business will be to demonstrate the lengths to which House leadership will go to offer corporate bailouts at the expense of consumers and workers.

Two completely different issues are being bundled into a single bill, H.R. 1927, the so-called “Fairness in Class Action Litigation and Furthering Asbestos Claim Transparency Act of 2015.”; The first section of the bill would all but prevent consumers from banding together in class action lawsuits against companies that have cheated them by prohibiting a court from certifying a class action unless all class members have suffered the same “type and scope” of injury as the named class representative or representatives. The second section of the bill would target individuals suffering from asbestos exposure who are seeking compensation through the asbestos trust system, requiring public disclosure on the Internet of sensitive personal information, including their names, work history, and likely a portion of their Social Security number.

But what both sections do accomplish is more bailouts for companies looking to avoid accountability when they’ve harmed consumers and who have knowingly exposed workers to asbestos.

Please take a moment to contact your representative in Congress and let him or her know that you don’t want more corporate bailouts, you want more protections for workers dying from asbestos exposure and consumers cheated by big businesses! Take Action

 

777 6th Street NW, Suite 200 | Washington, DC 20001 | 202-965-3500

Medfield Green’s Rachel Brown’s recycling tips

Medfield Green

How to Dispose of Holiday Packaging and No Longer Needed Items

 

Holiday gifting produces lots of packaging, and new gifts to replace worn, or less up-to-date items. Here are Medfield’s Transfer Station and Recycling Committee’s top 5 tips for their disposal:

 

  1. Use single stream recycling for the following:
  • regular cardboard and corrugated cardboard boxes (please flatten and make sure there is no packaging inside)
  • paperboard gift boxes
  • greeting cards (except those with foil, metallic inks, or glitter)
  • gift wrap, gift bags, tissue wrap (except those with foil, metallic inks, or glitter)
  • paper shopping bags (remove any handles that are not paper).
  • catalogs and calendars

 

The following does NOT belong in single stream:

  • ribbons, bows, and tinsel
  • packing peanuts and Styrofoam (see # 2 below)
  • holiday lights
  • plastic bags (see # 2 below)

 

  1. Hold your Styrofoam #6 (coolers, packing blocks, and packing peanuts) for the special collection on January 2 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Transfer Station. Packing peanuts and bubble wrap will be accepted if bagged separately. Air-filled packaging can be “popped” and recycled with plastic bags.

 

  1. Your Christmas tree (minus ornaments and tinsel) can be disposed of for composting at the Transfer Station. Wreaths should be disposed of on the tip floor as trash due to the wiring they contain.

 

  1. Electronix Redux will be at the Transfer Station January 2 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. and will accept unwanted computers, monitors, printers, faxes, entertainment systems, and other consumer products for a small fee. Electronix Redux is at the Transfer Station on the first Saturday of the month throughout the year, so if you miss them in January you can catch them another month.

 

  1. Donate unwanted items. The Town Garage office has the Medfield Reuse & Recycle Guide that provides a valuable resource of organizations that will accept your no longer needed items. The Transfer Station also has many recycling opportunities for these items including clothing, small electrics (Goodwill), books and DVD’s. You can find the reuse guide on the Town of Medfield Website under Transfer Station Brochures.

 

Begin the New Year with the resolve to make Medfield greener!

Medfield Green

MBTA’s The Ride at risk in Medfield

This from the Statehouse News Service, via John Nunnari –

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SENIORS TURN OUT TO WARN AGAINST CHANGES THAT COULD MAKE THEM “SHUT-INS”

 

By Andy Metzger and Matt Murphy

STATE HOUSE NEWS SERVICE

 

BOSTON, DEC. 14, 2015…..If the MBTA Fiscal and Management Control Board votes to eliminate “premium” services on the Ride, a door-to-door paratransit system, about a dozen people are prepared to be arrested Monday, according to Carolyn Villers, executive director of Mass Senior Action Council.

 

Villers anticipates the board will not take that step, and said if the elimination of “premium” services remains a possibility, a group of activists will go to Gov. Charlie Baker’s office to protest the proposal. If the board votes Monday to eliminate it “we will be rather disruptive,” Villers told the News Service.

 

The MBTA is wrestling with a projected $242 million deficit in fiscal 2017. The premium service applies to areas outside the Americans with Disabilities Act-mandated para-transit zone and applies to rides that are scheduled and taken on the same day, according to Villers.

 

A map Villers provided shows areas deemed premium in the Ride’s service area, including Medfield, most of Concord, Topsfield and part of Weymouth. The control board is meeting Monday after a joint meeting with the MassDOT board.

 

Advocates are warning against any reductions in services for elders and the disabled who rely on The Ride to buy grocery and get to doctor appointments.

 

Mass Home Care says that any move to cut back on “premium” services will lead to more “shut-ins” cut off from help to conduct their daily lives.

 

“If the MBTA takes The Ride off the road, we will lose more than 210,000 trips that not only link elders to needed services — but reduces their isolation in their homes for those who no longer can drive on their own,” Candy Kuebel, of Mass Home Care, plans to tell the board.

 

The T has estimated that it could save $5.2 million to $10.4 million starting early next year by limiting the door-to-door Ride service to the areas specifically required by the Americans with Disabilities Act.

 

Mass Home Care said seniors were already impacted by Ride fare increases in 2012 and did not receive a cost-of-living adjustment in their Social Security. Use of The Ride fell 20 percent after the fare hikes, according to Mass Home Care.

 

“You have heard the term ‘shut-ins.’ Well, no senior wants to be called a “shut-in,” but that’s exactly what the MBTA will be creating if you put the brakes on ‘premium rides,'” Kuebel said.

 

END

12/14/2015

 

Serving the working press since 1910

http://www.statehousenews.com

Town Administrator goals

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Mike Sullivan penned his goals for the next year at the selectmen’s request a couple of weeks ago –


Medfield Town Administrator  Goals 2015-2016

I.   Communications

1.   Schedule Town Boards and Committees to meet with Board of Selectmen on a regular basis to discuss opportunities, plans and obstacles in providing services to Town residents.

2.   Investigating new website companies, working with Community Compact for transparent budgeting options

3.   Creating opt in email communication system through the website

4.   Maintain a running three month calendar of Town events and post it to the Town’s website.

II.  Planning

1.           Include funding in fy17 budget to prepare town-wide master plan and work with Planning  Board and Town Planner to prepare.

2.        Continue to work with Selectmen, Personnel Board and Town boards and commissions to plan,  recruit and hire management staff. For fy16 plan for a transition in the Public Works Department.

3.         Department heads, boards and committees will be asked to prepare a five-year operating and capital plan, as well as an estimate of budgetary requirements.

4.         A draft Housing Production Plan was submitted to the Selectmen at the beginning of 2015.  For fyl6, ask the Board of Selectmen, the Planning Board and the Housing Authority to refine and  adopt an Affordable Housing Plan based on this draft. Also, ask the State Hospital Re-use Committee  to include provisions in its re-use plan for an affordable housing component addressing the Town’s
40B requirements and a plan to provide moderate income 55 and older housing and/or assisted living housing.

5.         The Town has adopted four of the five components necessary to qualify for Green Community Act status. An article will be placed on the 2016 Annual Town Meeting Warrant to adopt  the fifth component, the “stretch code”.

6.         Ground has broken on the town’s first public solar project at the wastewater treatment plant. It is expected to be completed and on line by the spring of 2016. Following up on that project, begin the plan for installation of a solar array on the roof of the town garage and the public safety building.

7.         Medfield is a progressive Tree City. In addition to the 350 trees the Public Works Department planted and maintained during the Town’s 3501  Anniversary celebration, the Town has been active planting trees along Main and North Streets. This year the DPW and the Tree Warden have planted 12 trees on
Green Street and seven trees in Vine Lake Cemetery and has been replacing existing trees as needed. Certain restrictions established by the Americans with Disabilities Act for accessibility and the Department of Transportation requirements for bike paths, have created problems in planting street
trees on older roads, with narrow widths, but whenever possible the tree department replaces, plants new trees and does whatever it can to encourage Tree City standards. In addition,  the Planning Board requires tree planting in new subdivisions. This year the new public safety  building will include substantial tree plantings along Dale Street and the Tree Department will
continue to evaluate trees at the Medfield State Hospital site.

8.         The Town has worked cooperatively with the School Department to fund, facilitate and support quality education. The combined Information Technology Departments, the coordination of energy and facilities improvements, coordination of snow removal operations to keep school closings to a minimum, conversion of the accounting system to provide for better financial reporting are
testament to this. For this year we are working with the school department to achieve compliance with the federal Affordable Care Act reporting requirements and to avoid high fines for not achieving compliance. The facilities manager will be working with the Library, the Council on Aging and the Public Works Departments to improve the efficiency of operations and develop reliable maintenance procedures to reduce the need for costly capital expenditures and to reduce the costs of energy usage. Among items to be looked at are roof and portico repairs at the library, solar power at The CENTER at Medfield and the DPW garage.

Ill. Capital Projects

1.   Continue to work with the State Hospital Redevelopment Committee and the MSH Building and Grounds committee

2.   In addition to the weekly on-site construction meetings, monthly meetings are held at the Town Hall to update the full Permanent Planning and Building Committee on the progress of the new Public Safety Building. To date the project is on time and within budget. Financing was completed during the summer to take advantage of the low interest rates. Town departments will provide assistance as requested.

IV. Finances
1.   I held my annual financial program for the Warrant Committee in October and focused on fund accounting in order to give the Warrant Committee members an understanding of the Town’s broad financial picture. Also, scheduled an early budget meeting with the Selectmen and the Warrant Committee to get a head start on the fy17 budget process.

2. I will prepare a three year budget forecast. While cities and towns are very limited by state control of taxation, I will explore new opportunities to seek new revenues and will work to cut expenditures.

3. Police contracts are up for renewal next year and we expect they will be completed on time. Fire contracts are several years past due for renewals. We thought we had reached agreement with the negotiating team, but the membership rejected the proposed settlement. We will try to get the fire union back to the bargaining table and finish negotiations, but the fire union has shown little interest in doing so.

4.   We will prepare an analysis of overtime expenditures, if requested by the Board of Selectmen.

5.   Will submit an article for funding of a 20-year Capital Budget for the 2016 Annual Town Meeting Warrant.

V.   Downtown

1.   Replace the Main Street/Route 109 railroad crossing. Construct the Ed Doherty Memorial at Meeting House Pond. Complete construction of Straw Hat Park. Work with developers of downtown projects (Macready, Borrelli, Larkin family and the owners of the North Meadows Road strip mall) to complete their projects, along with landscaping improvements, parking and other amenities. Assist  MedfieldTV with their move to the downtown and renovation of its new quarters.

2.  Work with Police Chief and Town Planner on a MAPC sponsored 109 traffic study. Work with developer of old Ord’s Block to add 12 public parking spaces on Town­ owned land off Janes Avenue. Get the North Street reconstruction project moving.

3.   Work with Town Planner and Economic Development Committee on the Downtown Summit and work to implement its recommendations.

4.   Complete Straw Hat Park during the summer of 2016.

5.  Set up meeting with Planning Board, Board of Selectmen, Historical Commission and Town Counsel to explore development of a Design Review bylaw. Review past Selectmen’s votes on sidewalk types/locations and work with DPW, Police Department and School Department and residents to develop a priority list for new sidewalk construction


 

BoS calendar

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Calendar for Board of Selectmen

December 1, 2015 to April 30, 2016

Selectmen’s Meeting Dates: December 1 & 15, January 5, 19 & 26,
February 2, 16 & 23, March 1, 15 & 22, April 5, 19 & 25.

December 1- Budget reviews; Discussion of potential warrant articles; Appoint Committee to study CPA.

December 15 – Budget reviews; Open Annual Town Meeting Warrant

January 5 – Budget reviews; Permanent Planning & Building Committee Update on Public Safety Bldg. Articles requiring legal review due.

January 15 -Annual Reports due in Selectmen’s Office. Date is set by a Town Bylaw voted at Town Meeting May 4, 1981

January 19- Budget reviews; Hospital Reuse Committee & Hospital Bldgs. & Grounds Committee updates

January 26 – Budget reviews; School Committee’s Fields Upgrade Committee. Warrant for Annual Town Meeting closes.

February 2 – Budget reviews; Meet with Senator & Representatives; Close Warrant for Annual Town Meeting.

February 16- Review of Warrant Articles for Annual Town Meeting; Review Community Preservation Act. If Selectmen recommending, set percentage property tax surcharge and/or low income exemption and/or first
$100,000 of value exemption.

February 23 – Review of Warrant Articles for Annual Town Meeting; Meet with Historic Commission to discuss Demolition Delay Bylaw and Design Review

March 1 – Review of Warrant Articles for Annual Town Meeting; Meet with Warrant Committee and Moderator to discuss Budgets, Warrant Articles and Town Meeting.

March 15 – Review of Warrant Articles for Annual Town Meeting; Warrant Hearing. Selectmen sign Town Election Warrant for posting. Meet with Council on Aging on proposed building addition.

March 18 -Warrant Report & Town Report sent to Printer.

March 22 – Assign Warrant Articles for Town Meeting.

March 28 -Annual Town Election. Polls at The Center At Medfield, 1 Ice House Road, open 6:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.

April 5 – Reorganize Board; Review Warrant Articles and Budgets for Town Meeting; sign Town Meeting Warrant for posting.

April 14 – Warrant Report mailed to residents

April 25 – 6:00 p.m. Selectmen’s Meeting High School Library; Annual Town Meeting at High School gymnasium.
Begins at 7:30 p.m.

BoS on 12/15

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Tuesday December 15, 2015@ 7:00 PM

AGENDA (SUBJECT TO CHANGE)

ANNOUNCEMENT: Transfer Station Holiday Hours:
Open Wednesday December 23, Thursday December 24, Saturday December 26
Closed Friday December 25
Open Wednesday December 30, Thursday December 31, Saturday January 2, 2016
Closed Friday January 1, 2016

APPOINTMENT
Town Planner Sarah Raposa; Discuss proposed zoning bylaw changes & FYl 7 Planning Board, ZBA Budgets

Town Administrator to discuss FY 17 Health and Life Insurance Budget

OLD BUSINESS
Review Selectmen calendar; discuss topics for next meeting
Vote to approve November 24, 2015 meeting minutes

NEW BUSINESS
Selectmen are requested to vote to support Mosquito Control Board FY 17 funding; vote to authorize Chairman DeSorgher sign the declaration

Selectmen are invited to attend the Eagle Scout Court of Honor for Mark I. A. Lavallee on Saturday January 16, 2016 at the CENTER of Medfield

Other business that may arise

Kathleen Brennan Day

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Town of Medfield
Proclamation

There are people in this Town who make Medfield the special place that it is. They are the kind of people who give of themselves, who strive to improve the life of the community, who go to meetings when they would rather stay home with their families, who listen patiently to residents concerned about the impact of a program or project on their children or their neighborhoods, who seek no recognition but prefer instead the satisfaction of accomplishing something of lasting value.

We celebrate one of these people today, Kathleen Brennan, who has dedicated her efforts on behalf of the residents of Medfield to insuring that Medfield’s Memorial Public Library provides an outstanding level of service to library patrons, to accommodating the changes that have taken place in the way that library services are delivered, to maintaining an exceptionally qualified and dedicated staff, and to insuring that the library has sufficient financial resources and public support to accomplish these tasks.

During her fourteen-year tenure as President of the Friends of the Library, Kathy has been involved in nearly every aspect of the Friends mission, from serving as membership chairman; raising over $20,000 annually to support library initiatives; supporting a wide variety of innovative programs ranging from creation of the Friends bookstore, provision of self-checkout stations,  recognition of excellence in student writing through the Amy Fiske and creative writing awards; participating in the strategic planning process; and serving on library director search committees. She also spearheaded a book campaign that raised $45,675 for the library and personally donated 200 books from her family’s collection. Under her able guidance, the Friends targeted their efforts towards children and teen programs with over 7,500 attending the more than 500 programs offered by the library during the past year alone. She has indeed done much to secure the Memorial Public Library’s place as an outstanding public library.

For her selfless efforts, we the Medfield Board of Selectmen, at a duly constituted meeting of the Board held on December 1, 2015, voted, unanimously, to declare December 8, 2015 as

Kathleen Brennan Day

in the Town of Medfield and ask our fellow citizens to join with us in honoring her.

Voted at Medfield,
in the County of Norfolk, Massachusetts
on this first day of December 2015

Richard P. DeSorgher, Chairman
Mark L. Fisher, Clerk
Osler L. Peterson, Third Member
BOARD OF SELECTMEN

“Goodbye, But Let’s Stay Friends”

“Goodbye, But Let’s Stay Friends” was the subject line and Kathy’s pun of her farewell email, which I omitted.

She also started her remarks by asking why the ghost took out so many library books?  “Because he goes through them so fast!”