T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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194.1 | | BUILD::MORGAN | | Fri Jan 12 1990 12:23 | 57 |
| Hi Frank, Good idea you have here. And believe me, the work you
people are doing with the commission is not going unnoticed. Thanks.
> 1. What bugs you most about the government of the Town of Maynard?
In regard to the way the school committee is run. It was my
understanding that one function of the school committee is to oversee
the work of the superintendent. It appears the two are walking hand
in hand much too often. In other words, the school committee rubber
stamps every request of the superintendent. How was the superintendent
able to get an assistant when there supposedly was no money available?
This was done after lecturing the teachers about budget constraints and
the fact that they would have to sacrifice some of the things they've
had in the past. I'd really like to know what the ratio of
administrators to teachers is now and what it was, say 15 years ago.
The size of the budget may be too much for the selectmen/fincom to handle.
The time could be ripe for a full time manager to oversee it. Unfortunately
this will probably result in a great deal of politicking. At this time,
there is a need for the town to come together instead of pointing fingers
and placing blame elsewhere, which brings me to...
Tax collection. Why is it that there is roughly 3/4 of a million
dollars owed to the town in back taxes? Is it the tax collector's job
to go knocking on doors and threaten to break kneecaps? Can the town
afford the lawsuits that may be necessary to get the money that it is
owed? What really can be done? I've read that Framingham published
the names of the people that owed back taxes, but I don't have any idea
how effective the results were. Should the interest penalties be
eliminated for these delinquent taxes in an effort to get this money?
I believe the state did this a couple of years ago.
DPW. Is it really necessary to get the new sidewalk plow/sander toy
out every time there is an inch of snow? I know that the majority of
the DPW workers are hard working but you sometimes get the feeling that
this department is a cash cow.
Police and fire departments. The working conditions for these people
are a disgrace. But, once again with the political climate of the
state and town in regard to taxes, it looks like these conditions will
remain that way for who knows how long.
> 2. What is the one thing you would do if you ran the town for a day?
This is only a pebble in a beachful of sand, but I'd consider
penalizing people that don't participate in the town recycle program.
This program results in direct money savings for the town and is
beneficial to the environment. The only problem is it is not
"convenient" for people. The volunteers do a tremendous job.
Try to bring the different governing boards together to air out their
problems. Hurling insults at people through the newspapers, etc. not
only deepens the anger, but it's also pretty rude. Where and when this
can be done beats the hell out of me.
Steve
|
194.2 | | DINER::SHUBIN | Question everything | Mon Jan 15 1990 09:09 | 27 |
| > 1. What bugs you most about the government of the Town of Maynard?
it's a small request, but I'd be happy if the various boards published
agendas in the beacon. I'd probably attend a few meetings if I had any
idea what they were discussing. I'm a pretty aware maynard resident,
but I never go to meetings. published agendas would provide interested
people more impetus to attend meetings, and provide other people with
at least minimal information about what's happening.
I agree with .1 that things may be getting too large for volunteer
boards to handle. running even a small volunteer group with a budget of
a few thousand dollars takes a lot of my time; I can't imagine how 3
people on the select board can run an entire town!
a really small (but important) point: I'd like to see the meeting later
this month be called "town forum" instead of "town father's forum."
some of those "fathers" are mothers!
(in response to .1: it *was* kind of obnoxious reading those columns in
the beacon where town officials dumped on each other. the good part was
that we townsfolk got to get some information that we wouldn't have
gotten. of course, it's not clear who was telling the truth and who was
just being rude, but seeing that rudeness is part of the information
that we got. on the other hand, it was embarrassing to see how poorly
written all the articles were, *especially* those from people
associated with the schools. what does that say about the education
that we're providing kids in this town?)
|
194.3 | education | DELNI::M_MEEHAN | uppity women unite | Mon Jan 15 1990 11:53 | 11 |
| >> What bugs you most about the government of the Town of Maynard?
The *major* thing that bugs me is the perception that many area residents
have of Maynard as lacking commitment to education. I have owned a home
here for several years and just bought a new one. I plan on staying
for a while and do not want to see my property value stagnate
because the town is perceived as not caring enough about education.
Therefore, I would like to see serious consideration given to joining
a regionalized high school.
....Margaret
|
194.4 | property value vs education | THOTH::FILZ | DTN 223-2033 | Mon Jan 15 1990 14:50 | 3 |
| reply to .3
How does property value relate to education?
|
194.5 | education and property values | DINER::SHUBIN | Question everything | Mon Jan 15 1990 17:31 | 14 |
| > How does property value relate to education?
if people perceive that we don't care about education, then they'll be
less willing to buy houses here. that's one of the major factors in
families' decisions about where to live. if people stop buying houses
here, then the prices will either go down or stop going up. either way,
we lose.
another reason is that we don't have a good school system, the town
will get a reputation for being, well, less smart. that's not good,
either. personally, I think that education is incredibly important, and
I don't think I'd want to live in a town that disagreed with that.
-- hs
|
194.6 | | THOTH::FILZ | DTN 223-2033 | Tue Jan 16 1990 08:15 | 9 |
| Do you know that Maynard rates in the top 100 schools in Mass. That
we spend more money per student that the other 240 schools systems
in Mass. Did you know that or supt. is one on the hifhest payed
in the area. I sent 2 kids throw the school system and they did
great. How can you get better education in a school system if you
can not get rid of the bad teaches (UNIONS AND TENDER).
Also must people move to Maynard because the price of houses are
lower that the surrounding area
|
194.7 | supply and demand | DELNI::M_MEEHAN | uppity women unite | Tue Jan 16 1990 10:37 | 9 |
| >> How does property value relate to education?
I think that if there is a perception that Maynard doesn't care
about education then prospective home-buyers with children will not
be attracted here. If the demand for homes in Maynard goes down
then the supply of available houses goes up. This will cause
prices to drop (or possibly remain constant).
....Margaret
|
194.8 | Town meetings are bad for democracy | PRNSYS::LOMICKAJ | Jeffrey A. Lomicka | Tue Jan 16 1990 10:56 | 22 |
| What bugs me most about town government in Massachusts in general, and
Maynard in particular, is the town meeting system.
Town meeting systems are NOT democracy, because it is too easy for a
special interest group to get together and show up at a meeting
en-masse and legislate into existance regulations that are not in the
best intrest of the true majority. (The Action 24-hour store law, for
example.)
I am a firm believer in government by representation.
Towns should be governed by a town board system. I should have an
elected neighborhood board member who is authorized to represent my
concerns at the board meetings. If I am concerned about something, I
can call or write my concerns to my board member, who provides this
service to the town citizens that he/she represents, in return for a
token compensation that comes from the taxes I pay to the town. (Say,
$1000 to $2500/year per board member.) At town meetings, the public is
invited to COMMENT, but not to VOTE. Only the board members vote. I
think that this change would lead to higher quality government, as well
as reduce the stress/anger/emotional issue level surrounding many of
the town issues.
|
194.9 | perception is important, too | DINER::SHUBIN | Question everything | Tue Jan 16 1990 11:58 | 11 |
|
I don't know how to properly compare schools. There are too many
variables. I do know that perception is at least as important as
reality -- even if we're among the top 100 schools in the nation, if
people perceive that we don't care about schools, and think that our
school system is bad, then we're in trouble because we'll develop a bad
reputation. that will bring on all the problems I made in my previous
note, and our property values will suffer along with our reputation as
a town.
-- hs
|
194.10 | Town meetings *are* democracy | DINER::SHUBIN | Question everything | Tue Jan 16 1990 15:18 | 23 |
| >Town meeting systems are NOT democracy, because it is too easy for a
>special interest group to get together and show up at a meeting
>en-masse and legislate into existance regulations that are not in the
>best intrest of the true majority. (The Action 24-hour store law, for
>example.)
>I am a firm believer in government by representation.
I agree that TM doesn't work very well, but it IS the ultimate in
democracy. each person gets to speak her/his mind. the problem is that
no one cares. in fact, the special interest groups are doing the right
thing; too bad everyone doesn't. that's the theory. in practice, jeff,
you're right -- TM doesn't work. representative TM is an alternative,
but I really like the fact that I can vote directly.
another problem is that I don't think that most people have enough
information before they come to TM. it's not easy to get it (let's face
it, the select board really doesn't want 10,000 people to show up for
their meetings!); perhaps the town should do more than just send out
the warrant in a plastic bag (and at that, one which frequently goes
right into the trash). there has to be a simple way for them to
disseminate information about the various articles.
|
194.11 | Get involved | THOTH::FILZ | DTN 223-2033 | Thu Jan 18 1990 07:20 | 8 |
| As a member of the fincom in the town of the pass 15 yrs all I can
say is that the fincom meetings are held on Tueseday evening at 7:30pm
an are open to the public. Yet noone come down not even the press.
Also the Tuseday before the annual town meeting the Fincom has a
open meeting to discuss the warrent with the public yet only Town
officals show up. If you are interested I'll post what dept/boards
we will be meeting with an at what time.
|
194.12 | Local Cable? | SONATA::HICKOX | Stow Vice | Thu Jan 18 1990 12:54 | 11 |
|
How about getting that warrant review meeting on the local
access cable channel. Even though not everyone has it, it would
still reach more people than are showing up in person. Maybe
if they knew in advance and found that some issues impacted
them directly they would come to the meeting.
Most towns have local cable access now and this is exactly
the kind of stuff that it has been set aside for.
Mark
|
194.13 | Keep those comments coming | SENIOR::IGNACHUCK | | Thu Jan 18 1990 19:25 | 22 |
| Just a note to thank everyone for their replies so far. Keep them
coming!!! I reviewed the ones recieved so far with the Charter
Commission last night and everyone ( particularly the non-deccies)
was impressed.
Last May I sent out over 100 questionnaires to just about every elected,
appointed and full time employees and got back 15 responses! Without
getting into detail, none of the MAJOR boards and Committees bothered
to respond. That's why I decided to turn to you folks.
Our next meeting is at 7:00 on Wednesday, February 7th. We will meet
on the first three Wednesdays of every month through June, at least.
One of the big issues we're facing is the elected versus appointed
status of various town boards and agencies. Any comments? Do you
feel that would be more likely to participate in town government if
you could get appointed rather than having to run for slot on a
board?
Thanks again,
Frank
|
194.14 | | DINER::SHUBIN | Question everything | Thu Jan 18 1990 21:11 | 17 |
| Frank:
Perhaps you could start a note to let us know what happens at the
commission meetings. As Art mentioned, there's not enough press
coverage of what goes on in meetings. And how about having WAVM carry
it on TV? I know that the Concord selectboard meetings are televised,
but I've never heard of any meetings in Maynard being carried on cable.
re: elected vs apointed. I worked on the recycling committee on the
board of health for awhile. it certainly was easier to get involved
that way than to have to run for office, but I like the idea of people
being elected. that should make them more accountable and more
well-known to townspeople, although I wonder how many people actually
vote, and how many of them actually know anything about the candidates.
are there some particular positions that you have in mind?
-- hs
|
194.15 | exit | SENIOR::IGNACHUCK | | Fri Jan 19 1990 18:42 | 27 |
| The State requires that we coninue to elect a Board of Selectmen,
A School Committee (including the Assabet Vocational High Committee
Member) and a Moderator. After that, the Charter Commission
may recommend that any board now elected become appointed or vice
versa.
Presently, we elect a Board of Health, Assessors, Town Clerk, Town
Treasurer, Housing Authority, Library Trustees, Board of Public
Works, Constables, and a Planning Board. All of the 33 Charters that
have been created since the creation of the Home Rule Amendment in 1966
have reduced this number by making most offices appointed by either
the Selectmen or Town Administrator. Since Prop 2 1/2, the number of
elected offices has dropped even further. In general, the Library
Trustees and Housing Authority seem to retain elected status because
of the manner in which they recieve and spend money. We are meeting
with the other Boards on the above list to find out whether they feel
they could be more effective and get more talent on their Boards by
being appointed rather than by remaining elected.
Running for an office is a hassle and I know this first-hand because
the Charter Commission is elected.
I wonder who out there would volunteer to serve on a Board if they
didn't have to go through the signature gathering and (perhaps) the
campaigning process just to serve the Town??
Frank
|
194.16 | my $0.02 | CASPRO::DUNN | | Mon Jan 22 1990 09:52 | 20 |
|
A few thoughts off the top of my head:
Make recycling mandatory, ie: a penalty for not participating,
since it costs the town more money that way.
Regionalize (at least with one other town) the administration of:
The police
the fire
the schools
the library
anything else possible.
It is ridiculous to believe that each town has to duplicate
everything from stem to stern.
Stop the people who dump into the Assabet within the Maynard
boundaries.
|
194.17 | It's starting | SONATA::HICKOX | Stow Vice | Mon Jan 22 1990 12:46 | 20 |
|
RE: Last
I believe there has been quite a bit of proposed regionalization:
Wastewater Treatment: Acton to join Maynard and share costs?
Schools: Maynard looking into the feasibility of merging with
another system.
Fire: Stow is considering utilizing Maynard's Fire/Ambulance
Dispatch as they may eliminate their dispatcher
positions to cut costs (and pay Maynard a per call fee)
much as Acton and Boxboro do now.
These are some good idea's that should help contain
costs and still provide an acceptable level of service.
Mark
|
194.18 | administration consolidation | CASPRO::DUNN | | Mon Jan 22 1990 13:20 | 32 |
|
> Fire: Stow is considering utilizing Maynard's Fire/Ambulance
> Dispatch as they may eliminate their dispatcher
> positions to cut costs (and pay Maynard a per call fee)
> much as Acton and Boxboro do now.
These types of things are great starts in the right direction. What I
had in mind were more steps down that road, like:
One police chief (and associated administration) for Maynard
and Stow (for example).
One fire chief (and administration) for two towns.
One library administration over two towns. Library hours can
be worked so all evenings are covered by one or the other.
Policies are the same, resources (capital items and people) are
shared where possible.
let's keep using Stow as an example. There are towns larger than
Maynard and Stow combined that provide fire, police, library, etc
services of good levels. Just because there are town lines in
between shouldn't matter. There's no reason we can't do it with one
administration.
I'm glad that towns are beginning to leverage off of each other (as in
the dispatch example). I hope that towns will soon begin to truly
regionalize in services other than schools.
|
194.19 | Status of the Town Charter | SENIOR::IGNACHUCK | Native Maynardian | Tue Mar 19 1991 21:31 | 100 |
| It has been a while since I updated you on the progress of the
new Town Charter, and I've been getting a few phone calls from
people wondering about the status, so here's an update:
Under State Law, The Charter Commission was required to submit it's
final report to the Selectmen by November 1, 1990. We met that
deadline. We have, therefore, completed our work and there
can be no further changes to the proposed Charter.
The remaining steps to acceptance are:
1. The entire proposed Charter must be printed by the Selectmen
and distributed to each "residence" in town containing one or
more registered voter prior to 14 days before the next annual
town election. Since the election is May 6th, the distribution
should take place sometime in the middle of April. Mike Gianotis
has bids on the printing and I believe he has arranged for the
distribution via the Sunday Chronicle bag system, which is much
cheaper than mailing.
2. The Charter Commission will hold a Public Hearing on Wednesday,
April 24th at 7:30 in the Upper Hearing Room of the Town Building
to answer any questions about the content and/or intent of the
various provisions in the Charter.
3. The question of acceptence of the Charter will be on the ballot
at the May 6th annual Town Election. The wording will be in
accordance with State Law:
"Shall this Town approve the new charter recommended by the
Charter Commission, summarized below?"
The summary will be as follows:
OPEN TOWN MEETING RETAINED
The charter retains the open town meeting. It formalizes the
town meeting as the legislative branch of town government.
BOARD OF SELECTMEN
The Board of Selectmen is retained as the key elected board of
the town, but is enlarged to five (5) members. The board will be
expected to excercise a policy-making role and assume leadership
responsibilities in many areas. It will have considerable powers
of appointment, the power of investigation, and it remains as the
licensing authority for the town.
OTHER ELECTED BOARDS
Other elected boards and officers under this charter will be
a moderator, a school committee, a board of library trustees and
a housing authority.
TOWN ADMINISTRATOR
The most significant change in the proposed charter is the
establishment of the position of town administrator, appointed by
the board of selectmen. The town administrator position eliminates
the existing position of the administrative assistant to the
selectmen.
The administrator will be a professional, especially fitted by
education and experience to strengthen the executive branch. He
or she will have the powers necessary to carry out the responsibilities
and duties of the office. Included in these responsibilities and
duties are personnel, budgeting, and purchasing. This person will be
the town's chief administrator, expected to provide day to day
management and coordination of the town's business.
RECALL PROVISION
The charter establishes a procedure for the recall of elected
officials.
OTHER CHANGES
The charter proposes an improved budget process and capital
improvements program. It eliminates the board of public works,
investing the responsibilities of this board in the board of
selectmen. It also establishes a special committee to prepare
a code of ethics applicable to all elected and appointed town
officials and town employees.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
To refresh everyone's memory, the Charter must, by Law, retain
the positions of Selectmen, School Committee and Moderator as
ELECTED positions.
I think that there will be an article in this week's Beacon regarding
the Charter. In addition, I have tried to write a few articles on
my own relative to the work of the Charter Commission, the history
of the efforts to get a charter for the town, and what exactly do
we gain by having a charter. I hope to have an article per week
in the Beacon. My wife hopes to get our living room painted, so don't
count on too many articles in the Beacon.....
Frank
|
194.20 | Congratulations, Frank | BUILD::MORGAN | | Tue May 07 1991 11:39 | 6 |
| The charter commission was passed by the voters. Am I correct in
assuming the election for the two additional selectmen will be in
September? Also, when will the job for the Town Administrator be
filled?
Steve
|
194.21 | | MEWVAX::AUGUSTINE | Purple power! | Tue May 07 1991 12:37 | 6 |
| I'd also like to add my congratulations to Frank. I'm impressed by all
the hard work and the good results.
Thanks, Frank.
Liz
|
194.22 | | THOTH::FILZ | DTN 223-2033 | Tue May 07 1991 16:05 | 1 |
| FRANK FOR SELECTMEN
|
194.23 | Election Process | SENIOR::IGNACHUCK | Native Maynardian | Tue May 07 1991 22:44 | 23 |
| RE. 20 - Steve, the election for the additional two selectmen will
be held on the third Monday in September (the 16th). The candidate
receiving the highest vote will serve the remainder of a three year term,
expiring in 1994, and the candidate receiving the second highest vote
will serve the remainder of a two year term, expiring in 1993. This
was the fairest way to do it, and avoids the possibility of a candidate
choosing to run or not run for a particular slot based on the competition.
Also, through this process, we get in line with a one/two/two yearly
election. Next May, George Shaw's slot will come up for election. In
1993, Ken Demars' and the new two year slot will come up, and in 1994,
Anne Flood's and the three year slot will come up.
The process for the selection of Town Administrator will begin within
30 days after the election (yesterday). The selectmen will select a
screening committee of nine to plan the process.
As for my personal plans, I think I will run for Selectman in
September.
Frank
|
194.24 | | HELIX::RUZICH | Realtime Software Engineering VAXELN | Wed May 08 1991 00:46 | 22 |
| .23> As for my personal plans, I think I will run for Selectman in
.23> September.
.23>
.23> Frank
When the Town of Maynard faces difficult issues, there is danger that
people divide up into factions, of old and new Maynard citizens. It's
easy to understand the psychology: you just get your group riled up
about "those people" and blame all the problems on them. That has
proven to be a very effective way to motivate a group of people, for a
while, anyway. But when the town is split, we can't solve our common
problems because there is little trust, and everybody is busy wasting
energy in a tug-o-war.
Looking at the long term, my personal opinion is that the best hope for
the town is in people who can talk to and understand both the old and
new Maynard citizens. Perhaps someone with ties to both groups, who
grew up in town, and works at a high-tech job.
You get my vote, Frank.
-Steve
|
194.25 | | BUILD::MORGAN | | Wed May 08 1991 08:14 | 5 |
| Great news, Frank. Sounds like Arthur's trumpeting has hit home. :-)
Someone with skills such as your own, would be a definite plus to the
Board. When's the campaign start, and what can I do to help?
Steve
|