Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Amherst's Teflon coated bureaucrats


Former Amherst Town Manager Larry Shaffer, who suddenly "retired" and left town with a $62,000 going away present the same day his secretary disappeared with $23,000 in hush money did, finally, land another job in "public service"--city manager of Jackson, Michigan; although he took a bit of a pay cut, down from $127,000 to only $115,000.

You almost have to wonder if there's a course taught for public administration majors on how to obscure mistakes and Cover Your Ass. It's not so much that he cheated on his wife while "serving" the town, it's more that he allegedly did it with a subordinate employee at town hall (before taking up with a UMass professor more in keeping with his stature.)

Or at the very least town manager wannabes should take a primer on Public Relations. Mr. Shaffer made a bad decision right off the bat by following the Select Board's marching orders to trample the First Amendment rights of the July 4th Parade Committee by forcing them to allow protesters to march in the privately organized, non-political family event.

Since the Select Board can fire a town manager with a simply majority vote, I guess you can't blame him for covering his ass on that issue--especially since the Board at the time leaned to the left of Chairman Mao.

But to tax Boy Scouts Christmas trees after 60 years of tax-free selling was decidedly different--and perhaps more telling story--as he initiated the entire fiasco on his own without even telling the Select Board before coming up with the idiotic scheme.

And obviously he did not share with the current Board his ethically challenged personal inter office decision to allegedly have an affair (hopefully not during business hours).

Perhaps he has learned a lesson...or maybe Jackson, Michigan will.

Monday, May 16, 2011

Solar sanity outshines gloom and doom

Town Manager John Musante addresses Town Meeting

UPDATE: So I feel like I had ring side seats to Custer's Last Stand last night as the "fight" put up by concerned neighbors was far less effective than the blond haired General in search of glory. And the final results exactly the same. Utter, devastating, defeat.

When NIMBY general Rich Spurgin's first amendment, requiring a minimum financial return threshold be guaranteed, failed so miserably the handwriting was etched on the wall in neon spray paint.
Professor Spugin leads the ill-fated charge

Spurgin's second amendment--and that was a mistake in not leading with your best case--concerning supposed "safety" issues fared even worse, although that's hard to imagine going down any lower in support.

So very far-and-away overwhelming that not a single member dared to voice "I doubt it" to force a standing vote (rules of town meeting require a standing vote if even a single member doubts the voice vote.)

Now of course the neighbors will resort to Plan B and hire an attorney who will file a case in landcourt something about this being for all intents and purposes a "taking by eminent domain" as their expensive property will no longer be as useful to them as the 'Oh Happy Day' they originally purchased it.

And so it goes in the People's Republic, where the sun seldom sets on discussions of self interest.

ORIGINAL POST (last night):

After a contentious two hour debate with opponents raising the spectre of an environmental disaster and more mundane concerns over the financial uncertainty of locking into a 30 year deal, and proponents trumpeting the $1 million annual net gain to the treasury via energy savings and equipment taxes while reducing the towns carbon footprint, Amherst Town Meeting this evening voted overwhelmingly to allow Town Manager John Musante the authority to enter into a long-term contract with Blue Wave Capital to construct a 4.75 megawatt solar farm on the old landfill.
A packed Town Meeting

Neighbors around the targeted site quickly organized resistance to the ambitious long term project and jam packed a public meeting in early April to bicker and snicker at town officials, started a website laden with doomsday predictions, purchased a half-page in last week's Amherst Bulletin, direct mailed material to all town meeting members and some even joined that legislative body via the most recent election.

Dave Keenan speaking against the deal while using a prop

A visibly angry Vince O'Connor speaking against the article after being interrupted by a "point of order" when he mentioned how his protest resume included Seabrook Nuclear Plant in the late 1970s and a draft resistance arrest in the mid 1960s resulting in federal prison time.

The old trot out the kids and dog routine

Now that the first big hill has been successfully scaled, the next step is for the Town Manager to come up with a contract that will be approved by the Select Board (the executive branch) and for the state Department of Environmental Protection to give final approval for using the highly regulated landfill as a solar farm. Both safe bets.

The next major mountain to climb is getting the Zoning Board of Appeals to issue a Special Permit, which requires a unanimous vote. In 2002 the ZBA voted down (2-1) the town's proposal to increase the height of the newer (now closed) landfill by ten feet which would have generated millions of dollars in revenues to the town.
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ARTICLE 24. Authorize Term of Lease for Old Landfill (Select Board)

To see if the Town will vote to authorize the Town Manager to lease all or any portion of the Old Landfill across Belchertown Road from the existing Transfer Station from time to time by one or more leases for such term of years up to 30 years and for such consideration as the Town Manager shall determine, for the purpose of installing and operating thereon a solar array for electric power generation and distribution, and to authorize the Town Manager to grant such easements in, on, under and across over said land for utility and access purposes, as reasonably necessary to install and operate such a solar array, and further to authorize the Town Manager to enter into a power purchase agreement with any lessee of such property to purchase all or a portion of the electricity production of the solar array and to enter into an agreement with the local utility to participate in the Net Metering program pursuant to the Acts of 2008, c. 169, §78, the so-called Green Communities Act, as may be amended.

A library high


Last week Amherst Town Meeting approved (article #20) Community Preservation Act funding that included $113,000 for the Jones Library repair of their historical chimneys. Today they were working on the chimney caps (CPA $ from last year's Town Meeting).

Party House of the weekend?

No, not this past week--and yes, that is a good thing (although APD did issue 17 "warnings" over the weekend for noise.)

Guess I will have to find a new weekly feature for the summer slowdown. Stupid crime of the week perhaps. This week it would have been the assault in the parking garage on Friday night 8:45 PM where Harrison Madzy, age 39, severely beat someone about the head with a wrench, all over a parking spot. Dub that one "'parking rage".

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Standing in the way of progress

A mighty oak stands tall (for now)
Two siblings not far away
Two Maples who will not be very merry

"You're in charge of the last of the Truffula Seeds.
And Truffula Trees are what everyone needs.
Plant a new Truffula. Treat it with care.
Give it clean water. And feed it fresh air.
Grow a forest. Protect it from axes that hack.
Then the Lorax and all of his friends may come back."

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Public Shade Tree Committee
MEETING TIME: May 19th 3:00 pm. LOCATION: First Floor Meeting Room, Town Hall. LIST OF TOPICS: Review April minutes; Tree Warden’s Report; Vote on Atkins Corner Tree Removal; Presentation of New APSTC website; Arbor Day and Faith Planting wrap-up; TreeCity USA Celebration Report. The meeting will be followed at 4:00 PM by a hearing on tree removal for the Atkins Corner project.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

So what do you really think?

The red hot issue of a sparkling new solar farm on a dreary old abandoned landfill certainly arouses passion and, as such, folks--especially NIMBYs--tend to shoot from the hip...usually folks who are lousy shots to begin with.

And never is it more evident then those hilarious occasions when they accidentally fire off an email to an entire listserve thinking it was a private response to only one individual.

Gavin Andresen had strongly defended the town's wish to enter a contract with Blue Wave Capital to construct a solar farm generating electricity and a cool million per year in payments and savings on land now sitting empty, costing the town tens of thousands per year in maintenance overhead.

Mr. Andresen even had the gall to publish a GIS photo showing one of the prominent NIMBYs who posts sky-is-falling rhetoric has a backyard touching the landfill.
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From: DBryne@...
To: amhersttownmeeting@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Friday, May 13, 2011 2:17:28 PMGerry:

Is Gavin Andresen an 'inheiritance case? I met him once for a few minutes and he struck me as 'one of those' BY the way the solar thing will be somewhat close to where I live but I am not an abutter or even close. It's just that I no longer trust Musante-Okeffee,et. al. As far as I can tell they're working for Maroulis. The unanimity of the boards is a tad frightening.

Yes it tends to get me down
when I see folks with shirts of Brown.

David
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Actually Mr. Byrne is fairly close to the old landfill, but considering he paid $359,000 for his unit five years ago and it's currently valued at only $215,300, he probably does not have to worry about a Solar Farm reducing the value any further.

Of course Mother Mary was informed and took down the offending post and even warned not to "reply all" to the original message as that would resend the string with the offending remarks, but I notice Mr. Bryne still did so last night in an attack on the Gateway Project and as a result resent the original ad hominem attack on Mr. Andresen.

Since Gavin also has a blog I'm sure he has thick enough skin to withstand such biting commentary from the peanut gallery. And (Princess) Stephanie O'Keeffe used to have one.


Hi Folks,

I have just been informed that a message was posted to this group that was intended to be a private message. This haas happened to others and can be embarrassing for all involved. Group members are advised that replying to any message from this listserv that has [AmhTownMtg] in the subject line will go the the WHOLE LISTSERV and not just the person who wrote the message you are replying to. Please be careful when replying!

Please DO NOT reply via the group to the message titled "my objection last night" as that might resend the message sent by mistake. Thank you all for your cooperation on this.

Mary Streeter
TM Discussion Group Moderator

How I was banned from the private Town Meeting listserve without really trying

Friday, May 13, 2011

Solar Shoot Out

Today's Amherst Bulletin half-page political ad

Monday's Amherst Town Meeting is shaping up to be an ultra-modern shootout at the OK corral where combatants carry Star Trek phasers instead of six shooters.

NIMBYs fire off a half-page ad selectively quoting from a NIMBY website that selectively cherry picks facts from oceans of Department of Environmental Protection required data, but still doesn't endorse the expensive sky-is-falling ad; and the town quickly (and cheaply) responds with a full spread of photon torpedoes via the main page of the official town website, normally a place where people go to figure out how to pay parking tickets.

While the old unlined landfill these folks bought expensive homes around certainly does produce lots of leachate--especially when it rains--that fluid is not exactly a toxic green goo oozing towards the town water supply. If you try to reuse a teabag for your fifth cup of tea, the results will be mighty disappointing.

All the groundwater monitor wells (28) around the old landfill fail to show contamination beyond a few chemicals and even then only in traces and it flows in the opposite direction from the municipal water supply over a mile away. Plus the methane/sulfur gas detectors (9) stationed around the perimeter all test completely negative.

In fact, the most recent DEP report to the town (2010) clearly states in bold letters: "Groundwater does not flow towards the Lawrence Swamp public water supply wells, which are located over one mile to the south/southeast." And if that is not clear enough, they boldly sum it up: "The qualitative risk assessment concluded that there were no significant risks to human health or public safety posed by the landfill."

The main reason the town is under orders from the DEP to regrade the cap is because the contents have settled, causing the cap to sag from a lack of support from down below allowing rain water to pool in places. Thus the regrading will help with water runoff and will most certainly aid in reducing leachate production.

But that is not what conflicted neighbors will unleash on Town Meeting Monday night. Instead, a doomsday scenario that could pass for a science fiction disaster movie trailer. YouTube here they come.
Old landfill (note gas detection pipes)