Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Sign Of The Times

Sand pile Amherst DPW

Even though the town has eliminated sand from its war-on-winter arsenal, the DPW continues a generations old practice of providing a free sand/salt pile (even providing a shovel) at their home base conveniently located a mile south of Amherst town center.

Last winter the DPW used between four and five THOUSAND tons of sand mixed in with 1,000 to 1,500 tons of salt.  

The town will continue to use salt, but will do so mixed in a liquid goo of magnesium chloride which can be applied to the roads even before the first snowflakes fall.  Massachusetts Department Of Transportation switched over to this formula years ago.

The current sand/salt inventory is left over from last year.

The town gave up the equally long-time practice of filling ugly green boxes stationed around town a few years back; and the most recent free delivery of sand/salt to homeowners who place buckets by the side of the road may also be the last time for that service.   

What's next, doctors and milk producers giving up house calls?




Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Town Gown RFP Almost There

One quarter of Town Gown Steering Committee

The UMass Amherst Town Gown Steering Committee met for the third time yesterday at the UMass Police Station and they are now about 90% done with a Request For Proposals to hire a consultant to help guide growth between the two main Superpowers in our little college town.

Well, except for Amherst College.

 2nd table of members Town Gown Steering Committee

 DRAFT



Last meeting the friction played out around public safety and how it should be a major concern with any future growth and development, be it economic or housing.  This meeting the bone of contention was how to deal with the issue of neighborhoods directly abutting UMass such as Fearing Street, Lincoln Avenue and North Pleasant Streets.


 3rd table Town Gown Steering Committee

 DRAFT



Most of the Committee wanted the consultant to focus on a broader interpretation of how to maintain safe and healthy neighborhoods. Since the concern is town wide and not just the immediate adjacent streets.

David Webber pointed out he lives in North Amherst where the problem with rowdy students is just as bad as those immediately south of the campus.

The committee will meet once more next week to finalize the RFP, but then will continue to meet afterwards to help focus community discussion on the results of the $60,000 study.

And in Amherst, there's never a shortage of community discussion.

Lost


Worcester Cold Storage Warehouse fire December 3, 1999

Fourteen years ago six men entered a burning building under their own power, perhaps partially propelled by adrenalin -- the rush that comes with pitched combat.

But this was no ordinary fire, nor was the Worcester Cold Storage building an ordinary structure.

The windowless six story century old building contained layers and layers of petroleum based insulation -- high octane food for The Beast.  And the interior layout was the same top to bottom making it a confusing maze, easy to get lost even under the best of conditions.

Two firefighters did get lost, under the worst of conditions, somewhere on the fourth floor, with their vital air supply quickly running out.  Without hesitation a four man rescue company hurried to their aid.  They too became lost.

All six perished doing what they love: Protecting everyday citizens -- even homeless ones who don't pay taxes.

The structure, dubbed "The building from Hell," continued to burn for six days as if taunting first responders, now in a recovery mode of operation.   By the eight day all six bodies were carried out of the rubble by members of the Worcester Fire Department.

Deep down inside every first responder knows an awful truth:  on any given day, any given call, circumstances can overwhelm training, guts and camaraderie.  As it did that awful night fourteen years ago.

And would again less than two years later when 343 firefighters perished carrying out the largest rescue operation in our nation's history. Or just last summer when a wildfire suddenly changed direction and overran an elite unit of 19 Arizona firefighters.

The Beast can never be completely eradicated, only controlled from one incident to the next.  By flesh-and-blood firefighters who put their lives on the line, every time.

Monday, December 2, 2013

Planning For The Retreat

 About 50 people attended tonight's Select Board hearing on The Retreat

After over two hours of public discussion the Amherst Select Board took no official vote this evening on a recommendation to the Planning Board concerning The Retreat, a "Cluster Subdivision" in Northeast Amherst consisting of 123 lots holding 175 housing units with a total of 641 beds. All of them rented to students.

Neighbors once again packed the Town Room and speaker after speaker brought up a litany of complaints over parking, noise, "unsafe" private roads, and the overall impact of forever changing the character of a historic neighborhood, Cushman.

Even Select Board Chair Stephanie O'Keeffe acknowledged that if the roads in the development are private rather than town accepted public roads, the Amherst police department could not enforce "open container" laws.  And to that Ms. O'Keeffe admitted, "I'm disappointed."

Although she was quick to point out "noise" bylaws could be enforced on the private property.

The Select Board took note of all the complaints and Ms. O'Keeffe will prepare and present a statement to the Planning Board at their Public Hearing on Wednesday night, where no doubt the same crowd will show up to once again voice their disapproval of the student housing project.

Early in the discussion O'Keeffe summed up what tonight's SB meeting was really all about:

"What we’re really doing is sending a message:  It's the obligation of the town to ensure that this is as responsible a project as it can be.  We are all watching this.  This is BIG, significant, and impactful.  Of great concern and interest to many." 

And perhaps the key statement of the night, a sentiment shared by everyone in the room:  "We have an obligation to get it right." 

As does the Planning Board, who will pick up the hot potato on Wednesday night.

All Quiet on the College Town Front



So this past Thanksgiving weekend has got to be a record of some sort:  APD did not make a single arrest and AFD did not transport a single alcohol poisoned college aged youth.

Although Amherst police did investigate a Breaking & Entering at 146 Mill Lane and APD and AFD had to break into a home in North Amherst on Thanksgiving based on an (erroneous) call indicating someone inside needed medical attention.






Let The Race Begin



Finance Committee Chair Andy Steinberg

Andy Steinberg is first to announce his candidacy for the five member Amherst Select Board, our executive branch of government. As an entrenched insider -- i.e. Town Meeting and Finance Committee -- Steinberg, a retired lawyer, is a slam dunk for one of two open seats.

Especially since he touts "collaboration and transparency" on a shortlist of his priorities.  Who can argue with those?

And as a Town Meeting member he voted in favor of flying the commemorative American flags every 9/11.  Well okay, maybe that one will cost him a few votes.

Interestingly enough, he's probably the only North Amherst/Cushman homeowner who does not have a "Stop The Retreat" lawn sign prominently displayed in his yard.  So yeah, that too may cost him a few votes since NIMBYs usually patronize the ballot box.

If they really possessed political power, however, they would not have been so unceremoniously blown out of the water at the last Town Meeting.

It's been a while since two incumbents both decided to retire from their Select Board seats, thus the field this coming election (March 25) is pretty wide open.  Fitting I suppose, since Stephanie O'Keeffe and Diana Stein both won their seats almost six years ago in a strongly contested election (5 candidates) but at the election three years ago neither had competition.

The odd thing about an election with two open seats is a voter gets two votes.   Thus like-minded candidates usually form an unofficial team, quietly telling their ardent supporters to throw their second vote to candidate B.

Theoretically Candidate A can have only 750 entrenched supporters as does Candidate B; but with each telling their supporters where to throw their second vote both candidates end up with a whopping 1,500 votes.

Thus making it tough on lone-wolf Candidate C, an outsider who tells their voters to "bullet vote"  (don't cast second vote) with a respectable 1,000 supporters,  but still ends up coming in a distant third.

Whereas if voters were only allowed one vote, Candidate C would have come in first.

Since there's no Proposition 2.5 Override or change-our-antiquated-form-of-town-government Charter issue on the ballot, voter turnout will be in the usual range ... dismal.

Over the past five years annual spring town elections averaged a pathetic 15% turnout (with an Override question on the ballot, 2010 had a 32% turnout) while the 2012 November Presidential election garnered a 69% turnout.

In addition to the two Select Board seats other town wide contests for three years seats include one seat on Jones Library Trustees, one  seat on Amherst School Committee, one seat each (for five year term) on Amherst Housing Authority and Amherst Redevelopment Authority (that did not meet once in the past year).

As usual the Town Meeting Moderator position is up (although Jim Pistrang has a 20 year lease). And Town Meeting will have the usual rotation of eight seats per Precinct up for three year terms (80 total) and a dozen other shorter term seats contested.

Amherst currently has 17,851 registered voters.

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Going In Circles?

Fort River School historic East Amherst Village

So maybe school officials should simultaneously teach history by having the kids sing "Marching through Georgia" or  -- to be fair and balanced -- "When Johnny Comes Marching Home" while traipsing around the school on these brisk mornings coming up. 

Or let the lead kid carry a Chinese flag. 

 Fort River School Monday 8:35 AM

#####
Email sent to parents November 18th

Dear Families and Guardians,
At Fort River Elementary School, we will implement a before school walking program, beginning December 2nd (the Monday after Thanksgiving).  This is a successful program at Wildwood, and we are modeling our system after theirs (thanks, Wildwood!).
This program is designed to provide an effective and safe method of increasing physical activity by taking advantage of time not in use for academics.  Currently, our students arrive between 8:30 & 8:45 and have 3 choices:  eat breakfast in the 1st cafeteria, socialize in the 2nd cafeteria, or socialize in the gymnasium.  We seek to change this morning supervised time to offer more productivity for the students.   
This program, to be implemented at Fort River Elementary School, will hopefully allow for two things to occur:
  1. Increase academic engagement and success.  School aged children who started their morning off with vigorous physical activity while waiting for classes to start showed results of improved focus and attentiveness, and decreased overall behavioral problems (Quick, 2008).
  2. Improve overall health of our students.  An increase in physical activity will be used to aid in the battle of childhood obesity and support students to develop a routine for daily exercise.
Students who need to eat breakfast will still come in the building after 8:30 and have a supervised meal in the cafeteria.  All other students will drop off items in the lobby (if necessary) and go back outside to begin walking around our building, supervised by adults stationed outside.  We will follow the guidelines set forth by the district regarding outside activities in relation to cold weather, and offer an inside walk on days that are too extreme.  All students will conclude their walk at 8:45 so that they may begin class at 8:50.
We anticipate that the students will need support for this transition, so we will have many adults on hand outside as we begin implementation (and continued supervision as the program proceeds).  We will also discuss this with them in class in the days ahead so that they may ask questions and be prepared to begin!   Please contact us if you have any questions or concerns. 
Fort River Administration