Oriental Flavor, 25 South Pleasant Street. Opening soon (hopefully)
Thursday, March 21, 2013
The (low) Price of Peace & Quiet
Safe & Healthy Neighborhoods department proposed budget (draft)
One of the sillier criticisms leveled at the Safe & Healthy Neighborhoods Working Group is that the body did not have a tenant as part of their genetic makeup. Which is kind of like saying all gynecologists have to be women.
But the other concern I've heard voiced by a somewhat sensible center of impacted landlords (besides the #1 issue of a "permit") is that rookie Building Commissioner Rob Morra is "empire building" and his newly expanded empire will be expensive to maintain and unworkable with the burdensome workload.
So yes, while the overall proposed budget for the new Safe & Healthy Neighborhoods department seems high at $218,000 keep in mind that two thirds of that ($157,500) will be covered by "user fees" i.e. the $100 annual fee for landlords.
And with the median rent in Amherst now at $1,108 per month, landlords are going to have a tough time portraying $100/year as onerous.
Thus the real increase in costs to the operating budget is only $60,500 ... or about what the town spends annually subsidizing the game of golf.
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Those Daring Young Men
AFD Engine 1 and Amherst College PD are on the scene of a chimney fire at a house on Hitchcock Street, one of the few on that street not owned by Amherst College. Command was terminated at 11:11 AM.
Orchard Valley Grows Again
36 Longmeadow Drive, Amherst
The house at 36 Longmeadow Drive, built back in 1970, has been demolished and crews are busy going about the construction of a new five bedroom house owned by CIL Realty using $232,000 federal tax subsidized monies to purchase the property and another $445,000 to build a new home.
Interestingly CIL put out a press release almost two years ago touting the $12 million MassDevelopment tax exempt bond issue to fund the acquisition of thirteen properties in eleven municipalities for the construction of community based group homes for the disabled. What's interesting is Amherst was not on the list.
Of course after the forever battle over Butternut Farm low income project only two doors down from the proposed group home, I can't say that I blame them for keeping things quiet.
According to Building Commissioner Rob Morra the construction project is pretty much immune from local zoning law due to the the "Dover Amendment". So, for instance, the home will be allowed to house five unrelated occupants in violation of the towns usual cap of four.
And because 36 Longmeadow Drive is now owned by a non-profit, tax exempt entity, the property could go off the tax rolls.
Butternut Farm, 12 Longmeadow Drive, Amherst
Tuesday, March 19, 2013
The Prosecution Rests
Safe & Healthy Neighborhoods meeting 3/19
At their lucky 13th and final meeting, the Safe & Healthy Neighborhoods Working Group voted 12-1-1 to specifically add "bad behavior" as a legitimate reason for enforcement action under the proposed bylaw, which in the most egregious of cases can result in the revoking of a rental permit.
Obnoxiously loud disruptive party houses that erode the quality of life in Amherst neighborhoods far and wide are the main reason the Safe & Healthy Neighborhood Working Group came into being.
Although vociferous neighbors are still concerned the new General Bylaw -- if endorsed by the Town Manager and then Town Meeting -- will not be ironclad enough to solve their problems with unruliness.
Assistant Town Manager David Ziomek Chaired SHNWG
The Select Board will decide, obviously yes, at their April 8 meeting whether to place the new General Bylaw on the warrant for the Spring Town Meeting, where it will require a simply majority vote. Over the years Amherst has flirted with rent control and rental registration, neither of which proved effective.
Although this time around, the seriousness of purpose is almost palpable.
Maurianne Adams still has reservations
Development Delayed
Map of proposed development (click to enlarge)
Due to a trivial paperwork error neighbors in North Amherst will get an extra couple weeks to raise the $6.6 million required to match the developer's offer via the town's "right of first refusal" that goes hand in hand with property protected by the state's Chapter 61A conservation law.
Last night the Select Board voted to send a letter to W.D. Cowls, Inc informing them of the bureaucratic boo boo and advising company president Cinda Jones that the 120 day clock has not started ticking.
NIMBYs have filed a petition article with Amherst Town Meeting calling for the use of eminent domain to take the property from Cowls to sabotage the land sale/development deal that will bring desperately needed, taxable student housing to Amherst with convenient access to UMass.
Proponents request Town Meeting appropriate only $1.2 million for the hostile taking, and it's unclear how the other $5.4 million would suddenly materialize.
Rising Sun Over Amherst
To commemorate the arrival tomorrow of middle school students from Kanegasaki, our Sister City for past twenty years, the flag of Japan now shares a town hall turret with Old Glory and the Massachusetts state flag.
Not far from Amherst Town Hall the weathered United Nations flag flies from a dedicated pole, and underneath the flag of Tibet recently flew freely to symbolize a yearning to be free.
But of course this coming 9/11, the commemorative American flags will not be allowed to fly in the downtown.
Labels:
Amherst town center,
Town Hall flags
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