Rail line bought by MassDOT

June 19, 2015

MassDOT Completes Framingham Secondary Rail Line Acquisition

MassDOT announced acquisition is complete of the Framingham Secondary Rail Line, a 21-mile segment of rail that connects Framingham and Mansfield. The line was purchased from CSX Corporation for $23 million.

Purchase of the Framingham Secondary is a strategic investment that links the Framingham/Worcester, Needham, Franklin, and the Attleboro/Northeast Corridor commuter rail lines together. The Framingham Secondary Line is also a major rail corridor for the shipment of freight between several key points in eastern Massachusetts, including Readville, Milford, Franklin, Fall River, and New Bedford, as well as Worcester. The line is also used for passenger service to and from Patriots home games at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough. For the purposes of planning for long-term infrastructure needs, purchase of the line provides added rail capacity that allows for passenger service to travel on alternative routes in cases where capital projects may disrupt normal service.

“After careful consideration of the agreement to purchase the Framingham Secondary Rail Line from CSX, MassDOT concluded that acquiring this rail asset supports our goals of increasing use of freight rail, which takes trucks off our highways and reduces greenhouse gases by consolidating the movement of freight,” said MassDOT Secretary and CEO Stephanie Pollack. “Additionally, purchase of the line establishes the interconnectivity of four of our major commuter rail lines, which allows us to plan for future rail upgrades in a way that will minimize disruptions by creating options for trains to continue providing passenger service by bypassing sections of rail on any of the four lines that would be under construction.”

Purchase of the line will also guarantee that game-day passenger service to Gillette Stadium for Patriots games will continue. The rail line’s current condition is only slightly above standards required for passenger service. MassDOT’s ownership of the line, coupled with infrastructure upgrades, will allow for the continuation of the successful game-day service. During the 2014-2015 season, 17,128 riders took the train to Foxborough; 6,015 more riders came from Providence, through Mansfield along the southerly end of the Framingham Secondary.

“Beyond the short-term value of supporting the shipment of freight, in the long term, the line has the potential to support future economic development,” said MassDOT Rail and Transit Administrator Astrid Glynn. “The communities to the southwest of Boston are experiencing strong regional growth. Should that trend continue, we would look engage the surrounding communities in a conversation about the potential for a pilot program of additional passenger rail service.”

Prior to enhanced service, the line would require significant upgrades to track, signals, and switches, to accommodate regular passenger trains. With preliminary upgrades set to begin next spring, any pilot of service would not begin before calendar year 2017.

T21 saves lives

This is from my Brown University emails, and is timely for us in Medfield as our Board of Health is meeting this summer to consider raising the age to buy tobacco in Medfield to age 21.  Medfield Cares About Prevention (MCAP) (www.MedfieldCares.org) and the Board of Selectmen have both endorsed T21 in town, and asked the Board of Health to take action.

Case study: Needham, Mass.

Teen smoking dropped after minimum sales age rose

Raising the legal purchasing age for cigarettes from 18 to 21 allowed a Massachusetts town to cut its teen smoking rate in half, accelerating the decline in smoking compared to surrounding communities.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — A new study co-authored by Stephen Buka, professor and chair of epidemiology at Brown University, reports that the Massachusetts town of Needham successfully reduced teen smoking when it raised the minimum sales age for cigarettes to 21.

In 2005, Needham became the first town in the country to raise the age from 18. In research led by the Education Development Center in Waltham, Mass., and published June 12 in the journal Tobacco Control, the authors compared teen smoking rates in the town and 16 others nearby between 2006 and 2010. They found that the prevalence of teen smoking in Needham dropped from 13 percent to 7 percent, a significantly greater drop than in the surrounding area where smoking fell from 15 percent to 12 percent.

Since 2012 some other communities have followed suit. If every town made the change and achieved the same result, Buka said, the health benefits would be huge.

“Teen smoking rates were cut in half after this law was introduced in Needham,” he said. “Nationwide, that would result in 3 million fewer youth who would die early from a smoking related disease. These findings suggest one of the best possible strategies to reduce smoking related diseases, the leading cause of preventable death in the United States.”

A better way to remove ticks

From the Lyme Disease Study Committee chair –


Chris Cole Kaldy
June 19 at 7:13am
Here’s a different way to remove a tick which leaves no remnants in your skin. Take a look!
You HAVE to learn this tick removal trick before you go camping

theshrug.net
It’s easier and safer than using tweezers or your fingers.

Prayer gathering 7:30 tonight

From Rev. Jonathan Chechile –


Dear Church Family and friends

I’m sure that you have seen the news out of ‪‎Charleston. First Baptist will be hosting a community prayer gathering at 7:30 p.m on Friday (tomorrow night). As of now, the plan is for Marc Eames of Church of the Advent and I to speak briefly to start, and then from there our main priority will be praying for our nation, the racial tension in our nation, the city of Charleston,  and Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church. Please consider joining us, and please spread the word.

Thanks you,

Jonathan

Budgeting discussions tonight

The Warrant Committee has sent the BoS the memo below of the budgeting issues it plans to discuss at tonight’s BoS meeting.

I had a list of budgeting issues I had developed this spring for a planned joint meeting of the BoS, Warrant Committee, and Water and Sewer Board in response to the budgeting conflicts W&S had with the Superintendent this year before town meeting (I am told that joint meeting has been postponed to the fall), and i have attached my proposed agenda after the WC memo.


 

MEMORANDUM
To: Medfield Board of Selectmen
From: Michael T. Marcucci
Warrant Committee Chairman
CC: Members of the Warrant Committee
Michael Sullivan, Town Administrator
Scott McDermott, Town Moderator
Date: June 14, 2015
Re: Issues for Discussion at June 16, 2015 Selectmen’s Meeting
______________________________________________________________________________
This Memorandum sets out several issues that members of the Warrant Committee would like to discuss at our June 16 meeting. The goal is to identify ways to improve the Town’s budgeting process and enhance the coordination between the Board of Selectmen and the Warrant Committee. The suggestions expressed here do not represent the views of the entire Warrant Committee and are raised for discussion purposes only.

Discretionary Spending: This year’s debate over Straw Hat Park has prompted discussion about how similar proposals should be addressed in the future. While there is no consensus on how the resolve the issues, several possibilities are identified below.

* Selectmen’s Discretionary Fund- one possible resolution would be to create a fund to be spent at the Selectmen’s discretion. The amount (in the range of $25,000-$50,000) would be appropriated in advance and the Selectmen would then decide how it should be spent. Thus, the Selectmen—and not the Warrant Committee—would be assessing the relative merits of various proposals within budget limits imposed by Town Meeting. If this cannot be done formally, it can be done informally by an agreement from the Warrant Committee to support some amount of discretionary spending recommended by the Selectmen. This would place these sorts of value judgments within the purview of an elected body.

* Advance Budget Guidance—As Gus Murby has noted, we are concerned about abusing volunteers’ time by asking them to undertake a project with no certainty of funding the outcome of that work. One possible resolution would be to provide joint budget guidance in advance. This would always be subject to the risk that other events would squeeze out funds when the budget is finally prepared but would at least provide some guidance about a budget range the Selectmen and Warrant Committee would be comfortable recommending to Town Meeting for the type of project contemplated.

Capital Budget: the capital budget process needs to be reformed. The current approach of fixing a set amount each year for capital spending which is then allocated by the Capital Budget Committee over several meetings at the end of the budget process does not allow for sufficient planning or flexibility. The amount of capital spending each year should be flexible based on the capital needs of the town and available funds each year. One possible approach would be to identify all capital needs over a 5 year period, which will then be prioritized by the Capital Budget Committee and then may be funded as appropriate over that period. The amount funded annually will vary with circumstances, but, over time, the capital projects of the town will be funded as needed.
We should also address within the capital budget process the sort of capital projects, like the Wheelock boilers and the traffic study this past year, which are capital projects but end up in separate warrant articles. Even if, as a matter of law or procedure, certain capital items must be voted on as separate warrant articles, they should still be vetted by the Capital Budget Committee and considered as part of the town’s capital plan.

Medfield State Hospital: As expressed in the past, the Committee is generally of the view that the Town should come to a resolution of the Hospital site sooner, rather than later. Preferably, this will be done some time in 2016. Whatever the Town decides to do with that property will have a significant impact on the Town’s finances for the foreseeable future. Given that, it seems that a simple up or down vote on a proposal to develop the property is insufficient. If the Town chooses not to develop the property, we must address the long term costs of ownership, which likely will require either increased taxes or cuts in other budgets. Otherwise, both expected and unanticipated costs associated with the Hospital property will squeeze out other budget priorities. The most prudent course may be to address this issue alongside any vote on a proposal from the
Medfield State Hospital Master Planning Committee.

Water & Sewer: Pete and I have discussed a joint meeting with the Warrant Committee, Selectmen, Water & Sewer Board, Ken Feeney and Mike Sullivan to sort out the  Water & Sewer budget process. We are happy to participate in such a meeting.


 


This was my suggested set of budget issues that I saw which needed to be addressed:

Financial Planning Meeting

Attending:
Board of Selectmen
Warrant Committee
Water and Sewer Board

AGENDA

1. Operating budget
a. Data – what data do boards need to create their budgets
i. e.g. – W&S tool
ii. dates and/or schedules
b. Responsibilities for generating the data
c. Uniform format for proposed budgets
i. last two years actual
ii. actual spending last prior full year
iii. requested next year – + explanations of changes

2. Capital budget
a. five year projections
b. total budget amount – how set?
i. NB – Arlington uses 5% of operating budget as its expectation

3. Budget calendar
a. create a template to reuse year by year going forward
i. e.g. – week 1 – all town boards meeting (in September)
week 2 – . . .
week 34 – annual town meeting (ATM)
b. meetings to set parameters
i. who is included
ii. selectmen should weigh in on expected increases
c. establish responsibilities and time lines for meeting
i. assign departments to dates
d. compare to timing and process in Amherst, Arlington, and Dedham (see attached)

4. Planning for the future
a. Mike Sullivan to plan for his successor
i. to create and document a written how to do the Medfield budget guide
ii. to document each step as he takes it in the first year, so town has a written budget road map of what needs to be done to create the budget each
iii. to cross train Kris to do all the steps in the budget process next year
b. Transparency
i. implement www.opengov.com and/or www.visgov.com (open source)
ii. implement the state’s system of putting its checkbook online
iii. implement the Willis Peligian tool town wide
iv. implement proper governance over budgets and associated expenditures:
(1) require budgets to include realistic operating and capital expenses; &
(2) include a separate contingency line item in each budget

5. Create a Business Manager for town, similar to business manager for the schools

 

MSH input session

This was the meeting last night when over one hundred people gathered at the MHS gym to brainstorm and kickstart the planning for what to do with the former MSH site the town now owns.

Lots of great ideas and good energy.

Great aerial photos of MSH

From Alec Stevens –


Hi folks,

Inspired by last night’s meeting, I went and took some more aerial photos of the property today.

Plenty of views of the core campus, the new water tower, and the C&D Area restoration.

 

https://www.icloud.com/sharedalbum/#B09GJDfWGG76oMq

 

Enjoy, and have a good weekend.

 

Alec

Lyme Rx

From Chris Kaldy, chair of Lyme Disease Study Committee –

Medfield Lyme Disease Study Committee Information site
Some very hopeful news!
In Test Tube, ‘Pulse-Doses’ Of Antibiotic Wipe Out Lyme Disease Bacteria Persisters

commonhealth.wbur.org
A germ-fighting scientist finds a possible new way to eradicate Lyme disease bacteria that persist a…

MSH planning

About 100+ residents gathered to get input and share ideas at the MHS last night about the future of the former Medfield State Hospital site.  I found the input exciting and stimulating, and now I am looking forward to getting a synthesis of those ideas and opinions back from the consultants at VHB.  Below is the agenda for the program.


Medfield State Hospital

Master Planning

Committee

Public Meeting #1 June 11th 2015

Setting the Framework for Master Plan Alternatives

6:00-6:45pm Open House

  • Visit six “Exploration Stations” to explore and discuss a variety of issues and opportunities and your wish list. (See below for more detail)

6:50-7:00pm Welcome and Workshop Format

7:00-7:30pm Project Overview

  • What goes into a Master Plan Alternative?
  • Potential “Frameworks”
  • Overview of the “Non-Development Economic Alternative”

7:30-7:50 Visual Preferences & Setting the Framework

  • Visual Preference Exercise
  • Setting the Framework

7:50-9:00 Shaping Alternatives for Exploration – Breakout Sessions

  • Breakout Groups Discussions
  • Report Back

9:00pm Adjourn and Exiting Exercise

  • Identify a short phase that describes your alternative or theme and write it down at the
    Theme Station before you leave

 

Open House Exercise

Participants are asked to circulate between each of the six stations to engage in conversations with the Medfield State Hospital Master Plan Committee and the Town’s Consultants.

Learn about topics and share your “wish list” at each of the following “Exploration Stations”:

Themes                                                                 – Open Land & Natural Environment

Transportation, Connectivity & Infrastructure           – Historic and Cultural Resources

Economic & Financial                                            – Built Environment

Get familiar with the MSH Site by looking at the 3D model built by the Wentworth students.

BoS on 6/9

Town Hall, Chenery Meeting Room, 2nd floor Tuesday June 16, 2015 @ 7:00 PM

AGENDA (SUBJECT TO CHANGE)

7:30 PM Warrant Committee, Michael Marcucci, Chair
Philosophical discussion regarding fy2017 budget process

OLD BUSINESS
Vote to approve meeting minutes of June 2, 2015; additionally Oct 21, 28; Nov 4, 18, 25; Dec 2, 16

NEW BUSINESS
Superintendent Feeney recommends the Selectmen vote to award the bids for Bituminous Type I-I to Riley Brothers; Crack Seal to Crack-Sealing, Inc.; Stone Seal to All States Asphalt Inc

Vote to appoint W. James Allshouse, Sealer of Weights and Measures

Norfolk Hunt Club requests permission to use the hospital grounds for their equestrian activities beginning
in September through November

Other business that may come before the Board of Selectmen


TOWN OF MEDFIELD
Office of
SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC WORKS
MEDFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS
KENNETH P. FEENEY
Superintendent
TO: Board of Selectmen
FROM: Kenneth P. Feeney, Supt. /PF”‘ \ l
DATE: June 5, 2015
SUBJECT: BID AW ARDS
(508)359-8505,x3002

It is my recommendation that the following bids be awarded according to the low
bid prices and the Town of Medfield specifications:

Bituminous Type 1-1
Riley Brothers  —  $60.20/ton at plant NO BID – delivery

Crack Seal
Crack-Sealing Inc.     — $8.00/gallon

Stone Seal
All States Asphalt Inc.  —
Treated Stone Seal $2.22/SY
Double Stone Seal $4.20/SY
$4.35/SY including sweeping
20% Asphalt-Rubber $4.50/SY
Shimming/Leveling $132.50/ton


Memo to: John Thompson, Medfield State Hospital, B&G Committee
From: Gil Rodgers, Norfolk Hunt Club
Date: June 7, 2015
Subject: Proposed Equestrian Use of Medfield State Hospital Grounds during Fall 2015

Dear John,

Consistent with past uses of the hospital grounds for the Norfolk Hunt Club (NHC) we propose and seek
approval for the specific activities listed below. The route is essentially the same as in 2014, 2013 and
previous years that was very successful for the Norfolk Hunt Club, riders, and spectators, and took place
without any incidents. We appreciate this opportunity to continue to use the hospital grounds, and look
forward to another successful hunt season in the fall 2015.
1. Mounted Hunts On the following dates: Saturday, September 19; Tuesday, September 29;
Saturday, October 3; Saturday, October 20; Tuesday, October 27; Wednesday, November 11
(Veterans Day); and Thursday November 26 (Thanksgivings Day) (beginning at approximately 8:00
AM and concluding by about 12 noon) mounted Hunts are proposed using the MSH grounds
including potions of the main campus, Sledding Hill and outside hay fields The route will be
essentially as follows: Trailers and vehicles will park at the top of the Sledding Hill, riders cross
Hospital Road, ride along top of Garden Field to the West of Campus, take North Street on north side
of campus to the large hay field behind R-Building, continue into Dover and Sherborn, return through
dirt road to the east of the campus bypassing water tower construction area, cross Hospital Road,
and finally end up at the Sledding Hill. (See attached route map.) The routes may be run in reverse
direction for some of these Hunts. It is recognized that remediation work near the Charles River may
be continuing in the fall months and we will closely coordinate these Hunts with B&G Committee and
if necessary develop an alternate route to avoid interference with this work.
2. Hound Schooling These will be held approximately once a month on Thursday mornings. We
propose the following dates: September 24, October 22, and November 19. Hound schooling is
conducted from approximately 7 AM to 8 AM with mounted Huntsman and several mounted
whippers-in. The route is essentially as follows: park on the top of the Sledding Hill, ride around
Sledding Hill, cross Hospital Road, ride around the hay field to the east of the campus and the hay
field north of the “R” Building (bypassing water tower construction area). NHC will coordinate with the
farmer working these fields. This will typically involve only about a dozen horses, is subject to weather
conditions, and will be used only if conditions are suitable for the safety to the riders and horses.
For all of these events all riders will have signed the NHC waiver of liability form that protects Town of
Medfield, DCR, NHC, and riders from any liabilities. Our insurance binder for the full year 2015 is already
on file with the Town of Medfield.
If you have any questions, need clarifications or additional information please contact me directly at the
numbers below. I would be pleased to attend the B&G Committee meeting when this is discussed, and
will of course be available for Selectmen’s meeting when this is presented for approval.
1
We kindly request Town’s completed review and approval by June 26, 2015 so that we can announce
these activities in our fixture card and post on our calendar of future events for the fall. Our first event is
scheduled for Saturday, September 19, 2015. We appreciate this very much.
Thank you.
Gil Rodgers
Cell: 617-792-0583
gilrodgers@aol.com
Fax: 508-359-8215
Attached: Proposed Route Map
2