This coming Saturday, March 29, we will come together to discuss and vote on issues that matter to the future of our town. Town Meeting matters, as these votes decide how we will spend our money and what zoning we will enact to manage change over the coming years. By giving direction to town board and committees, the voters are the ones who have the final say. It is the voters who are ultimately responsible for how our town will proceed on all fronts.
This Town Meeting will take up some very important matters that go beyond the seemingly more pedestrian issues of straightforward annual budgets, the purchase of new police vehicles, or the adjustment of building height calculations. We will have an opportunity to engage in debate that could result in an outcome that reflects the best of Lincoln’s collaborative innovation.
Early in the day, a critical portion of Town Meeting will pick up where we left off at the State of the Town meeting last fall. Two articles hold potential for further developing a pathway suggested at that fall meeting. But the path is filled with potholes that could prevent a positive and creative outcome.
At State of the Town, we had a remarkable coming together of generations—School Committee members, Council on Aging (COA) representatives, Parks and Recreation, and citizens—singing the praise of bringing together, on one campus, programs to serve all ages. There we heard great support for what might become a Lincoln community campus.
To facilitate the creation of the unified campus concept celebrated at the State of the Town, the challenge will be to find a way to discuss the two separate components of this scheme at the same time.
The two components are a School Committee-sponsored article (Article 11) and a Board of Selectmen request of the Capital Planning Committee (one line item of Article 9). Article 11 asks for up to $250,000 to study a range of options for a school building project. Article 9 will ask for (among other items) up to $75,000 to study a variety of sites for programs for the COA and Parks and Recreation, as recommended by the Community Center Feasibility Study report.
At State of the Town, the Community Center Feasibility Committee (CCFC) presented the results of their analysis of programmatic needs and potential sites to deliver programs. Many of the sites are those also mentioned in the Selectmen’s list for further review. The CCFC preliminary analysis found that:
- Bemis Hall has both space limitations and safety concerns that cannot be solved in a way that addresses long-term needs.
- Pierce House was also determined to have serious space constraints, and any relocation to Pierce House would displace the uses currently enjoyed by citizens and many community groups.
- The only South Lincoln site that may be on a wish list might be the DPW site. But communities around us that have built new DPWs have encountered EPA regulations that place a price tag at $15 million and up. And where would we relocate our DPW, if we choose to spend $15 million?
So, if we can build on the enthusiasm for coming together that was expressed at State of the Town, embracing that spirit of collaboration and celebration of community, we might find a way to combine study of school needs, COA needs, and others needs in a unified, holistic manner—to develop a comprehensive way to meet community needs. And we might find that our community is best served when we all study, work and play together, on one campus.
The challenge will be for the leadership of the schools and the Board of Selectmen to create a committee to advance this collaboration. It won’t be easy to craft an innovative charge, and select a committee from the extensive talent pool that is Lincoln. It will need to take a fresh look at how we might proceed. But such approaches are not new to Lincoln. This is the kind of innovation that Lincoln has been know for—look at the creation of South Lincoln Crossing, Lincoln Woods, Battle Road Farm, Codman Community Farm, Codman Pool, and the recent protection of the Van Leer/MacDowell farmland. These initiatives all relied on cross-board collaborations and bold leadership that did not shy from the difficulties in bringing such projects forward.
We did it before. We can do it again. After all, when the ballfield at the center of our community campus was gifted in 1932, it was done with the notion that it would provide a place for all ages to come together and cheer as one.
Yes, there are exciting opportunities and challenges offered by matters before the town this coming Saturday. Be sure and attend. Jump into the discussions. Your voice matters. Your vote matters. Town Meeting matters.
Sincerely,
Sara Mattes
71 Conant Rd.
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