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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1997-Annual Report1997 Annual Report Town of Lexington Massachusetts Settled 1642, incorporated as Town of Lexington 1713 Population Latitude - 42.26N Longitude - 71.13W Area of town in acres 10,650.42 Area of town in square miles 16.64 Extreme length in miles 5.80 Extreme width in miles 4.85 Highest elevation, feet above m.s.l. 374 Lowest elevation, feet above m.s.l. 110 Town -owned conservation land, acres 1,289.8 Accepted public streets, miles 125.89 Unaccepted public streets, miles 12.12 Condominium and private drives 4.75 State highways 18.98 Trunk sewers 34.09 Street sewers 122.63 Water mains 156.40 Assessed Valuation Fiscal Year 1998 Residential / Open Space $3,300,687,100 Commercial 345,212,000 Industrial 85,747,000 Personal Property 63,451,360 Total town $3,795,097,460 Tax Rate per $1,000 (Fiscal Year 1998) Residential / Open Space 13.43 Commercial / Industrial 25.51 Personal Property 25.51 Typical Property Valuation $318,000 Typical Annual Property Tax Bill 4,416 Typical Annual Water /Sewer Bill 529 Town Credit Rating (Moody's): AAA 1997 Census 31,545 Table of Contents Introduction Environment Directory 1997 Lexington Overview 2 Board of Appeals 43 Town Meeting Members 86 1997 Revenue Sources 3 Planning Board 47 Voters' Info. 88 1997 Operating Expenses 4 Permanent Building Comm. 48 Phone Numbers Back Cover Conservation Commission 49 Govern / Administrate Conservation Property List 50 Building/Inspection 51 Cover Lexington Center Committee 51 Board of Selectmen 5 Design Advisory Committee 52 In 1891, the town voted to provide MAPC HATS 7 7 student transportation, at town expense. Commission 2000 7 Life Quality /People Shown here in front of Hancock School HFAC Personnel Advisory Board 8 8 is the first school bus - Traffic Safety Committee g Recreation Department 52 in those days they called it a barge - Town Report Committee g Bikeway Committee 53 with students and driver. Moderator 9 LexHAB 54 Town Clerk/Board of Registrars 9 Lex. Housing Authority 55 Photo courtesy of the Lexington Special Meetings 10 Employee Honor Roll 55 Historical Society. Town Meeting, 1997 10 Social Services /C.O.A. 56 Town Elections 13 Human Services 56 Town Meeting Members Assn. 14 Veterans' Services 57 Financial reports, with the exception of Town Manager 15 Fair Housing 57 Retirement Funds, are based on the fiscal Youth Commission 57 year that ended June 30, 1977, usually Education Cary Lectures 58 referred to as FY97 Arts Council 58 Battle Green Guides 58 All other statistics, unless otherwise not - School Committee 18 Celebrations Committee 59 ed, are based on the 1997 calendar year. School Superintendent 18 Historic Districts Comm. 60 School Expenditures 22 Historical Commission 60 Minuteman Tech 25 Cable Advisory Committee 61 Cary Memorial Library 26 Legal Dep't of Public Works Town Counsel 61 DPW/Engineering 29 Transportation Advisory 34 Financial Lighting Options Committee 35 Trustees of Public Trusts 63 Public Safety Appropriations Committee 68 Capital Expenditures Comm. 70 Comptroller 70 Fire Department 36 Revenue Officer 71 Police Department 38 Board of Assessors 72 Police Manual Committee 39 Retirement Board 73 Board of Health 41 Combined Balance Sheet 74 Revenues/Expenditures 76 Schedule of Appropriations 80 Debt Service Summary 85 TOWN OF LEXINGTON Page I ANNUAL REPORT 1997 1997 Lexington Overview Battered for months by the `rithmetic and rhetoric from both sides of a proposed school renovation plan, voters in Decem- ber cried "enough!" and scuttled the $68,200,000 project. Below is a brief paper trail of the major events in the town's struggle to resolve this knotty fiscal matter. Look for details in reports from the Town Clerk and Board of Selectmen. March 3 Town Election: Citizen Stephen J. Tripi and nine or more registered vot- ers inserted a question on the ballot that would limit the town's annual budget growth to three percent of the prior year's budget. It won, but it was a non- binding question with no teeth. April 9, Town Meeting passed five school funding articles; Article 4 line item 1100, and articles 5, 6, 22 and 23, the latter with a $2,400,000 tab primari- ly for final plans for a major school rebuilding program. June 2, in a Special Referendum trig- gered by Tripi and followers, voters decided, 3,829 to 3,175, to cancel Town Meeting's approval of Article 23, final plans. However, their numbers fell short of a state law that requires 20 percent of registered voters to agree on a referen- dum issue, and Article 23 survived. October 20, Special Town Meeting adopted a $68,200,000 school renovation project involving the high school, the two middle schools and Harrington Element- ary School. The project was scaled back from one which would have encom- passed all school buildings. The meeting also adopted an article which appropriat- ed an additional $1,050,000 for major renovations to the library. December 8, voters upset the October 20 Special Town Meeting decision on the schools' big building plan. Despite the plan's importance, a majority of voters were no -shows at the polls. Meantime, the schools moved fearlessly ahead with their technology plan, now in the stage of "immersing" faculty and students in computer lore, as described by Superintendent Jefferey M. Young in his well- documented narrative. Both the Selectmen and Town Manager chide the schools for tardiness when it comes to budget planning; seems the town side finishes its work by January 15, but the school committee straggles into class with its homework about a month later, putting a time squeeze on the overall budget approval process. Serious students of management practic- es will also find meaty reading in Town Manager White's discussion of the Senior Management Team and how it operates to stimulate bottom -up partici- pation by all staffers in planning and operations. In other fiscal matters, both White and the selectmen hailed progress in long term financial planning. Said White, "1997 may be remembered as the year in which Lexington got its fiscal house in order." Middlesex County government quietly bowed out, leaving the town to run its own bow wow licensing program; dog fees that use to be split with the county now stay in town. The DPW lightened up nights for many residents as it started turning back on lights that had been turned off to save money two years ago. Look for even better news on the lighting front, as Director George A. Woodbury charges ahead in his quest for town ownership of the lights, and the right to screw in the types of bulbs residents favor. He's also pressing to get a better deal on electric bills for everybody in town. And if you cussed the cancellation of last fall's Household Hazardous Waste Col- lection day, he has good news there. The police put a uniformed cop on patrol in the high school and report the move has paid off handsomely. But they're still puzzled by the number of folks who ring up 911 then hang up before rescuers can find out what's wrong. Means that a lot of cruisers zip out chasing wild geese. Fire fighters welcomed their new engine; it's loaded with life- saving gear. And the chief reports that his department is adopt- ing the town manager's Senior Manage- ment Team concept. HATS, the organization which keeps a beady eye on Hanscom Field activities, cautiously applauded the year's progress in negotiations with Massport. Scores of citizens from Lexington and its neighbors gave their time and smarts to the cause. In the area of foreign affairs, the select- men note the town's link to sister city Gatchina, which is in ... guess where? Look it up in the selectmens' report. On the millennium front, that momentous moment in the town's history will be celebrated with a bang, so promises Commission 2000, the new committee appointed to muster the troops for four days of celebrations. Library staff and trustees stacked up impressive deeds; pushing ahead with major renovation plans and adding new computer gadgetry. It's amazing how much data you can finger when your home computer is linked to Cary. But do kids still read? Check the report on the summer reading program for children. The sweats set crowded town fields with a full program, aided by increased collab- oration between public and private bodies to get things done, like new lights at the center playground. Several new appointments were made to bolster the Board of Health and staff, busy curbing smokers and aiding Police, Human Services, Schools and RePlace to counter domestic violence. In another foray into joy- through- technol- ogy, the town plugged into a new phone system, condensed on this report's back cover. Be alert - there are two prefixes, 862 and 861. TOWN OF LEXINGTON I Page 2 1 ANNUAL REPORT 1997 1997 Revenue Sources I Real 43,017,984 Il Real 8,229,027 Seal 2,153,156 'roperty 1,313,734 3ipts 6,151,727 6,074,250 =unds 1,943,722 N urplus 799,506 Funds Water 4,748,368 Sewer 6,721,938 ;reation 1,609,010 $82,762,422 TOWN OF LEXINGTON Page 3 ANNUAL REPORT 1997 1997 Operating Expenses Education Public Schools 40,159,768 Legal M M Tech 472,415 nvironment Board of Appeals 40,632,183 D. P. W. Conservation Com. 71,303 6,768,574 ublic Safety & Health Police Dispatch 3,3999,9087 353,261 Council on Aging Health 121,305 Veterans 44,542 6,993,662 Library Personal Services1,017026 Expenses 144,843 1,161,869 Shared Employee Pens. 3,291,820 General Insurance 563,454 Expenses Debt Serv. Prin. 3,301,000 Debt Ser. Int. 787,487 7,943,761 Enterprise Water 4,527,140 Sewer 5,974,411 Recreation 1,290,468 11,791,019 Total Operating Expenses $79,718,362 TOWN OF LEXINGTON Page 4 ANNUAL REPORT 1997 Planning Board 145,122 Legal Building & Zoning 283,111 nvironment Board of Appeals 31,047 & Conservation Com. 71,303 People p Historic Dist. Com. 5,590 796,888 Council on Aging 301,269 4,346 Veterans 44,542 1,026,672 Human Services 79,130 Celebrations 13,434 962,394 LEXPRESS 228,138 3,224,608 1,202,686 Shared Employee Pens. 3,291,820 General Insurance 563,454 Expenses Debt Serv. Prin. 3,301,000 Debt Ser. Int. 787,487 7,943,761 Enterprise Water 4,527,140 Sewer 5,974,411 Recreation 1,290,468 11,791,019 Total Operating Expenses $79,718,362 TOWN OF LEXINGTON Page 4 ANNUAL REPORT 1997 Town Counsel 204,882 Legal Town Clerk 132,778 & Bd. of Registrars 19,425 Elections 77,223 overnment Executive 796,888 Legislative 4,346 Financial 1,026,672 State & County Assess. 962,394 3,224,608 Shared Employee Pens. 3,291,820 General Insurance 563,454 Expenses Debt Serv. Prin. 3,301,000 Debt Ser. Int. 787,487 7,943,761 Enterprise Water 4,527,140 Sewer 5,974,411 Recreation 1,290,468 11,791,019 Total Operating Expenses $79,718,362 TOWN OF LEXINGTON Page 4 ANNUAL REPORT 1997 Board of Selectmen Board of Selectmen; Seated, Elizabeth B. Eddison, Dan H. Fenn, Jr., Chairman Leo P. McSweeney, Executive Secretary Phyllis Smith, Daniel P. Busa, Jr., Peter D. Enrich. Standing, Town Counsel Norman Cohen and Town Manager Richard J. White. Enrich is the newcomer to the board. Photo: Ray Barnes. For the Board of Selectmen, and for the Celtics, 1997 was a "Building Year." We can but hope that Chairman McSweeney has as much success as Rick Pitino. In this, our annual report to our neigh- bors, we touch on five of the most im- portant components of this construction project. With the exception of one, the results will not be immediately visible and, in some cases, like a foundation, hardly visible at all. But it is our hope and expectation that the quality of our common life in this new structure will prove to be increasingly satisfactory and satisfying for us all. Capital To carry the building analogy one step further, we want to focus first on capital projects. It is no secret to anyone that our buildings, equipment, and roads are aging and that, under pressure from operating budgets, we have not been adequately funding their maintenance and/or replacement. With a cap on avail- able revenue, both political and statutory, no community can do all it wants to do, or indeed all it ought to do. .Of course, the most costly of the needed capital projects is the schools. Many citi- zens, including especially the School Committee and the Permanent Building Committee, worked very hard indeed to come up with what was ultimately a four - school proposal — High School, Clarke, Diamond, and Harrington — carrying a price tag of $68.2 million, 59 percent reimbursable by the state. As we all know, in the final analysis the citizens stated that this amounted to more money than they cared to spend on this particular plan. Convinced, nevertheless, that some proj- ect is desperately needed, the Selectmen wrote the School Committee within days of the override vote suggesting that rep- resentatives of the two groups meet to fashion a new plan which the community would support. In so doing, the Board ex- pressed its conviction that Lexington is a town which values education highly, that support for schools — while naturally peaking among those with children — is widespread across all demographic groups (cf. the Mercer study), and that therefore a doable project is in reach. Page 5 Further, it demonstrated its awareness that the three sets of needs — enrollment increases, deteriorating systems and struc- tures, and the demands of schooling for the new millenium — must be met. Creating a proposal that meets all the needs, including community acceptabili- ty, will not be easy but it must be done. At year's end, a committee was being formed under the leadership of Select- man Dan Busa to begin the process. On the municipal side, the price tag is far lower because the requirements and the inventory are much smaller. A plan and a schedule have been established and await the decision on the schools. In the mean- time, immediate problems such as the Cary Hall roof will be addressed shortly and we are planning to make progress on road repair and rebuilding in 1998. Cary Memorial Library has serious sys- tems and functional problems. The sev- enth most used community library in the Commonwealth, it is inadequate for its current use, never mind for the onrush of technology. The Selectmen, along with the other Trustees, have been working this year to arrive at a project which links town and state funds with a level of private donations which seem attainable. Board of Selectmen Finally, the Board approved one project long in the planning which will be started and finished in 1998: Depot Square. Art- fully, everyone involved has produced a design that at least serves, if not satisfies all the parties at interest. The Selectmen believe that the result of this complex process will please — even delight — townspeople for many years to come. Fiscal Structure Turning from physical to fiscal structures, the Board put many of the pieces in place this year which are required if we are to strike a good bal- ance between long -term and short-term demands and prudently manage our avail- able revenues. With the implicit, if not explicit, approv- al of Town Meeting, we established a policy on free cash which builds it by 0.5 percent per year until it reaches a level of 5 percent of our annual budget. We have set a minimum standard of about 1.4 per- cent of the municipal budget each year for infrastructure maintenance to be paid out of current revenues rather than by borrowing. We have established a policy of putting money into a stabilization fund to build a balance toward known future major expenses such as fire equipment. The Recreation Enterprise Fund was restructured to ensure its future viability. We have reaffirmed our compensation policy that is designed to pay our employ- ees slightly above comparable towns, but to have fewer of them, and are working with the School Committee to establish this as a town -wide policy, a matter which is high on our agenda for 1998. We want to lift the 1.5 percent cap on municipal wages as rapidly as we can prudently do so, given the five -year pre- dictions of the Long Range Planning Committee. Budget As we have reported before, we continue to seek ways to make our annual negotiations with the School Committee more productive. This pro- cess has been, is, and will continue to be arduous and sometimes tense because strong people on both sides hold strongly to their views as to the appropriate allo- cation of our resources. Selectman Peter Enrich has taken the initiative in proposing a way to inject a long -range approach into the process and to get it underway earlier in the year. Al- though his proposals were not implement- ed in 1997 because of concentration on the school capital project, the Board is interested in refining and working on them in conjunction with the School Committee. In this regard, the Board feels that align- ing the timing of the two budget process- es would be constructive, as would a mutually agreeable approach to budget building which takes into account not only needs but also available resources and the citizens' level of support. Commercial Development This year the Board formally received and discussed the report of the Business Committee. Although the relative value of commer- cial and industrial properties is increas- ing, thus somewhat relieving the pressure on the homeowner, the Board feels it is crucial that we strengthen our ability to attract new sustainable and environmen- tally sound enterprises to town. The two key recommendations of the Committee were that we add an econom- ic development officer to our staff to pro- mote Lexington, and that zoning regula- tion, especially along Hartwell Avenue, be reviewed. It is the Board's hope that both of these recommendations will be implemented in 1998. With our propor- tion of both school children and seniors rising, the demands on our resources will not shrink in the future, so revenue sources other than the individual home- owner are critical. Unfinished Business As the year drew to a close, the Board was well aware of the extremely full plate that is before it for 1998 and beyond. For example, how can we best take advantage of the deregula- tion of electricity? Can we finally reach closure with Boston Edison on our pur- chase of the streetlights, thus maintaining the level of illumination desired by the town while lowering costs? What should we do about the DPW building and site? Page 6 What is the best way to deal with the Council on Aging facility which once was adequate but is clearly not going to be so in the future? What should be the plan for the fire station(s) and for the School Administration Building? A Sense of Community The Board of Selectmen, elected by and representing all the people in town, bears a special responsibility to do whatever it can to make sure that everyone's voice is heard and that Lexington, despite the difficult issues that divide us, continues to take actions which unite us. In this regard, we are impressed by the contribution which citizens are making toward this goal, too often unrecognized in the thunder and lightning of our con- flicts. We note especially the successful effort to light the central playground ball - field; the progress on the WEB page; the establishment of Lexfest! as an annual event; the creation of the Lexington Commission 2000; our new sister city program with Gatchina, Russia; the es- tablishment of the Genesis Community Fund; the generous response to the appeal for the Fund for Lexington and the scholarship and educational funds. Quietly, usually unheralded, community organizations go about their daily busi- ness of making Lexington the kind of town in which we want to live. So we salute and celebrate all those citi- zens who serve. We extend our thanks to the town employees, from our creative and resourceful Town Manager to the people who teach our kids and protect us and maintain our infrastructure. And we are especially grateful to Phyllis Smith and Lynne Pease who gracefully respond to our requests and keep the office of the Selectmen running smoothly. FY97 FY96 Payroll; 51,273 51,359 Expenses: 67,268 54,983 MAPC Role: The Metropolitan Area Planning Council (MAPC) is a regional planning agency. Lexington and 100 other com- munities in the area participate. It acts as a forum for state and local offi- cials, provides a wide range of technical services to member communities and oversees federally funded transportation programs in the area. Appointed: Lexington's representative is Assistant Planner Joseph Marino, ap- pointed by the Town Manager. Highlights: 1997 was the year Lexington (and Bedford) switched membership in one MACP subgroup to another. The new subgroup, Minuteman Advisory Group on Interlocal Coordination (MAGIC), runs roughly northwest along the Rt. 2 corridor. Most importantly, it includes all towns in HATS, towns which share many com- mon interests with Lexington besides Hanscom Field; electric utility deregula- tion, transportation issues and dealings with NESWC, which burns up our trash. Besides Lexington, the Towns within MAGIC are: Bedford, Lincoln, Concord, Carlisle, Acton, Littleton, Maynard, Hudson, Bolton, Stow and Boxborough. Hanscom Area Towns Committee Role: Hanscom Area Towns Committee (HATS) works to enable Bedford, Concord, Lexington, and Lincoln to join on planning issues of mutual concern, especially those involving the impact of Hanscom Field on our area. Lexington Representatives are generally appointed by the Board of Selectmen, as follows: one Selectman (Dan H. Fenn, Jr.); one Planning Board member (Richard A. Canale); two at -large (Lisa Baci, Margaret Coppe). Expended: $13,913 Hanscom Area Towns Committee Highlights: During 1997, HATS was chaired by Peter Sugar of Lincoln, who took over for Dan Fenn in January. Lora Goldenberg represented Bedford; In the spring, Arthur Fulham replaced Lee Wood as Concord's representative. HATS had three major preoccupations this past year: • Participation in the completion of the Generic Environmental Impact Report (GEIR), which Massport submitted to the state in the spring. • Establishment and implementation of procedures designed to insure the towns' meaningful participation in any non - aviation land development at Hanscom to be initiated and managed by Massport. • The achievement of an agreement with Massport re. aviation use of Hanscom. The GEIR, a wearying process at best for all concerned, was completed and HATS and the four towns filed extensive com- ments with the Secretary of Environmental Affairs. Many Lexington citizens played major roles in the process on both technical and strategic matters, and the town is in their debt. In order to lay the groundwork for our proactive involvement in both aviation and non - aviation issues, the towns under- took a study which, hopefully, would lead to some kind of master plan for the Hanscom area. Daylor Consulting con- ducted the study, which was completed last summer and provided us with a great deal of data and some suggested direc- tions for the future. A process was established with Massport for the non - aviation development of Han- scom land. Unique and therefore untest- ed, the towns hope and expect it will mean their full and effective involvement in any non - aviation use of Hanscom. Massport prepared, but did not issue, an RFP soliciting proposals for a golf course, assisted living facility, office building, and hotel/conference center. The towns said clearly and often that an office building would not be acceptable. Following a presentation at Representa- tive Kaufman's Forum, new Massport Ex- ecutive Director Peter Blute established an ad hoc committee on an aviation agree- ment which HATS hopes will document the approach he enunciated at that time. If we can achieve such an agreement, it will mean that HATS has reached a goal which it has long since set for itself and towards which it has been working aggressively since March 1996. For a change, the towns will have formal assurances and protections. Hopefully, we will see this effort bear fruit in 1998. Commission 2000 Role: To foster an appropriate town - wide celebration for Patriot's Day in the year 2000. Appointed by the selectmen. Chairman Gardner L. Hayward, Jr.,Vice Chairman James D. Roberts, Executive Secretary Suzanne E. Barry, Treasurer George S. Comtois, Public Relations Robert H. Neufeld, Events Coordinator Winston E. Flynn, Liaison to National Parks Louis C. Sideris, Selectmen Liaison Daniel P. Busa. Appointed in 1997, commission to be dissolved in June 2000. Highlights: Kickoff press conference held December 15 at Museum of Our National Heritage. Initial plans call for four -day celebration: April 14, Revolutionary War encamp- ments and Midnight ride of Paul Revere; April 15, Reenactment of Battle on the Green and retreat from Concord, with 1,000 or so reenactors from many states and Canada; April 16, Rededication of the Battle Green; April 17, Parades and ceremonies. Page 7 HFAC Role: The Hanscom Field Advisory Com- mission (HFAC), serves, by state law, as the official forum for airing issues and facilitating communications on opera- tions at Hanscom Field. Appointed by selectmen of Lexington, Concord, Bedford, Lincoln, Carlisle and Acton; one representative, one alternate. Lexington representative, Michael J. Barrett (1998 HFAC Chairman); alter- nate, Florence Koplow. Other members include representatives of the North Lexington Assoc., South Lexington Civic Assoc., League of Women Voters, HATS, various aviation and business interests, government agen- cies and the military. Expended: In -kind contribution; i.e., monthly use of selectmens' meeting room. Direct budgetary impact: zero. Highlights: Organized The Fly Friendly Initiative under which pilots using Hanscom work voluntarily with area resi- dents to redesign flying practices to reduce noise impact on residents. HFAC is looking for other ways to harness this wide base of interests to work for the benefit of all. Personnel Advisory Board Role: Advises selectmen, Town Manag- er and appropriate town agencies on per- sonnel policies; compensation, fringe benefits and proposed organizational changes. Appointed by the selectmen for three year terms. Co- chairs Evelyn Silber and Janet Perry; Elmer Guilmartin, Richard Evans, Katherine Page, William Barnes and Jules Pieri. Highlights: • Provided technical help and training for all town staff on sexual harassment; revised town's harassment policy. Personnel Advisory Board • Updated town's Affirmative Action Statement. • Updated Employee Handbook. • Assisted with design and introduction of Employee Orientation Process and Exit Interview Process. -Recommended new Employee Perform- ance Evaluation System. -Participated in townwide committee ap- pointed by the selectmen on compensa- tion practices. Staff support provided by Linda Crew Vine, Assistant Town Manager and Gayle Shattuck, Personnel analyst. Traffic Safety Committee Role: The Traffic Safety Commitee advises the selectmen on such traffic matters as speed limits, signage, parking and pedestrian crosswalks. Appointed by the selectmen. Chairman Peter Chalpin, DPW, Capt. James Kil- martin, Police, Myla Kabat -Zinn, William Mix, Ronald Marble, Roy Murphy, Edward Barsamian and the late William Fitzgerald. Highlights: • In eight meetings, the committee con- sidered 28 items involving the following locations; Harrington, Solomon Pierce and Whipple Roads; Mass. and Fletcher Avenues; Bow, East, Winter, Hancock, Wood, Hill and Manning Streets; Wallis Court; the Jack Eddison Bikeway; Hastings and Diamond Schools. Citizens may submit their suggestions to the selectmen. Page 8 Town Report Committee Role: To gather up, edit and organize reports from all official town bodies in a format suitable for printing an annual report as required by state law. Appointed by the selectmen. Chairman Bob Morrison, Win Friedman, Ray Barnes, Bill Hoyt, John Ayvazian, Bob Halfman, Zelda Sokal, Audrea Simpson. Expended: $4,633, for printing. Highlights: This year we asked the town's departments and committees to follow a more concise format when pre- paring their reports. The idea was to make it easier for citizens to locate spe- cific information within each report. The results are mixed, as readers will discover; some fine tuning is in order for next year. Town Report has evolved over the years to be more a summary than a complete compilation of every action taken by town government, every penny spent. This means that some interesting materi- al, for whatever reason, gets left out. Easy to do, when you're making a sum- mary. Any citizen who feels that important information was left out of this report should send specifics to the committee, care of Town Office Building. It's this committee's observation that town business becomes more complex and hectic each year. Our hats are off to the departments and committees which did such a conscientious and timely job reporting their activities to us. Why isn't Town Report on the web? No demand for it, not that we've heard. Besides, who wants to read a blinking screen when you can get a neat printed version, handy for reading in bed, from the Town Office Building? Moderator Elected: Margery M. Battin, for the 11th straight year. Despite the rancor in town over the referendum and debt exclu- sion override votes, the Annual and two special fall town meet- ings proceeded smoothly and amicably. Town Meeting mem- bers worked diligently and thoughtfully with the boards, com- mittees and the Moderator to avoid repeating 1996's mistakes. The Moderator continued the following practices: 1. A pre -Town Meeting planning session with the Modera- tor, article sponsors, Town Counsel, Town Clerk and finance committee chairmen to review timing, procedural matters, anticipate scheduling difficulties, audio - visual requirements, probable amendments and potential areas of disagreement; 2. A two -hour workshop for new Town Meeting members held by the Moderator, Town Counsel, Appropriation, Capital Expenditures, Planning Board and TMMA chairmen to answer questions, clarify financial and planning terms and concepts, and explain legal issues and parliamentary procedures. The Moderator sent written instructions to the sponsors of citizen articles to help them prepare for Town Meeting. She wrote a newspaper article explaining the protocol regarding citizen participation. The description of Town Meeting practic- es and procedures and a summary of Lexington's parliamentary procedures were updated and distributed. The Moderator was elected President of the Massachusetts Moderators Association. The Moderator thoroughly enjoyed working with the very committed, intelligent and enthusiastic Town Meeting Mem- bers, boards and committees. The quality of Lexington's citizen participation is unparalleled, the dedication of its staff une- qualed. Patience and a sense of humor prevailed. Town Clerk/ Board of Registrars Appointed: Donna Hooper appointed Town Clerk in August, 1996 by the Town Manager. Although the March 3rd Town Election was the sole election scheduled for 1997, three elections were held. Town Clerk / Board of Registrars With the cooperation and assistance of all involved, including the almost 100 election workers, DPW staff, school custodians, police and others, the elections were carried out successfully. In addition, the year also saw not one but three town meetings, with Special Town Meetings in October and November deal- ing with school and zoning issues. The Clerk's office continued to plumb the capabilities of the Central Voter Registra -tion Information System (CVR) admin- istered by the Secretary of State. The sys -tern helps us manage voter history, linkages with Town Census/Resident Data, the annual census and more. Voter registration continued to grow, with 20,835 registered in December against 20,435 the previous December. Details: Political Party Democrat - Unenrolled- Republican - Political Designation Libertarian Independent 3rd Party Socialist Reform Green Party Prohibition 8,689 8,653 3,443 26 16 History reflects a range of 12 -39% of reg- istered voters partici- pating in the annual town election, depending on the issues and contested races. In contrast, state election turnouts have ranged from 80 -90% participation over recent years. Voter participation has ranged from 46% to 67% in the proposi- tion 2 -1/2 override votes taken in 1988, 1990, 1992 and 1995. Turnout for the December 1997 debt exclusion Special Election was approximately 48 %. With help from a Simmons College intern, the town's Records Management program was formalized with cross - departmental participation. Vital Statistics for 1997: (as of 12/23/97) Births 226 Marriages 173 Deaths 354 Licenses: Dogs 2,020 Hunting 92 Fishing 210 Page 9 FY97 FY96 Payroll $130,692 $125,778 Expenses 2,642 2,087 Personnel 4 4 Elections 38,849 77,223 Registration 16,920 19,424 Appointed: Donna Hooper appointed Town Clerk in August, 1996 by the Town Manager. Although the March 3rd Town Election was the sole election scheduled for 1997, three elections were held. Town Clerk / Board of Registrars With the cooperation and assistance of all involved, including the almost 100 election workers, DPW staff, school custodians, police and others, the elections were carried out successfully. In addition, the year also saw not one but three town meetings, with Special Town Meetings in October and November deal- ing with school and zoning issues. The Clerk's office continued to plumb the capabilities of the Central Voter Registra -tion Information System (CVR) admin- istered by the Secretary of State. The sys -tern helps us manage voter history, linkages with Town Census/Resident Data, the annual census and more. Voter registration continued to grow, with 20,835 registered in December against 20,435 the previous December. Details: Political Party Democrat - Unenrolled- Republican - Political Designation Libertarian Independent 3rd Party Socialist Reform Green Party Prohibition 8,689 8,653 3,443 26 16 History reflects a range of 12 -39% of reg- istered voters partici- pating in the annual town election, depending on the issues and contested races. In contrast, state election turnouts have ranged from 80 -90% participation over recent years. Voter participation has ranged from 46% to 67% in the proposi- tion 2 -1/2 override votes taken in 1988, 1990, 1992 and 1995. Turnout for the December 1997 debt exclusion Special Election was approximately 48 %. With help from a Simmons College intern, the town's Records Management program was formalized with cross - departmental participation. Vital Statistics for 1997: (as of 12/23/97) Births 226 Marriages 173 Deaths 354 Licenses: Dogs 2,020 Hunting 92 Fishing 210 Page 9 Town Clerk/ Board of Registrars (continued) Abolition of Middlesex County government made 1997 the last year Lexington operated under the county licensing system. We now do our own dog licensing. Recent changes requiring all first -time hunters to complete a hunter education course did not significantly impact sales of hunting licenses. Board of Registrars: Mary C. Abegg was reappointed by the selectmen to a three - year term on the Board of Registrars. The Registrars actively oversaw voter registration and the three elections conducted in 1997. Assistant Registrars Margaret Schwartz and Mary DeSimone, at Lexington High School and Minuteman Regional Vocational School respectively, noted an increase in student registrations resulting from the two special elections relating to school building issues. The Town Clerk's Office looks forward to further improve- ments to the Commonwealth's CVR system. It should help us maximize the use of available technology to maintain records and make information easily available to the community. Possible implementation of an optical scan voting system will be further investigated. Special Meetings Special Town Meeting October 20 Article 2 $68,200,000 Adopted Oct. 20. For building, equipping and furnishing addi- tions to, and remodeling, rebuilding and repairs to the High School, Clarke and Diamond Middle Schools and Harrington Elementary School; and for computer hardware, software and portable classrooms. Article 3 $1,050,000 Adopted Nov. 19. Appropriated, in addition to the $7,850,000 appropriated at the 1996 Town Meeting, to construct, equip and furnish addition to and remodel, reconstruct and make extraordinary repairs to Cary Memorial Library; to purchase equipment, including computer hardware and software and to remodel Cary Hall for use as an interim library. Article 4, street related improvements, indefinitely postponed. Article 5, Grant Place easement, adopted Oct. 20. Selectmen authorized to grant permanent easement to owner of 2 Grant Place to continue using existing portion of driveway. November 19 Zoning By -Law change, 55 Hayden Ave. Amended zoning district designation of 55 Hayden Ave. to CD from CRO. 1997 Annual Town Meeting The 1997 Annual Town Meeting opened March 24, held eight sessions and adjourned April 16, 1997. All sessions were called to order by Town Moderator Margery M. Battin in Cary Memorial Hall. The March 31 meeting was adjourned to April 2 due to a bliz- zard; it was attended only by the Moderator, Town Clerk, Chairman of the Board of Selectmen, Town Counsel, Town Manager and the Water /Sewer Supervisor. Prior to the first session, Moderator Battin honored the passing of Town Meeting Members Jason Berger and Weiant Wathen- Dunn. At a later meeting, a moment of silence was observed for Richard M. Perry who died suddenly on April 12. Perry was a Town Meeting Member for 40 years and served as Town Comptroller for 20 years, 1966 - 1986. Among those honored before different sessions were the National Merit Finalists from the High School and the Haydenettes Precision Skating Team which had placed fourth in the World Competition held in Finland. Article Action Summary Annual Town Election, Art. I. See Elections Reports of Committees, Art. 2. Reports were presented, accepted and placed on file from the Committee on Cary Lectures, Trustees of Cary Memorial Library, LexHAB, the Fair Housing and Human Relations Committee, Superintendent of Schools, Town Manager, Capital Expenditures Committee, Appropriation Committtee, Planning Board, Recreation Committee, Conservation Commission and Council on Aging. Town Meeting Member Clark Cowen, Pr. 7, and Chairman of the Council on Aging, reported April 14 that the Council's new Day Care Center, built by Minuteman Tech students, would open in May. Appointments to Cary Lectures Committee, Art. 3. Adopted March 24. The Moderator to appoint a committee of three to run the Cary Memorial Lectures. Line Use Amount Operating Budget, Art 4. Adopted April 2. Monies for all town departments. All amounts to be raised on the tax levy, except as noted. 1100 Lexington Public Schools $42,403,72 Also see articles 5, 6, 22, 23. 1200 Minuteman Tech 721,950 Page 10 1997 Annual Town Meeting Line Use Amount 2110 Contributory Retirement 3,121,803 Of this amount,$82,203 to be transferred from Water / /Sewer Enterprise Funds 2120 Non Contributory Retirement 183,036 2130 Insurance 575,854 $108,588 to be transferred from Water /Sewer $333,234 Enterprise Funds, $16,441 from Health Trust. 2140 Unemployment Benefits 50,000 2150 Police/Fire Medical 52,393 2210 Payment on Funded Debt 2,191,000 2220 Interest on Funded Debt 377,029 2230 Temporary Borrowing 77,250 2240 Exempt Debt 1,100,500 2310 Reserve Fund 150,000 2320 Salary Adjustments 187,279 With $14,881 transferred from Water /Sewer Enterprise Funds 2410 Municipal Services 254,209 (Formerly Jurisdictional Accts.) 2420 Town Network Expenses 11,400 3000 DPW Personal Services 3,145,955 With the following transfers: Water /Sewer Funds $333,234 Parking Meter Fund 70,084 Cemetery Trust Funds 100,000 Recreation Enterprise 46,520 3000 DPW Expenses 4,177,052 With the following transfers: Water /Sewer Funds $256,353 Recreation Fund 448,317 Parking Meter Fund 105,500 3600 Transportation Personal Services 235,943 (Lexpress)With $80,000 transferred from the Parking Meter Fund 3700 Water Department 3,792,335 Transfer from Water Enterprise Fund 3800 Sewer Department 6,406,463 Transfer from Sewer Enterprise Fund 4200 Police Department 3,857,77 With $174,017 transferred from Parking Meter Fund 4300 Fire Department 3,179,380 5100 Library 1,264,949 Line Use Amount 5200 Recreation Department 648,038 Transfer from Recreation Enterprise Fund 5300 Public Celebrations 17,050 6100 Council on Aging 305,957 6210 Veterans 57,510 6310 Youth Services 71,929 6320 Developmentally Disabled 13,184 7100 Inspectional Services 512,937 7200 Planning Department 146,010 8110 Selectmen 131,005 With $2,622 transferred from Water /Sewer Enterprise Funds 8120 Town Mgr. Personal Services 291,922 With 43,898 transferred from Water /Sewer Enterprise Funds 8130 Town Report 6,000 8310 Comptroller 370,218 With $121,084 transferred from Water /Sewer Enterprise Funds 8320 Revenue Office 215,892 With $932,462 transferred from Water /Sewer Enterprise Funds and $7,500 from Flexible Spending Plan funded by anticipated revenues. 8330 Assessors 278,417 With $55,81 transferred from Water /Sewer Enterprise Funds. 8340 Data Processing 256,133 With $33,320 transferred from Water /Sewer Enterprise Funds. 8410 Legal Fees/Expenses 211,150 8420 Town Clerk 137,986 8430 Board of Registrars 21,700 8440 Elections 34,730 Other Appropriation Articles Supplementary Approp. for FY97, Art S. 188,557 Adopted April 7. For line item 1100, Schools. Transfer from Unreserved Fund Balance. Prior Years Unpaid Bills, Art. 6. 18,443 For School bills. Transfer from Unreserved Fund Balance. Supplementary Appropriations, Art 7. For authorized capital improvements. Indefinitely postponed April 7. Page 11 1997 Annual Town Meeting Water Mains, Art. 8. Adopted April 7. Transfer fromWater Enterprise Fund. Federal aid expected. Sanitary Sewers, Art. 9. Adopted April 7. To be funded by notes. Federal /State aid expected. Sewer Rehab Program, Art. 10. Adopted April 7. To be borrowed in anticipation of Federal/State aid. Street Related Improvements, Art. 11. Adopted April 7. To be funded by notes, with state reimbursement anticipated. Automated Water Meters, Art. 12. Adopted April 7. Treasurer authorized to borrow $550,000 from MWRA. State grant and interest -free loan anticipated. Public Works Equipment, Art. 13. Adopted April 7. Building Envelope Program, Art. 14. For extraordinary repairs to various buildings. DPW Mower Replacement, Art. 15. Adopted April 7. Transfer from insurance proceeds. Brook Maintenance, Art. 16. Indefinitely postponed April 7. Fire Equipment, Art. 17. To replace rescue equipment. Elections Optical Scan Equipment, Art. 18. Indefinitely postponed, April 7. Rehab Center Pool Complex, Art. 19. Transfer from Recreation Enterprise Fund Recreation Facilities Improvements, Art. 20. Indefinitely postponed April 7. Rescind Approps. under Art. 19, FY96, Art. 21. Adopted April 7. Funds returned to Recreation Enterprise Fund. 280,00 560,000 300,000 700,000 550,000 392,000 200,000 ►. 45,000 100,000 Miscellaneous School Article, Art. 22. 1,155,000 Adopted April 9. Treasurer authorized to borrow for repairing school administration building and buying additional computer equipment. School Reconstruct Program, Art. 23. 2,400,000 Adopted April 9. Treasurer authorized to borrow for repairs and additions to schools. Stabilization Fund, Art. 24. 100,000 Adopted April 14. Funds to Reduce Tax Rate, Art. 46. 1,233,000 Adopted April 16. Transfer from Unreserved Fund Balance. Notice of Intent Fees, Art. 26. 10,898 Adopted March 24. Transfer from Reserve for Appropriation to Wetlands Protection Fund. Total Appropriation 89,545,165 Prior Year 92,706,467 Zoning and Other Articles Amend Art. XXXII of General by -Laws, Art. 25. Adopted March 26. Technical corrections to by -laws governing wetlands. Zoning By -Law Change, Art. 27. Not adopted April 14. Would have changed CRO zoning to CD at 55 Hayden Ave., to allow for an addition to an office building. Zoning ByLaw Change, Art. 28. Adopted April 16. Changed RO zoning to CD at 16 Hayden Ave., to allow for an office building. Land Acquisition, Spencer St., Art. 29. Adopted March 24. Completes acquisition voted last year of land at the end of Spencer St., for Conservaton/Recreation use. Use of Driveway on Grandview Ave., Art. 30. Adopted March 24. Legislation/Town -Wide Referendum, Art .31. Not adopted March 26. Would have had selectmen petition legislature for an act requiring a town -wide referendum to approve any operating budget, except Enterprise Funds, which exceeded prior year operating budget by more than three percent. Accept Chap. 60 Sect. 3C of General Laws, Art. 32. Adopted March 24. Permits town to include check -offs on tax bills to fund scholarship fund for Lexington students. Amend Chapt. 521, Act of 1983, Art. 33. Not adopted March 24. Would have widened approval process involving use of town -owned land for LexHAb housing. Page 12 1997 Annual Town Meeting In lieu of Tax Payments by LexHAB, Art. 34. Not adopted March 24. Land Transfer, Art. 35. Adopted March 24. Transfers town - owned parcels on Sutherland Rd. to Conservation Commission for conservaton/recreation use. Goals Relating to Hanscom, Art. 36. Adopted March 26. Goals adopted to guide selectmen and other town officials dealing with the Mass. Port Authority (Massport) on use and development of Hanscom Field. Planning/Legal Services for Hanscom, Art. 37. Adopted March 26. Permits selectmen to set aside $25,000, if needed, for legal and planning counsel in dealing with Massport. Town Meeting Approval in re Hanscom, Art. 38. Adopted March 26. Input to be sought from Town Meeting on major agreements the town might make with Massport. Capital Expenditures Guidelines, Art. 39. Adopted as amended April 14. Appropriation Committee to devise guidelines for capital expenditures. Retirement Board: Military Service Buy Back, Art. 40. Adopted March 26. Permits veterans to buy up to four years of creditable service toward retirement. Compensation for Retirement Board, Art 41. Indefinitely postponed March 26. Municipalization of Utilities, Art. 42. Adopted April 9. The second of two required votes to give the town authority to act in citizens' interests in negotiating with power sources. Real Estate Transfer Tax, Art. 43. Indefinitely postponed April 9. Would have authorized select- men to ask legislature to enact a real estate transfer tax, with proceeds going to operating expenses. Minuteman Tech Agreement Amendment, Art. 44. Adopted April 9. A vote to reallocate the town's required share of the school's budget. By -Law Amendment, Art. 45. Adopted April 9. Authorizes Board of Health to issue fines for violations of tobacco control regulations. Summarized from Town Clerk's minutes of Town Meeting. Complete minutes available in Town Clerk's Office. Seepage 10 for reports on the two Special Town Meetings. Elections, 1997 Town Election, March 3 Voting: 36% of registered voters. Selectmen Peter D. Enrich 2,581 Robert N. Cohen 2,133 Peter C.J. Kelley 1,931 Dawn E. McKenna 358 Moderator Margery M. Battin 4,675 School Committee Susan A. Elberger 4,235 Barrie Peltz 3,883 Stephen J. Tripi 2,378 Planning Board Anthony G. Galaitsis 2,574 Charles Hornig 2,418 Lexington Housing Authority Leona W. Martin 3,895 Non - Binding Referendum Shall the Town require town - wide vote of approval of any fiscal year budget which exceeds prior year's budget by more than 3 %? Inserted by Stephen J. Tripi and nine or more other registered voters. Yes: 2,034 No: 1,627 Town Meeting Members Precinct One Charles E. Shaw 311 Jean W. Cole 296 Laura L. Boghosian 292 Judith L. Zabin 283 Joel A. Adler 279 Paul G. Topalian 271 Rae Zuerndorfer 222 Carol Sampson 40 Precinct Two Alan B. Wilson 450 Michael J. O'Sullivan 429 Donald D. Wilson 427 Marian A.O. Cohen 426 Heather L. Hartshorn 424 Marita B. Hartshorn 416 James S. Wilson 401 Katherine Kiefer 378 Page 13 Precinct Three 576 Jacqueline B. Davison 430 Caleb Warner 406 Jeanne K. Krieger 373 Samuel Berman 363 Douglas M. Lucente 351 Robert Rotberg 325 Carol J. Grodzins 314 David J. Kessler 301 Isabel L. Jankelson 253 John H. Sellars 245 Precinct Four Peter C. J. Kelley 576 Barrie Peltz 497 Stephen E. Coit 483 Nicholas A. Cannalonga 434 David J. Harris 423 Carol B. Hartman 414 Michael Wagner 382 Kenneth A. Reich 361 Frederick L. Merrill, Jr. 308 (Replaced Peter D. Enrich who resigned after being David E. Burns elected to the Board of Selectmen) Scott F. Burson 274 Howard K. Shafer 254 Precinct Five Mary Kathryn Wolf 374 Sam Silverman 368 Douglas C. Boyer 354 Melinda D. Vinton 341 Marsha F. Byrnes 340 Margaret C. Nichols 334 James M. Shaw 333 Ira W. Crowe 332 Precinct Six Edmund C. Grant 539 Jane Pagett 537 Marjorie M. Daggett 534 Bebe Fallick 500 Edith Sandy 498 Frank Sandy 480 Sheldon A. Spector 469 Cynthia L. Blumsack 453 William B. Simmons 410 Ronald B. Pawliczek 362 David E. Burns Elections Town Meeting Members Association (TMMA) Precinct Seven Mary W. Miley Marsha E. Baker Alan Garber Fred H. Martin Robert G. Coyne Alan A. Wrigley Steven L. Colman David G. Kanter Neal E. Boyle, Jr. Precinct Eight Richard H. Battin Carolyn H. Tiffany Steven J. Hurley Paul W. Jenkins Donald Jenkins, Jr. Morton J. Kahan Elizabeth C. Whitman Nancy W. Madden Precinct Nine Fred D. Rosenberg Janet M. Perry Paul E. Mazerall Susan R. Cusack Richard L. Canale Susan A. Elberger Loretta A. Porter Dawn E. McKenna William Kennedy 413 393 371 358 347 344 339 317 326 525 523 490 481 481 434 348 18 414 404 398 389 386 386 372 341 10 Special Referendum, June 2 A vote to approve Town Meet- ing action on Art. 23, which spent $2,400,000 for final plans for the School renova- tion project. In response to petition by Stephen J. Tripi and not less than 3% of regis- tered voters. Yes: 3,175 No: 3,829. Voting: 34% of registered voters. Special Election, Dec. 8 A vote on the debt exclusion question as approved under Art. 2 of the Oct. 20 Special Town Meeting, to fund re- modeling and expanding the high school, two middle schools & Harrington Elemen- tary School, for $68,200,000. Yes: 4,529 No: 5,456 Voting: 48 % of registered voters. Role: TMMA serves as an informational body for its members. It publishes a booklet on the annual Warrant, holds meetings prior to Town Meeting and runs bus tours of sites involved with the Warrant. It keeps in touch with town officials throughout the year. Membership is open to all Town Meeting members, who elect an executive committee comprised of three members from each pre- cinct. Citizens may attend its monthly meet- ings. Email address: tmm@link.ci.lexington.ma.us 1997 -1998 Executive Committee Chairman Robert Cohen. Pr. 3 Secretary Susan Cusack, Pr. 9 Vice Chairman Alan Lazarus Pr. 6; Treasurer Heather Hartshorn 2 Precinct Chairman Clerk Associate One Joel Adler Paul Topalian Charles Shaw Two Timothy Enright Katherine Kiefer Rene Varrin Three Samuel Berman Shirley Frawley Jacqueline Davison Four Nicholas Santosuosso Kenneth Reic Michael Wagner Five Andrew Friedlich Douglas Boyer Marsha Byrnes Six Anne Ripley Bebe Fallick Richard Pagett Seven Marsha Baker Robert Coyne Gordon Hardy Eight Anne Frymer Diana Garcia. Bigelow Moore Nine Dawn McKenna Michael Schroeder Henry Manz TMMA Executives: Ist row, Robert Cohen, Alan Lazarus, Marsha Byrnes; 2nd row, Marsha Baker, Diana Garcia, Samuel Berman, Dawn Mckenna, Jacqueline Davison, Anne Frymer, 3rd row, Andrew Friedlich, Richard Pagett, Bigelow Moore, Anne Ripley. Photo: Ray Barnes. Page 14 Payroll Expenses Personnel Full Time Part Time FY97 253,975 15,500 4 1 FY96 271,348 15,633 4 1 The Town Manager is the Chief Exec- utive Officer of the Town as established in the Selectmen Town Manager Act. The Town Manager either directly or indirectly, through staff, administers the policies and procedures of the Board of Selectmen, enforces by -laws and actions passed by Town Meeting, prepares the budget and manages the daily operation of all Town departments. Appointed by the selectmen. Richard J. White, appointed in October 1997. Finances The Town maintained a payroll of $12,767,554 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1997, covering 284 full -time and 84 part -time employees. The total budget appropriated for fiscal year 1998 was $82,290,948. Revenue limitations and an increasing school -age population continue to challenge elected officials, staff and citizens alike. Budget Process It appears that Lexington will never have enough money to support all of the municipal services that are worthy of funding. Consequently the Selectmen's annual budget review process has become a more important public event. As such the Board of Selectmen and the professional staff have tried to open up the budget review process so that it is and is perceived to be more inclusive. The Selectmen and School Committee met early in the fall to discuss emerging budget issues. Although the municipal and school budget development process- es could not be designed to run parallel, the School Superintendent, School Com- mittee, Town Manager and Selectmen met regularly in an attempt to enhance communications around budget issues. Internally, the staff continued their efforts at opening up their budget devel- Town Manager opment process by presenting budget and service options to the Selectmen during their regularly scheduled meetings in October, November and December. In addition, the staff, for the first time, began a comprehensive examination of long and short term budget and policy issues for the community to discuss and examine. Hopefully, these issues will be used as the basis for the development of a policy work plan for coming years. The open budget sessions held in 1997 were very successful in that they allowed the community an opportunity to under- stand the tradeoffs, initiatives and sacri- fices required to construct a budget given the limits imposed by Proposition 2 1/2. Every process can be improved. Town by- laws require the Town Manager to submit a comprehensive budget that in- cludes expenditure estimates for every municipal function including the schools by January 15th. The Superintendent of Schools presents his final budget in late January (FY99 submission was January 27). The School Committee votes on a budget to send to Town Meeting in late February (FY99 vote scheduled for Feb- ruary 24, 1998). Clearly, we could do a better job at coor- dinating our budget schedules. Perhaps the by -law requiring the Town Manager to submit a budget can be changed to better coordinate the public decision making process. Sensitivity to the information needs of Town Meeting must be balanced with a need for the Selectmen and School com- munity to coordinate schedules and devel- op a process so that the Town's service demands can be sensibly measured. Financial Policies 1997 may be remembered as the year in which Lexington got its fiscal house in order. The budget culture during this past decade has been challenging for the staff and community. Proposition 2 -1/2 has dominated all of our thoughts and actions during this last decade. Our efforts at preserving the integrity of the services Page 15 we offer our citizens have been noble. Those efforts have not been made without consequence. Investments in our infrastructure have been compromised. Cash reserves are depleted. In 1997, the Board of Selectmen success- fully interrupted the community's focus on solving the short term budget problem of the day and began a dialogue with Town Meeting and the community about Capital Investment, Cash Reserves and creating a Stabilization Fund. Tax Levy Capital In 1997, the Town increased its tax levy investment in its infrastructure. Prior to 1997, capital programs traditionally fund- ed with cash from the tax levy — equip- ment, roofing, paving, street reconstruc- tion, etc. were significantly reduced or eliminated. In 1996, after capital cash investment expenditures fell dramatically from investments made in 1995, the Capital Budget team identified a desirable range for capital cash funding of between 1.5% and 5% of the prior year's tax levy. Although the Selectmen did not formally adopt the recommendation as policy, a long term target of $2 million in tax levy capital investment was informally em- braced. The 1996 Annual Town Meeting endorsed this goal by appropriating $550,000 from the tax levy to fund capital equipment purchases. Although $550,000 falls pitifully short of the $2 million goal, this investment was in- creased to $736,000 by the 1997 Annual Town Meeting. Increasing our tax levy capital invest- ment over time in an attempt to meet this $2 million goal is a very good and prudent step forward. Hopefully, the 1998 Annual Town Meeting will see the wisdom of this practice and build upon it. Cash Reserves Last year, the Board of Selectmen asked the community to focus on a number of important financial issues. Past competi- tion for funding depleted all of the Town's cash reserves. We spent almost every penny available for appropriation every year from fiscal years 1989 through 1996. Leaving absolutely no savings to draw upon in an emergency put the Town in a very precarious finan- cial position. As a result, the Selectmen considered setting a policy which pre- scribed setting aside 5, 10, 15 or 20 percent of the tax levy as cash reserves. Squirreling away large amounts of cash to create a savings account for the Town's future required a radical change in fiscal behavior and as such the Selectmen chose a 5% cash reserve set aside as the most prudent and obtainable option. This goal could not be achieved in one or two years. The Board of Selectmen developed a strategy to meet a 5% savings goal that must be achieved incrementally over a ten year period. Town Meeting endorsed this policy by setting aside $576,527 in 1997. The fol- lowing is a ten year schedule adopted by the Board: Balance After Appropriation FY98 FY99 FY00 576,527 864,574 1,528,063 FY01 FY02 FY03 1,528,063 1,875,198 2,232,938 FY04 FY05 FY06 2,601,544 2,946,769 3,302,375 FY07 4.64% 5.01% 3,668,621 Free Cash Balance After Appropriation FY98 FY99 FY00 FY01 1.03% 1.50% 2.01% 2.50% FY02 FY03 FY04 FY05 2.97% 3.43% 3.88% 4.27% FY06 FY07 4.64% 5.01% Stabilization Funds The Town used to pay cash for the pur- chase of equipment such as a fire pump or ladder truck or the removal and re- placement of a School or Town building roof prior to the mid 1980s. Again, ser- vice demands far outstripped our avail- able resources and as such these purchas- es and repairs were postponed. Town Manager In some extreme cases, exceptions were made and equipment purchases and roof replacements were financed by borrow- ing. Borrowing for equipment or roof maintenance is not considered a prudent act in municipal finance circles. Replac- ing a roof or purchasing equipment in the amounts ranging from $450,000 to $600,000 leaves very little tax -levy capital funds available for other uses. In 1997 the Selectmen, with the support of Town Meeting, reestablished a Stabili- zation Fund with a $100,000 appropria- tion. Such a fund can be used, after steady and systematic appropriations, to buffer the annual costs of some of the pricey equipment purchases and main- tenance projects that are necessary from time to time. Employee Compensation The consequences of our fiscal difficul- ties have been shared by our employees. Raises of 0 %, 2 %, 3 %, 1 1/2% and 1 1/2% over the last five budget years have created a perception among most employ- ee groups that we have ignored our stated compensation policies and conveniently balanced the budget during these last five years on the backs of our employees. The Selectmen appointed an Employees Compensation Committee, with represen- tatives from every employee sector, union and non -union (School and Town), to help reestablish a deliberation process that provides our employees with some assurance that our planning around their fiscal future holds equal footing with all other fiscal planning issues. The Compen- sation Committee has completed its charge and has recommended that the Selectmen take the following action: * Personal services costs should be budgeted before all other operating costs. * There should be compensation equity between unions and non -union employ- ees, assuming that wages plus benefits equal compensation. * Develop lists of comparative communi- ties in consultation with employee groups, based on workload indictors, Page 16 community profiles, or other appropriate indicators. There will not be a standard list that applies to every group. * Develop a written compensation policy to attract, retain, inspire and motivate employees. * Implement a one -time salary adjust- ment as a correction for staff to be placed equitably in their range based on perfor- mance and longevity. Enterprise Funds The Recreation Enterprise Fund narrowly avoided a deficit in 1997. Fluctuations in golf revenue combined with large sub- sidies to the DPW Parks Division for maintaining all Town owned recreation facilities and the implementation of a $50,000 in lieu -of -tax payment severely compromised the Recreation Enterprise Fund. Fiscal policies were altered to avoid deficits in 1997 and 1998. Town Meeting eliminated the recreation in lieu - of -tax payment, established in FY97, for 1998 budget. The DPW Park Division subsidy was significantly reduced and all recreation capital projects that were not directly connected to a revenue produc- ing activity (the pool and golf course are two revenue producing activities) were no longer allowed to be funded with Rec- reation Enterprise Funds. Debates about Enterprise Fund in- lieu -of taxes continued in 1997. Town Meeting implemented a first time ever sewer in- lieu -of -tax payment of $250,000. The Selectmen appointed a citizens' commit- tee to examine this practice. The commit- tee's analysis was not conclusive and as such the debate about in- lieu -of taxes will continue. Public Works Street lights, street lights, street lights!!! became the constant refrain during the Selectmen's meetings throughout 1997. A Town Meeting decision to shut off 1300 street lights throughout the com- munity, once implemented, created a citi- zens' reaction almost comparable to the one experienced in Lexington in 1775. During all of this, the Public Works staff has performed admirably and with great patience and professionalism under some very difficult and tense circumstances. By late 1997, the Board of Selectmen approved a plan to return power to some 600 street lights in residential areas in Lexington. This should resolve many of the complaints of the citizens that shared their concerns with the Selectmen and the professional staff. Expanded operating hours at the landfill, a regional hazardous waste collection facility, electric deregulations, NESWC contracting issues, the temporary move of the library to Cary Hall and Lexington Center parking are just a few of the many issues and initiatives being managed by the DPW staff. Public Safety Chief Chris Casey's leadership and his staff s efforts on implementing a compre- hensive community policing program have created a new culture within the Police Department. Community policing is a program that is based on developing and maintaining a strong commitment to problem solving and aligning values with- in the Police Department with those of the community. The citizens' academy established in 1996 has been well received within the community. Fifteen were graduated in 1996 and a comparable number in 1997. The bike patrol concept has been expand- ed. Alternative sentencing programs, and the DARE program continue to be well received and a strong School/Police Department partnership has benefited all our younger citizens. Jack Quinlan completed his second year as Fire Chief. In 1997, the Chief and his staff were able to reestablish an equip- ment replacement program. A training team was established and new initiatives are emerging that will enhance the com- petency of the Fire personnel. In addition, the Fire leadership team is examining the possibility of increasing the ambulance service level beyond basic life support to advanced life support which would require most if not all the firefighters to upgrade their medical re- sponse skills to the paramedic level. Town Manager Personnel The Town experienced an overall work force turnover of 4% in 1997. Most of the recruitments were for entry level positions. The Town's personnel objec- tives for the year were internally focused. A Sexual Harassment Policy was devel- oped and distributed and a supervisors' training was provided to all departments. A new Wage and Classification system for the non -union municipal employees was implemented. A Comprehensive Orientation Process was developed and monthly orientation meetings were held to assist new employees acclimate to their new job successfully. An Exit Interview Process was developed to help people transition smoothly from their employment with the Town. Senior Management Team The Senior Management Team (SMT) created in 1992, emerged as a force in 1996. Members are: Assistant Town Manager, Public Works Director, Finance Director, Town Clerk, Recrea- tion Director, Inspectional Services Director, Planning Director, Management Analyst, Library Director, Police Chief, Fire Chief, Social Services Director, and me as Town Manager. Budgets, strategies, planning, and polic- ing major policy recommendations are developed by the group. All major per- sonnel decisions and recommendations are reviewed and considered within the team. We believe that the mechanism has greatly enhanced communication and the understanding within the organization. Together we hope to establish a shared vision that is embraced by all Town employees. We would like to create an environment that encourages flexibility, effective communication, and proactive behavior. In addition we hope to encourage risk taking, and to develop a broad external Page 17 perspective that motivates our employees to move beyond the departmental per- spective. A defined and agreed upon mission is critical for the SMT to trans - ferr this success to the next level. The Technology and Capital Budget Team efforts were good beginnings for tapping the competency, skills and insights of employees who are not traditionally offered leadership opportunities. The first step: a strategic plan which specifies actions that advance the organi- zation's mission. The strategic plan also considers how outside trends will impact the Town's mission. The second step measures progress. Team staff development, internal/ - external marketing, Town and committee structure, and service delivery are the four general focus areas. We are devel- oping our plan from the bottom up. Most, if not all, of the short and long term goals have been achieved. The Senior Management Team is now updat- ing its Strategic Plan. In addition, a Middle Staff Group has been established to provide input into the direction and goals of the organization. I extend heartfelt congratulations and thanks to each member of the Senior Management Team and the whole staff for an excellent effort and a great product. Collective Bargaining The Department of Public Works, Dispatchers and Police contracts are set- tled for FY98. Fire contracts are current- ly under negotiation. The Town evaluates all employee performances on regular basis and does not provide automatic step increases for its non -union work force. Non -union employees received an aver- age increase of 1 1/2 % in FY97. Inquiries and comments regarding the administrative operations of Town Gov- ernment are encouraged. Special thanks are extended to all citizen volunteers. School Committee & Superintendent of Schools School Committee: front, Susan Elberger and Barrie Peltz; rear, Fred Rosenberg and Superintendent Jeffery M. Young. Not shown, Joseph Dini, who resigned in December, and Mary Neumeier. Peltz and Elberger were reelected in the spring town election. Photo, Ray Barnes. Role: To develop school policies, approve operating and capital budgets, supervise and evaluate the Superintend- ent of Schools, advocate for school con- cerns to other town officials and the community, and act as liaison between school department and community. Elected by the community for overlap- ping three year terms. Chair: Susan B. (Barrie) Peltz, Susan Elberger, Mary Neumeier, and Fred Rosenberg. Joseph Dini resigned effective December 1. Expenditures: Operations, FY97: $40,159,768 Details on pages 22 - 24 Highlights: School articles passed by Town Meeting for FY98: Art. 4: Operating budget $42,403,743 Art.S:Supplementary appropriation for current fiscal year 188,557 Art. 6: Prior years' unpaid bills 18,443 Art. 22: Misc. school capital budget 1,155,000 Art. 23: Plans for building renovation - /reconstruction 2,400,000 Comments: Major focus for the committee was on capital needs for all school buildings. The committee, working with the Perman- ent Building Committee, developed a major $68,200,000 plan which was defeated in a debt exclusion override vote 8 December. 1997 was the first year of increased number of hours of "structured learning time" mandated under state Education Reform Act of 1993. High school plan, creatively addressing need for 990 hours, was approved by the state. 1997 was the second year of 5 -year tech- nology plan and we received a Light- house Grant, designating Lexington as resource for other communities develop- ing technology plans. Staff development continued with major emphases on technology, anti - racism training, and aligning Lexington's curric- ula with state curriculum frameworks. Calendar Committee developed two -year plan, including school opening before Page 18 Labor Day in 1998. Thanks are due to the Lexington Education Foundation for its continuing support of creative and innovative pro- jects and methods throughout the school system. Thanks also to both individual school and town -wide PTAs for their sustained efforts to enhance the quality Superintendent of Schools Last year, Lexington Public Schools' faculty and staff, along with members of the community, studied and debated numerous educational issues, including school reform efforts launched by the Massachusetts Board of Education. Budget Planning Each year at the beginning of the budget process, the School Committee articu- lates a set of values and priorities which instruct the superintendent to prepare an annual operational budget. As in the past, the focus was on maintaining rea- sonable class sizes in the face of increas- ing student enrollment, providing appro- priate special education services and continuing our initiatives in technology and curriculum development. The 1997 Annual Town Meeting appro- priated $42,403,743 for operating the school system in the 1997/98 school year. This appropriation enabled the Committee to meet its goals and to settle collective bargaining agreements with five unions. As in prior years, the School Committee made some difficult policy decisions in order to reach agreement with the select- men and bring to Town Meeting a bal- anced budget for FY98. State funds from the Education Reform Act of 1993 continued to help supple- ment the School Committee's annual budget, but with the enrollment increase and the demands of various program areas, compromises had to be made in order to live within the fiscal constraints facing the Town. Superintendent of Schools Capital Planning The School Committee and administra- tion worked with the Permanent Building Committee, Capital Expenditures Com- mittee and Appropriation Committee to develop a plan to renovate all nine school buildings. The major share of the project entailed renewing existing systems with- in the physical plant, but the proposal also called for adding new space to accommodate increasing student enroll- ment. Because of its cost, the plan was split into two phases; phase one included repairs to Lexington High School, Clarke and Diamond Middle Schools, and Har- rington Elementary School. The remaining elementary schools were left for phase two, with the understanding that further study of enrollment projec- tions for those schools was appropriate before funding was requested. While Town Meeting approved the $68.2 million capital project with the under- standing the Town was eligible for 59 percent reimbursement by the state, the general electorate, in a special election in December, rejected the proposal, thus sending the School Committee back to the drawing board. The Committee plans to advance a revised plan and seek community support to make necessary renovations to school buildings in 1998. Curriculum and Instruction The school department has been busily engaged in adapting our local curriculum to the recently published Massachusetts curriculum frameworks. Committees of teachers and administratrators review current Lexington practice and ensure that it is aligned to state expectations with the understanding that students in grades 4, 8, and 10 will in 1998 partici- pate in the first battery of the new Massachusetts Comprehensive Assess- ment System (MCAS) tests. These new tests are designed to "raise the bar" for all students in Massachusetts. For the 1997/97 school year, the system concentrated on reviewing the social stud- ies and language arts /reading curriculum areas. Other areas will be reviewed in the coming years. Lexington educators have made a long term commitment to create multicultural, anti - racist classrooms where children of all backgrounds are able to achieve aca- demic success. This systemwide effort has been supported through the profes- sional development program and through membership in the EMI (Empowering Multicultural Initiatives) collaborative of Metco communities. Technology This year the Town provided over $1 million to purchase approximately 300 teacher workstations, school servers and CD ROM towers to provide staff access to shared applications and reference soft- ware. Every classroom is now on -line, and each teacher has adequate access to technology. The Technology Plan is organized by year, each year focused on a specific goal. Year 1: Completing the Network (96 -97) Year 2: Teacher Immersion (97 -98) Year 3: Curriculum Integration (98-99) Years 4 & 5: Student Immersion (99 -01) Currently, the School Department is addressing Year 2, Teacher Immersion, through a system -wide plan designed to provide all teachers with fundamental computer skills. By year end, the goal is to have all staff competent in the five core technology - related skills referred to as "Kansas ": basic desktop operations, word processing, electronic mail, web research, and network access and file server use. Five - hundred staff members are partici- pating in teacher -led learning teams. The teams, consisting of 10 to 12 teachers, are working collaboratively to integrate technology skills with the district -wide initiatives (related to anti - racist education and the newly adopted state Curriculum Frameworks) and with individual school initiatives. Every learning team selects a study focus ranging from learning basic "Kansas" skills to integrating technology into a particular curriculum unit. Page 19 Teachers are building the foundation to make recommendations about the best applications of technology to support the curriculum and identify core skills for students. This year of immersion will help teachers use technology in the class- room in preparation for Year 3, when the focus will be on the curriculum. Program Recognition • Lexington's FLES (elementary school foreign language) Program received the Exemplary Program Award for its leader- ship as a role model in the state. • The National Association of Teachers of English commended the high school's English Department for excellence in its instructional program. • Bowman School received a $3000 Greenways and Trails Demonstration grant from the State Department of Environmental Management. The funds were used to improve the bridge and trails to conservation land adjacent to the school, to create curriculum materials with a focus on watersheds. • Cooperation between the school and Cary libraries, enhanced by participation in the State Strategic Plan for Libraries and the Metrowest Library Network and through planning for mutual support during library renovations. Faculty Notes • Kathy Baker, FLES Spanish Teacher, received the Massachusetts Foreign Lang- uage Association's 1997 New Teacher Commendation. • LHS Physical Education teacher Tony Porter received the annual Honor Award from the Massachusetts Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance. • Football coach head Bill Tighe and boys' soccer coach head Bob Hartshorn both earned their 200th career wins as varsity head coaches of those sports. Superintendent of Schools • Leonard Swanton, fifth grade teacher at Estabrook, was the state's 1996 -97 Teacher of the Year and received the Presidential Award for Excellence in Math and Science Teaching. • Maureen Bennani, a Clarke French teacher, was selected by the American Association of Teachers of French to participate in the 1997 AATF Summer Institute in Lyon. • Nancy Tokarz, John Chamberlain and Alyson Brown received a grant from EDCO for "Thoreau and Friends," an interdisciplinary project which studied the ecology of Walden Pond. • Bowman teacher Vickie Schwartz, Science specialist Fran Ludwig, and parent Bonnie Newman secured a grant for Bowman's Big Backyard, an environ- mental program. • Donna Polhamus, Hastings Library Media Specialist, received the Progres- sive School Library Media Award from the Winnebago Software Co. for her work on assessing students' library skills. • Audrey Friend Scholarship, sponsored by the Massachusetts Association of School Library Media Specialists, pre- sented to High School Library staffer Margaret Donovan for her continuing studies at Simmons' Graduate School of Library and Information Technologies. Student Achievements Lexington students once again inspired us with their accomplishments in aca- demics, the arts, community service and athletics. Following are some of the highlights: • Twenty -seven students from the High School, Diamond and Clarke Middle Schools attended the METCO Directors' Association Youth Leadership Confer- ence. The goal: to develop leadership skills and to help students participate in the desegregation process. • Yi -An Huang took first place in Lexington's DAR Essay Contest. • The National Association of Teachers of English chose Sarah L. Park as a recipient of their award for Superior Performance in Writing. • Allison Burson won First Place in the MAFLA State Essay Contest in the middle school division. • Diamond and Clarke students partici- pated in the National French Contest. Eight Clarke students, Christina Austin, Joohee Chung, David Koha, Emilie Coueignoux, Megumi Matsuki, Tomer Cohen, Tobias Loss - Eaton, and Yian Huang, were ranked level 4 or above while six Diamond students received a state ranking of 9th place or better and five students, Kevin Litwack, William Andress, Jamie Frank, Evan Flyn, and Lauren Ready, earned national rankings of 8th place or better. • Forty -two Diamond students participat- ed in the National Spanish Contest. Eight received a state ranking of 9th place or better, three students, Laurent Wilson, Nathan Pagett and Netra Srikanth, re- ceived 2nd and 3rd place rankings. • Nine Clarke students were the 1997 National winners of the American Asso- ciation of Teachers of Spanish and Portu- guese Contest -- Elie Rabinowitz, Paul Avenati, Zach Selbert, Alexa Milton, Jennifer Yang, Luke Butler, Lila Cohen, Valerie Texin and Sasha Brown. • Several Lexington High School stud- ents received the highest rankings in the 1997 Foreign Language National Examinations in French, German, and Spanish. Andrew Lin, ranked 1st place; and Melody Abedinejad, Rudolf Faust, and Yuen -Jong Liu, ranked 3rd place in French. Jessica Liu, Claudia Stumpf and Matthew Saradjian earned rankings of 1st place and Abbe Barg and Amuradha Gokhale earned 2nd place rankings in German. Bryan Wilson achieved 1st place; Lien Debrouckere, 3rd place; and Nicole Dray, 4th place in Spanish. Page 20 Thirty Lexington students, named final- ists to the Region IV Science Fair, com- peted with students from 92 other schools; 15 Lexington students placed among the top 20 and took most of the prizes. For the eighth consecutive year Lexing- ton students advanced to the state Sci- ence Fair and captured many awards - four students were first place winners, one of whom was the grand prize winner; four second place winners; three third place winners. . Two Lexington Students were semifinal- ists in the 56th Annual Westinghouse Talent Search and one was the overall winner in the American Chemical Soci- ety's Avery Ashdown Chemistry Compet- ition. The High School Science Team for the second consecutive year won the right to represent Massachusetts at the National Science Olympiad Championship, where they captured a gold medal, three silver and two bronze. Two Science Club teams defeated 27 oth- er teams from New England and ended up competing with each other for the New England Science Bowl Cham- pionship. They placed fourth over -all in the national competition. • The Diamond Math Team finished second out of 48 teams in the Intermediate Mathematics League of Eastern Massachusetts. Mark Lipson, David Greenspan, Chris Clark and Philip Morse - Fortier finished in the top ten in their grade levels. In the New England Mathematics League of 400 schools, Diamond 6th graders finished in 2nd place, 7th graders in 8th place and 8th graders in 3rd place. Sixth grade student Mark Lipson earned the highest score in his grade level. In the Metropolitan Chapter of Eastern Mass MathCounts Competition the Diamond team of David Greenspan, Philip Morse - Fortier, Steven Estes, Chris Clark, and Kevin Litwack finished first in the chapter and 2nd in the state. Superintendent of Schools • LHS senior football player Gavin McDonough was recognized by Channel 5 as "High 5 Star of the Week" for his dramatic last second field goal to win the Thanksgiving Day football game over rival Burlington. • The girls outdoor track and field team won the state Class A Relay Champion- ship, finished second in the State Class A Team Championship Meet, and won the Salem, NH Invitational Championship Meet. • The volleyball team won their first league championship, with an undefeated 18 -0 record and advancing to the section- al semi - finals in the state tournament. • The boys cross country team won the Middlesex League Championship, com- pleting an undefeated 9 -0 season. • The boys swimming team won the Middlesex League Championship finish- ing undefeated at 6 -0. • The boys tennis team won the Middlesex League Championship, with a 17 -1 record. • The girls lacrosse team was co- champion in its division of the eastern Massachusetts League. • The cast of Clarke's Interview Production, under the direction of Alyson Brown, took second in the Best Ensem- ble category and Alex Kieft won the Best Actor award in the Massachusetts Middle School Drama Competition. The per- formers were invited to represent the United States at the Middle School Drama Festival in Canada. • In what has become an annual "trad- ition," the High School was well repre- sented at the Massachusetts Music Educa- tors' Northeast Senior District Festival. Chosen by competitive audition, 35 stud- ents participated in the Senior District Band, Jazz Band, Orchestra and Chorus. The District Chorus was conducted by Lexington resident Ms. Dorothea DiDomenico. • Additionally, 24 High School musicians qualified to audition for the All -State ensembles and participate in the Massa- chusetts Music Educators All -State Con- ference and concerts. • Three High School musicians went on to represent both the high school and the state in prestigious ensembles at the Music Educators National Conference in Baltimore. Participating; Linda Yeo, bass trombonist in the All- Eastern Orchestra, Sheaurmei Tsai, violinist in the All -East- ern Orchestra and Catherine Gang, alto section in the All- Eastern Chorus. • Students of the Visual Arts Department again were acknowledged for their excel- lence from The Globe Scholastic Art Awards. This year 16 works were chosen for awards. Portfolios submitted by David Campbell, David Liu and Chris Lyddy were sent to New York for the national competition. • In March, seniors exhibited their work in the Piper Gallery of the Cary Library in recognition of `Youth Art Month.' • Thirty eight students from Lexington were selected for membership in the Northeast Junior District Festival Band, Orchestra and Boys and Girls Choruses. The festival concluded with a gala con- cert at Gordon College on March 15. • In April, the High School Concert Band and Wind Ensemble earned Gold medals at the Massachusetts Instrumental Con- ductor's Ass'n State Concert Festival. • At its annual sold -out 1997 Pops Concert, several students received awards for their outstanding contribu- tions to the Music Department. They included: Michael Martin, Thomas Archibald, Elizabeth Shapiro, Linda Yeo, Andrew Garland, Alec Derian, Kate Gang, Elizabeth Nichols, Liesje Spacpen, and Yea -Tyng Tang. Page 21 Enrollments Clarke Actual Projected Diamond 97/98 98/99 Bowman 539 552 Bridge 496 484 Estabrook 483 495 Fiske 394 407 Harrington 395 394 Hastings 417 432 Total Elementary 2724 2,764 Clarke 693 681 Diamond 679 715 Total Middle 1,372 1,396 High School 1,474 1,589 Grand Total 5,570 5,749 High School Class of 1997 Size of class 344 Continuing education 96% 4 -year college 88% 2 -year college 6% Other schooling 2% Employment 3% Other 1% National Merit Scholarship Program, Class of 1998: Letters of Commendation 47 Semi - finalists 20 School Inventory Elementary, Grades K -5 Bowman, 9 Philip Rd., Blt. 1967 Malcolm Astley, Principal Bridge, 55 Middleby Rd., Blt. 1966 Barbara Manfredi, Principal Estabrook, 117 Grove St., Blt. 1960 David Horton, Principal Fiske, 34A Colony Rd., Blt. 1948 Joanne Benton, Principal Harrington, 146 Maple St., Blt. 1956 David Crump, Principal Hastings, 2618 Mass. Ave., Blt. 1955 Richard Rogers, Principal Middle Schools, Grades 6 -8 Clarke, 17 Stedman Rd., Blt. 1972 Pamela Houlares, Principal Diamond, 99 Hancock St., Blt. 1957 Joanne Hennessy, Principal High School, Grades 9 -12 251 Waltham St., Blt. 1950 Philip Lanoue, Principal School Expenditures by Line Item Personnel Services 1992 -1993 1993 -1994 1994 -1995 1995 -1996 1996 -1997 Administrative Offices 336,176 337,742 393,467 386,216 412,098 Principals and Assistants 957,187 1,019,507 1,054,657 1,079,025 1,114,919 Supervisors /Coordinators 571,270 640,221 676,976 668,739 747,262 Classroom Teachers 14,314,334 14,897,077 15,696,252 16,385,616 17,506,883 Degree Changes 28,750 28,500 40,000 45,000 0 Severance Pay 58,420 205,011 180,688 206,506 142,992 Special Needs Staff 1,953,213 2,040,613 2,296,173 2,661,947 2,802,538 Tutors 594,847 898,518 1,024,390 1,114,999 1,417,104 Stipends (Extra Duty) 69,919 88,495 101,470 61,894 66,388 Nurses 153,136 161,957 179,322 184,275 205,858 Instructional Materials Specialists (Library) 400,046 403,630 470,949 512,435 547,662 Guidance Counselors 690,526 680,908 780,342 842,858 874,251 Psychologists 100,362 97,424 135,934 137,896 147,513 Doctors 27,668 25,372 24,335 26,225 2,200 Aides 431,987 494,166 500,755 483,739 609,313 Special Needs Assistants 185,918 198,960 224,557 225,161 263,862 Secretarial and Clerical 1,007,985 1,040,650 1,134,917 1,231,308 1,331,103 Computer Center Technical 43,978 45,324 46,706 70,685 168,018 Student Programmers 6,648 3,569 9,891 14,725 9,099 Custodians and Maintenance 1,583,063 1,589,111 1,580,885 1,569,347 1,619,407 Crossing Guards 67,059 65,616 76,751 79,337 83,207 Workers' Compensation 24,192 18,625 36,216 1,699 0 FICA/Medicare Tax 211,647 258,769 136,115 148,208 208,990 Employee Benefits * 2,892,086 3,180,190 3,299,797 Sub -Total 23,818,329 25,239,765 26,801,748 28,137,840 30,280,487 * School Benefits Costs included, beginning in 1994 -1995 Expenses Fuel, Heating 308,147 239,275 217,090 319,788 374,106 Vehicle Parts, Gas, Oil 3,352 4,305 4,548 7,647 7,038 Office Supplies 80,449 63,835 80,981 103,139 97,222 Teaching Supplies 334,355 283,135 314,919 300,324 322,874 Other Supplies 148,068 74,551 111,638 125,277 160,554 Textbooks 191,170 164,330 213,097 240,109 238,825 Library Books and Cataloging 29,131 25,214 41,600 40,925 42,336 Periodicals and NewspApers 10,210 9,812 10,706 14,830 12,303 Recruiting Materials 5,194 8,686 12,188 13,564 9,729 Report Cards/Progress Reports 237 1,671 2,383 2,064 1,055 Handbooks 2,600 1,896 1,030 65 3,582 Professional Books /Subscriptions 5,264 4,050 6,949 6,289 13,501 Student Publications 2,085 5,674 8,999 7,500 5,260 Film Rental 2,309 2,349 2,230 2,759 55 Media Purchase 10,522 7,277 13,383 9,789 12,742 Computer Software 23,793 18,187 36,000 49,556 53,150 Repair of Plant (Supplies) 79,138 60,525 54,092 85,854 89,697 Repair of Grounds (Supplies) 1,710 583 116 1,268 1,010 Sub -Total 1,237,734 975,355 1,131,949 1,330,747 1,445,039 Page 22 School Expenditures by Line Item Equipment Purchase & Rental 1992 -1993 1993 -1994 1994 -1995 1995 -1996 1996 -1997 New Equipment 59,387 31,858 218,951 216,583 100,872 Replacement of Equipment 15,771 10,140 52,941 83,621 54,260 Sub -Total 75,158 41,998 271,892 300,204 155,132 Contracted Services Consultant Services 314,101 512,696 663,693 527,109 629,608 Special Testing 30,853 26,118 57,215 53,696 31,891 Built -in Items/Bldg. Repairs 90,124 100,477 55,338 92,955 79,015 Electrical (Repairs) 28,734 22,884 27,999 22,896 25,615 Plumbing (Repairs) 18,451 19,423 16,565 17,604 14,891 Heating (Repairs) 45,136 32,398 36,924 59,577 85,758 Painting 27,583 12,122 13,851 30,172 10,276 Roofing (Repairs) 7,859 6,000 3,333 10,069 4,674 Glass (Repairs) 6,000 4,401 5,172 4,745 6,205 Other Property Services (Repairs) 21,984 27,480 31,066 24,938 79,785 Mop Rental 6,308 8,136 6,149 8,193 8,879 Electricity 552,551 517,177 526,990 539,795 641,433 Water 93,596 96,519 101,237 103,485 91,990 Gas (Bottled and Natural) 13,119 11,312 9,173 15,934 16,299 Telephone 103,757 106,562 110,989 121,903 160,892 Insect Control 3,885 3,918 4,534 5,380 4,047 Elevator Service and Repair 5,369 0 0 16,665 1,338 Pupil Transportation Regular 478,986 507,984 535,432 642,243 700,975 Special Needs, in Town 72,093 73,978 70,133 85,886 92,745 Special Needs, outside 89,488 96,064 113,215 134,210 140,098 Field Trips 3,070 2,441 5,208 5,832 6,305 Other Transportation 72,933 65,916 94,185 115,599 99,688 Travel and Meetings Intrastate 11,498 23,201 24,762 23,997 25,272 Travel Out of State 1,077 11,584 6,197 4,425 12,660 Travel Within Lexington 7,551 7,373 7,145 8,695 9,156 Printing 7,540 7,707 9,066 5,730 8,916 Newsletter 7,068 9,865 3,185 2,097 1,037 Equipment Service/Maintenance 200,620 181,385 198,770 209,773 Tuition Special Needs 794,504 887,153 1,202,009 1,485,484 1,215,039 Membership 39,552 32,737 40,958 37,555 53,541 Other General 150,006 221,365 215,516 380,559 157,425 Equipment Rental 23,490 5,628 10,637 16,863 18,017 Sub -Total 3,298,886 3,642,004 4,206,646 4,814,054 4,979,315 Grand Total 28,430,107 29,899,122 35,394,321 37,763,035 40,159,770 Page 23 Summary of Outside Funding These funds enable the school system to provide services beyond the scope of the regular budget. Applications filed for 1996- 1997 funds were successful in bringing in several new grants including the Education Technology Bond funding. The total below does not include PTA and other support group fundraising estimated annually at $250,000. Each of these grants or fees is put into a separate revenue account with the Town Treasurer, and the funds are spent only on the approved items not included in the Town appropriated school budget. GRANTS FEDERAL AREA STATE Chapter 636 METCO Comprehensive Health Drug -Free Schools Ed Reform Act Coalition of Essential Schools Middle Sch, /College Partnership Time and Learning Restructuring Network LEXINGTON USE Lexington Special Services Mainstreaming for Pre - School Instruction Technology Math/Science Health Education Life Skills Elementary Violence Protection China Exchange Study Groups Education Technology Bond Educational Technology Lighthouse Program Community Service Learning * Dept of Public Health Enhanced School Health Service Total State Funds * Approved, but not received FEDERAL/STATE Minuteman School to Career Partnership Total Federal/State Funds Lexington Education Foundation (FY96) FEES LOCAL (Collected in 1996 -1997) Transportation Athletics & Athletics Gate Receipts Tuition Building Rental Medicaid Reimbursement COMMUNITY CORPORATE AND PRIVATE DONATIONS Cisco Systems Donation, Private Individual, IBM Lab. GRAND TOTAL, ALL SOURCES Page 24 AMOUNT $ 15,559 370,510 44,945 10,544 12,024 $453,582 $882,767 120,583 23,315 14,650 15,907 25,000 10,000 16,000 158,220 30,000 5,000 60,628 1,362,070 $6,000 $6,000 $81,225 $302,374 150,075 20,338 8,140 57,358 $538,285 $10,000 15,000 $25,000 $2,466,162 Emergency Immigration PL94 -42 Special Education PL94 -142 Early Childhood PL97 -35 Chapter 2 Block Grant Title VI PL100 -297 D. D. Eisenhower/Title 11 Total Federal Funds STATE Chapter 636 METCO Comprehensive Health Drug -Free Schools Ed Reform Act Coalition of Essential Schools Middle Sch, /College Partnership Time and Learning Restructuring Network LEXINGTON USE Lexington Special Services Mainstreaming for Pre - School Instruction Technology Math/Science Health Education Life Skills Elementary Violence Protection China Exchange Study Groups Education Technology Bond Educational Technology Lighthouse Program Community Service Learning * Dept of Public Health Enhanced School Health Service Total State Funds * Approved, but not received FEDERAL/STATE Minuteman School to Career Partnership Total Federal/State Funds Lexington Education Foundation (FY96) FEES LOCAL (Collected in 1996 -1997) Transportation Athletics & Athletics Gate Receipts Tuition Building Rental Medicaid Reimbursement COMMUNITY CORPORATE AND PRIVATE DONATIONS Cisco Systems Donation, Private Individual, IBM Lab. GRAND TOTAL, ALL SOURCES Page 24 AMOUNT $ 15,559 370,510 44,945 10,544 12,024 $453,582 $882,767 120,583 23,315 14,650 15,907 25,000 10,000 16,000 158,220 30,000 5,000 60,628 1,362,070 $6,000 $6,000 $81,225 $302,374 150,075 20,338 8,140 57,358 $538,285 $10,000 15,000 $25,000 $2,466,162 Minuteman Science - Technology High School FY97 Expended: $12,575,842 Payroll .............. 8,094,950 Expenses......... 4,057,172 Capital Items.... 423,720 Lexington's assessed share of Minute- man's budget: $732,188 Superintendent: Ronald Fitzgerald, hired by Regional School Committee; Regional School Committee (appointed by town moderators) Acton: Bob Wiltse, Chair Arlington: Paul Schlichtman Belmont: Joseph White Bolton: Paul Scheipers Boxborough: Donna Corey Carlisle: James Ford Concord: John McCarthy Dover: Frank Gobbi, Jr. Lancaster: Shawn Winsor Lexington: Jane Pagett Lincoln: Sally Bobbitt Needham: Jeffrey Stulin Stow: Frances Hyden Sudbury: Glenn Noland, Vice Chair Wayland: Dorothy Pesek Weston: Josef Gazzola Enrollment Information for Lexington, shown in full -time equivalents (FTE's): Regular high school students: 35.00 Part-time students: 17.83 Afternoon students: 2.68 Middle School tech programs: 25.00 Highlights: Creative partnerships • Wayland and Concord are participating in a program under the auspices of the School -to- Careers Partnership in which students can combine career training at Minuteman with academics at their own schools. • Lexington and other district towns par- ticipate in the middle school literacy program, introducing students to pro- jects in biotechnology, environmental technology, robotics, telecommunica- tions, microelectronics and mechanics. • Minuteman's Technology Days provide an opportunity for 200+ middle school students and their science teachers to spend a day at the school's labs doing hands -on activities in several tech areas . • An After School program at Minuteman offers career exploration and academic enrichment opportunities to middle school pupils two afternoons per week. Funding Opportunities Minuteman established an Innovations Committee to review funding and pro- gram options available to the school and the type of support it might acquire from outside organizations to supplement its traditional funding sources. The Innovations Committee founded a non - profit organization called the Minute- man Science Foundation. Funding is sought to promote cooperation among business and industry organizations, Min- uteman area colleges, selected state and federal agencies, and other schools and foundations. The goal is to advance the cause of scientific and technical learning for those of all ages in eastern Massachusetts. Lexington's Elizabeth Eppelsheimer is a junior, majoring in Data Processing. Scott Pisano, a freshman, is majoring in Auto Repair. Photos: Minuteman Tech. Page 25 Cary Memorial Library Expenditures The governing body of the library is the Board of Trustees in accordance with the will of Maria Hastings Cary. The board consists of the town's "settled minister," principal clergy of each congregation in town, selectmen and school committee. The Executive Committee is elected by the board: Chairman Rev. Dr. Peter H. Meek, Vice Chairman Dan H. Fenn, Jr., Vice Chairman, Rev. Brian S. Dixon, Elizabeth B. Eddison, Susan A. Elberger and Library Director Carol A. Mahoney. The Executive Committee, in turn, ap- points the Advisory Committee: Chair- man Stephen A. Krensky, Sara B. Chase, Edwin B. Cox, Jacqueline Davison, Paula Fowler, Audrey J. Friend, Ione D. Garing, Timothy P. Hart, Marilyn Mair- son, Theodore Mairson, Walter S. Pierce, Ann Wallace, Nancy R. Winsten. Role: To provide materials, resources and services that promote lifelong learn- ing and cultural enrichment, enhance pub- lic school curricula, promote reading as central to literacy, initiate a dynamic pro- gram of reading for pre - schoolers and provide electronic access to information. Highlights: • In July, the public libraries of Lexing- ton, Brookline, Cambridge and Newton switched networks to the Minuteman Library Network (MLN) from the Metro Boston network. Cary was closed the week of June 30 to ease the transfer. Prior to the move, staff cleared up prob- lem records in the database, weeded out the library's collection and attended soft- ware workshops. While the library was closed, 11 additional network computer terminals were connected up, bringing the total to 50. Public service areas were rearranged to adapt to the new terminals, and an acquisition module was added to keep track of library materials budget. With the new network, Lexington resi- dents have borrowing privileges at 33 public and four academic libraries, as well as the Boston Public Library. This translates to access to some 4.5 million items available through terminals in the library, schools and, with the proper equipment, the home. Access is available to databases that include periodical indexes - many with full text articles from several sources. Residents may also access their borrower account to renew materials, check re- serve material and their overdues, using a PIN issued by the library. • Building Committee Members: Chairman Walter S. Pierce, Eizabeth B. Eddison, Dan H. Fenn, Jr., Mary Lou Touart, Sara B. Chase, Rev. Peter H. Meek, Jay Lucker, Julie Triessl, Director Carol Mahoney; architects Stephen Hale and Melissa B. Benett. A second bid for a library construction grant was made in February; $2,861,621, it was awarded in May by the state. The committee launched the design devel- opment stage in the summer, and began discussions about moving the library tem- porarily to Town hall. The 1996 Town meeting authorization for bonding of $7,850,000 for library expansion was increased to $9,000,000 at a November Special Town Meeting. This action did not change the town's share of the project's cost; $2,400,000. In the fall, the trustees hired Develop- ment Guild/DDI, Inc., of Brookline to make a feasibility study and provide fund- raising counsel to the trustees. Long Range Planning The state requires the library to have a long -range plan on file in order for the library to get state and federal funds. The Page 26 plan must be a formal, multi -year plan that includes a mission statement, needs statement, goals, annual action plans, measurement factors, methodology and trustees' approval. The committee working on the plan include the aforementioned Dixon, Krensky and Mahoney, and Asst. Direct- or Connie Rawson, Trustee Susan B. Gregory, Isabel Jankelson of Friends of the Library, Katherine Hall Page, Endow- ment Committee, Donna Hooper, Town Clerk, Laura Kulin, Branch Librarian and Cynthia Johnson, Adult Services. Preservation Grant State library commissioners funded "Lex- ington's Legacy," a study for the preser- vation needs of Cary's special historical collection. The Northeast Document Conservation Center was hired to survey the collection. Its report identified goals and priorities for long -term protection and provided a strategic preservation plan. Departmental Highlights The Library staff received high honors from the MA Library Association for their public relations efforts. Six awards were presented to the library. Adult Services Adult Services maintains a collection of over 150,000 items including books, mag- azines, newspapers, audiovisuals, for- eign language material and art prints. • In FY97 circulation was 380,418 items, an average of 31,701 items per month. • Attendance at the main library was 562,936. • 3,311 interlibrary loans were received; Cary provided 4,040 items to other libra- ries. • Total non - resident circulation in FY97 was 141,383. • 29,628 residents in Lexington have library cards. • Library cards from Massachusetts are honored at the library. • All adult library material is now being checked out at one circulation desk. FY97 FY96 Payroll 958,205 985,294 Expenses 225,078 220,785 Personnel Full Time 26 26 Part Time 40 60 The governing body of the library is the Board of Trustees in accordance with the will of Maria Hastings Cary. The board consists of the town's "settled minister," principal clergy of each congregation in town, selectmen and school committee. The Executive Committee is elected by the board: Chairman Rev. Dr. Peter H. Meek, Vice Chairman Dan H. Fenn, Jr., Vice Chairman, Rev. Brian S. Dixon, Elizabeth B. Eddison, Susan A. Elberger and Library Director Carol A. Mahoney. The Executive Committee, in turn, ap- points the Advisory Committee: Chair- man Stephen A. Krensky, Sara B. Chase, Edwin B. Cox, Jacqueline Davison, Paula Fowler, Audrey J. Friend, Ione D. Garing, Timothy P. Hart, Marilyn Mair- son, Theodore Mairson, Walter S. Pierce, Ann Wallace, Nancy R. Winsten. Role: To provide materials, resources and services that promote lifelong learn- ing and cultural enrichment, enhance pub- lic school curricula, promote reading as central to literacy, initiate a dynamic pro- gram of reading for pre - schoolers and provide electronic access to information. Highlights: • In July, the public libraries of Lexing- ton, Brookline, Cambridge and Newton switched networks to the Minuteman Library Network (MLN) from the Metro Boston network. Cary was closed the week of June 30 to ease the transfer. Prior to the move, staff cleared up prob- lem records in the database, weeded out the library's collection and attended soft- ware workshops. While the library was closed, 11 additional network computer terminals were connected up, bringing the total to 50. Public service areas were rearranged to adapt to the new terminals, and an acquisition module was added to keep track of library materials budget. With the new network, Lexington resi- dents have borrowing privileges at 33 public and four academic libraries, as well as the Boston Public Library. This translates to access to some 4.5 million items available through terminals in the library, schools and, with the proper equipment, the home. Access is available to databases that include periodical indexes - many with full text articles from several sources. Residents may also access their borrower account to renew materials, check re- serve material and their overdues, using a PIN issued by the library. • Building Committee Members: Chairman Walter S. Pierce, Eizabeth B. Eddison, Dan H. Fenn, Jr., Mary Lou Touart, Sara B. Chase, Rev. Peter H. Meek, Jay Lucker, Julie Triessl, Director Carol Mahoney; architects Stephen Hale and Melissa B. Benett. A second bid for a library construction grant was made in February; $2,861,621, it was awarded in May by the state. The committee launched the design devel- opment stage in the summer, and began discussions about moving the library tem- porarily to Town hall. The 1996 Town meeting authorization for bonding of $7,850,000 for library expansion was increased to $9,000,000 at a November Special Town Meeting. This action did not change the town's share of the project's cost; $2,400,000. In the fall, the trustees hired Develop- ment Guild/DDI, Inc., of Brookline to make a feasibility study and provide fund- raising counsel to the trustees. Long Range Planning The state requires the library to have a long -range plan on file in order for the library to get state and federal funds. The Page 26 plan must be a formal, multi -year plan that includes a mission statement, needs statement, goals, annual action plans, measurement factors, methodology and trustees' approval. The committee working on the plan include the aforementioned Dixon, Krensky and Mahoney, and Asst. Direct- or Connie Rawson, Trustee Susan B. Gregory, Isabel Jankelson of Friends of the Library, Katherine Hall Page, Endow- ment Committee, Donna Hooper, Town Clerk, Laura Kulin, Branch Librarian and Cynthia Johnson, Adult Services. Preservation Grant State library commissioners funded "Lex- ington's Legacy," a study for the preser- vation needs of Cary's special historical collection. The Northeast Document Conservation Center was hired to survey the collection. Its report identified goals and priorities for long -term protection and provided a strategic preservation plan. Departmental Highlights The Library staff received high honors from the MA Library Association for their public relations efforts. Six awards were presented to the library. Adult Services Adult Services maintains a collection of over 150,000 items including books, mag- azines, newspapers, audiovisuals, for- eign language material and art prints. • In FY97 circulation was 380,418 items, an average of 31,701 items per month. • Attendance at the main library was 562,936. • 3,311 interlibrary loans were received; Cary provided 4,040 items to other libra- ries. • Total non - resident circulation in FY97 was 141,383. • 29,628 residents in Lexington have library cards. • Library cards from Massachusetts are honored at the library. • All adult library material is now being checked out at one circulation desk. Cary Memorial Library • Receipt printers have been added to public service desks. Children's Services The childrens' collection contains 59,420 books, audio - visual material and maga- zines. Forty CD -ROM programs were added. A project re cataloged hundreds of children's non - fiction books. • In FY97 the Children's library circulat- ed 281,685 items, an average of 5,400 items. • In FY97 the Children's library circulat- ed 281,685 items, an average of 5,400 items per week. • Staff answered 8,165 questions. • 1,413 children participated in the 1997 "Catch the Summer Spark - READ" pro- gram. The fourth annual summer reading video was produced by children's librar- ians and school librarians. A total of 20,962 hours were spent reading. 80 sep- arate programs for children age 2 to 13 and their families were held. • Two new monthly programs "Lap -time for Pre - Walkers" and "Laptime for Walk- ers" were begun. These laptime programs combine books, rhymes, fingerplays and songs. • WGBH/Channel 2 filmed some com- munity spots in the Children's room. • Staff participated in the Public Schools new teacher orientation day. • The Children's room staff was honored with four awards from the MA Library Association Public Relations Awards. East Lexington Branch • In FY97 the East Lexington Branch Library circulated 26,400 items. Reference Services The Reference Department continued classes in the Internet and the on -line catalog. Class visits are arranged through- out the year. The Rotary Club of Lexing- ton donated a workstation and printer to provide electronic access to career and job information. • The Reference Department handled over 51,000 reference transactions. • The state Board of Library Commission- ers provided all libraries with five elec- tronic reference databases through the Internet. Residents now have access to an index of 1,580 academic and general in- terest periodicals, health information re- source, 900 business and finance periodi- cals, general reference center, and a national newspaper index. Remote access is available. • An update print version of the informa- tion and referral guide, Lexington Com- munity Resources, was made available for sale to the public. The on -line version is continually updated and is available on the public access database. Friends of Cary Library The Board of Trustees voted in Decem- ber to change the bylaws of the Friends, which will now be a separate entity not under the direct jurisdiction of the trus- tees. The Friends had applied for and received a 5016 tax exempt status. Personnel Changes Cynthia Johnson, formerly Head of Refer- ence Services, was promoted to Head of Adult Services; Jane Eastman, promoted to Head of Reference Services, Anna Kiredjian, promoted to Library Associ- ate, audio - visual desk. Also, Heather Viteiello and Judy Dec were appointed technicians; Heather Pigott, reference librarian. Joyce Fearnside resigned to pursue her artistic interests and Ann Parson resigned to become Director of the Bolton Public Library. Library Benefactors Leroy & Geneva Brown 4,000 Beal 1,000 Maria Hastings Cary 400 Book Purchase 1,000 Alice Butler Cary 2,958 Jane Phinney 300 Goodwin Musical 1,100 Laura M. Brigham 3,100 George W. Sarano 300 War Parents Book Memorial 1,800 Nelson W. Jenny 2,000 Pauline Burbank Peirce 1,000 Caira Robins 300 Wellington Library 1,100 Page 27 Emma Ostrom Nichols 1,000 Sarah Elizabeth Raymond 2,528 Abbie C. Smith 1,000 Lewis L. Hoyt 1,000 Sue Medeiros 949 Pearl Toback Feld 666 Ann E. Ferry 3,370 The Rev. Harold T. Handley 1,938 Beryl M. Safford 1,484 James Stuart Smith 11,072 Warren Sherburne 4,020 Edith J. Childs 300,810 Diane Lund 4,115 James and Pauline McDevitt 5,000 Mona Anderson 1,100 Kurt Reizes 1,273 Gerald Sussman 654 Sub Total 362,337 Campaign for the New Century Manfred Friedman 4,025 John N. Pierce 2,183 William F. Buckley Robert Wendell Hannam Evelyn & Samuel Borshay Margaret F. Kinley Edward C. Stone Frederick Cowing Frick John C. Eddison Wilson/Furey/F. Schofield Stanley Hill Amer. Leg. Post 38 Ethan Bogen Larry & Sophia Ho Science & Technology Winsten Fund Cox Family Gift Robert T. Davison Albert Gallatin Friend Harriet B. Hathaway Oscar & Stella Liu Sinai Family Robert C. Hilton Robert LaMantia Francis Bradley Chang Chi and Yenshew Lynn Chao Chinese Heritage Krensky Family Fund Rae Cecilia Kipp Indian/American Sub Total 5,125 2,700 3,000 2,565 3,840 4,697 6,625 2,860 2,500 4,375 3,500 4,836 1,835 5,072 2,710 2,000 1,500 1,500 1,500 1,035 1,525 1,577 1,500 2,500 2,195 5,630 16,975 $101,885 Grand Total $464,222 Cary Memorial Library Trustee Funds Statement Balance on Hand 6/30/96 Lexington Savings $115,529 Receipts Book Rental $ 2,097 Book sales (Friends) 7,569 Books Sold 3,326 Copy Service 6,447 Directory 292 Fines, etc. 100,549 Friends Membership 73,619 Investment Dividends 49,383 Named Funds 19,989 Sub Total Receipts $263,270 Total Receipts & Bal on Hand 12,412 6/30/97 $378,799 Disbursements Aquarmaintenance 811 CR Program 4,641 Custodians (Friends) 184 Custodial Uniform 454 Endowment 64,139. Equipment 3,888 Exhibits 993 Friends Mailings 560 Fundraiser 21,279 Library Materials 154,938 Library Supplies 12,412 Mileage 1,323 Miscellaneous 10,568 Museum Passes 1,290 Plaques 783 Printing (Friends) 1,422 Printing (Fundraising) 532 ProfessionalDevelopment 10,491 Recruitment 3,609 Rentals 362 Total Disbursed $294,679 Balance on Hand 6/30/97 Lexington Savings $84,120.64 Cary Library staff members, all a -buzz at the Spelling Bee fund raiser. Message on the T- shirts tells of plans for a new "hive" for the library. Staffers Elaine Garnache, Connie Rawson and Janice Franca. Photo: Cary Library. Page 28 Department of Public Works /Engineering Expended in FY97 $15,469,308 Payroll $3,459,449 Expenses $12,009,859 Full Time Employees 92 Director: George A. Woodbury, appoint- ed by the Town Manager, 1995. Highlights: This was the second year of expanded operations at the composting site; reve- nues were up by 30 %. Establishing a regional Household Haz- ardous Waste (HHW) collection site at the Hartwell Ave. site approached reality. The state approved a $164,000 grant to build the facility; nine communities signed on to participate. We expect to be in operation by May. Streetlights have been a contentious issue with 1,294 lights turned off out of a total of 3,281. In October, selectmen decided to restore as many as possible within the budget. Timing of the original turn -off resulted in many more being turned off to achieve the savings in the remaining months of the budget year than would have been necessary if we could have had them out for the full budget year. As a result, there were extra savings in the second year that we could use to restore some lights. In the meantime, Lexington was successful in influencing the Utility Deregulation Legislation to permit town ownership of streetlights. That negotiation is just beginning but hopefully will yield significant savings. In this same light (pun intended), we also were successful in the municipal load ag- gregation piece being included in the leg- islation. It will allow advertising in early 1998 for an energy supplier for the town. Building Maintenance Superintendent Steve Hatch took over the custodial and maintenance services for the Senior Cen- ter. He shifted to a team approach and performs much of the preventive main- tenance formerly done by contractors. The quality of the work is better, more timely and much less expensive. The team approach ensures that every team member is familiar with every task, which increases flexibility. Brian Gilbert, Parks Superintendent, re- ceived a special grant and is working with a citizen's group to look at bikepath maintenance from a holistic approach. His increased emphasis on turf mainten- ance resulted in substantial improvments in several areas. Superintendent Bill Hadley's analysis of the sewer infiltration and inflow program showed that by accelerating the program we could increase the town's savings. Additionally, he instituted an aggressive program to switch to automated meter reading that will further cut costs. In the Highway Division, Warren Mon - signore began automating the highway pavement condition data to get the most paving done at the least cost. Negotiations between the 23 Northeast Solid Waste Committee (NESWC) com- munities and the operator of the North Andover incinerator broke down in Sep- tember. We had hoped to improve prices but to no avail. Consequently, the combi- nation of deferred debt and meeting new air pollution standards is going to raise trash disposal prices substantially. We continue to look to other communi- ties for opportunities to partner and share. The regional HHW site is just one example. We continually seek new oppor- tunities to save money. We are fortunate to have an excellent work force that is willing to be creative. DPW Administration FY97 Expended: $332,024 Payroll: $294,520 Expenses: $37,504 Number of employees: 7 DPW Administration consists of the Director of Public Works, Operations Manager, Office Manager and 4 clerical employees who provide support for the Administration/Engineering and Opera- Page 29 tions offices. Staff supervises competi- tively bid contracts for Public Works ser- vices including rubbish recycling, trash disposal, snow plowing, and transporta- tion; it also monitors the parking pro- gram and town building utilities. In addi- tion, staff accomplished the following: • Operations Manager oversaw the remov- al of underground fuel storage tanks and installation of above - ground tanks and a new fuel dispensing system. By combin- ing fuel service for DPW, Police and Fire vehicles, the Town qualified for a $31,000 State grant. • Operations and Engineering staffs over- saw construction of the new salt storage facility at 201 Bedford Street. • Staff continued to work with the De- partment of Environmental Protection and consultants to plan official closure of the Hartwell Avenue landfill site. Engineering Division FY97 Expended $250,737 Payroll 241,404 Expenses 9,333 Number of employees 6 Town Engineer: Francis X. Fields, P.E. appointed May 1982. Role: design and construction services to the DPW and other departments, boards, committees and the general public. Infrastructure Renewal: Engineering staff designed and super- vised infrastructure contracts totaling ap- proximately $1,000.000. Contract 97 -1. $398,153 3.2 street miles resurfaced. Article 10/96 E.H. Perkins Const. Contract 97 -2. $259,038 Renewal of 5,000' of 6" water main on Ames, Baker, Banks, Butler, Carville and Tucker Aves., Lisbeth and Oak Sts. Article 8/96 Federico Const. Corp. Contract 97 -4. $432,324 Phase 1, Collection Sewers Article 9/96 ODF Contracting Old Spring and Spring Sts., Golden Ave- nue, Bowman and Vine Streets. Department of Public Works /Engineering Facilities Construction & Renewal: Division staff provided construction serv- ices for the following contracts: Contract 96 -5. $135,650 Salt Storage Shed at DPW Facility Article 10/95 Cousins Const., Inc. Construction to provide an environmen- tally -safe road salt storage area. Contract 97 -5. $197,797 Fuel Depot at DPW Facility Article 10/96 Ralph Surianello, Inc. Replacement of undergound fuel storage tanks with above - ground tanks having vapor recovery dispensers and a compu- terized management system. Contract 97 -6. $99,880 Roof Repair & Replacement Article 12/96 Capeway Roofing System Repaired Town Office Building roof; Re- placed Central Fire Station and Visitors Center roofs. Roads and Utilities built at no cost: None Water /Sewer Connection Permits: Division staff made 173 inspections for water or sewer service connections by Town - licensed contractors. Street Opening Permits Issued: 399 permits for opening or occupying the public way were approved and issued to contractors. Property/Utility Records Information: Citizens, contractors, developers and realtors were among the 839 persons requesting information this year. Street Lighting Program FY97 Budget: $428,045 The Public Works Director and a Senior Civil Engineer oversaw the Street Light- ing Program begun in 1996 that turned off 1,294 street lights. This remains un- popular with many citizens. By the end of December approximately 500 lights had been restored. The DPW continued to negotiate the transfer of streetlights to town owner- ship. A special section was inserted into Deregulation of Utilities legislation to allow utilities to transfer the lights. Staff reviewed various lighting options and pol- icies to be implemented if the town takes ownership of the lights. Also see Lighting Options Committee report on the last page of this section. Types of streetlights as of Dec. 1997 Mercury Vapor 1,584 Incandescent 436 High Pressure Sodium 435 Total Lights in Service 2,455 Parking Operation FY97 Expended: $53,755 Compensation $34,508 Expenses $19,247 Number of Employees: 6PT Program Manager: Pauline Burke The parking program provides a balance of short and long -term parking for Center visitors and employees. Current facilities include a 300 car attended lot, 4 permit lots and about 500 parking meters in the business area. Six part-time employees operate the attended lot with backup from the Building Maintenance staff. The Meriam St. lot is attended on week- days and Saturdays, April through mid - November. In addition to Saturday re- ceipts, FY97 revenue includes increases in charges for all -day and night parking, and the permit fee for the attended lot. Revenue for FY97 Parking Meters $236,000 Attended Lot $130,781 Parking Permits $40,735 Total Parking Revenue $407,516 Building Maintenance FY97 Expenditures: $419,960 Personal Services $156,782 Expenses $263,178 Superintendent: Steve Hatch Number of employees: 8.5 This division is responsible for custodial services, preventive maintenance and re- pairs on Town -owned buildings, except Page 30 for schools. It also monitors utility usage and oversees contracted repairs. The custodial staff was reorganized into teams as opposed to having one person dedicated to each facility. This was done in preparation for taking on the responsi- bility for the Senior Center and Cary Lib- rary on July 1. Custodians have been en- couraged to seek various licenses in the trade skills to enhance our maintenance capabilities. The foreman earned his boil- er maintenance technician's license and used his new skills to repair the fire sta- tion boiler. The division continued a proactive pre- ventive maintenance stance. Supervisory staff surveyed all building infrastructure components; emergency systems, fire alarms, sprinklers, plumbing and electri- cal systems. Using manufacturer's speci- fications and operating manuals, staff in- stituted a basic maintenance schedule, anticipating this schedule will be incor- porated on the town's computer network. Staff also took on improvement projects: They rejuvenated an antiquated air condi- tioning system at Cary Library; installed a sump pump system at the Fire Station to alleviate a potential health hazard; oversaw the removal of a 1,000- gallon underground oil tank from Fire Head- quarters preventing possible environmen- tal consequences; installed a new 200 - amp electric service at Fire Headquarters; completed renovations to the directors' room in Cary Hall for use as a computer training room; and remodeled the West - view Cemetery office to improve cus- tomer service. The superintendent installed new electric and lighting systems for the new salt shed, old salt shed and a storage building at the DPW barn. Library custodial staff rebuilt an inoperative battery- operated emergency lighting system. Town Office Building custodial staff remodeled a meeting room at the Police Station to bet- ter utilize space for the Operations Cap- tain's Office while also reversing the Police Chiefs and the Informational Re- Department of Public Works /Engineering source Captain's offices. These accomplishments plus day -to -day emergencies and custodial services could only be accomplished by a concentrated team effort of the Building Maintenance Highway Division FY97 Expended: $847,985 Payroll $623,797 Expenses $224,188 Number of Employees: 18 Superintendent: Warren Monsignore The Highway Division maintains 126 miles of accepted streets and sidewalks, the drainage system and brooks, and manages the solid -waste disposal and yard -waste composting programs. Street and Sidewalk Repair: The Division used over 2,300 tons of asphalt maintaining roads. Of that, 1,000 tons was applied by town employees using a hired asphalt spreader on the following streets which needed extensive pot hole repairs: Concord, Coolidge and Mass. Avenues; Hancock, North and Waltham Streets; and Maguire Road. Sidewalk improvements requiring grad- ing and resurfacing to eliminate water collection problems were made at two locations on Meriam St. and Mass. Ave. Storm Drains: Repairs were made at 4 locations to correct drainage problems. Pipe was replaced as follows: 100' on Curve St. due to roots, 65' on Lincoln St. by Lincoln Field due to failure, and 35' on Redcoat Lane. A 150' drainage ditch was dug out at the rear of a Garfield St. residence. Catch basin cleaning: $28,670 Contractor: Lloyd Truax 4,515 catch basins were cleaned in FY97 Street Sweeping: $24,963 Contractor: American Sweeping Co. The contractor swept all streets within a 2 -week period in the spring. Two Town brooms are used weekly in the Center, parking lots and for emergency clean up. Traffic Lines Markings: $41,445 Contractor: Markings, Inc. Traffic lines and markings are painted, summer and fall. In the spring, the cross- walks on Mass. Ave. and throughout the Center are painted a second time. Traffic Sign Maintenance: $4,634 Contractor: L &C Flashing Barricades The town is responsible for over 2,400 traffic control signs and 500 parking meters. While town forces perform some maintenance, most repairs were done by a private contractor in FY97. Traffic Signal Maintenance: $2,823 Contractor: Tri-State Signal The Town owns 13 traffic signals. 26 ser- vice calls were made this year by the con- tractor. Besides paying $14,000 in elec- tric costs, DPW staff changed the bulbs. Bikepath Maintenance: The bikepath required increased main- tenance due to age and vegetation. Some areas needed pavement repair. Staff also worked with Police to address youth prob- lems in a particular area. Snow Removal Operation: FY97 Expended: $466,841 Payroll $186,897 $279,944 All DPW Staff Expenses No. of employees: Snow plowing operations involved DPW staff and 31 private contractors; seven sanders were used. In the winter of 1996 -97 Lexington experienced 22 snow and ice storms for a total of 54" of snow. Four storms re- quired full plowing operations. The last storm on March 31 -April 1 generated 24" of wet snow that was difficult to manage due to downed limbs and wires. During the entire winter season 1,500 tons of sand and 2,400 tons of salt were used. The town completed a new shed that allows the sand/salt mix to be stored under cover. Dry mix makes the spread- ers more effective and reduces the amount of mix required per mile. Page 31 Road Machinery Division: FY97 Expended: $473,957 Payroll $256,470 Expenses $217,487 Number of Employees: 7 Superintendent: Robert H. Lesley Maintains DPW equipment fleet valued at over $4 million; 59 vehicles consisting of sedans, pick -up trucks and large dump trucks, 64 pieces of off -road maintenance and construction equipment. Minor re- pairs and preventive maintenance provid- ed on Fire and School vehicles. Vehicles and equipment are serviced and checked under a computerized, scheduled Preventive Maintenance Program. A Ve- hicle Restoration program is ongoing when it is more cost effective to restore a vehicle than to replace it. All Road Machinery staff are skilled in welding, sheet metal design, fabrication, and making new parts. These skills ena- bled them to repair vehicles, construction equipment and snowplows. Mechanics built special projects in support of other departments when it was cost - effective. Solid Waste Management: FY97 Expended: $2,064,031 Compensation $55,630 Expenses $2,008,401 Number of Employees: 1 Program Manager: Joe R. Medlin Waste management programs include trash collection and disposal, recycling, composting and household hazardous waste collection and disposal. Monitored by the Operations Manager, one recy- cling employee, a seasonal employee and other DPW staff. In FY97, 10,893 tons of solid waste were burned at the North East Solid Waste Committee's North Andover incinerator. Residents removed another 34 tons from the waste stream through curbside recycling. 4,027 tons of recycled materi- als were distributed by BFI to various plants for use in post- consumer products. Composting at the recycling area on Department of Public Works /Engineering Hartwell Avenue is operated by one full - time employee, a seasonal employee and other Highway staff. Residents recycled 8,200 tons of yard waste; leaves, grass clippings and brush. Highway Division staff help manage the facility and sell bio- degradable bags. For the first time in 15 years, there was no Hazardous Waste Collection Day. A permanent regional facility is being built on Hartwell Ave. to accommodate 8 -10 collections a year beginning in 1998. FY97 Solid Waste Contracts: Refuse Collection: Browning - Ferris Industries $627,826 Refuse Disposal: Mass. Refusetech, Inc. $1,000,227 Recycling Collection: Browning - Ferris Industries $302,000 Park Division FY97 Expended: $639,859 Payroll $572,518 Expenses $67,341 Number of Employees: 16 Superintendent: Brian Gilbert Maintains over 600 acres of town, school and recreation lands, helps Conservation Commission in maintain- ing vegetative growth on properties under their jurisdiction, and makes changes at Pine Meadows Golf Course. In addition to maintenance, the division engaged in several projects to improve the appearance and infrastructure of the town's open space : Playgrounds and Tot Lots: Staff helped install a sand volleyball court, repaired fitness path stations and boardwalk at Lincoln Park; oversaw repairs to Center tennis court; sealed all wood totlot struc- tures with water protection and repaired the fence at the Reservoir. Sports Fields: Completed the first phase of renovations at Lincoln #3 and Harring- ton #1 fields; completed the modifica- tion of a new softball field at Harrington, including player benches; constructed & modified benches at various baseball fields; constructed 2 additional rain can- non for irrigating sports fields and assist- ed installing lighting at the Center fields. Park Maintenance: Staff painted, re- paired and constructed picnic tables and trash receptacles; installed new and cleaned and sanded all existing teak benches; cleaned and polished the Min- uteman Statue; initiated a planning com- mittee for improvements to the Minute- man Bike Path; assisted Building Main- tenance with renovations to Westview Cemetery and the main and East Lexing- ton libraries; completed installing a con- crete sidewalk adjacent to pool complex and installed a wooden rail and gate at Willard Woods. Tree Division FY97 Expended: $211,206 Payroll $199,314 Expenses $11,892 Number of Employees: 6 Superintendent: Brian Gilbert Responsible for the care and preservation of all woody plant vegetation in parks, along streets and town properties. By con- servative estimates, the division main- tains 9,000 - 10,000 street trees, all inva- sive roadside brush, all shrubbery plant- ings and trees in parks, playgrounds, cem- eteries, town and school properties. In 1997, crews responded to 78 emergen- cies, many due to the April 1 snowstorm. General Tree Care: Staff resolved over 250 service requests; pruned Cedar St., sections of Pine Meadows Golf Course, Munroe and Westview Cemeteries as part of a preventive maintenance pro- gram; fertilized all newly planted trees and the mature trees on the Battle Green, Hastings Park and at the Town Hall; watered newly planted trees and those showing signs of stress; pruned all trees planted in the last 4 years and the pear trees in the Center. Removed 108 dead, diseased or hazardous trees, including grinding the stumps, adding loam to grade and seeding the site. Page 32 Planting: Planted 79 trees funded through the State's ReLeaf program and local donations; planted traffic islands at Cedar and Hill Streets and Ledgelawn at Hillside Terrace; continued the lilac border at Buckman Tavern grounds; and planted Belfry Hill in cooperation with Minuteman Technical High School. Pest Control: Applied herbicide to con- trol curbside and invasive weeds such as poison ivy along bike path and trails. Recycling: Staff chipped 3,900 Christ- mas trees in early 1997. By- product from chipping operations is used in the Park system or sold for the highest bulk price. Other projects: Helped Cemetery Div- ision staff with Memorial Day prepara- tions and the Engineering Division with survey crew staffing. Pine Meadows Golf Course Operator: New England Golf Corp. Budget: $375,081 Contract Managers: Karen Simmons, Brian Gilbert The Recreation Department and Park Division work with the Recreation Com- mittee in monitoring this contract, which expires in 1998. Improvements made by the management company and the DPW staff included: Landscape plantings installed at the 1st, 4th and 8th tees and entrance road; trees planted along the 1st and 2nd fairways. All greens and tees were seeded and meticulously maintained to improve turf quality; 5th green was reopened. Trees were pruned and removed to improve shot value, increase light and air circulation to greens and tees. The sand trap adjacent to the 4th green was re- placed with a series of rolling turf waves. Installed a cart path on the 5th hole; removed an asphalt pad on the 8th fair- way and graded and seeded area; installed drainage on four greens. Department of Public Works /Engineering Cemetery Division: FY97 Expended: $261,979 Payroll: $240,254 Expenses: $21,725 Number of Employees: 6 Acting Supt.: Dennis M. Mazzone Operates and maintains grounds (34 acres), buildings and equipment for four cemeteries: Westview, Munroe, Robbins and Colonial (Ye Olde Burial Ground). Cemetery staff busier than usual. The division was one man short because of the superintendent's position vacancy; at the same time the work load increased. There were 234 interments in Westview Cemetery and 4 in Munroe, an increase of 47 over FY96. In Westview Cemetery, 115 new lots were sold, total- ing 171 graves. Foundations for 130 flush markers were approved and set. Ye Olde Burial Grounds Restoration Project continued. To date, cleaning, re- pairing and poulticing of stones by vol- unteers and preservation consultants has resulted in 93 stones being restored. Division staff continued restoring the stone wall in the Robbins Cemetery. With funding from the Trustees of Public Trusts, restoration of the Westview Cem- etery turf continues. Fertilizers, grub - proofing, and broad -leaf weed control are included, as well as increased irriga- tion. The results can be noticed. The cemetery office was renovated. Walls were relocated and offices recon- figured to better utilize existing space. New furniture purchased through fund- ing from Trustees of Public Trusts. Fresh paint and new carpeting made the setting more amenable to the sensitive nature of customer's visits. Collections in FY97 totaled $379,970. Water /Sewer Divisions: FY97 Expenditures: $8,420,617 Payroll: $550,021 Expenses: $7,870,596 Number of Employees: 16 Superintendent: William P. Hadley The Town purchases approximately 2 billion gallons of water annually from the Massachusetts Water Resources Authori- ty (MWRA), and pays MWRA to treat and dispose of the town's sewage. The average residential water /sewer bill in FY97 was $528.60 (9600 cubic feet). In November, the selectmen approved an average residential rate increase of 8 percent. This is the fourth year increases have been kept to less than 10 %. The State Legislature again included sewer rate relief in their budget. That amounted to a reduction of $648,742 in the town's MWRA assessment. FY97 was the third year of the policy that allows a second meter for outdoor watering. Water consumed through this meter is charged only the water rate. The infrastructure consists of 154 miles of water mains, 2 water towers storing 3 million gallons, 1,500 fire hydrants, 3,400 street and hydrant control valves, and about 10,000 residential control valves located on property lines. Four main transmission lines serve Lex- ington: a 16" main at Summer St., a 16" main on Mass. Ave. in East Lexington up to Pleasant St, a 12" main at Watertown St, and a 24" main on Concord Avenue. The system has 120 miles of street line sewers, 34 miles of trunk line sewers and 9 pump stations, including the new main pumping station. Duties are divided into three sections: water distribution, sewer maintenance, and construction. Employees are cross - trained to perform all division functions and help in snow removal operations. Page 33 In the distribution section, 7 employees respond to service calls, repair curb and water control boxes, read and install water meters, take water samples, perform hydrant maintenance, and main- tain and update the water control valve locations. They oversee the cross- connect- ion control program and investigate all water bill complaints. They also mark out services for contractors, utility compa- nies and assist the Engineering Division. In an effort to provide quality water, staff conducted a system wide water flushing program during October and November. Tests for bacteria and coliform on a weekly basis at nine sampling locations disclosed no faults. The sewer maintenance section consists of three employees who maintain 154 miles of pipe and 9 sewer pump stations, implement the sewer main flushing program and manage the pump station maintenance program. Staff has the tech- nical knowledge to identify electrical problems with relay or pressure switches. The construction section of the division consists of four employees responsible for the lead water service replacement program, installing new control valves and replacing defective valves. Staff oversees replacements of hydrants, sewer mains and sewer services. Employees attended training seminars on confined space entry, cross connection control, MWRA procedures for drinking water sampling, hydrant maintenance and courses relating to the State certification exams. Two employees earned State Certified Drinking Water Facility opera- tor's licenses, one a Grade 2 and the other a Grade 3 license. Another employee qualified for a Cross Connection Back - flow testing license. Staff responds to emergency water and sewer repairs day and night. Service inter- ruptions are kept to a minimum but breaks are often at times and locations in- convenient to customers and motorists. Department of Public Works /Engineering Repairs and Replacements Water main breaks 23 Water service leaks 5 Hydrants repair 120 Hydrants replaced 9 Service control valves 42 Street control valves 19 Renewed water services 28 Replaced sewer services 12 Sewer main blockages 11 Sewer service blockages 9 Sewer manholes 15 Sewer mains flushed & cleaned 158,600' New Installations Outdoor watering meters 201 Control valves 3 8" Water main Westview Street 400' 4" Water main Buckman Tavern 200' 1" Water service Lincoln Street recreation field 100' Hydrants 3 Water meters 329 Water services 35 Sewer services 86 LEXPRESS FY97 Expended: $223,231 Payroll $47,334 Expenses $175,897 Number of Employees: 1.5 Transportation Coordinator: Vacant LEXPRESS provided 89,563 rides in FY97. Senior citizens accounted for 24 %, adults 17 %, youths 59 %. Role: The Transportation Advisory Com- mittee (TAC) helps selectmen with trans- portation policy and advises the town's Transportation Coordinator. Appointed by the selectmen: Donald Graham, chair, Sara Arnold, co- chair, Elizabeth Andrews, Sally Castleman, Edward Ganshirt, William Mix, Lorraine Pacocha, Nicholas Santosuosso, Ben Turk. Betty Eddison is liaison for the selectmen. Transportation Advisory Committee: Seated, Betty Eddison, selectman liaison, Chairman Donald Graham, Elizabeth Andrews. Standing, Edward Ganshirt, Ben Turk and Elaine Dratch. Photo: Ray Barnes Page 34 A major transportation issue has been reducing private automobile traffic. TAC's major contribution toward finding effective alternative transportation has been LEXPRESS, the municipal bus network now in its 18th year. LEXPRESS provides daytime service on six routes connecting the town's residen- tial neighborhoods with the Center, schools and other areas. TAC also advises on operations of the Lexington Chair Car service available to the physically challenged residents. Over the past two years TAC has assisted the Planning Board in developing a Trans- portation Demand Management policy. This requires a developer of commercial or industrial property to include in its site planning, specific provisions for facilitat- ing alternative means of transportation. Until she moved to the Metropolitan Area Planning Council on October 1, 1997, Transportation Coordinator Bar- bara Lucas led the effort to win four state /federal transportation grants. 1. Under a transportation enhancement grant, a design consultant was selected and design plans completed for improv- ing Depot Square and Emery Park. 2. Under a grant for purchasing com- pressed natural gas (CNG) buses for LEXPRESS, several meetings with vend- ors were held and several buses demon- strated. Establishing a fueling station for the CNG vehicles was discussed. A certification was obtained from the U.S. Department of Labor that the pur- chase and use of the CNG buses would not harm currently employed union transit workers. At the close of the cal- endar year, specifications for the CNG buses and a Request for Proposals to be issued to prospective vendors were in final review. 3. Discussions continued during the year about utilizing a 2 -year demonstration grant to initiate a Lexington- Concord tourist trolley to serve the Museum of Our National Heritage, run through the Department of Public Works /Engineering length of the Minuteman National Historic Park, and terminating at the Old North Bridge. In late 1997, issues of sponsorship, financing, and parking were being discussed by Lexington, Concord and Minuteman Park representatives. A fourth grant was on hold. When a Transportation Management Association (TMA) is organized for Hartwell Ave. businesses, matching funding will be available to develop commuting alterna- tives to the single- occupant vehicle. An MBTA proposal to discontinue Satur- day service on the Hanscom Field - Alewife bus highlighted the need for TAC to work more closely and on a con- tinuing basis with the MBTA to assure that all the parts of the town's transporta- tion network continue to function. Efforts continued to seek additional fund- ing to support transportation initiatives. Transportation Demand Management Plans for two developments; Hayden Medical Center and 55 Hayden Ave., included commitments of $4,000 annual contributions to support LEXPRESS. Lahey- Hitchcock Clinic donated $15,000 to extend Chair Car Service hours. The Chair Car service, operated by SMC Transportation, provided 1,069 trips in FY97, to medical appointments, the Senior Center, the new Adult Day Care Center on Mill Street in Lincoln, and to shopping areas. An important function of TAC continues to be helping to expand the use of these services. At the end of the calendar year the Transportation Services Office was integrated into the Department of Public Works Administrative Office on the second floor of the Town Office Building. For the last three months of the year, while awaiting the selection of a new Transportation Coordinator, Pauline Burke, DPW Office Manager and former Transportation Coordinator, and Janet Lewitzky, part-time assistant, carried on the duties and functions of the Transportation Services Office. Lighting Options Committee Role: To study and develop an optimal street lighting system for Lexington. Appointed by the selectmen. Chairman Myla Kabat -Zinn, Peter Kovner; John Davies, Planning Board liaison. Thanks to persistent efforts by DPW Director George Woodbury, language was included in the recently passed electic utility deregulation bill that gives Massachusetts towns the right to buy and install their own street lights. The committee had informed the town several years ago that substantial savings could be realized by owning our own sys- tem. However, there was no regulatory mechanism in place to help Lexington make this happen. Now, with the continued aid of utility ex- pert Paul Chernick, the town is negotiat- ing with Boston Edison to buy out, or in- stall our own lights. Working with Ripman Lighting Consult- ants, the Lighting Commitee continued to gather data from existing street lights and those in the demonstration project, to help determine which lights to choose for a townwide changeover. The goal is to own our street lights to real- ize immediate cost reductions; then re- turn all lights to service while changing over to more cost - effective, energy -effi- cient, color - corrected lights that give us good visual acuity and make streets safe and pleasant. Page 35 Expenditures FY97 FY96 Payroll 2,636,344 2,497,459 Expenses 287,709 151,217 Personnel Full time 55 55 Appointed: John F. Quinlan appointed Fire Chief in October 1995 by the Town Manager. Administration: The team concept of management, initiated in the Town Mana- ger's office, was extended to the depart- ment. This is a non - traditional management ap- proach which eliminates the old hierar- chical decision - making structure. The team is working to instill a sense of "ownership" among all employees and extend strategic planning to all levels within the ranks. The team includes the, chief, assistant chief, shift commanders and president of the firefighters union. Operations Total emergency calls: 3,398 Fire /emergency related calls: 1,310 Medical calls 2,088 Ambulance runs to hospitals 1,336 1992 -1997 Emergencies 3398 2694 'Total Responses 20 8 1264 EMS Responses 1992 1997 There was one second alarm fire, in the Drummer Boy Condominium complex. It destroyed most of of the second floor of one unit and caused minor damage to an adjoining unit. Fire Department There were nine "working fires" where all Lexington apparatus and on -duty per- sonnel were committed and that caused substantial damage to contents and/or structure. There were 27 other structural fires with reported damage. In June, a series of violent thunderstorms swept the community. Several homes were struck by lightning. Fires and/or damage from lightning strikes occurred in four homes in scattered sections of town and stretched the on -duty resources of the Department. In the area of medical emergencies, it is significant that our back -up ambulance transported 273 patients. It was used as a second transport vehicle, or on a simulta- neous call, a record 176 times. We were able to provide crucially needed treat- ment and transport to residents in a time- ly manner, eliminating the wait for a mutual aid ambulance from out of town. This enhances our EMS mission, to pro- vide quality emergency service as quick- ly and efficiently as possible. As the result of Town Meeting action, the Department purchased and took deliv- ery of a new Fire Pumper in 1997. The apparatus encompasses the latest in safety improvements in emergency warn- ing lighting and passenger compartment features for protecting firefighters. There are several design innovations developed by a committee of fire personnel and the manufacturer's representative. The vehicle is not just a fire engine. It was designed as a Rescue Pumper. The "Jaws of Life" was built into the vehicle; two 100 -foot reels of hydraulic line ena- ble rescuers to use the jaws while the noisy power unit remains on the engine. This helps rescuers coordinate their activ- ity without shouting, and can help reduce the anxiety level of victims. The engine also has compartments spe- cifically designed to accommodate EMS equipment, backboards, a defibrillator, oxygen equipment and trauma kits. Page 36 The purchase of turnout gear — protec- tive coats and pants — was completed. Half of the Department had been outfit- ted the previous year. Another personnel safety improvement was the purchase of a new self - contained breathing apparatus fill station. It pro- tects personnel from injury in case an air cylinder ruptures while being refilled. Two local residents and long -term em- ployees retired. Captain John Fradette and Lieutenant Ted Setterlund each had over thirty years of Department service. Fire Prevention /Safety Education Assistant Chief Sullivan directs the fire and life safety code compliance for the Department. Fire prevention oversees the proper installation of fuel tanks and the removal of underground storage tanks. There is a close working relationship with developers and contractors to ensure all safety requirements are addressed when projects are under construction. This involves extensive plan review prior to construction and on -site inspections until the project is finalized. Fire safety education is another area in which the prevention division is in- volved. Several programs were conduct- ed for area nursing homes staff in patient evacuation procedures and fire safety awareness. Some area motels also sought safety training for their staff. For the second year, the department was awarded a $5,000 SAFE (Student Aware- ness of Fire Safety Education) grant from the state's Department of Public Safety, Division of Fire Services. The grant enabled our SAFE team to bring the age - appropriate fire safety pro -gram, "Learn Not To Burn," to all first graders. Many preschools received a modified ver- sion of the program. The goal is to,famil- iarize these youngsters with firefighters and how they (the firefighters) appear in turnout gear. Another SAFE program was a summer camp. Two students attended a one -day Massachusetts Fire Academy program where they participated and observed as- pects of firefighter recruit training. Community Service Department members have an abiding concern for our community, shown in many different ways. The Department Honor Guard participates in various civic events; the monthly blood pressure clinic for the Senior Center, and Fire Preven- tion Week Open House are examples. Other areas where we interacted with our "customers "; The Prom night disaster, a mock fatal car crash in which firefighters partnered with the school resource officer and other Police personnel to graphically depict the consequences drinking and driving. Fire Department personnel participated in health and safety awareness programs sponsored by local corporations for their employees. A fire and home safety information booth at Discovery Day is another example of direct community involvement. We, as an organization, are committed to improve our community service beyond Fire Suppression and Emergency Medical Service. Fire Department The Fire Department's new "rescue pumper" is "fully loaded, " with the latest in emergency tools, including built -in jaws of life, defibrillator, oxygen equip- ment and trauma kits A large assembly of High School students watch as Officer Garabedian and the Fire Department "respond to the scene" during a mock accident re- enactment highlighting the consequences of drinking and driving. Photo: Police Dept.. Page 37 FY 97 FY 96 Payroll: $3,270,254 $2,955,554 Expenses: 327,844 292,264 Capital Items: 0 0 Personnel Full Time 65 65 Part Time 5 5 Chief: Christopher Casey, appointed by the Town Manager, 1993 Highlights • First year of School Resource Officer proves an overwhelming success • Domestic Violence Response Team formed • Investigations lead to arrests of armed robbery suspects, halt mini crime wave • Regional drug task force makes an impact • Detective William Young retires Comments: In the 70's and 80's police departments regularly requested more officers and more technology exclusively for the police department, with intentions to sup- press and prevent crime. Unfortunately, success rates were not encouraging. In the 90's, greater emphasis was given to the variety and complexity of police serv- ices and to promoting community part- nerships. In 1997, this commitment to community policing was rewarded by some important achievements in: Community Programs: During the school year, School / Community Re- source Officer Dana Ham forged a unique partnership with school adminis- trators, students, faculty and parents at the high school. Taking an initial concept of "policing" at the school, Officer Ham used education, problem solving and enforcement in a program supported and praised by all. For example, Officer Ham developed, organized and involved the community in a "mock accident" re- enactment which demonstrated the con- sequences of drinking and driving. Police Department Officer Ham also helped create a Middle School Peer Leadership Program to iden- tify and train peer leaders at the high school to help entering students make the transition to high school. The program will include school and evening activities to foster positive connections with com- munity and school. In November, the Police Dept. collabo- rated with the Human Services Depart- ment, the schools, Board of Health, and the Wayside Youth and Family Support Network to create a new Domestic Vio- lence Response Team. This program, funded by a state grant, provides advoca- cy and counseling services to victims of domestic abuse. Officers John Mazerall and Bryan Hoi- seth were appointed and trained as Youth Officers who are frequently assigned missing person and criminal investiga- tions when a child under 17 is involved. They also administer the Juvenile Diver- sion Program; 23 youths were supervised this year during community service in lieu of prosecution in the courts. Crime Enforcement: Timely response and follow -up investigations by patrol officers and detectives resulted in some important arrests. Officer Joseph Lahiff and Sergeant Anderson received com- mendations for their actions on February 14th responding to a report of a Waltham bank robbery. They located the freshly abandoned stolen vehicle, searched the area, and arrested the suspect before he could enter a residential neighborhood. Early on April 24th, officers investigated the unlawful entry of a motor vehicle; they tracked down and arrested two men attempting to flee in a stolen truck. The investigation led to discovery of over two dozen crimes of theft, unlawful entry, and malicious destruction of property. Other investigations by detectives result- ed in arrest of two men wanted for over a dozen armed robberies in the suburban - west area, including those at the Heritage Mobil and the Lexington Sheraton. Page 38 One detective devotes time to the Subur- ban Middlesex County Drug Task Force, a regional effort of seven area communi- ties. In fiscal 1997, the task force made 140 arrests and seized 887 grams of co- caine, 231 pounds of marijuana, 145 bags of heroin, 300 hits of LSD, 10 firearms, 14 vehicles, $65,000 in cash, 11,500 vials of steroids, and 1,576 illegally pos- sessed pills. Personnel Issues: Detective William Young retired after more than 32 years of distinguished service. Other personnel changes included Officer Steven Garabe- dian's appointment to the Detective Bu- reau; Officer Aiden Evelyn's assignment as an assistant range officer and Officer Charles Crayton's joining the D.A.R.E. program as an instructor. This year the department received more than 80 letters commending officers for a job well done, or expressing appreciation for department programs. These letters, and personal contacts with the communi- ty, contribute immeasurably to the pro- motion of community policing values within the department. Police Services — General: As the fol- lowing charts show, the number and type of crimes investigated and service calls attended has remained fairly consistent for several years. The department catego- rizes approximately 300 different crimes and services rendered by the police and fire departments. Overall, the number of police service calls in 1997 decreased 0.6% to 12,288. The decrease is due to a reduction in motor vehicle incidents: accidents requir- ing investigation (down 77 or 14.4 %) and suspicious person or vehicle complaints (down 102 or 15.6 %) Under the NIBRS (National Incident -Based Reporting Sys- tem), 1,146 crimes will be reported this year (down one crime from 1996). The emergency 9 -1 -1 system logged over 5,000 calls. However, some 400 calls were abandoned by callers before a dis- patcher could answer the phone. Dis- patchers call back anyone who is discon- nected after dialing 9 -1 -1. If no answer is received, officers are dispatched to investigate the call. This year, 224 aban- doned calls were investigated. Police Manual Committee Role: The professional policy and pro- cedures manual of the Police Depart- ment guides officers in handling the many complex and emergency situations they must deal with. The committee monitors policies and procedures as they are drafted and revised and offers com- ments to help the chief maintain a pro- fessional manual. Appointed by the selectmen. Chief Christopher Casey, Cleveland Coats, Edith Flynn, Gerald McLeod, William Hays; selectman liaison Peter Enrich. The town applied to the new State Ac- creditation program. This program has adopted national accreditation standards which allow police agencies to achieve state accreditation and eventually nation- al recognition Police Department Complaints and Calls for Service Accident Calls 1,049 Animal Control 275 Alarms, home or commercial 1,940 Alarms, all others 546 Reports of fire 226 Medical assistance 996 Assist motorist 1,061 Missing persons 81 Disturbances /disputes 455 Building & person checks 934 Suspicious activity reports 548 Total, all crimes 1,146 Total, other calls for service 4,393 Motor Vehicle Citations Issued Warnings 408 Civil infractions 2,237 Criminal complaints 193 Arrests 88 Total 2,926 Larcenies - Reported 375 340 1987 1997 Page 39 Criminal Court Summary Arrests w/o warrant 170 Arrests with warrant 126 Criminal summons 508 Clerk's hearing 86 Private complaints 13 Total 903 Other Criminal Court Cases MV Homicide 2 Operating MV to endanger 30 Operating MV, lost lic /reg 147 Operating MV w/o license 42 Operating MV under influence 51 Operating MV w/o license 67 Using a MV w/o authority 8 Disorderly/Disturbing peace 18 Liquor law violations 40 Malicious damage /vandalism 18 Forgery 1 Receiving stolen property 7 Protective order violation 10 Drug law violations 62 Calls for Service 13650 11750 1987 1997 Auto Thefts 22 13 1987 1997 Police Department Civil Motor Vehicle Infractions Red light violation Stop sign violation Failure to use care Unregistered MV Speeding Turning violation Crosswalk violation Other violations Total Parking violations Meter violations Total 551 129 233 114 879 423 103 829 3,263 Parking Enforcement Fines $10,000 1,980 4,290 7,400 88,090 6,200 1,875 13,235 $113,605 Issued Fin 2,644 $41,445 4,782 23,910 7,436 $65,355 Serious Offences 430 508 1987 1997 Summary of Serious Offenses Classification Offenses Charges Arson 3 0 Rape 1 0 Assaults, incl. weapons 68 66 Robbery, home invas'n 8 17 Burglary, break & enter 75 27 Larceny (not vehicles) 340 79 Motor vehicle theft 13 4 Total 508 193 Accidents 1300 773 1987 1997 High Accident Locations, 10 or More Accidents Bedford Street @ Hartwell Avenue 20 Bedford Street @ Route 128 29 Bedford Street @ Eldred Street 16 Marrett Road @ Massachusetts Avenue (MM Tech) 15 Route 128 @ Route 2 14 Waltham Street @ Concord Avenue 14 Route 128 @ Bedford Street 13 Woburn Street @ Lowell Street 13 Massachusetts Avenue @ Waltham Street 12 Massachusetts Avenue @ Grant Street 11 Concord Avenue @ Spring Street 10 Marrett Road @ Waltham Street 10 Page 40 Expended: FY97 FY96 Payroll $129,409 $109,599 Personnel: Full Time Staff 4 Part Time Staff 1 Grant - funded 2 Board of Health and Staff Board Martha Wood, Chair Dennis Sterzin Dr. James C. Beck Dr. Burt M. Perlmutter Dr. Elaine Grunberg Staff Beverly E. Anderson, Director Lisa Ruffy, Health Agent Joyce Cheng, R.N., Public Health Nurse Kathy Fox, Animal Control Officer Carol Joyce, Administrator Associates Lea Susan Ojaama, Tobacco Control Officer Christine Fichera, Title V Program Agent Notable Events Board of Health: Barbara Marshall re- signed from the Board of Health. Elaine Grunberg, M.D. joined the Board. Martha Wood continued as Chair. Staff Changes -- Beverly Anderson took over as Health Director, assuming the post held by Roy Sanderson. Lisa Ruffy accepted the position of Health Agent for the town, after Edward Goulding, Jr. resigned. Joyce Cheng, R.N. filled the newly created position of Public Health Nurse, replacing services previously provided by the Cambridge Visiting Nurses Association. Carole Joyce and Kathy Fox continued as Administrator and Animal Control Officer respectively. Domestic Violence Response The Health Department teamed with Schools, Human Services and Police, and with Replace to develop an interven- tion program for domestic violence. Vio- lence in the family is a major cause of morbidity and mortality nationwide. Lex- ington's Domestic Violence Response Team will provide support and guidance for victims of domestic violence. Board of Health Revision of Health Regulations The Board of Health has begun the process of revising the health regulations for the Town, which have not been changed since their publication in 1953. The regulations will be analyzed and changed to address recent concerns in environmental health. Representatives from the Mass. Association of Health Boards are assisting with the process. Under consideration for inclusion in the new regulations are guidelines for aquifer protection, well construction, lead con- trol, and other areas. Biosafety Regulations Regulations for the Use of Recombinant DNA Molecule Technology were changed and approved by the Board of Health in November. Toxic Use Reduction Grant The Health Department received a $7,000 grant from the Toxic Use Reduc- tion Institute to promote ways to reduce, substitute or eliminate the use of hazard- ous substances in the home and business. The program will use the new Household Hazardous Waste Facility in Lexington as a base for promoting the concept of toxic use reduction. Flu clinic 1200 residents were vaccinated for influ- enza in October at Cary Hall during the annual flu clinic. Volunteers from COA, from Symmes Medical Center, and from New England Home Health Care partici- pated in the clinic. Employee Health Public Health Nurse Joyce Cheng, R.N., now provides municipal employees with Hepatitis B vaccinations, eliminating the cost of private doctor visits for the town workers. Mosquito Control The town participated in the East Middle- sex Mosquito Control Project for the 53rd year. Page 41 Title Five Program A program to identify and track the sub- surface disposal systems in town and to educate home owners owners on the implications of Title V regulations has been implemented. Christine Fichera is currently working as Title V Program Agent. Residents owning subsurface dis- posal systems have been asked to have their systems checked on a regular basis. Tobacco Control Lea Susan Ojamaa manages the tobacco control program for the town, in partner- ship with the Town of Bedford. The pro- gram is funded by a grant from the Mass. Tobacco Control program through the Health Protection Fund. This grant has been renewed for a second grant cycle which will continue through June 30, 2000. The program focuses on policy promotion and enforcement that elimi- nates the sale of tobacco products to minors, policy promotion and enforce- ment aimed at reducing public exposure to environmental tobacco smoke, smok- ing cessation, community services and education. An article was passed at the 1997 Town Meeting amending the town by -laws to expand the Board of Health's ability to fine for Tobacco Control viola- tions by using non - criminal disposition (issuing tickets) for violations of the Tobacco Control Regulations. Environmental Concerns Repeated testing of the Vine Brook showed evidence of contamination by coliform bacteria. The Health Depart- ment is working with the Department of Public Works to determine the cause. The Vine Brook culvert has been exam- ined for illegal connections, and home- owners with subsurface disposal systems near the brook have been notified of the problem. Additional testing has also been carried out to locate the source. Communicable Diseases In May, Joyce Cheng, R.N. assumed the role of Public Health Nurse for the town. Among other duties, she is responsible for the investigation and follow -up care of communicable disease in the town. Sixty -one cases of communicable disease were investigated. They are: Amebiasis 1 Campylobacter 25 Chicken Pox (Varicella) 7 Cryptosporidiosis 1 Giardiasis 2 Hepatitis B 2 Listeriosis 1 Lyme disease 1 Salmonella 7 Shigella 2 Streptococcus Pneumonia 1 Viral Meningitis 2 Tuberculosis class 2 8 Tuberculosis class 3 1 In addition, twenty -eight STDs and AIDs cases were reported to the MDPH. They include: Clamydia 9 Gonorrhea 3 AIDs 16 Syphillis 0 Animal Control Animal Control Officer Kathy Fox enforces state and local animal control laws and manages the animal shelter for the town. Rabies remains a problem, with the state reporting a doubling of cases testing positive for the disease. Statistics Licensed dogs Leash Law violations Unlicensed dog violations Unlicensed dog notices Dogs placed in shelter Dogs adopted Dog bites Cat bites Other Livestock : Horses Cows Deer Poultry 2020 24 160 375 28 4 13 5 2 27 5 11 8 Household Hazardous Waste The Board of Health voted that the autumn collection of household hazard- ous waste at the DPW facility would not Board of Health be held, and funds would be reserved for the opening of the new permanent drop - off facility in Lexington. The new facility is expected to be open in April of 1997. Indoor Air Quality The Health Department worked with the Environmental Assessment Unit of the Mass. Dept. of Public Health in response to reported air quality problems at the Bridge and Bowman schools. Poor venti- lation and prior flooding of the buildings were found to be the causes of some of the problems. Radon - resistant construction is also be- ing promoted through the Inspectional Services Department. Immunizations The annual flu clinic was held on Octo- ber 15 at Cary Hall. Over 1200 residents were vaccinated at the clinic. Volunteers from the Council on Aging, and nurses from Symmes Medical Center and from New England Home Health Care partici- pated in the clinic. Two residents unable to attend the clinic and referred by their doctors received flu shots from the Pub- lic Health Nurse at home. TB screening tests were offered starting in October to individuals at risk for the disease. Eight- een residents or town employees have received the services. Inspections Food establishments 205 Housing 13 Pools 16 Swimming areas 4 Camps 12 Daycare 1 Demolitions 27 Lead paint 1 Oil spills 2 Indoor air quality 5 Tanning 1 General Assistance 83 Septic abandonment 38 Page 42 Environmental Health Complaints and Nuisances Air Quality 1 Water - surface 8 Water - drinking 5 Solid waste 14 Hazardous waste 8 Housing 18 Food 16 Pools 9 Mosquitoes 16 Smoking 5 Pests /rodents 9 Lead paint 14 EMF 1 Noise pollution 4 Wells 4 Septic 121 Asbestos 4 Animal- Massage 7 Radon 5 Lyme Disease 2 Rabies 2 Encephalitis 1 Other environmental 34 Permits Issued Type Number Animal 25 Asbestos 49 Camps 9 Catering 13 Food 175 Funeral 2 Installers 10 Massage Establishments 16 Massage Therapists 30 Medical Waste Disposal 10 Methyl alcohol 22 Motel/hotel 3 Nursing Homes 4 Pools 23 Wading pools 7 Jacuzzi 1 RDNA 3 Syringe 1 Rubbish Trucks 12 -20 Septage 12 -20 Rest Homes 1 Tanning 1 Temporary Food 47 Role: The board is a quasi-judicial body which grants variances from the Zoning Bylaw, issues special permits for uses as authorized by the bylaw, and hears appeals of decisions made by the Build- ing Commissioner and Zoning Officer. Appointed by the selectmen. Chairman John J. McWeeney, Vice Chairman Ed- win P. Whittemore, Francis W. K. Smith, Robert V. Whitman, Robert F. Sacco. Associate members Nyles N. Barnert, Joseph A. Campbell, Natalie H. Riffin, Arthur C. Smith, Judith J. Uhrig and Lynne C. Wilson. Elinor Greenway is the administrative clerk. In calendar 1997, the board heard: • 41 petitions for variances; granted 34; • 46 petitions for special permits - many of which were renewals; • Two petitions for special permit with site plan approval; • One comprehensive permit for a LexHAB project; • An appeal of a decision by the zoning officer; • One request to extend a variance; • 17 requests to modify special permits. Notable were permits approved to allow the new ball field lights, the Gingerbread Construction Co. bakery, renovating the former Itek facility, a two - family home on Spencer St. by LexHAB and plans for a new office building on Hayden Ave. Three institutions experienced difficulty getting permits to expand: 1. Cary Library withdrew its application in order to put its plans in better shape. 2. The Waldorf School received only partial approval of what it sought. 3. St. Nicholas Church expansion was denied. Board of Appeals Petitions heard by the Board of Appeals in 1997 are listed in the order in which hearings were scheduled. Decisions may have been subject to conditions. For details please see the Town Clerk. January 87 Kendall Rd., Jean L. Parr: granted a five -year renewal of a special permit for a home office. (Expires 1/24/02) 177 Cedar St., Lilly Szonyi: granted a five -year renewal of a special permit for a home office. (Expires 1/25/02) 166 Bedford St., Bstreet Bagels: granted a five -year renewal of a special permit to operate a bagel and sandwich shop. (Expires 1/31/02) 10 Muzzey St., Japonaise Bakery: grant- ed a five -year renewal of a special permit to operate a take -out and fast food service and to increase seating to 15. (Expires 12/31/01) 1386 Massachusetts Ave., Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints: granted a variance from the side yard setback to allow property to be divided into two lots. 150 East St., Doran Farms: granted a six - month renewal of a special permit for a commercial greenhouse and to use the rear of 168 and 172 -174 East Street to mature plants for sale. (Expires 7/30/97) 182 Bedford St., L'Alouette: granted a five -year renewal of a special permit for a take -out food shop and changed hours of operation. (Expires 1/25/02) Vacant lot on Jefferson Ave., Ronald and Alina Garry's appeal was granted and the decision of the Zoning Officer that a, lot located in both Lexington and Arlington is unbuildable was overturned. February 95 Hayden Ave., Fresenius Medical Care withdrew its petition for a special permit for a sign on the third floor to exceed the width restriction. Page 43 7 Juniper Place, Amy and David Goldminz: granted a variance from the front yard setback to add a front vestibule and steps. 9 Pleasant St., Arthur Anthony: granted a variance from the side yard setback for an addition. 727 Marrett Rd., The Flatley Co.: granted a special permit with site plan review (SPS) for 80 additional guest rooms with site improvements at the Sheraton Lexington Inn. 10 Maguire Rd., Nordic Properties: The board determined that the proposed removal of buildings and increase in parking are not minor and a public hearing is required. March 11 Maguire Rd., IDEO Product Develop- ment: granted a special permit to install a sculpture as a standing sign. 32 Ingleside Rd., Andrea Celenza: grant- ed a five -year renewal of a special permit for a home office. (Expires 3/31/02) 386 Lincoln St., Todd Burger: granted a variance from the setback to a side street for a child's treehouse. 498 Waltham St., Douglas Williams: granted a special permit to add a second story to a nonconforming dwelling. 2 Eliot Rd., John and Patricia Sawyer: granted a variance from the side yard setback for a garage. 71 Bow St., Anthony and Dianne Augustine: granted a variance to increase the net floor area of a nonconforming two - family dwelling by adding a two -story addition. A variance from the side yard setback for the addition was denied. April 200 Lincoln St., Anne and Anthony LoRusso: granted a variance from the setback to a side street for an addition. 34 Robbins Rd., Brian and Susan Adamik: granted a variance from the rear yard setback for a one -story addition. 14 Baker Ave., S. Perkins and P. Groskin: granted a variance from the side yard setback for a one -story addition. 64 Reed St., Ben Turk: granted a special permit to add a second dwelling unit to a single- family dwelling. 64 Reed St., Ben Turk withdrew the peti- tion for a variance to allow the entrance to the second dwelling to be located in the front of the dwelling. 10 Woburn St., Gingerbread Construc- tion Co.: granted a one -year special permit for a new fast - food/take -out food establishment and to modify the land- scape screening. (Expires 9/30/98) 10 Woburn St., Gingerbread Construc- tion Co.: granted a special permit for a freestanding sign. 26 Parker St., Bean There Realty Trust: granted modifications to the special permit for additions to the existing dwell- ing with no increase in site coverage. 675 Waltham St., Stone Meadow Golf. The board determined that the proposed shed, fence and parking area are minor and a public hearing is not required. 1040 Waltham St., Center for Mental Health Services. The board determined that the proposed gazebo is minor and a public hearing is not required. 10 Maguire Rd., Nordic Properties: grant- ed modifications to the special permit to increase the number of parking spaces. 8 Rangeway, William and Michelle Bloomer: granted a special permit to add a full -shed dormer to a nonconforming dwelling. 40 Valleyfield St., Andrew and Corrine Lowen: granted a variance from 2.5 -story height restriction to add a full -shed dormer to a two -story dwelling. Board of Appeals 20 -22 Cliffe Ave., Julie -Ann and Eric Shapiro: denied a variance to allow a new driveway and parking spaces to be less than five feet from rear and side lot lines. 150 East St., Doran Farms: granted a two - year renewal of a special permit for a commercial greenhouse and to use the rear of 168 and 172 -174 East Street to mature plants for sale. (Expires 7/30/99) May 2678 Massachusetts Ave., Margo Schmidt: granted a five -year renewal of a special permit for a home office. (Expires 3/31/02) 927 & 945 Waltham St., Nicholas Cannalonga: granted a two -year renewal of a special permit for a nursery, roadside stand and to sell Christmas trees at Wagon Wheels Nursery & Garden Center. (Expires 4/24/99) 1707 Massachusetts Avenue Rear, Belmont Manor Realty Trust: granted a special permit for a tenant directory wall sign to exceed the height restriction. 82 Simonds Rd., A. Craig and R. Bond: granted a special permit to add a second story to a nonconforming dwelling. 2016 Massachusetts Ave., Philip and Janet Hurd: granted variances from the front and side street setbacks to add a garage /family room addition and extend the front porch. 58 Blossomcrest Rd., Yair and Anna Egozy: denied a variance from the side yard setback to add a garage with living space above. 1265 Massachusetts Ave., Seasons Four: The board determined that the change in the standing sign is minor and a public hearing is not required. June 4 Berwick Rd., Daniel McCarthy: grant- ed a variance from 2.5 -story height restriction to add a full -shed dormer to a two -story dwelling. Page 44 135 Massachusetts Ave., Wild Foods, Inc.: granted a one -year special permit for a fast -food and take - out -food busi- ness to be known as Wildberry Deli & CafB (Expires 8/30/98) Worthen Road, Center Field Athletic Recreation Complex. Granted a special permit to install six 70 -foot light poles at the soccer, baseball and softball fields and allow four existing light poles to remain at their present 70 -foot height. 14 Benjamin Rd., Loren Wood: denied a variance from the side yard setback to allow existing decks to remain as con- structed. 14 White Pine Lane, Elizabeth Liao: granted a five -year renewal of a .special permit for a home office. (Expires 6/14/02) 14 White Pine Lane, Timothy Dugan: granted a five -year renewal of a special permit for a home office. (Expires 6/14/02) 44 Forest St., Detlev and Ellen Suderow: granted a special permit to allow a gar- den shed to remain as located. 119 Grant St., Ansel and Louise Davis: postponed to August a hearing for a special permit to add a second dwelling unit to a single - family dwelling. 11 Liberty Ave., Lance and Patricia Linton: granted variances from side and front yard setbacks for a one -story addi- tion. 915 Waltham St., Texaco Station. The board determined that the expansion of the area to sell food is minor and a public hearing is not required. 26 Parker St., Woodhaven Realty. The board determined that the grant of addi- tional land to 6 Jackson Court is minor and a public hearing is not required. 1 Hollow Lane, Phyllis Houvouras: grant- ed a variance from the rear yard setback to add a bay window. 80 Westview St., Colin Richardson. Hear- ings for variances and special permits to allow construction of an office building in the CM District continued to July. 409 Massachusetts Ave., Lexington Toyo- ta. The board determined that the pro- posed paving of the landscaped buffer strip abutting the residence at 443 Mass Avenue is not minor and a public hearing is required. 750 Marrett Rd., Battleroad Limited Partnership. The board determined that the installation of an AT &T wireless telephone base station on the roof of the One Cranberry Hill building is minor and a public hearing will not be required. 95 Hayden Ave., Fresenius Medical Care. The board determined that the installation of a canopy structure to cover the walkway from the parking garage and two stairwells is minor and a public hearing is not required. July 3 Abbott Rd., Jane Forsyth: granted a five -year renewal of a special permit for a home office. (Expires 7/31/02) 18 Lockwood Rd., Gail Leichtman: grant- ed variances from the front and side street setbacks to add a deck to a noncon- forming dwelling. 41 Ledgelawn Ave., Joyce and Normal Dufault: granted a front -yard setback variance to add a dormer with overhang. 8 Rangeway, William Bloomer. The board determined that the addition of a full -shed dormer is a minor revision to the special permit and no public hearing is required. 80 Westview St., Colin Richardson: grant- ed variances from dimensional controls in the CM District to allow construction of an office building. 80 Westview St., Colin Richardson: granted special permits to modify transi- tion area landscape screening and park- ing lot design for a proposed office build- Board of Appeals ing in the CM District. 154 Bedford St., Kimberly and Mark Sutton: granted variances from the side yard setback and to increase the net floor area of a nonconforming two - family dwelling by adding a deck with storage area below. 26 Richard Rd., Stephen & Barbara Abra- mo: granted a special permit to add a sec- ond story to a nonconforming dwelling. August 119 Grant St., Ansel and Louise Davis: granted a special permit to add a second dwelling unit to a single - family dwelling. 1646 Massachusetts Ave., Spaulding Management: granted a special permit for a free - standing sign. 29 Hartwell Ave., McGraw -Hill Com- panies: denied a special permit for a free- standing tenant directory sign. 15 Nichols Rd., Robert Fusunyan: grant- ed a special permit to add a second story and front vestibule to a nonconforming home with no increase in site coverage. 61 School St., Daniel McDonough: grant- ed a variance from the front yard setback to extend the front porch of a noncon- forming dwelling. 16 Hayden Ave., 16 Hayden Avenue Realty Trust: granted a special permit with site plan review (SPS) to construct a medical office building on a 2.15 acre lot, rezoned CD -8, and to install a free- standing entry sign. September 55 Hayden Ave., Spaulding & Slye. The board determined that the change in the free - standing entrance sign is minor and a public hearing will not be required. 30 Middle St., James Martin: granted a special permit to replace a nonconform- ing shed with a smaller shed. 25 Theresa Ave., Paul Rahilly: granted a variance from the front yard setback for a one -story addition to a barn. Page 45 212 Marrett Rd., Mark Houghton: grant- ed a variance to expand a nonconforming two - family dwelling by converting a barn into a recreation room and adding a deck and covered porch. 5 Augustus Rd., Neil Saveriano: granted a variance from the front yard setback for new front steps. 65 Munroe Rd., J. Riera and A. Saltz: granted a variance from the front yard setback to add a two -car garage and enlarge and cover the front entry. 17 Meriam St., St. Nicholas Orthodox Church: denied variances from front, side and rear yard setbacks and off - street parking requirements for additions to the church building. October 29 Volunteer Way, Nancy and Ronald Hubert: granted a six -month extension of a variance for new front entrance. (Expires 3/24/98) 95 Hayden Ave., The Beal Companies. The board determined that the installa- tion of an exterior generator is minor and a public hearing is not required. 739 Massachusetts Ave., The Waldorf School: granted a special permit for a free - standing sign on a temporary basis for special events at the school. 31 Wyman Rd., Nachman Cohen: grant- ed a one -year special permit for a home office. 45 Lincoln St., K. Arnold & G. Dulac: granted a variance from 2.5 story residen- tial height restriction to add front and rear dormers to a two -story dwelling. 9 Ellison Rd., Geoffrey and Margaret Wade: granted a variance from the side yard setback for an addition and chimney. 55 Ledgelawn Ave., D. Cusanello & K. Manickas: granted variances from front and side yard setbacks for a two -story addition and new entry. 1874 Massachusetts Ave., Cary Memor- ial Library. A hearing for variances from dimensional controls, transition area screening and off - street parking require- ments for expansion of the library was postponed and later withdrawn. 55 Hayden Ave., Spaulding & Slye. The board determined that the relocation of the curtain wall is minor and a public hearing is not required. 544 Lowell St., Plant Action: granted a 5- year renewal of a special permit for a commercial greenhouse. (Expires 12/9/02) 17 Locke Lane, Jill- Laurie and Joseph Crane: granted a one -year special permit for a home office. (Expires 10/30/98) 6 Tufts Rd., Eugene Radzihovsky: grant- ed a special permit to allow 125 cu. yds of fill to remain on the property. 38 Outlook Dr., L. Schiffman and P. Joseph: denied a variance from the side yard setback for a mudroom with a 2.5 foot side yard setback. 17 Fletcher Ave., Joseph Rice: granted variances from front yard setback for a two -story addition, porch and front steps. 24 Balfour St., Joyce Peseroff: granted a variance from side yard setback for a garden shed. 135 Massachusetts Ave., Wildberry Deli & Cafe. The board determined that the change in opening hours to serve break- fast is minor and a public hearing is not required. 55 Hayden Ave., Spaulding & Slye. The board determined that the installation of an air conditioning unit on the roof is minor and a public hearing is not required. November 319 Marrett Rd., Glenn Eric's Deli: granted a five -year renewal of a special permit to operate a take -out and fast -food Board of Appeals service. (Expires 8/8/02) 17 Hartwell Ave., Boston Properties: granted a special permit for a free- standing sign. 703 Massachusetts Ave., The Waldorf School: granted a variance from the rear yard setback for a 2 -1/2 story classroom addition to convert the building into a high school. A variance from the front yard setback was denied to restore the historic front porch. December 343 Marrett Rd., Christine Klostermann: granted a five -year renewal of a special permit for a home office. (Expires 8/15/02) 47 Rindge Ave., Les Wallerstein: granted a five -year renewal of a special permit for a home office. (Expires 12/31/02) 10 Donald St., Edward Griffin: granted a special permit to add dormers to the front and rear of a nonconforming dwelling. 318 Lincoln St., Marianne and David Carpenter: granted a variance from the side yard setback for a two -car garage. 32 Cedar St., Richard and Janice Valliere: denied a variance for a fence to exceed six feet along the lot line. 32 Wachusett Dr., Rose and John Scampini: granted a variance from the side yard setback for a two -story addi- tion. 2 & 3 Spencer St., Lexington Housing Assistance Board (LexHAB): granted a local initiative comprehensive permit for a two - family dwelling. 1709 Massachusetts Ave., Stone Soup Grill & Cafe. The board determined that the change in ownership for a restaurant is minor and a public hearing is not required. Board of Appeals: Seated, Francis W.K. Smith, Vice Chairman Edwin P. Whittemore, Chairman John J. McWeeney, Carolyn C. Wilson, Robert V. Whitman, Robert F. Sacco. Standing, Nyles N. Barnert, Natalie N. Riffin, Joseph A. Campbell, Arthur C. Smith. Photo: Ray Barnes. Page 46 FY97 FY96 Payroll $127,945 $126,999 Expenses 6,614 6,613 Personnel - Full Time 3 3 Elected: Board Members; Anthony G. Galaitsis elected, 1997, to a five -year term. Steven L. Colman will serve on the Board until 2001; John L. Davies, Clerk, until 2000; Frederick L. Merrill, Jr., Vice Chairman, until 1999. Chairman Richard L. Canale's term ends in March, 1998. Appointed: Robert A. Bowyer, Director, appointed by the Town Manager, 1980. Joseph A. Marino, Assistant Planner, Elissa M. Tap, Department Clerk. Commercial Development The Board issued a report, Commercial Development in the CRO, CM and CD Zoning Districts, that is a product of: 1. its work on the Land Use Element of the Comprehensive Plan, 2. the four -town planning study involv- ing other Hanscom Area (HATS) towns, 3. the town's need to raise real estate taxes from commercially zoned property. The Board's recommendations to Town Meeting relied primarily on an analysis of potential impacts and benefits of pro- posed commercial development. To deal with growing suburban traffic congestion, transportation planners rec- ognize that attempting to endlessly build more roadways is expensive, disruptive to already developed properties, environ- mentally unsound and likely ineffective. The board adopted a Transportation De- mand Management Policy that shifts the focus of meeting transportation needs to techniques affecting demand for travel.. The Policy seeks to reduce the use of sin- gle- occupant automobiles while encour- aging greater use of car pools and public transportation. The board will not make a favorable recommendation on a rezoning proposal unless it includes a Transport- ation Demand Management Plan. Planning Board Planning Board: seated, Chairman Richard L. Cana /e, John L. Davies, Frederick L. Merrill, Jr., Steven L. Colman. Standing, Anthony Galaitsis, elected in '97, Planning Director Robert Bowyer, Asst Director Joseph A. Marino. Photo: Ray Barnes. New Single- Family Houses 1990 -1997* Number Built Per Year Year In -fill Replace- Subdi- Total * January through May only. In -fill: house built on a vacant lot in an existing neighborhood. Replacement: house built on a lot made vacant by demolishing an old house in an existing neighborhood "a tear down." Subdivision: house built on a new lot on a new street. In response to concerns expressed by residents about the increasing number of large houses being built in Lexington, es- pecially those built on lots where exist- ing small homes were demolished, the Page 47 Planning Board produced an analytical report entitled New, Larger Houses in Existing Neighborhoods. Data developed by the Planning Department indicates that "tear downs" - demolishing existing houses and constructing new, larger sin- gle- family houses in their place - is be- coming a principal source of lots for new residential construction. Replacements are approximately 2.5 times larger and more valuable than the houses torn down. There are two classes of problems in attempting to provide some "solution" to tear downs. The architectural part deals with the physical characteristics of the new house - the size, bulk, height, shad- ow, and conceivably its design. Those can normally be addressed through zon- ing. But the State Zoning Act limits the extent to which existing lots and houses can be regulated. The socio- economic part of the problem deals with the income needed to purchase the new house, the effect on real estate values in the neighborhood and the reduction in the supply of more reason- ably priced housing. There is little a mu- nicipalty can do to deal directly with theprice of housing by regulation. ment vision 1990 13 4 6 23 1991 4 3 17 24 1992 7 5 10 22 1993 10 10 7 27 1994 15 16 11 42 1995 9 14 11 34 1996 17 19 19 55 1997 5 7 4 16 Totals 80 78 85 243 * January through May only. In -fill: house built on a vacant lot in an existing neighborhood. Replacement: house built on a lot made vacant by demolishing an old house in an existing neighborhood "a tear down." Subdivision: house built on a new lot on a new street. In response to concerns expressed by residents about the increasing number of large houses being built in Lexington, es- pecially those built on lots where exist- ing small homes were demolished, the Page 47 Planning Board produced an analytical report entitled New, Larger Houses in Existing Neighborhoods. Data developed by the Planning Department indicates that "tear downs" - demolishing existing houses and constructing new, larger sin- gle- family houses in their place - is be- coming a principal source of lots for new residential construction. Replacements are approximately 2.5 times larger and more valuable than the houses torn down. There are two classes of problems in attempting to provide some "solution" to tear downs. The architectural part deals with the physical characteristics of the new house - the size, bulk, height, shad- ow, and conceivably its design. Those can normally be addressed through zon- ing. But the State Zoning Act limits the extent to which existing lots and houses can be regulated. The socio- economic part of the problem deals with the income needed to purchase the new house, the effect on real estate values in the neighborhood and the reduction in the supply of more reason- ably priced housing. There is little a mu- nicipalty can do to deal directly with theprice of housing by regulation. Planning Board South Lexington Development Two rezoning petitions for additional commer- cial development were approved by Town Meeting in 1997; a proposal for a medical office building at 16 Hayden Avenue, and rezoning the former W. R. Grace property at 55 Hayden Avenue to include additional office space. A majority of the Planning Board op- posed rezoning for the medical office building and supported the 55 Hayden Ave. proposal. However, Town Meeting passed the medical building request at its spring meeting, and the other at a Special Town Meeting in November. In both cases, traffic mitigation require- ments included the use of police officers to control traffic on Hayden Ave. intersec- tions and Transportation Demand Man- agement Plans. Hanscom Area Planning The Planning Board was actively involved in planning around Hanscom Field. Chairman Rich- ard Canale headed "Topic Review Com- mittees" that analyzed the Generic Envir- onmental Impact Report of real estate development scenarios for Hanscom Field prepared for Massport. The board and department staff participated in an unprecedented Four -Town (Bedford, Con- cord, Lexington, Lincoln) Master Plan- ning process. 1998 should focus on devel- oping an implementation plan for the Draft Master Plan prepared by Daylor Associates for the four towns. "Magic" Planning Region Lexington has changed its affiliation to a planning subregion of the Metropolitan Area Planning Council (MAPC) to the Minuteman Advisory Group for Intergov- ernmental Cooperation (MAGIC) that includes towns in the Route 2 Corridor. Lexington had been in the North Sub- urban Planning Council, towns along Route 128 from Burlington to Lynnfield. The Planning Board reports referred to above may be read at the Town's web site: http: / /link.ci.lexington.ma.us New dwellings built, 1997: 7 one - family houses in subdivisions 10 one - family houses on existing vacant lots 21 one - family houses built on lots where the previous house was demolished Subdivision Plans Approved,1997: 94 Adams Street at Brent Road, 2 units Sketch Plans presented 22 Revere Street, 1 housing unit 155 Old Spring Street, near Concord Avenue, 2 housing units 160 -170 Old Smith Farm, Wood Street, 7 housing units Street Improvements Approved, 1997 James Street, 1 housing unit Kimball Road, 1 housing unit 2 Carl Road, 1 housing unit Permanent Building Committee Role: To provide ongoing expertise and experience in managing design and con- struction of all Town building projects. Includes hiring professional assistants, obtaining bids and entering into contracts for plans, specifications and completion of construction. Can participate in legal actions to defend the Town's interests. Established 1967. Appointed by the Town Manager for three -year overlapping terms. Chairman William R. Bruckman, Peter Johnson, Peter Kelley, Philip Poinelli, Mary Lou Touart. Members appointed by client; for schools, Jonathan Himmel; for library, Walter Pierce and Jay Lucker. Expended: For school projects, using Town Manager and School budgets: $6,818 for records and reports $33,010 for Owner's Representative. Highlights: Supervised plans for expand- ing all nine schools and packaging the project into two phases prior to the Octo- ber Special Town Meeting. Fay DeAvig- non, Owners Representative, was hired in August to assist committee in evaluating plans, to serve as liaison between the schools and HMFH (the architect), keep the project on schedule and save money. Authorized $9,500 for HMFH to com- plete design for Hastings School, where enrollment pressure is greatest. Met jointly with Cary Library Building Committee. Held 67 meetings totalling 162 hours. r Permanent Building Committee: Front, Erna Greene, Clerk, and Mary Lou Touart. Back, Philip Poinelli, Peter Kelley, and Peter Johnson. Not shown, Chairman William Bruckner. Photo: Ray Barnes. Page 48 Conservation Commission FY97 FY96 Payroll: $63,885 $60,439 Personnel: Full Time 1 1 Part Time Role: Protects and maintains the environ- ment for people and wildlife in Lexinton through land acquisition and manage- ment. Administers and enforces the State Wetlands Protection Act and the Town's Bylaw for Wetland Protection. Most of its time and effort is directed toward protecting wetlands and riparian areas by educating and working with homeowners and developers. The commission was established in 1963. Appointed by the Town Manager, with the approval of the Selectmen, for over- lapping three -year terms: Chairman Joyce Miller, Vice - Chairman Robert Stewart, Lisa Baci, Bebe Fallick, Angela Frick, Philip Hamilton, Richard Wolk. Actions: The Commission acted on 23 Notice of Intents, eight Amendments to Order of Conditions, 24 Requests for Determina- tions, three Emergency Certifications and one Enforcement Order. Highlights: The Commission worked with: • Tom Sileo in completing the Open Space and Recreation Plan required by the state. • Conservation stewards who monitor and maintain more than 1300 acres . • The Citizens for Lexington Conserva- tion which supports conservation issues. • The Community Gardening Program. • A summer crew builds and clears trails, builds bridges and provides gener- al maintenance on the conservation land. • State's Department of Environmental Protection and the US Army Corps of En- gineers for protecting wetlands in the Town. Conservation Commission: Front, Lisa Baci, Joyce Miller, Bebe Fallick, back, Robert Stewart, Philip Hamilton, Administrator Marilyn Nordby and Clerk Linda Gaudet., Photo: Ray Barnes. Page 49 Approved at 1997 Town Meeting: • Article 25, changes to the Town Wet- lands By -Law. Vernal pools and their buffer zones, and land subject to flood- ing, protected; applicants made responsi- ble for notifying abutters about projects due for commission review; control of erosion and sedimentation, and protec- tion of recreation, added to the list to which proposed work may be significant. Commission representatives: • Lisa Baci represented the LCC on the HATS Committee on environmental issues associated with Hanscom Field expansion. • Angela Frick represented the LCC on the Minute -Man Bikeway Advisory Com- mittee and the Middlesex County Land Use Task Force. • Phil Hamilton and Robert Stewart rep- resented the LCC on the Land Acquisi- tion Committee. • Lisa Baci, Bebe Fallick and Joyce Miller represented the LCC on The Snow Storage Committee. Associate Commissioners: • Paul Riffin, Community Gardens • David Williams, Land Acquisition Committee • David Langseth, hydrology consultant • Caleb Warner, Cambridge Watershed Advisory Committee • Kay Tiffany, Massport and Hanscom liaison Conservation Land Inventory Summary 1964 -1997 Year(s) Reimbursements Net Cost Voted/Given Acres Total Cost Federal State to Town Total Land Acquisition 1289.8 $5,377,786 $335,406 $1,199,031 $3,843,349 Cataldo Reservation '74'84* 5.4 6,150 - - -- - - -- 6,150 Great Meadow Expansion '74'82 1.9 3,857 - - -- - - -- 3,857 Lillian Rd @ Munroe Brk '92 1.1 transfer - - -- -- - - - - -- Orchard Crossing '88'89# 8.5 gift - - -- - - -- - - -- Whipple Hill '63'66- 7'74'77 *'94 #'95# 121 142,489 47,487 35,020 59,982 Bowman Park Expansion '75 1.2 18,000 - - -- 9,000 9,000 Daisy Wilson '78 8 75,995 - - -- 37,997 37,998 Dunback Meadow '65-6'72'77-8-9'80-1 *# 170.5 374,147 87,100 87,050 199,997 Liberty Heights '74* 5.5 9,596 - - -- 4,618 4,978 West Farm '66'76'77'85* 12.8 323,000 - - -- 12,100 310,900 Brookhaven 189# 3.3 gift - - -- - - -- - - -- Concord Avenue Area '71'79 #'94# 30.7 102,890 - - -- 49,534 53,356 Hayden Woods '69'77 -8'81* 78.9 152,598 68,304 38,540 45,754 Juniper Hill '70'72'74# 28.4 120,413 - - -- 56,872 63,541 Metropolitan State Hospital '73# 6.2 gift - - -- - - -- - - -- Philbrook Terrace '89# 2 gift - - -- - - -- - - -- Waltham Line '77* 12 transfer - - -- - - -- - - -- Waltham Street Farms '7276 -7 4 41.5 300,450 - - -- 154,225 146,225 Upper Vine Brook '72'75 -6'95* 34 121,443 - - -- 55,803 65,640 Lwr Vine Brook/Pinard Woods '68- 97578481'85 4 98.5 339,235 42,069 147,200 149,966 Munroe Brook Pond '85# 3.1 gift - - -- - - -- - - -- Pheasant Brook Estates I '85'89# 4.6 gift - - -- - - -- - - -- Pheasant Brook Estates 11 190# 29.7 gift - - -- - - -- - - -- Shaker Glen '73 16.8 85,636 - - -- 41,143 44,493 Tower Park Expansion '87 2.3 180,000 - - -- - - -- 180,000 Chiesa Farm '76'85 23.1 1,592,500 - - -- 46,125 1,546,375 Hammer Hill '79 0.9 gift - - -- - - -- - - -- Parker Meadow '76'79'80 17.7 237,000 - - -- 60,000 177,000 Willard's Woods Exp '64'66'67'79 *95* 103.2 116,786 32,906 17,997 65,883 Woodland Bird Sanctuary '89# 7.2 gift - - -- - - -- - - -- Burlington Strip '71'77* 8.6 106,097 - - -- - - -- 106,097 Paint Mine '75'77* 35.5 8,811 - - -- 2,000 6,811 Simonds Brook North '70'76 -7'82# 57.7 291,736 38,526 131,600 121,610 Simonds Brook South '68'70'79 20.7 49,028 19,014 12,006 18,008 Turning Mill Pond '77'78'85# 9.7 5,000 - - -- - - -- 5,000 Turning Mill Road '89# 4.4 gift - - -- - - -- - - -- Hastings Sanctuary Meagherville/Pine Meadow '71 '66'77 *#95* 1.7 90 6,000 gift/transfer - - -- - - -- - - -- - - -- 6,000 - - -- Meagherville Lots '91 #'93 #'94# 0.5 gift - - -- - - -- - - -- Poor Farm '83* 10.7 transfer - - -- - - -- - - -- Valley Road '82* 3.2 transfer - - -- - - -- - - -- 128 Greenbelt '78* 11.7 transfer - - -- - - -- - - -- Bates Road 191* 9.3 transfer - - -- - - -- - - -- Cranberry Hill '77 24.6 73,929 - - -- 15,201 58,728 Fiske Hill '78'84* 10.2 transfer - - -- - - -- - - -- Idylwilde '75 9.4 200,000 - - -- 100,000 100,000 Katandin Woods '77'80'89# 37.5 185,000 - - -- 85,000 100,000 Tophet Swamp '81 * 25.5 transfer - - -- - - -- - - -- Sutherland Woods '95* 24.9 transfer - - -- - - -- - - -- Brown Homestead '95* 6 trade - - -- - - -- - - -- Augusta Land '96 8 150,000 - - -- - - -- 150,000 * All /part Town -owned transfer # All /part gift Another 150 acres are protected by restrictions and easements given to the town by residents. The largest are: Munroe Brook, 65.7 acres; Tophet Swamp /Kiln Brook, 34.3 acres; Potter's Pond, 15.1 acres; and Vine Brook, 9 acres. The others are small tracts ranging on down to 0.1 acre. Boston Edison Company licenses 26.4 acres. Page 50 Building /Inspection Department Role: The Building Division of the Dept. of Inspectional Services enforces: State Building Code Uniform State Plumbing and Gas Code State Mechanical Code State Electrical Code Architectural Access Board Regulations Lexington Zoning By -Law This involves plan review, permit issu- ance, and inspection of all building, elec- trical, plumbing, gas and mechanical con- struction, including new structures, addi- tions, alterations and repairs. Building Commissioner: Steven R. Fred- erickson, P. E. Appointed by the Town Manager: full - time Inspector of Wires, part-time Plumb- ing/ Gas/ Mechanical Inspector, part-time Building Inspector, part-time Zoning En- forcement Officer, part-time Sealer of Weights and Measures and full -time Department Clerk. FY97 Budget Expenditures: $254,314 Highlights: Construction continued act- ive in 1997. Several one - family homes were completed in new subdivisions on Fox Run Lane, Granger Pond Way, Cur- rier Court, Johnson Farm Road and Litch- field Road. Several single family struc- tures were constructed on scattered sites. New commercial construction includes an office building and detached parking structure at 210 Spring St. The parking structure was completed in 1997 and the offices are anticipated early in 1998. A vacant gas station at 10 Woburn Street was converted to the Gingerbread Con- struction Co. and opened late in 1997. Other Actions: Office rearrangements for new tenants were frequent in 1997. The recent phenomenon involving the demolition of existing houses and the construction of new larger houses on scattered sites continues. Itek Corp. vacated 10 Maguire Road; demolition and alterations have begun, to make way for new tenants. Comments: The Building Division is al- so responsible for enforcing the State Architectural Access Board regulations on handicapped accessibility. Any issues re. access by the handicapped to build- ings are handled by this division. The Sealer of Weights and Measures works under the jurisdiction of the Build- ing Division, determining accuracy of all weighing and measuring devices in com- mercial and public use in the Town. Total Permit Activity Year Bldg Elec Plbg Reported Single Multi Additions Additions, Residential 188 Swimming Pools 4 Value* Family Family 272 1997 961 949 975 $34,357,867 40 3 766 1996 952 968 1242 $37,263,844 56 2 805 1995 867 908 1236 $32,935,035 35 1 742 1994 858 926 831 $30,917,312 42 3 * ** 729 1993 792 857 698 $29,674,410 27 7 ** 709 *Actual construction valuation is higher. ** Lexington Ridge (198 apartments) ** *Locke Village (3 buildings; 62 condo units) Breakdown of Building Permits New Units, Residential 43 Repairs /Alterations 225 New Units, Commercial 0 Stoves 9 Additions, Residential 188 Swimming Pools 4 Additions, Commercial 10 Roofing/Siding 272 Miscellaneous 189 Garages /Carports 11 Sheds 10 Lexington Center Commitee: Front, Judy Uhrig, David Williams, Janet Tiampo; back, Bigelow Moore, Morton Kahan, Robert Burbidge and Steve Hurley. The com- mittee, appointed by the selectmen, advises on plans and projects affecting downtown businesses. Photo: Ray Barnes. Page 51 Design Advisory Committee Role: To assist the selectmen and other boards, merchants and citizens in apply- ing professional design standards to new buildings, renovations, signage, lighting and landscape improvements. Appointed by the selectmen for one year terms. Chairman John Frey, Clerk Elizabeth Whitman, Karen Bechtel, Stacey Bridge - Denzat, Thomas Coffman, Bruce Creager, Barbara Hulsizer, Steven Hurley, Carl Oldenburg. Associate Members Richard Friedson, Jonathan Longley, Walter Pierce, Robert Stigberg. Expenditures: None Highlights: Recommended approval of IDEO sign/ - sculpture, Hartwell Ave. & Maguire Rd. Made substantive recommendations for revising Sheraton's site plan for expan- sion on Marrett Rd. John Frey and Tom Coffman appointed to Emery Park/Depot Sq. design review committee. Assisted Gingerbread Construction Co. in finalizing their design. Sign Guidelines were prepared for, and approved by selectmen; guide will be distributed to applicants by the Board of Appeals staff. Studied "traffic calming" measures for Harrington Rd. and mockup of a speed bump at the DPW yard. Reviewed newspaper vending machines. Reviewed Spaulding and Slye expansion plans and sign for site at 55 Hayden Ave. Recommended sign at Seasons Four on Massachusetts Avenue be approved. Negotiated signage reduction at US Trust on Hartwell Ave.; recommended appro- val of final plan. Advised that location for Pet Mania sign differed from the Commission's intent. Recommended disapproval of St. Nich- olas Church expansion beyond by -law setbacks on Meriam St. Continued to review building and site designs for Cary Library. Recommended approval of temporary signs at Waldorf School on Mass. Ave. Advised on parking layout and land- scape screening for 80 Westview St. Advised and recommended approval of simplified design for Boston Properties sign at 17 Hartwell Ave. Advised Mail Boxes, Etc., on signage at Waltham St. Recommended DPW remove shrubbery blocking sight lines on the traffic island at Bedford and Hancock Streets. Design Advisory Committee: Standing, Assoc. Robert Stigberg, Carl Oldenburg, John Frey, Thomas Coffman, Bruce Creager, Assoc. Jonathan Longley. Seated, Barbara Hulsizer, Betsey Whitman, John Davies, Planning Board liaison, Karen Bechtel and Stacy Bridge - Denzat. Photo: Ray Barnes. Recreation Department Director: Karen Simmons, appointed by the Town Manager, 1996 Recreation Committee, appointed by Town Manager with Selectmen approval: Sandra Shaw, Chair, Pamela Varrin, Vice - chair, Don Chisholm, Paul Keane Rick DeAngelis. Page 52 Highlights: • Work underway to improve irrigation at Pine Meadows Golf Club, including dredging the lower pond and installing wells to improve the water supply. • The improvement plan for Pine Meadows was scaled back in response to town -wide fiscal concerns. The course continued to be well used. Management was excellent. • A new sand volleyball court was con- structed on Lincoln Field in response to community interest. League play will begin in spring, 1998. FY 1997 Expended $ 1,281,203 Expenses: $ 898,535 (includes transfers to General Fund) Payroll: $ 335,958 Capital Items: $ 46,710 Director: Karen Simmons, appointed by the Town Manager, 1996 Recreation Committee, appointed by Town Manager with Selectmen approval: Sandra Shaw, Chair, Pamela Varrin, Vice - chair, Don Chisholm, Paul Keane Rick DeAngelis. Page 52 Highlights: • Work underway to improve irrigation at Pine Meadows Golf Club, including dredging the lower pond and installing wells to improve the water supply. • The improvement plan for Pine Meadows was scaled back in response to town -wide fiscal concerns. The course continued to be well used. Management was excellent. • A new sand volleyball court was con- structed on Lincoln Field in response to community interest. League play will begin in spring, 1998. Recreation Department (continued) • Needed repairs started on the Center Pool Complex; resurfacing the main pool and repairing the diving pool. • Funding for Recreation Capital projects are supported by Recreation Enterprise Funds only when directly related to fee - generating programs — aquatics, tennis and Pine Meadows Golf Club. Non -rev- enue generating Recreation Capital pro- jects will be supported by the tax levy. • The Recreation and Open Space Plan was completed in partnership with the Conservation Commission; it can be used to apply for state funding for land pur- chases. This document inventories recrea- tion and conservation lands, how lands are used by citizens, and requirements to maintain and protect these resources. • Recreation programming continued re- sponsive to community needs. Swim tags sold out this summer, swim classes were filled, tennis programs expanded, and col- laborative programs designed with the Council on Aging and the Police Depart- ment Youth Diversion Program. An In- ternship Program was developed, training in Therapeutic Recreation, Recreation Management, and Recreation and Leisure Studies. • Recreation continues to work closely with community groups to respond to their needs and share the financial burden for projects not always affordable. Examples: 1) Collaboration with Lexington Youth Soccer in which LYS provides supple- mentary field maintenance, as well as tak- ing on irrigation at Adams field. 2) Providing support to the Lexington Lights Project, a citizen's group which raised money to complete and improve the lighting at the Center Baseball and Softball fields. • Increased participation in soccer, junior lacrosse and other field sports severely taxed our fields. Plans to add fields at the Hennessey site sparked a lively discus- sion with the neighborhood about alterna- tive uses and the value of passive recrea- tion. The search for solutions to the field crunch continues. Comments: Collaboration was a theme for this year, with projects marked by cooperation between departments, public - private partnerships, creative problem - solving, working with citizen participa- tion and input, and exploring a variety of ways to fund projects in times of fiscal constraint, while keeping the spirit of public recreation. Another sign of spring is the annual Little League Parade, just one of the many activities involving the Recreation Department Page 53 Bikeway Committee Role: To advise the selectmen on bike routes in the town, bikeway preservation and expansion, and the harmonious and safe use for all non - motorized transporta- tion modes. Appointed by the selectmen. Chairman Marita Hartshorn, Jerry Van Hook, Bob Sawyer, Coleen Haggerty, Harvey Bingham and John Frey. Highlights: • Lobbied to have existing levels of support (one percent of the gas tax) dedicated to intermodal transportation corridors; • Recommended commuter bikeway along Hartwell Ave.; • Increased number of bike racks in the center; • Surveyed bikeway abutters to assess their needs; -Recommended a push button traffic light at the Bikeway and Bedford Street • Supported Greenway Project site analy- sis aimed at making the bikeway a linear park; the state awarded the town a $4,000 grant toward this purpose. • Made recommendations on the Maple Street bridge, coordinated the stewards program and recommended shower for bicycle commuters at 55 Hayden Ave. The committee coordinates its activities with the Friends of the Bikeway; Chairman Jerry Van Hook. Bikeway Committee Bikeway Committee: front, Angela Frick, Marita Hartshorn, John Frey, back, Colleen Haggerty, Harvey Bingham and Sandra Shaw. Photo: Ray Barnes. Another team effort completed this LexHAB home on Grandview Ave in 1997. LexHAB bought the materials, the Rotary Club chipped in with techni- cal and trade assistance and Minuteman Tech students did the work, under faculty supervision. Photo: LexHAB. Page 54 LexHAB Role: To provide affordable housing for low- and moderate - income families Appointed by the selectmen for overlap- ping three year terms: Chairman Marsh- all Derby, David Eagle, William Hays, Gerry Howell, Eleanor Klauminzer, Don- ald Wilson, and Martha Wood; Joan Wall, office manager. LexHAB does not receive funding from the town. It operates with funds internal- ly generated from rental income on its 43 properties. All units, except for six given to it by the former Interfaith Housing, are owned free and clear of debt. Highlights • Grandview Ave. scattered -site home completed. • Town and State approvals received for two - family home on Spencer St. • Selectmen approved a Sedge Rd. project; it will come before the 1998 Town Meeting for land transfer approval. • Town Meeting continued its support of LexHAB's affordable housing goals. At the 1996 Town Meeting, the town purchased the Augusta land near Maple St. As part of that negotiation, LexHAB agreed to purchase, for $125,000, an op- tion for a parcel at the end of Spencer St. LexHAB exercised its option and went through a Local Initiative Comprehen- sive Permit process to get the necessary permits to build a two - family home. After extensive neighborhood meetings, LexHAB received approvals from the selectmen, State Department of Housing and Community Development and the Board of Appeals. Construction is sched- uled to start in the Spring of 1998. LexHAB evaluated a portion of school property along the Sedge Rd. entrance to Diamond Middle School and found it an excellent site for its scattered -site hous- ing program. The School Committee and selectmen agreed. At the 1998 Town Meeting, approval to transfer the parcel from the schools will be sought so that a one - family home can be built on the site. LexHAB (continued) Single family homes are built through a collaborative effort of Minuteman Tech, the Lexington Rotary Club and LexHAB. Minuteman students construct a house, under teacher supervision, as part of their hands -on education. Rotary members pro- vide technical and trade assistance. Lex- HAB buys required materials and trades. Town Meeting, at its 1997 Spring session, twice restated its support of LexHAB; by turning down two articles, one that would have required Town meeting approval for any LexHAB development on town -owned land, and another that would have LexHAB make in -lieu tax payments on its housing units. At this time, LexHAB has 43 dwelling units: • Thirty -three units; 7 one - bedroom, 23 two- bedroom and 3 three- bedroom units in four developments; • Ten single family homes; 1 two bedroom, 2 three- bedroom and 7 four bedroom units. LexHAB also serves the town by admin- istering the Muzzey Condominium resale restrictions, by being the reporting board for privately developed residences con- taining affordable units and by comment- ing on proposed residential developments that include affordable components. Also, LexHAB is represented on the Lex- ington Community Reinvestment Act Committee and the Middlesex County Hospital Ad -Hoc Committee. Lexington Housing Authority Role: Established by Town Meeting in 1965 to provide housing for low income people through state and federal grants. Rental income applied to operating expenses. Acting Director: Annette L. Carroll, appointed in 1996 by the Authority. Elected Authority Members, serving five_ year terms; Chairman Donald D. Wilson, Vice Chairman Leona W. Martin, Treasurer John E. Ryan, Assist- ant Treasurer Nicholas Santosuosso. Appointed by the state in 1997, Sandra Aghababian. Highlights: Renovations on 17 scattered site homes continued, financed in 1996 by a federal grant of $345,000. The authority administers 208 units of elderly housing, 18 one - family homes, one two - family home, seven condo units, 4 homes for the handicapped, 68 Section 8 Certificates, 10 MRVP vouchers and 12 Dept. of Mental Health vouchers. Page 55 Employee Honor Roll Lexington's Employee Recognition Day was November sixth, honoring those who have served the town the longest. Altogether, there were 33, excluding the school department, who have worked 10 or more years in the community. 35 Years Nadine Kostriza Library 30 Years Coleman Connolly DPW Daniel Hoag Police James Kilmartin Police 25 Years Donald Adams DPW George Anderson Police Kenneth Donnelly Fire Elinor Greenway Board of Appeals Anthony Mongelli DPW John Tobias Fire Thomas White DPW 20 Years Christopher Casey Police Paul Clear Police Wikje Feteris Library 15 Years George Barry DPW James Cataldo DPW Francis Fields Engineering Alan Hartman DPW Robert O'Keefe Fire Barry Rose DPW Kenneth Tremblay Fire 10 Years Paul Bates Fire Louise Clark Library Charles Crayton Police John Daley Fire Kevin Garvey Fire Margaret Gentile Revenue Phyllis Herda Library Genevieve Hurny Library John Jelley DPW Steven Musto Police Julie Triessl Library Richard White Town Manager Social Services - C.O.A. COA Role: To provide services and pro- grams for seniors 60 and above. The num- ber of older adults in town continues to grow. Seniors 60 and over comprised 24 percent of the population as of July 1997. The Senior Center provides for this broad constituency. Appointed by the Town Manager; Coun- cil on Aging (COA) Board: Chairman Clark Cowen, Phyllis Rand, Gene Isotti, John Curry, Barbara Rubin, Jacqueline Davison, Edmund Grant, Jack Fisher, Margaret Jemison, Ann Kriebel and Sheldon Spector. Nancy Freed appointed Director in October 1996. Expenditures FY97 FY96 Payroll 106,748 91,375 Expenses 155,061 113,921 Personnel Full Time 5 5 Part Time 5 7 Community Programs • New recreational programs included chair massage and a New Years gala. • The Senior Volunteer Corps mobilizes active elders, especially newly retired, to work as skilled volunteers. The town ben- efits from their committment while the volunteers continue to use their skills. Funds for this program came from senior services at Symmes Medical Center, Ray- theon and the State Office of Elder Affairs. Property Tax Work Off is three years old. Designed for eligible seniors and dis- abled residents, the program provides a $500 property tax credit in exchange for 100 hours of service. In FY97, participants provided 1,200 hours to several town departments, sav- ing themselves $6,000 in taxes. Also, nearly 300 senior volunteers con- tributed 22,000 hours of service to the Senior Center; $227,800 estimated value. Intergeneration events included volun- teers from the middle and high schools, Girl Scouts and the Youth Commission. Students formed a real bond with seniors; both groups continued to learn and grow. Meals Under the Congregate Meals Program, Minuteman Home Care, assisted by 12 volunteers, served about 10,500 meals in the Center's dining room, updated with new furniture and decor. Forty volunteers, some of them active for nearly 20 years, delivered hot lunches and cold dinners to about 100 ill or infirm residents. New Support Systems Adult Day Care moved into a ranch house built by students at Minuteman Tech. This program served 69 disabled seniors. It is designed to assist disabled seniors who need support to continue liv- ing at home by providing respite care at the house; supervised social groups, conditioning exercises and entertainment. A new volunteer service for seniors who need help grocery shopping was an- nounced by the State's Office of Elder Affairs. It will match seniors with volun- teers who will do the shopping. Minuteman Cane Award Art Ballou won this annual prize awarded to the citizen over 80 for out- standing dedication and service to the community. A Friendly Visitors Program was launched; it matches homebound seniors with volunteers who make weekly visits. The Senior Health Monitor program con- tinued to provide nursing and social ser- vice support to 52 seniors. The impor- tance of this town- sponsored program is growing as Medicare, Medicaid and HMO guidelines become more restrictive for in -home nursing services. The COA also provided counseling, information and referral aid to several support groups, including Parkinson's, Widows and people with low vision. Page 56 Human Services Committee Appointed by the selectmen: Barbara Ciampa and Helen Cravis, co- chairs, replaced Chairman Jolley Anne Wein- stock in the fall; Julie E. Fenn, Rosalyn L. Gittleman, Eva S. Glick, Lauren Mac- Neil, Gregory Kotonias- Payne, MD, Linda Pucci, Richard W. Safford. Stephen Baran, staff. Highlights: Developed resources for families with preschool children; as a result, Parenting Resources Assoc. was awarded a $2,500 grant to advise a group of children two through six; RePlace agreed to serve children up to four years old. The committee and Social Services Co- ordinator Stephen Baran combined mon- ies from the Fund for Lexington, the Human Services Fund and contributions from Church of Our Redeemer and Han- cock United Church of Christ to provide such items as a wheelchair lift, a walker, overdue utility bills, childcare, moving expenses, car repairs„ food, shelter and transportation. Total expenditure, $8,350. Town Meeting appropriated $69,834 for Replace, now affiliated with the Wayside Youth and Family Support Network. The agency streamlined its in -house clin- cial and outreach programs. It also began an advocacy program with the Police Dept. for victims of domestic abuse. In FY97, the town contributed $12,800 toward the salary of a Job Procurer employed by the Central Middlesex Assoc. for Retarded Citizens. Enablement Committee This group., a subcommittee of the Human Services Committee, continued to monitor accessibiity for the handi- capped, and contributed to the Select - mens' Meeting Room audio functioning, curb cuts at various locations, side entrance at 1656 Mass. Ave and Depot Square modifications. Social Services Veterans' Services In FY97, $16,498 was expended for veterans' daily living expenses, fuel assistance and health insurance; 75 percent reimbursable by the state. Recipients were three men, a married couple and two widows. Expenses ad- minstered by the Human Services Coord- inator, approved by Veterans' Agent John J. Ryan and the State. Fair Housing/Human Relations Appointed by Selectmen: Chairman Michelle Waters - Ekanem, Florence A. Baturin, Ralph D. Clifford, Susan R. Cusack, Donnalee A. Farris, Beverly Goodridge, Mary Haskell, Shang -chao Liu, Kathryn Lockhart, Leona Martin, Marion Kilson. The committee supported Town Meeting articles relative to developing affordable housing; continued to support LexFest!; advocated in behalf of families seeking housing under the auspices of the Hous- ing Authority and drafted a confidentiali- ty policy to protect people seeking to Youth Commission Youth Commission: Top Row, Steve Cole, Donna Ryan and Beverly Kelley, adult advisors, John D'Amore, Tom Bellini, Brian Kelley, Chris Nasson, Eric Kelley, Andrew Bechtal, Katie Schmaltz, Laura Beth Chamberlain, Nancy Barter, chairman; 2nd row, Richard Perry, Meredith RommelFanger, Maria Stavropolous, Kristen Hopwood, Tracey Cole, Sara Dailey, Liz Palladino; 3rd row, Becky Busa, Amber Moore, Nabella Syed Andrea Modoona, Rebecca Fentio; bottom row, Courtney Benson and Tiffany Shi. Planting shrubs on their traffic island face painting kids at OctoberFest, caroling the seniors at Countryside, serving Thanksgiving dinners at the COA,were among the community activities taken on by these busy youths. Photo: Ray Barnes. Arts Council: Front, Genevieve Dulac, Kathy Jacob, Judy Ozuranski, back, Lynn Feldman, James Courtemanche, Marcie Therault, Barbara Williams, Fredi Blume, Joyce Fearnside. Photo: Arts Council. Page 57 Arts Council Role: To distribute funds allocated by the Massachusetts Cultural Council (MCC), raise funds from private sources and buy artwork for the town's permanent collec- tion in the Town Office Building. Appointed by the selectmen for no more than two 3 -year terms. Co- chairmen Judi Ozuransky and Joyce Fearnside, Jim Courtemanche (named chairman in Sep- tember), Fredi Blume, Barbara Williams, Genevieve Dulac, Marcie Theriault, Kathy Jacob, Lynn Feldman. Highlights: Over $8,300 awarded to 22 recipients in the '96 -'97 granting period. Of that, over $3,000 supported the PASS program which enables students to attend theaters and concerts, take field trips to "living" villages (Sturbridge) and visit museums. More than 760 students bene- fitted from the program. Local Cultural grants were given to three individual artists and support was provid- ed for concerts held in town. Two dance projects were funded; the International Festival of Wheelchair Dance at the Cotting School and a National Tap Dance Day Celebration presented by Thelma Goldberg. Grants were also made to the DeCordova Museum for Art in the Park, Fiske School Art Dept. for a mural, Lee Fearn- side for a photo exhibit on the Battle Green and the Munroe Center for the Arts and for a presentation with the Social Studies Dept. of the Middle Schools. Lexington's council was one of 35 in the state to receive a grant from the MCC's Matching Incentive Program. The $918 amount was based on private funds raised in FY96 and 97. A benefit concert was held in February for the Ellalou Dimmock Fund estab- lished in 1996 for the distinguished singer, voice teacher and longtime resi- dent. The fund awards a prize to the high school's outstanding vocalist. The 1997 recipient was Elizabeth Shapiro. Cary Lectures Cary Lectures: Don Gillespie, Susan Rockwell, James Cowan, Susan Wilson, associate. Photo: Ray Barnes Role: To entertain and enlighten the citi- zens. Funded by an annual grant from the trustees of the Isaac Harris Cary Educa- tional Fund, founded by the wills of Eliz- abeth Cary Farnum and her sister Susanna F. Cary more than 50 years ago. Appointed by the Moderator: Chairman Susan Rockwell, James Cowan and Donald Gillespie; Associate Member Susan Wilson. The 1997 series, free to residents, fea- tured: The Ramon De Los Reyes Spanish Dance Theatre; Professor Jason Taylor described his involvement in writing 1 Kept My Promise, with Holocaust survivor Jacob Birnbaum; Mr. and Mrs. Birnbaum then recounted their experiences in slave labor camps; The story of Korczak Ziolkowski, the sculptor who launched the project to sculpt Chief Crazy Horse out of a South Dakota mountain. Page 58 The committee provided a new sign to promote its programs at Cary Hall. Its present challenge is to find a new venue for the series; Cary Hall is scheduled to house the library for the next two years. Battle Green Guides Role: To inform visitors to Lexington Common of the town's history, especial- ly of the events of April 19, 1775. Appointed by the Town Manager. S. Lawrence Whipple is Director of Guides and receives $1,500 per annum. Two senior guides, Neil Cronin and Ken Smith, served in 1977. High School students qualifying and serving as guides were Debbie Billmers, Brian Kelley, Steve Davis, Ben Elgart and Tad Antognini. Highlights: In April and May, school groups comprise a large portion of the visitors; in the foliage season, it's the busloads of adults Celebrations Committee Role: Plan and carry out proper observ- ances of Patriots' Day, Memorial Day, Veterans' Day and holidays and special events designated by the selectmen. Expended; $16,000 Appointed by the selectmen for three - year terms. Chairman John Graham, Sec- retary Jean Coates, Suzzie Harris, Jim Cataldo, Paul Jenkins, Sondra Lucente, Julie Miller, Robert Schuster, Bob Tra- cey and Henry Murphy. Subcommittee: Marian Snow, David Taylor, Mike O'Connell, Fr. Dave O'Donnell and Karen Smith. Patriots' Day, April 21. Ringing the Old Belfry Bell at 5:30 announced the Reen- actment of the Battle of Lexington by the Lexington Minutemen (LMM) and the British 10th Regiment The Youth Sunrise Parade at 7:30 was led by Chief Marshal Sarah Day, Presid- ent of the High School Class of 1997, with Chief of Staff Annie Tsang, Class Vice President and Aides Amy Seaquist and Emily Razzano. Morning ceremonies at the Battle Green were introduced by Chairman John B. Graham and Suzzie Barrie. The Gover- nor's Proclamation was read by Select- man Leo F. McSweeney and Greetings from the State by Representative Jay R. Kaufman. High School Seniors Robert Nasson and Felicia Kuo won the Youth Recognition Awards for combined academic excel- lence and community service. The Lions Club White Tricorn Hat Award was presented to David G. Williams for his outstanding service to the town. Theme for the afternoon parade was "History — Alive in Lexington." Judged the best floats were: • Youth Division: 1st, Lexington/Bedford Pop Warner Football; 2nd, DARE; Hon- orable Mention, Dance Inn. Commercial Division: 1st, J.T. Ford Landscaping, 2nd, Wilson Farms, Honor- able Mention, Mahoney's. Civic Division: 1st, U.S.S. Lexington model, 2nd Follen Church. A new fourth division was entered this year by the Knights of Columbus. Parade Chief Marshal William J. Dailey; Chief of Staff Leo P. McSweeney; Aides Dan F. Busa, Eric H. Carlson, Mark Vital. Division Marshals: Cornelius P. Cronin, Paul E. Furdon and John Rudd. The Celebrations Committee thanks the many businesses and organizations, re- cruited by the Chamber of Commerce, who contributed to the parade's success. Memorial Day, May 26. Memorial serv- ices at Westview Cemetery preceded the morning parade. Honorary Chief Marshal was the late Richard M. Perry, represent- ed by his wife Helen, son Richard E., and daughters Janet Perry and Joan Modilia. Commemorative services were also held at Cary Hall and Colonial Cemetery. Speaker at ceremonies on the Battle Green was John J. Ryan, invocation by Rev. Judith Brain. Veterans' Day, November 11. The morn- ing parade was led by Aurio J. Pierro, VFW Post 3007 and aides Paul E. Cunha, Thomas J. Driscoll, William G. Hooper, Bob Tracey and Frank Samuel. The parade made stops at the Korean / Vietnam Memorial, Soldiers Monument and VFW Monument, where wreaths were laid and one -round volleys fired by the LMM Company. Ceremonies on the Battle Green included remarks by Col. Norm Johnson, USAF, from Hanscom; wreaths were laid and volleys fired in honor of our MIA/POWs. Debra D'Entremont and Kristine Mat- thews sang the National Anthem, accom- panied by the High School Band. Invoca- tion by Pastor Jed Snyder, Countryside Bible Chapel. Celebrations Committee: Front, Karen Smith, Suzzie Harris, Sondra Lucente, Jean Coates and Julie Miller, back, Henry Murphy, Chairman John Graham, Paul Jenkins, Jim Cataldo and Bob Tracey. Photo: Ray Barnes. Page 59 Historic Districts Commission Role: Promote the educational, cultural, economic and general welfare of the public through the preservation and pro- tection of historic buildings, places, and districts. Appointed by the Selectmen for overlap- ping five year terms: two from candi- dates nominated by the Lexington Historical Society, one from candidates nominated by The Lexington Arts and Crafts Society, Inc., one from candidates nominated by the trustees of the Cary Memorial Library and one member selected at large by the selectmen. Chairman Stephen M. Politi, Ian Adamson (who replaced Clark Griffith, resigned), Richard Bechtel, Mark DiNapoli, and Joann Gschwendtner. Associate Members Walter Bergler, Eleanor MacQueen, Elaine Doran, and Sara Chase. Highlights: 149 hearings: 33 informal, 83 formal, 33 continued Certificates of Appropriateness: 86 issued, 5 denied Major Projects Reviewed: Commercial space at 1656 Mass. Ave. Reuse of gas station as the Gingerbread Construction Company at 10 Woburn Street Redesign of Depot Square -Emery Park Began discussions of central business district proposals for flower barrels, bike racks, and newspaper vending machines Other Actions: Facilitated application process by chang- ing meeting dates to the first Thursday of each month thereby accommodating Thursday publications of required legal notices. Comments: The Commission Clerk, Margot Rushton, resigned in June. The Commission regrets that the Town has not yet named a permanent replacement. Historic Districts Commission: Eleanor MacQueen, Elaine Doran, Joann Gschwendtner, Chairman Stephen Politi, Mccall- Taylor, Walter Bergler and Ian Adamson. Photo: Ray Barnes. Page 60 Historical Commission Role: Preserve and protect historically and architecturally significant structures and areas in Lexington; advise the Building Inspector on issuing permits for demolishing significant buildings outside the historic district. Appointed by the Town Manager for three -year terms: Chairman David R. Kelland, Marilyn Fenollosa, Alfred Mates and Tom Taylor. Expended: Petty cash for film and devel- oping. Highlights: The commission maintains the Comprehensive Cultural Resources Survey ( "inventory") of historically and architecturally important buildings in town. The seven - volume inventory is available in Cary Library and Town Office Building. However, the inventory is incomplete; large areas of the town were omitted from the original inventory because of budgetory and time limitations. The commission has a grant of $10,000 ($5000 from the state historical commis- sion and $5000 in matching funds from the Trustees of Public Trusts) to update the inventory by adding 110 of the 600 properties originally identified for inclu- sion. Comments: Updating the inventory is important to the work of the commission; to preserve the town's historic fabric and highlight the added value of historic structures. The commission is seeking additional funds to continue this project. Commission members are volunteers, but hire a consultant to document property. The commission also supports efforts to nominate buildings for the National Reg- ister of Historic Places maintained by the Secretary of the Interior. There are resto- ration funds as well as tax advantages for owners of such properties. Cable Advisory Committee Role: To represent the town in contractu- al and operating matters with the cable licensee, to be ombudsman for cable users, to oversee use of the Institutional Trunk that connects town buildings and to advise in managing the town's growing information- handling network. Appointed by selectmen. Chairman Jane Gharibian, Julian Bussgang, John Cunha, Theodore Mairson, Stephen Ellis, Martha Stanton, David Becker, Julie Triessl, Peggy Bateson, Julie Longcope, Robert Warshawer, David Buczkowski, David Kanter. Technical consultants: Byron Blanchard and Paul Nesbeda. Advisors: Caleb Warner and William Lucas. Highlights: • A new responsibility emerged for the committee; overseeing the proliferation of towers and antennas that go with new cellular and digital phone services. • A new cable carrier is seeking a fran- chise, creating the potential for competi- tive rates and improved services. The current license with Cablevision expires in the year 2001. • The committee again recommended the selectmen hire an independent employee to make long range plans for properly running the town's Institutional Trunk. • Restructuring of rates and program tiering remained a problem for subscrib- ers and the committee. Some subscriber complaints dropped off. However, formal complaints have been filed with the state and the FCC (Federal Communications Commission) on issues the committee feels need to be clarified or corrected. Committee members also continued active in meetings of the Massachusetts Municipal Association, and relevant state and federal hearings. Coverage of local events increased, but there remains a shortage of volunteers to help with the cameras and production. Phone 861 -2708 to register cable service complaints. Town Counsel Expenditures FY 97 $204,882 Appointed Norman P. Cohen of Palmer & Dodge, Boston, appointed Town Counsel, 1972. Pursuant to Section 5 of Article XXI of the General By -Laws of the Town of Lexington, I hereby submit my report in writing as Town Counsel for the period from January 1, 1997 to December 31, 1997. The report is divided into the several sections required by the By- Laws. (a) All actions by or against the Town which were pending January 1, 1997. 1. Richard Hamilton et al vs. Joyce A. Miller et als, Land Court No. 122701. Appeal from an order of conditions issued by the Conservation Commission. 2. Elena Massimilla vs. Zoning Board of Appeals et als, Land Court No. 123 -774. Appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals upholding the denial of a build- ing permit. 3. Town of Lexington vs. Heirs of Jessie Bullock, Land Court No. 82829. Petition to foreclose tax lien. 4. Town of Lexington vs. Briggs Asso- ciates, Inc. et als, Middlesex Superior Court No. 90 -3507. Action for damages arising from the continued leaking of the high school field house roof. 5. Bernard J. Rothmel et als vs. Zoning Board of Appeals et als, Middlesex Super- ior Court No. 93 -4189. Appeal from decision of the Board of Appeals modify- ing the grant of a special permit. 6. Mrs. Janet Dube et als vs. Town of Lexington, Middlesex Superior Court No. 93 -7511. Suit alleging anti -trust and other violations arising out of the sale of grave boxes and burial vaults by the Town. Page 61 7. Town of Lexington vs. Smith -Grove Construction Company, Inc. et al, Middle- sex Superior Court No. 94 -0944. Suit for damages arising out of a school construc- tion contract. 8. Douglas E. Yeo, et als vs. Town of Lexington et als, United States District Court No. 94- 10811. Suit to force the publication of certain ads in the Lexing- ton High School newspaper and year- book. 9. Frances R. Frankenburg et al vs. Board of Appeals, Land Court No. 212044. Appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals granting a variance to an abutter to permit the construction of a concrete retaining wall. 10. Colonial Development Corp. vs. Town of Lexington, Middlesex Superior Court No. 95 -2068. Action for damages allegedly caused by the failure to main- tain an adequate drainage system. 11. Marion Angoff vs. Lexington School Committee, et al, Middlesex Superior Court No. 95 -0746. Suit for damages allegedly caused by failure of various school officials to honor an agreement reached with the plaintiff at the time of her resignation from her teaching posi- tion. 12. Nicholas Santossuso. vs. Board of Assessors, Appellate Tax Board No. 230914. Petition for abatement of 1995 real estate taxes. 13. The Sheldon Corp. vs. The Lexington Conservation Commission, Middlesex Superior Court No. 96 -3083. Appeal from a denial by the Conservation Com- mission of an order of conditions to per- mit the development of a parcel of land. 14. Daniel F. Splaine et al vs. Town of Lexington et al, Middlesex Superior Court No. 96 -3774. Suit for damages allegedly sustained from a collision with a town vehicle. (b) All actions brought by or against the Town during 1997. 1. Lorenzo Q. Scott vs. Lexington Police Department, Middlesex Superior Court No. 96 -3052 remanded to Concord Dis- trict Court No. 9747RM013. Action to recover property taken by police during an investigation. 2. Winning Homes, Inc. vs. Lexington Conservation Commission, Middlesex Superior Court No. 97 -1045. Appeal from a denial by the Conservation Com- mission of an order of conditions to per- mit the development of a parcel of land. 3. Lewis S. Blair vs. Department of Public Works, Concord District Court No. 9747 SC 0671. Claim for damages allegedly caused by failure to place a warning device at the site of a fallen tree. 4. Loren Wood vs. John J. McWeeney, et als., Middlesex Superior Court No. 97- 3790. Appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals denying a variance for a deck. 5. Eleanor Barbera vs. Town of Lexing- ton, Middlesex Superior Court No. 97- 3911. Claim for damages allegedly result- ing from a negligent operation of a scoop stretcher. 6. Nathan Johnson et al vs. Lexington Police, Middlesex Superior Court No. 97- 5153. Complaint alleging illegal search of an apartment. 7. Sandra A. Fulmer, on behalf of Adrienne D. Fulmer vs. Richard White et als, Middlesex Superior Court No. 97- 5511. Claim for damages allegedly caused by the negligent closing of a school door on a child's hand. 8. Crystal Cordell, PPA vs. City of Lexington, Middlesex Superior Court No. 97 -6297. Claim for damages alleged- ly caused by the negligent supervision of the plaintiff in a school gym class in 1987. Town Counsel 9. Fleet Bank of Massachusetts - Lexing- ton Enterprises, Inc. - ... and 8 addition- al plaintiffs vs. Board of Assessors, Appellate Tax Board Nos. 284141, 244362 .... Petitions for abatement of 1997 real estate taxes. (c) All actions settled or disposed of during 1997. 1. Town of Lexington vs. Smith -Grove Construction Company, Inc. et al, Middle- sex Superior Court No. 94 -0944. Suit for damages arising out of a school construc- tion contract. Case settled. 2. Frances R. Frankenburg et al vs. Board of Appeals, Land Court No. 212044. Appeal from a decision of the Board of Appeals granting a variance to an abutter to permit the construction of a concrete retaining wall. Case dismissed. 3. Nicholas Santossuso vs. Board of Assessors, Appellate Tax Board No. 230914. Petition for abatement of 1995 real estate taxes. Case withdrawn. 4. Jeffrey Osoff vs. Town of Lexington, Middlesex Superior Court No. 96- 04491. Suit for property damages allegedly sus- tained as a result of the back -up of a sewer. Case dismissed. 5. Intercargo Insurance Company vs. Sun Valley Industries, Inc. and Town of Lex- ington et al, Middlesex Superior Court No. 96 -6762. Suit naming the Town as an equitable defendant to prevent it from paying any funds to the defendant. Case resolved. 6. Cumberland Farms, Inc. - Tropeano T &N Realty Trust - ... and 22 additional plaintiffs vs. Board of Assessors, Appel- late Tax Board Nos. 234387, 234831.... Petitions for abatement of 1996 real estate taxes. Twenty -three cases settled or tried. 7. Town of Lexington vs. Baumgartner, Land Court No. 104300. Petition to fore close tax lien. Decision for the Town. Page 62 8. Town of Lexington vs. Bredesen, Land Court No. 104301. Petition to foreclose tax lien. Decision for the Town. 9. Lewis S. Blair vs. Department of Public Works, Concord District Court No. 9747 SC 0671. Claim for damages allegedly caused by failure to place a warning device at the site of a fallen tree. Decision for the Town. 10. Fleet Bank of Massachusetts - Lex- ington Enterprises, Inc. - ... and 8 addi- tional plaintiffs vs. Board of Assessors, Appellate Tax Board Nos. 284141, 244362 .... Petitions for abatement of 1997 real estate taxes. One case with- drawn. Trustees of Public Trusts Role: To administer, invest and disburse funds of trusts bequeathed or donated to the town for specific public purposes. Appointed by the selectmen. Chairman Alan S. Fields, Thomas G. Taylor and David G. Williams. Highlights: • Trustees distributed a total of $140,927 to the following specific areas of need: Beautification $ 7,563 Human Services 14,390 Perpetual Care 9,322 Scholarship 24,918 Lex. Education Foundation 84,228 Recognition 506 • The total market value of all trusts as of 6/30/97 was $3,305,354. • Five additional trusts were established or transferred to the trustees in 1997: 1. EllaLou Dimmock Prize for Vocal Excellence. 2. Charles E. Ferguson Youth Recogni- tion Award Fund. 3. Mickey Finn Scholarship Fund. 4. Srinivasu Meka Scholarship Fund. 5. S. Lawrence Whipple Scholarship Fund. Details are in the Scholarship section which follows. These trusts represent the love the donors and individuals being honored have for Lexington and its citizens and their wish to contribute to the town's betterment. Knowing that a trust is in perpetuity and will be managed by the town at no cost to the trust, also that gifts will be used locally, and are tax deductible, is most satisfying to donors. A recent national study on philanthrophy showed that community foundations which raise and distribute money locally saw the biggest gain in donations. Any person or organization may create a trust with a gift of $5,000 or more. Additions may also be made to any exist- ing trust at any time. A brief description of each trust and a financial statement follow. "Principal Balance" refers to the original gift and additions plus realized capital gains. "Income Balance" refers to unspent inter- est and dividends. Disbursements is the money disbursed in fiscal 1997. ALL PURPOSE Fund for Lexington -- Established 1995, the income to be used in three areas; assisting those in need, beautification and providing seed money for innovative ideas and projects. Donations can be earmarked for any of the three areas. Disbursements $5,460 Principal balance $1,139 Income balance $14,677 George. L. Gilmore Fund -- Established 1950, the income to be used as the Town may from time to time vote; and if at any time special use arises to which in the opinion of the Selectmen the principal of said fund may be applied, then the princi- pal of said fund may be applied upon the vote of the Town meeting. Disbursements $5,175 Principal balance $23,747 Income balance $44,945 BEAUTIFICATION Geneva M. Brown Fund -- Established 1947, the income is to be used for improving and beautifying the common and the triangular parcel of land in front of the Masonic Temple. Principal balance $ 4,365 Income balance $ 9,067 Colonial Cemetery Fund - -The income provides for repairs and upkeep at the cemetery. Principal balance $2,380 Income balance $ 921 Page 63 Jack Eddison Blossom Fund- - Established 1993, three- fourths of the annual net income to be used to help preserve the character and green spaces of Lexington and its Bikeway, through maintenance, new projects and the plant- ing of flowers and trees. Principal balance $35,807 Income balance $3,541 Frederick L. Emery Fund -- Established 1936, income to be used by the Lexington Field and Garden Club for grading, grassing and keeping in order grass borders between sidewalks or foot- paths and the driveways on public streets, and in otherwise beautifying the public streets, ways and places, preference be given to said objects in order stated. Disbursments $248 Principal balance $5,674 Income balance $336 Orin W. Fiske - Battle Green Fund- - Established 1899, income of this fund is to be used for the maintenance of the Lexington Battle Green or the monu- ments erected thereon. Principal balance $593 Income balance $244 Charles E. French Colonial Cemetery Fund - Established 1905, the annual income thereof to be devoted to the care of the older part of the cemetery in which repose the remains of Rev. John Hancock and wife. Principal balance $4,857 Income balance $3,574 Gordon/Souza Juniper Hill Fund- - Established 1993, three- fourths of the annual net income shall be used to help preserve the character of Juniper Hill Conservation Land; such income may be spent for plantings, signs, maintenance projects and land acquisistion. Disbursements $700 Principal balance $14,665 Income balance $602 Trustees of Public Trusts George O. Smith Fund -- Established 1903, the income thereof to be expended by the Field and Garden Club in setting out and keeping in order shade and orna- mental trees and shrubs in the streets and highways in said town, or the beautifying of unsightly places in the highways. Disbursements $100 Principal balance $2,273 Income balance $136 Teresa and Roberta Lee Fitness Nature Path -- Established 1990, the income, and, if necessary, the principal, are to be used by the Town of Lexington Recreation Committee for the work of grading, planting, beautifying and main- taining the Teresa and Roberta Lee Fitness Nature Path. Disbursements $3,535 Principal balance $28,301 Income balance $9,117 Lexington Community Playground Fund -- Established 1991, the income, and, if necessary, the principal, are to be used by the Town of Lexington Recreation Committee for the work of repairing and maintaining the Lexington Community Playground. Disbursements $310 Principal balance $5,940 Income balance $1,035 Lexington Nature Trust Fund- - Established 1992, the income and if necessary the principal, is to be used by the Town of Lexington Conservation Commission for the acquisition, promo- tion and management of its properties. Disbursements $1,670 Principal balance $18,056 Income balance $436 Edith C. Redman Trust -- Established 1928, the income only therefrom to be used and applied for the care and main- tenance of the Lexington Common; known as the "Battle Green ". Principal balance $651 Income balance $832 Everet M. Mulliken Fund -- Established 1948, the income shall be used under the supervision of the proper town authori- ties, for the care of Hastings Park in said Lexington. Disbursements $1,000 Principal balance $8,271 Income balance $13,151 George W. Taylor Flag Fund- - Established 1931, the income to be used for the care, preservation and replace- ment of the flagpole on the Battle Green, or for the purchase of new flags; any balance of income from said fund to be used for the care of Lexington Common. Principal balance $2,414 Income balance $1,482 George W. Taylor Tree Fund- - Established 1931, the income to be used for the care, purchase and preservation of trees for the adornment of the town. Disbursements $1,000 Principal balance $5,061 Income balance $4,355 Hayes Fountain Fund -- Established 1895, the income is to be used for the perpetual care of the fountain and grounds immediately around it. Principal balance $1,268 Income balance $1,219 Albert Ball Tenney Memorial Fund- - Established 1950, the income is to be used to provide nightly illumination of the Lexington Minuteman Statue. Principal balance $10,361 Income balance $2,053 William Tower Memorial Park Fund- - Established 1913, the income thereof to be applied by said town, in each and every year for the care, maintenance and improvements of Tower Park. Principal balance $19,382 Income balance $53,249 Page 64 CELEBRATION American Legion Celebrations Fund- - Established 1982, three- fourths of the annual net income of this fund is to be used towards defraying the town's cost for the Patriots' Day, Memorial Day and Veterans' day celebrations: Principal balance $6,636 Income balance $788 Leroy S. Brown Fund -- Established 1940, the income is to be used towards defraying the expense of an appropriate and dignified celebration of the anniver- sary of the Battle of Lexington. Principal balance $6,094 Income balance $2,410 HUMAN SERVICES Bridge Charitable Fund -- Established 1880, the income from said trust fund shall be annually distributed among the deserving poor of Lexington without dis- tinction of sex or religion. Disbursements $4,000 Principal balance $34,782 Income balance $6,648 Friends of the Lexington Council on Aging, Inc. -- Established 1992. Income, when requested, shall be used to provide programs and services to benefit older adults in the Town of Lexington. Principal may also be used for programs and services but also may be used for capital improvements to the Senior Center. Disbursements $5,000 Principal balance $153,681 Income balance ($1,305) Elizabeth Bridge Gerry Fund- - Established 1885, the income from said trust fund shall be distributed to the deserving poor of Lexington without dis- tinction of sex or religion. Principal balance $2,404 Income balance $1,570 Trustees of Public Trusts Beals Fund -- Established 1891, the income of this fund is to be expended for the benefit of worthy, indigent, aged men and women over sixty years of age, American -born. Principal balance $2,513 Income balance $2,424 Lexington Human Services Fund- - Established 1990, to be funded by trans- fers from other funds administered by the Trustees as well as private contributions, to provide funds for the Lexington Human Services Committee in its mission to help individuals in need. Disbursements $5,390 Principal balance $8,710 Income balance $1,769 Jonas Gammell Trust -- Established 1873, the income is to be expended by the board of public welfare and by two ladies appointed annually for the purpose by the selectmen in purchasing such luxuries or delicacies for the town poor, wherever located, as are not usually f ir- nished them, and shall tend to promote their health and comfort. Principal balance $611 Income balance $351 Harriet R. Gilmore Fund -- Established 1892, the income is to be expended for the benefit of poor people in Lexington. Principal balance $708 Income balance $1,296 RECOGNITION Charles E. Fergeson Youth Recognition Award Fund -- Established 1997. Will fund monetary awards to the LHS students given the Lexington Youth Award at each Patriot's Day celebration. The receipients are selected by the Youth Commission. Moneys for the fund were left to the town by Charles E. Ferguson, Town Moderator from 1949 -1969, 1966. Disbursements $100 Principal balance $11,064 Income balance $116 Paul Foley Leadership Fund- - Established 1990, this award shall be made periodically to a member of the administration, faculty, staff, or a volunt- er in the Lexington Public School System to recognize and reward his/her outstand- ing leadership in facilitating a team approach to meeting the educational needs of students, individually or as a group. Principal balance $2,662 Income balance $293 Jacquelyn R. Smith Memorial Internship Fund -- Established 1993, three - fourths of the annual net income is to be used to help professionals gain valuable work experience and explore career options within local government. Disbursements $406 Principal balance $61,383 Income balance $4,140 Lexington Education Foundation- - Established 1989, the fund is to be used to promote sound, innovative approaches to enhance excellence in education by funding projects in areas of creative program development, innovative materi- als and instructional resources. Disbursements $114,221 Principal balance $6,119 Income balance $17,313 SCHOLARSHIP Hallie C. Blake Fund -- Established 1920, the income is to be expended annu- ally in cash prizes to two seniors (a boy and a girl) of Lexington High School, who by example and influence have shown the highest qualities of leadership, conduct and character and who possess in the largest measure the good will of the student body. Disbursements $400 Principal balance $5,697 Income balance $166 Page 65 Sangwook Ahn Memorial Scholarship Fund -- Established 1992, three- fourths of the annual net income is to be awarded to a Lexington High School senior whose life encompasses a joyful display of zest, a respect for all, a striving for excellence and service towards others. Disbursements $400 Principal balance $12,518 Income balance $156 Bettie Clarke Scholarship Fund- - Established 1993, three - fourths of the annual net income to be awarded to a Lexington senior at Lexington High or Minuteman Regional Vocational Tech, who joyously, intelligently and creatively participates in community public service, and has demonstrated respect for all points of view. Disbursements $500 Principal balance $14,077 Income balance $228 Mickey Finn Scholarship Fund- - Established 1996 by the family and friends of Mickey Finn, a President of the Lexington Little League, a coach and mentor of many Lexington youth. The scholarship will be awarded to a graduat- ing senior who participated in Lexington Little League or Girls' Softball. Disbursements $150 Principal balance $5,858 Income balance ($44) EllaLou Dimmock Prize for Vocal Excellence Fund -- Established 1997 by The Lexington Council for the Arts. The award recognizes a LHS student, selected by the LHS music faculty, who demon- strates promising vocal ability and/or promotes vocal musical performance in the community. Principal balance $5,000 Trustees of Public Trusts (continued) Anne E. Borghesani Memorial Prize- - Established 1990, three - fourths of the annual net income is to be awarded to a woman in the senior class of Lexington High School who has demonstrated a commitment to the community. Disbursements $800 Principal balance $24,099 Income balance $271 Richard Isenberg Scholarship Fund- - Established 1986, three- fourths of the annual net income of this fund is to be awarded annually to a member of the junior or senior class of Lexington High School who has demonstrated excellence in sports writing. Disbursements $400 Principal balance $10,795 Income balance $136 Harrington Memorial Fund - -To the school committee of the Town of Lexington for scholarships for needy children. Disbursements $2,400 Principal balance $51,473 Income balance $1,179 Robert P. Clapp Fund - -The income to be used to provide two prizes for pupils of Lexington High School, one for excel- lence in speaking and the other for excel- lence in composition. Principal balance $1,155 Income balance $562 Carolyn M. McCabe Memorial Scholarship Fund - Established 1986, three - fourths of the annual net income will be awarded to a woman in the senior class of Lexington High School who was a varsity athlete who demonstrated aspects of Carolyn's characters; i.e. good sportsmanship, inspired competition, spirit and fun; nominations must be made by a team mate or coach. Disbursements $1,000 Principal balance $24,301 Income balance (27) Charles E. French Medal Fund- - Established 1905, the income is to be used annually to purchase silver medals (or scholarship) to be distributed to pupils in the senior high school for the best scholarship. Principal balance $3,233 Income balance $820 Lexington P.T.A. Scholarship Fund- - Established 1996, three- fourths of the annual net income to be awarded to stud- ents in need of financial assistance and in accord with the criteria of the named funds held under this "umbrella" fund. Disbursements $5,536 Principal balance $14,532 Income balance $ 5,215 Lexington Outlook Club/Bessie and Gabriel Baker Scholarship Fund- - Established 1989, three - fourths of the annual net income is to be awarded to women in the senior class of Lexington High School who are going to college. Disbursements $400 Principal balance $10,306 Income balance $427 Lexington Outlook Club Scholarship Fund -- Established 1902, three - fourths of the annual net income is to be awarded to women in the senior class of Lexington High School who are going to college. Disbursements $500 Principal balance $13,402 Income balance $651 Virginia M. Powers Scholarship Fund- - Established 1995, three - fourths of the annual net income is to be awarded to a woman student with financial need who evidences a seriousness of purpose, a clean sense of responsibility, coupled with humility and respect for others. Principal balance $10,332 Income balance $536 Page 66 Lexington Outlook Club/Maxine Francis Warnecke Scholarship Fund- - Established 1986, three - fourths of the annual net income is to be awarded to women in the senior class of Lexington High School who are going to junior college or college, who have a need for financial assistance and who have made a commitment to pursue a career in medi- cine or science. Disbursements $7,500 Principal balance $189,395 Income balance $8,853 Mary Sorenson Memorial Fund- - Established 1969, three- fourths of the annual net income will be awarded to graduating seniors in need of financial assistance. Principal balance $5,165 Income balance $218 Foster Sherburne and Tenney Sherburne Fund -- Established 1956, the net income from said fund shall be awarded annually to assist in the educa- tion of such deserving young men or women domiciled in Lexington. Disbursements $2,000 Principal balance $28,510 Income balance $521 Mary and August Schumacher Trust Fund -- Established 1988, three- fourths of the income to be used annually to fund two scholarships, of equal value, to Lexington High School seniors who have been accepted at an accredited college, have worked diligently on academic studies while perhaps not being in the top 10 percent of the class and who need for funds to obtain a college education. Disbursements $1,400 Principal balance $44,687 Income balance $2,131 Trustees of Public Trusts (continued) Srinivasu Meka Scholarship Fund- - Established 1996 by the family and friends of Srinivasu Meka, a member of the LHS Class of 1991 who died in 1994. The recipient must have a minimum 3.0 average, been involved in student council, sports and planning to attend a 4 year college or university. Disbursements $500 Principal balance $7,258 Income balance $154 Charles Lyman Weld Fund- - Established 1946, the entire fund, both principal and income are available upon a vote of the town, for educational pur- poses, a chapel at Westview Cemetery or scholarships. Principal balance $11,012 Income balance $623 Dorothea Schmidt -Penta Memorial Scholarship Fund -- Established 1980; this scholarhip will be awarded when the principal balance reaches $5000, at which point three- fourths of the income will be awarded to a Lexington High School senior planning to enter the field of health service. Principal balance $3,612 Income balance $87 Sevag Yazgian Memorial Scholarship Fund - Established 1995, three- fourths of the annual net income is to be awarded to a Lexington High School senior planning to become a physician, who has demonstrated consistent academic improvement and possessed aspects of Sevag's easy going personality, is dedicated to family, friends and community, and evidences a desire to see others happy, and evidences pride in an ethnic heritage. Disbursements $200 Principal balance $5,385 Income balance $44 Elsa W. Regestein Award Fund- - Established 1933 by Marcia Dane; the income to be spent for awards to a Lexington High School senior who has done the school work conscientiously and creditably and who, in the judgement of the faculty, deserves public commen- dation for carrying on at the same time either in or out of school, a worthwhile activity or employment which has not been given other recognition. Scholarship will be awarded when the principal balance reaches $5,000. Principal balance $1,818 Income balance $44 Ellen A. Stone Fund -- Established 1890, the accrued interest is to be paid to the school committee who are to employ it in aiding needy and deserving young women of Lexington in obtaining a higher education. Principal balance $5,407 Income balance $1,361 S. Lawrence Whipple Scholarship Fund -- Established 1996 by his many friends in honor of "Larry" Whipple. The scholarship will be awarded to a Lexington resident currently attending a public or private secondary school or college, who has demonstrated a genuine affinity for this community and has made a significant contribution to a better understanding of Lexington's past. Principal balance $5,238 Page 67 Pooled Endowment Account for 61 Funds All balances as of 06/30/97 Principal securities and cash Shares 400 Coca Cola Company $27,200 200 Warner Lambert Co $24,850 300 Houghton- Mifflin $20,025 300 Computer Sciences . $21,638 500 Enron Corp $20,407 440 Ericsson LM Telephone $17,325 400 General Electric Co. $26,000 512 Thermo Electron Corp $17,600 400 Boeing Co $21,225 400 Precision Castparts. $23,850 300 Prentiss PPTYS TR $7,688 200 Bristol Myers Squibb. $16,200 600 Pfizer Inc. $36,600 300 Citicorp $36,169 300 IBM Corp. $27,075 175 American Internat'1 Grp $26,141 200 Chase Manhattan Corp $19,413 600 GTE Corp $26,325 100 Sunamerica Inc. $10,588 500 Beacon PPTYS $16,657 300 Equity Resid PPTYS TR $14,250 600 Nationwide Hlth PPYTS $13,200 1,000 Fedl Home Loan Mge Corp PFD 7.90% $24,875 150,000 U.S. Treasury Notes 5.125% 02/28/98 $149,438 100,000 Federal Home Loan Banks 5,725% 06/15/98 $ 99,781 100,000 FBNA DEB 7.0% 08/12/02 $99,422 100,000FHLMC DEB 6.750% 05/30/06 $100,625 GALAXY TREASURY FUND CLASS F TRUST $137,224 CD in Cambridgeport Savings Bank $106,000 CD in Bank of Boston $11,000 TOTAL PRINCIPAL $1,198,788 Income securities and cash GALAXY TREASURY FUND CLASS F TRUST $228,077 TOTAL INCOME $228,077 TOTAL MARKET VALUE OF ACCOUNT $1,426,865 Trustees of Public Trusts Westview Cemetery Perpetual Care Fund Disbursements $ 8,683 Principal securities and cash Shares 200 Bankamerica Corp. $12,913 660 BankBoston Inc. $ 47,768 400 Citicorp $ 48,225 400 Comerica Incorporated $ 27,200 300 First Union Corporation $ 27,750 100 Morgan J.P. & Company $10,438 800 State Street Boston Corp. $37,000 400 Suntrust Banks Inc. $22,025 300 Union Planters $15,563 800 American General Corp. $38,200 450 American Int'l Group Inc $67,219 2,000 Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp PFD 7.9% $49,750 125,000 U.S. Treasury Notes 6.0% 10/15/99 $124,746 200,000 U.S. Treasury Notes 5.125% 02/28/98 $199,250 100,000 Federal Home Loan Banks 5.725% 06/15/98 $99,781 150,000 FNMA DEB 7.000% 08/12/02 $149,133 2,000 Fed Home Loan Mort Corp PFD 7.90% $49,750 100,000 Ford Motor Credit Company 8.0% 01/15/99 N/C $102,492 5,000 Hocking Valley Railway Co 4.5% 07/01/99 1st Cons Mtg $ 4,750 50,000 GTE Corporation DEB 8.85% 03/01/98 $50,881 GALAXY TREASURY FUND CLASS F TRUST. $137,575 TOTAL PRINCIPAL $1,272,657 Income securities and cash GALAXY TREASURY FUND CLASS F TRUST $313,288 TOTAL INCOME $313,288 TOTAL MARKET VALUE OF ACCOUNT $1,585,946 Munroe Cemetery Fund - Perpetual Care Fund Disbursements $639 Principal securities and cash 50,000 U.S. Treasury Notes 5.125% 02/28/98 $ 49,813 50,000 Federal Home Loan Banks5.725% $49,891 50,000 FHLMC DEB 6.750% $50,313 50,000 FHLMC DEB 7.700% $49,672 TOTAL PRINCIPAL $199,688 Income securities and cash GALAXY TREASURY FUND CLASS F TRUST $93,847 TOTAL INCOME $93,847 TOTAL MARKET VALUE OF ACCOUNT $293,543 Page 68 Appropriation Committee Role: The Appropriation Committee is charged with advising the town and Town Meeting on all fiscal matters. Appointed by the Moderator for FY98, for overlapping three -year terms: Chair- man Paul Lapointe, Vice - Chairman Rog- er Borghesani, Stephen Coit, Ronald Colwell, Paul Hamburger, Alan Levine, Mary Miley, Isabel Mroczkowski, and Ronald Pawliczek. A mid -year vacancy was filled by Catherine Abbott. At the Annual Town Meeting, Commit- tee supported the following requests. Art. 4 To approve the operating budget as amended. Concern was expressed about Minuteman Tech cost structure, revenue estimates and fund balances. Committee offered an amendment to the Minuteman line item, and noted that the Fire Department Personal Services line and Special Education services in the Public Schools line may be underfunded. It also stated that a policy on in lieu of tax payments is needed. Arts. 5, 6, 46. To appropriate funds for expenses for the current fiscal year, pay bills for services in prior years and appropriate funds to reduce the tax rate. Arts. 8, 9, 10, 11. To appropriate funds for water mains and sewer system; resur- face streets using state funds. Arts. 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 19. To continue installing water meters read by automat- ed methods, to purchase Public Works and Fire Department equipment, to main- tain Town buildings, and to rehabilitate the Center pool complex. Art. 21. To rescind the 1996 appropria- tion for improvements at Pine Meadows Golf Course. Arts. 22, 23. To purchase computer equipment for the schools and repair the school administration building. To con- tinue design work for a major project to renovate and enlarge school buildings. Art. 26. To appropriate funds in the Wetland Protection Fund to make them available for the Conservation Commis- sion in administering the Wetlands Pro- tection Act. Appropriation Committee Art. 29, 34. To acquire a lot on Spencer St., part of the Augusta land; to require in lieu of tax payments by LEXHAB. Art. 32. To accept the provisions of the state law which would allow requests for donations to a Town scholarship fund to be mailed with water or tax bills. Art. 37. To support the use of $25,000 for professional assistance in protecting the town's interests at Hanscom Field. Art. 40. To allow town employees who are qualified veterans to purchase up to four years of creditable service for retire- ment purposes based on their armed forces service records. Art. 42. To approve the town's ability to municipalize utilities. Art. 44. To reaffirm the original method of determining the town's share of Min- uteman Tech expenses. The Committee did not support the following requests: Art. 31. To petition the state legislature to require a referendum vote to approve budget increases above 3 %. Art. 24. To appropriate $100,000 for a stabilization fund. The Committee approved the follow- ing transfers from the Reserve Fund: $8,000 for special election support by the Town Clerk's office, $92,000 for Fire Department personal services overtime, $50,000 for School Dept. utilities and special education. Other actions: Art. 39. Moved that this article, which was placed on the Warrant at the Committee's request and would develop guidelines for financing capital expen- ditures, be indefinitely postponed. At October 20, Special Town Meeting, Committee endorsed motions to remodel school buildings, and appropriate funds for Library renovation to go forward. Committee continued to strengthen its ties with Capital Expenditures Commit- tee and other town boards and officials. Committee is particularly grateful to Chief Financial Officer John Ryan for his able counsel and service as secretary. Appropriation Committee: Front, Isabel Mroczkowski, Stephen Coit, Catherine Abbott, Alan Levine. Back Chairman Paul Lapointe, Paul Hamburger, Ronald Pawliczek Roger Borghesani, Comptroller John J. Ryan. Photo: Ray Barnes. Page 69 Capital Expenditures Committee Role: to protect and nurture the town's capital base and provide Town Meeting with information for making well - informed decisions on capital issues. Scope encompasses both school and town capital, including areas covered by funds raised in the tax levy, bonds and enterprise funds. Evaluations include replacing old capital items, acquiring new ones and maintaining existing capital items. Appointed by the Moderator to serve overlapping three year terms, running from July 1 through June 30. Serving the 1997 Town Meeting were Chairman Karen Dooks, Vice Chairman David Miller, Secretary C. N. Touart, Ron Grammont and Bill Kennedy. The committee beginning July 1: Chair- man Bill Kennedy, Vice Chairman Charles Hornig, Secretary C . N. Touart, Karen Dooks and Shirley Stoltz. All of us realize the importance of main- taining the town's infrastructure. How- ever, meeting these needs poses a con- tinuing challenge because of limitations placed by proposition 2 1/2. Within sewer /enterprise funds, there is a regular process to address upkeep. Financing capital outside of these funds is more difficult. There is a significant backlog of deferred maintenance and up- keep of both the municipal and school facilities but no agreed -upon plan in place to address these needs. The street resurfacing program is miles and years behind schedule, the DPW building needs replacing or major over- haul, school buildings need major upgrad- ing and there are still significant needs at the central fire station. Putting off rein- vestment in these capital needs only magnifies costs when they are eventually addressed. A start was made three years ago when the Archetype report evaluated facilities improvements needed in municipal and school buildings. This report laid the groundwork for some of the articles placed before the 1997 Town Meeting. In addition, the Ad -Hoc Building Finance Committee reviewed the capital needs addressed in the Archetype report and set priorities for accomplishing the work. Capital Expenditures Committee: Charles Harris, Shirley Stolts, Chan Touart, Karen Dooks, Bill Kennedy. Photo: Ray Barnes. Page 70 The following municipal articles were recommended for approval by the Capital Expenditures Committee and approved for funding by Town Meeting in April: • Water Main Cleaning and Lining, Article 8, $280,000. Ongoing program to remove tubercular growth in pipes and improve water quality and flow. Comptroller Appointed by the selectmen. John J. Ryan, appointed Comptroller in 1986. Comptroller FY97 FY98 Payroll $271,168 $266,288 Expenses 126,940 106,990 Personnel 6 6 Data Processing Payroll 77,349 83,843 Expenses 169,967 172,290 Personnel 2 2 The Comptroller's Department partici- pated with other departments in prepar- ing an "Official Statement" for the purpose of issuing $4,675,000 of bond Anticipation Notes dated 8/29/97. The funds, authorized by Town Meeting, are for several capital articles; various school projects, sewer rehabilitation, land acquisition and library planning. Recent rule changes by the Securities and Exchange Commission continued to place a burden on this office. The changes require the town to prepare the above - mentioned Official Statement for temporary (anticiption notes) as well as for permanent debt. The Data Processing Department initiat- ed a software training program to instruct employees in switching to Microsoft Word and Excel from WordPerfect and Lotus. The program is the first of its kind to be run by staff. Revenue Officer FY 97 Expended Payroll: $155,064 Expenses 15,050 Revenue Officer: Maureen G. Valente, appointed 1992 by the Town Manager. Resigned August 1997. Arthur J. Flavin, Jr., appointed October 1, 1997. Office staff: Six. Responsibilities: Acts as treasurer and tax collector. Receives and disburses all town funds, manages investment polic- ies; manages employee benefits along with Town Manager. Collects all real es- tate, motor vehicle, and personal property taxes and water /sewer bills. Highlights: • Real estate taxes collected: $53,196,683. • Personal property taxes collected: $1,309,082. • Motor Vehicle Excise taxes: $2,933,883. • Water /Sewer collections: $9,513,940. • Investment income: $774,778 • Short term notes: $2,360,000 Reissued in April for school capital arti- cles voted at the 1995 and 1996 Town Meetings. $1,220,000 in State Aid Antici- pation notes issued in April. • One long term bond: $435,900 Issued in May; Article 13, 1966 Town Meeting, sewer projects. Partially subsid- ized by an MRWA grant. • Lien Certificate volume stayed high as many homeowners refinanced to take advantage of continued low interest rates. Arthur Flavin was the former Treasurer /Collector in Winthrop for five and a half years. Before that, he was a systems manager for Shawmut Bank. The Boston State graduate has a wife Richelle, a daughter Alexis and twin daughters Vanessa and Ariana. Page 71 Board of Assessors FY97 FY96 Payroll 181,688 181,007 Expenses 4,000 4,000 Personnel 5 5 Role: The Assessor's Office is responsible for valuing all taxable property in the community. Office activity centers around maintaining an extensive property database, valuing and defending all property values, providing information for the classification hearing, and calculating the tax rate for Department of Revenue approval. The office shares inventory data with property owners and real estate professionals. Appointed by the Town Manager. The Board of Assessors; Chairman William Jackson, Robert N. Foster and Sarah F. Robinson. Joseph H. Nugent, Jr., was promoted to Town Assessor in 1997. Nugent replaced Janet Vacon who com- menced writing a new chapter in her life and is now sailing somewhere on the high seas. Janet provided a great service for our department and the community. We admired her as a true professional and will miss her as a friend. Real Estate Research Consultants Inc. (RRC) conducted a full field review of all existing and new personal property business accounts this year. This effort resulted in an additional $418,039 in personal property taxes. In 1997 the office continued to maintain database reliability and improve computer models for property assessments. Vision Corporation started data conversion for the new Computer Assisted Mass Appraisal (LAMA) system during the fall. All real estate values for FY99 will be done by assessing personnel on the new system. Assessment for Fiscal 1998 Property No. of Assessed Class Parcels Value Single Family 8,798 2,975,012,000 Condominiums 770 161,186,000 Two Family 192 49,235,000 Three Family 13 3,870,000 Multi -Unit 13 57,101,000 Land 623 25,319,100 Misc. Residential 53 22,798,000 Commercial 412 337,857,000 Industrial 43 85,747,000 Agriculture (61A) 3 90,000 Recreational (6113) 8 2,925,000 Mixed Use Res /Com 22 10,506,000 Personal Property/Utilities 830 63,451,360 Total 11,780 $3,795,097,460 Fiscal Year 1998 Recapitulation Amount to be raised Appropriations Total Town Meeting Appropriation $82,555,847.00 Other amounts to be raised 6,890,255.00 Debt and interest charges 70,621.00 Final court judgements 0.00 Total overlay deficits of previous years 0.00 Total cherry sheet offsets 1,114,112.00 Snow and ice deficit Ch. 44 Sec. 3 1 D 154,741.00 Subtotal $1,339,474.00 State and County cherry sheet charges 970,068.00 Allowance for abatements and exemptions 578,461.04 Total amount to be raised $85,443,850.04 Estimated receipts and other revenue sources Estimated receipts - State Levy Cherry sheet estimated receipts 6,890,255.00 Cherry sheet overestimates 3,283.00 Total $6,893.538.00 Estimated receipts - Local 77.85% Local receipts not allocated 6,764,000.00 Enterprise funds 12,766,302.00 Total $ 19,531,182.00 Revenue sources appropriated for particular purposes Free cash 207,000.00 Other available funds 638,494.00 Total $ 845,494.00 Revenue appropriated specifically to reduce tax rate Free Cash 1,233,000.00 Total estimated receipts and other revenue $28,503,214.00 Summary of total amount to be raised and total receipts Total amount to be raised $85,443,850.04 Total receipts 28,503,214.00 Net amount to be raised; Tax Levy 56,940,636.04 Tax Levy and Tax Rates: Fiscal Year 1998 Class Levy Levy Valuation Tax % $ Rate Residential 77.85% $44,330,050.32 $3,300,687,100 13.43 Open Space 0.00% 0.00 0 0.00 Commercial 15.46% $8,805,072.19 $345,212,000 25.51 Industrial 3.84% $2,187,089.83 $85,747,000 25.51 Personal Prop. 2.84% $1,618,423.70 $63,451,360 25.51 Total 100.00% $56,940,636.00 $3,795,097,460 Page 72 Appointed/Elected: Chairman Robert Cuhna, Robert M. Gary and Arthur Washburn, elected by members of the local retirement system, Kristen Dailey, appointed by the selectmen and Comp- troller John J. Ryan, ex- officio. Washburn and Dailey are new members Highlights: • Pension reform passed by the legisla- ture in 1996 required the board to increase its size to five from three members and to take on a new respon- sibility; running an early intervention program to help town employees on acci- dental disability return to work. • At Town Meeting, the board presented a Military Services Buy Back article. It grants qualified veterans the right to purchase up to four years of military service to be added to their credible service time, for retirement purposes. Town Meeting passed the article; less than 20 eligible employees purchased all or part of their military time. • The board implemented the decision of the Division of Administrative Law Appeals to include additional veterans' benefits. Prior to this decision, veterans whose pensions exceeded the 80 percent limit were not eligible for this benefit. • Disability retirees reevaluation and reex- amination now determined by the Public Employee Retirement Administration Commission, after consultation with the local board. • The board purchased new computer soft- ware and Marguerite Oliva, retirement ad- ministrator received training on the system. Seven members of the system retired from town employment; the board wishes them many happy years ahead. Eighty eight new members joined the system. Investments The Pension Fund benefited from the upbeat capital market; signficant growth was recorded in the actuarial valuation of the system. Retirement Board Contributory Retirement System 12/31/97 12/31/96 Cash & Equivalents $113,031 147,434 Fixed Income Securities Govt. & Agency Securities Corporate Bonds Total Fixed Income Equities Fidelity Mutual Funds Contrafund Equity- Income Fidelity Fund Growth & Income Value Magellan Total Equities Total Assets Page 73 16,171,617 15,899,419 4,301,823 2,977,909 20,473,440 18, 877,328 8,043,209 6,268,871 7,562,763 5,818,255 10,889,802 8,246,128 7,501,177 5,762,433 5,616,411 4,638,683 2,502 - 39,615,864 30,734,370 60,202,335 49,759,132 Combined Balance Sheet, June 30, 1997 General Special Capital Enterprise Treasurer Long Term Total Fund Revenue Projects Funds Trusts Debt Assets Assets Cash and Investments: Cash $7,528,165 $2,892,348 $515,670 $2,150,202 $3,748,532 $0 $16,834,915 Temporary Investments 0 Other Investments 0 Total $7,528,165 $2,892,348 $515,670 $2,150,202 $3,748,532 $0 $16,834,915 Property Taxes Receivable: Fiscal 1998 (12,006) (12,006) Current Year's Levy 322,516 322,516 Prior Years' & Deferred 300,290 300,290 Total $610,800 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $610,800 Other Receivables & Tax Titles: Motor Vehicle Excise $380,098 $380,098 User Charges & Liens 2,108,494 2,108,494 Special Assessment, Current 1,484 1,484 Special Assessment, Long -Tm. 163,453 163,453 Departmentals 131,892 131,892 Payments in Lieu of Taxes 41,189 41,189 Tax Titles 416,356 416,356 Due from Other Governments 3,025,000 3,025,000 Other 1,812,588 3,109,406 4,921,994 Prepaid Expenses 6,731 6,731 Total $1,141,203 $0 $0 $6,946,082 $3,109,406 $0 $11,196,691 Property and Equipment - Net: $40,752,764 $40,752,764 Amount to be Provided For: Repayment of Long -Term Obligations $0 Retirement of Bonds 11,367,000 11,367,000 Retirement of Grant & Bond Anticipation Notes 1,220,000 2,360,000 3,580,000 Total $0 $1,220,000 $2,360,000 $0 $0 $11,367,000 $14,947,000 Total Assets $9,280,168 $4,112,348 $2,875,670 $49,849,048 $6,857,938 $11,367,000 $84,342,172 Page 74 Combined Balance Sheet, June 30, 1997 Bond & Grant Anticipation Notes Payable 1,220,000 2,360,000 3,580,000 Bonds Payable 6,047,427 11,367,000 17,414,427 Total Liabilities $2,867,440 $1,742,121 $2,363,817 $6,282,277 $3,529,698 $11,367,000 $28,152,353 Fund Balances: Contributed Capital $33,249,602 $33,249,602 Retained Earnings 8,341,117 8,341,117 Retained Earnings Appropriated 0 Fund Balances: Unreserved General Special Fund Revenue Capital Enterprise Projects Funds Treasurer Long Term Trusts Debt Total Liabilities & Fund Balances Liabilities Reserved for Expenditures 1,233,000 447,196 1,450,432 3,130,628 Res. for Encum. - School Warrants Payable $913,482 $521,944 $3,817 $202,810 $386,705 $2,028,758 Accrued Expenses 12,006 12,006 Short-Term Debt Deficit 0 Accrued Payroll 52,942 177 27,871 (154,741) 80,990 Reserved for Abatements 397,514 397,514 Deferred Revenues 1,347,758 1,347,758 Deposits for other Liabilities 155,744 4,169 3,142,993 3,302,906 Due to other Funds 0 Bond & Grant Anticipation Notes Payable 1,220,000 2,360,000 3,580,000 Bonds Payable 6,047,427 11,367,000 17,414,427 Total Liabilities $2,867,440 $1,742,121 $2,363,817 $6,282,277 $3,529,698 $11,367,000 $28,152,353 Fund Balances: Contributed Capital $33,249,602 $33,249,602 Retained Earnings 8,341,117 8,341,117 Retained Earnings Appropriated 0 Fund Balances: Unreserved 4,559,210 2,100,823 3,328,040 9,988,073 Over/Under Assessments 9,833 9,833 Reserved for Expenditures 1,233,000 447,196 1,450,432 3,130,628 Res. for Encum. - School 519,924 519,924 Reserved for Encumbrance 304,116 269,404 64,657 525,620 200 1,163,997 Reserve for Future Year Ta 12,006 12,006 Short-Term Debt Deficit (70,620) (70,620) Snow & Ice Deficit (154,741) (154,741) Total Fund Balances $6,412,728 $2,370,227 $511,853 $43,566,771 $3,328,240 $0 $56,189,819 Total Liabilities & Fund Bal. $9,280,168 $4,112,348 $2,875,670 $49,849,048 $6,857,938 $11,367,000 $84,342,172 Page 75 Revenues /Expenditures & Fund Balance June 30, 1997 Expenditures Education 37,273,825 3,255,897 Fund Types 42,189,599 Public Works 6,198,718 Governmental Fiduciary Combined Totals 6,353,937 Public Safety Special Capital/Hgwy Expendable Memorandum Only 7,983,906 General Revenue Projects Trust/Agency 1997 Revenue General Government 3,139,513 161,863 160,070 1,650 Property Taxes 54,510,683 1,331,238 94,710 $5,061,839 54,510,683 Intergovernmental 5,614,508 2,443,915 1,136,944 7,730 9,203,097 Motor Vehicle Excise Tax 2,945,244 442,398 201,635 ($50,436) 2,945,244 Department & Other 3,292,244 2,918,067 2,280,495 8,490,785 Interest 774,776 858,464 $654,764 128,218 902,994 Special Assessments 30,969 $63,066,579 $4,474,622 $2,855,971 30,969 Total Revenue $67,168,403 $5,361,982 $1,136,944 $2,416,443 $76,083,772 Expenditures Education 37,273,825 3,255,897 1,659,877 42,189,599 Public Works 6,198,718 155,219 6,852,000 6,353,937 Public Safety 6,342,584 605,298 1,036,024 (4,704,000) 7,983,906 Pension 2,430,522 0 2,430,522 General Government 3,139,513 161,863 160,070 1,650 3,463,096 Culture & Recreation 1,331,238 94,710 $5,061,839 682,864 2,108,812 State & County Assessments 962,394 962,394 Health & Human Services 442,398 201,635 ($50,436) 6,844,203 7,488,236 Debt Service 4,086,923 4,086,923 Others, Net 858,464 $654,764 $3,378,676 $11,027,548 858,464 Total Expenditures $63,066,579 $4,474,622 $2,855,971 $7,528,717 $77,925,889 Other Financing Sources (Uses): Continued Appropriations (824,040) (22,740) (311,322) (1,158,102) Proceeds of BANS /GANS/Refundings 6,852,000 6,852,000 Repayment of BANS /GANS/Refundings (4,704,000) (4,704,000) Transfer from Reserve for Abatements 0 Transfer from (to) other Funds (3,385,108) (472,112) 85,000 5,061,839 1,289,619 Total Other (Uses) ($4,209,148) ($494,852) $1,921,678 $5,061,839 $2,279,519 Excess (Deficiency) of Revenues Over Expenditures ($107,324) $392,508 $202,651 ($50,436) $437,400 Fund Balance, Beginning of Year $5,696,011 $1,298,097 $654,764 $3,378,676 $11,027,548 Fund Balance, End of Year $5,588,687 $1,690,605 $857,415 $3,328,240 $11,464,948 Page 76 Revenues /Expenditures & Fund Balances - Special Revenue, June 30, 1997 Page 77 Balance Transfers/ Encumbrances Expenritures Revenues Balance July 1, 1996 Adjustments June 30, 1997 School Lunch Total $97,979 $0 $0 $937,850 $842,193 $2,322 Highway MA 35929 716,024 0 24,333 551,173 0 140,519 Highway Layout 49,690 0 0 0 0 49,690 CH90 MA 35574 60,117 0 1,307 42,911 0 15,900 CH 90 MA 36631 118,801 0 0 118,801 0 0 CH 90 MA 36280 712,780 0 221,025 241,884 0 249,871 Marrett Rd Design Grant ( #7680) 115,991 0 0 67,980 0 48,001 Total $1,773,403 $0 $246,665 $1,022,748 $0 $503,990 Other Special Revenue Spring St/Hayden Ave 80,000 0 0 0 0 80,000 Traffic Imp, S. Lex. 80,000 0 0 0 0 80,000 Fitness 2,869 0 0 4,781 16,755 14,843 Hats 11 1,000 0 0 0 (4,000) (3,000) Selectmen Gift - Nynex 40,500 0 0 0 40,750 81,250 Lexington Center Benches 7,461 0 965 13,047 20,565 14,014 Massport Intern Grant 0 0 0 13,730 13,730 0 Bikeway 1,916 0 0 168 395 2,143 Depot Square Beautification 10,000 0 0 0 0 10,000 Nextell Comm. 31,843 0 487 14,539 22,915 39,732 Cable T. V. 1,616 0 0 0 0 1,616 Estate Charles Ramsdell 220 0 0 220 0 0 Cable Maintenance Account 0 0 0 8,317 20,000 11,683 Spring St/So. Lex. Traffic 0 0 0 0 80,000 80,000 Flexible Spending 4,956 0 0 3,316 8,650 10,290 Sprint Communications 0 0 0 7,267 33,000 25,733 Hardy Pond Brook 20,680 0 7,740 2,940 0 10,000 N.O.I. Fees 5,074 0 0 4,662 3,518 3,930 Insurance Recovery Police 1,503 0 0 21,877 20,374 0 Off -Duty Detail - Police (65,970) 0 0 497,748 471,570 (92,178) D.A.R.E. Gifts - Revolving 7,818 0 0 4,987 4,141 6,972 Community Policing, 96 6,483 0 0 4,550 0 1,933 Community Policing 122 0 0 0 0 122 96 D.A.R.E. 2,923 0 0 2,923 0 0 Community Policing 97 0 0 1,200 17,799 20,000 1,001 97 Law Enf. Block Grant 0 0 0 2,500 2,500 0 97 S.A.F.E. Grant (Fire Ed.) 0 0 0 4,572 4,635 63 97 Lexington's Legacy Grant (Libr) 0 0 0 0 900 900 97 D.A.R.E. Grant 0 0 126 15,663 16,000 211 Cops Fast Grant 0 0 0 25,000 25,000 0 Pagenet Gift - Water Tower 0 0 7,765 148 8,805 892 Off -Duty Detail - Fire 5,100 0 0 3,575 192 1,716 Fire Dept Gifts 1,175 0 0 2,565 2,625 1,235 Insurance Reimb. <10,000 0 0 0 250 250 0 Fire Fighter Exam 0 0 0 4,244 7,915 3,671 DPW Revolving 22,422 0 0 66,474 103,973 59,921 Mass Releaf SBA 1,950 0 0 1,059 0 891 Page 77 Revenues /Expenditures & Fund Balances - Special Revenue, June 30, 1997 School Special Revenue Off -Duty Custodian Balance Transfers/ Encumbrances Expenritures Revenues Balance Comp Hlth Hmn Svcs FY94 6/30 July 1, 1996 Adjustments 0 0 0 June 30, 1997 Mass Releaf 97 (DEM) 0 0 556 2,744 0 (3,300) Sale of Cemetery Loan 26,085 0 0 0 67,926 94,011 Ins Reimb >20,000 Bowman Library 0 0 0 47,000 47,000 Off -Duty Custodian 4,182 0 0 4,113 3,290 3,360 DPW Ins Reimb < 20,000 17,123 0 0 18,071 947 0 Traffic Signs & Fences 6,316 0 0 0 0 6,316 Trees 276 0 0 0 0 276 Hydrants 20,632 0 0 0 1,556 22,189 Parking Meter 249,711 0 0 426,510 236,313 59,514 Parking Permits 105,407 0 0 0 40,735 146,142 Parking Lots (92,443) 0 0 0 130,781 38,338 NESWC Recycling Assistance 25,441 0 2,050 18,450 50,260 55,201 Off -Duty Detail - DPW 4,399 0 0 0 0 4,399 Selectmen's Tree Gift Account 0 0 0 1,912 3,140 1,228 Floods 89 -1 (FEMA/MEMA) 0 0 0 45,491 45,491 0 Hanscom AFB Waste Trans Facility (3,969) 0 0 102 4,071 0 COA- Social Day Care 39,230 0 0 112,709 107,408 33,929 COA Transportation Grant - Revol. 0 0 0 7,000 7,000 0 COA Selectmens Gift 16,250 0 0 6,680 0 9,570 Meals on Wheels 10,924 0 0 40,520 29,239 (357) DEA Formula Grant 0 0 0 23,097 23,097 0 Home Care Grant 0 0 0 8,031 8,031 0 97 COA Incentive Grant (Computer) 0 0 1,851 63 1,914 0 Lexpress Fare/Passes 102,477 0 0 60,676 71,109 112,940 MBTA Grant 0 0 0 80,000 80,000 0 Lexington Transit Guide 6,161 0 0 7,488 9,200 7,893 Alternative Transp. Serv. Gift 0 0 0 0 40,000 40,000 State Aid to Libraries 72,519 0 0 66,617 48,770 54,673 Fed. Literacy Grant 3,362 0 0 7,157 8,000 4,205 Community Septic Mtg Grant 0 0 0 4,518 18,000 13,482 Total $885,765 $0 $22,740 $1,690,838 $2,028,407 $1,200,594 School Special Revenue Off -Duty Custodian 7,804 0 0 43,961 36,310 153 Comp Hlth Hmn Svcs FY94 6/30 26,954 0 0 0 0 26,954 Eisenhower 9/1/93 - 8/31/94 929 0 0 0 0 929 Teacher of the Year FY94 855 0 0 855 0 0 Bowman Library 1,940 0 0 0 100 2,040 Drug -Free Schools 7/1/95- 6/30/96 9,323 0 0 21 0 9,302 Comp Hlth Hum Svcs 7/95 -6/96 3,725 0 0 3,033 0 692 CH 11 11/95-8/96 (4,523) 0 0 1,745 6,695 427 Lex. Sch. To Careers Grant 0 0 0 2,400 12,000 9,600 Elem. Sch. Violence Prevention 97 0 0 0 14,334 14,650 317 Community Service Learning 97 0 0 0 3,483 5,000 1,517 Greenways & Trails (DEM) 97 0 0 0 0 3,000 3,000 Thoreau & His Friends Grant 0 0 0 0 5,000 5,000 Exchange Teacher - FY97 0 0 0 19,507 19,507 0 Progress Sch Media (Winnebago) 0 0 0 400 400 0 Harrington School Gift 12 0 0 0 0 12 Metco 7/1/94- 6/30/95 (11,597) 0 0 0 0 (11,597) Mainstream 9/1/94- 8/31/95 1,535 0 0 0 0 1,535 Page 78 Revenues /Expenditures & Fund Balances - Special Revenue, June 30, 1997 Page 79 Balance Transfers/ Encumbrances Expenritures Revenues Balance July 1, 1996 Adjustments June 30, 1997 Lexington Spec Sery 9/94 -8/95 (10,263) 0 0 0 0 (10,263) Eisenhower 9/1/94 - 8/31/95 189 0 0 0 0 189 CH 2 ED Tech 9/1/94- 8/31/95 146 0 0 0 0 145 Comprehensive Health 1,479 0 0 0 0 1,479 Sumner Richards Memorial - Revolv. 2,450 0 0 0 0 2,450 Enhanced School Health 2,302 0 0 0 0 2,302 Teaching for Understanding 321 0 0 0 0 321 Environ Mgmt/Res Cons 96 0 0 96 0 0 Early Childhood 9/1/95 - 8/31/96 18,519 0 0 16,671 0 1,848 Lex Special Services 9/1/95 - 8/31/96 12,432 0 0 (992) 0 13/424 Metco 30,504 0 0 7,818 0 22,686 Adult Education - Revolving 89,834 0 0 153,404 229,359 165,790 CH I 7,428 0 0 3,075 0 4,354 Bridge School Gift 853 0 0 0 127 2,100 Eisenhower 9/1/95 - 8/31/96 4,367 0 0 3,869 0 498 DPH Enhanced Sch Hlth 7/95 -6/96 (27,379) 0 0 966 66,643 38,298 Time & Learning 1,248 0 0 375 0 873 Middle Sch Partnership FY96 3,066 0 0 3,955 0 (890) Driver Ed - Revolving 31,480 0 0 53,465 65,240 43,255 Lost Books - Revolving 4,256 0 0 0 0 4,256 Athletics - Revolving 18,339 0 0 30,968 28,872 16,243 Drama Foundation - Revolving 9,554 0 0 0 20,000 29,554 Ins. Reimburse < 20,000 22,311 0 0 22,911 600 0 Susan Spencer Memorial Fund 404 0 0 55 0 349 Diamond Sch Improvement FY96 136 0 0 0 0 136 High Sch Restructuring FY96 9,067 0 0 3,878 0 5,189 Ed Reform Study Groups FY 96 604 0 0 2,000 0 (1,396) Lexington Educational Foundation 37,602 0 0 80,301 81,225 38,525 Lex Summer Camp 5,443 0 0 1,200 0 4,243 Diamond Band 396 0 0 0 0 396 CH II Block Grant 213 0 0 0 0 213 Metco FY97 0 0 0 1,047,403 1,048,996 1,593 Health Protection FY97 0 0 0 118,085 120,583 2,498 Early Childhood - SPED FY97 0 0 0 55,834 66,055 10,221 IDEA - SPED FY97 0 0 0 340,373 349,053 8,680 Drug -Free Schools - FY97 0 0 0 21,436 21,593 157 DPH (FY97 - 9/30/97) 0 0 0 70,034 0 (70,034) Study Groups FY97 0 0 0 2,061 16,017 13,956 Essen. Sch/Time & Lrarn/Partn FY97 0 0 0 22,214 25,000 2,786 Ed Reform Restruct. Network FY97 0 0 0 4,225 10,000 5,775 Emergency Immigrant Act FY97 0 0 0 14,620 15,559 939 Eisenhower Prof. Dev. FY97 0 0 0 7,150 12,024 4,874 Title VI FY97 0 0 0 9,283 5,337 (3,946) Ed. Tech Matching Grant 0 0 0 123,597 158,220 34,623 Fiske Sch. Gift Account 0 0 0 0 1,345 1,345 Ed Tech Lighthouse Grant 0 0 0 7,978 30,000 22,022 SPED Early Child Allocation FY98 0 0 0 0 15,751 15,751 Total $314,355 $0 $0 $2,318,047 $2,491,381 $487,689 Special Revenue Fund Total $3,071,501 $0 $269,405 $5,969,483 $5,361,981 $2,194,595 Page 79 Comptroller Schedule of Appropriations, June 30, 1997 Account Budget Transfer Expended Carry Total Balance 1998 Forward Expended Bud e Selectmen Personal Services 49,688 1,585 51,273 0 51,273 0 51,257 Expenses 79,426 (2077) 67,268 727 67,995 9,354 79,748 Town Manager Personal Services 244,345 9,630 253,975 0 253,975 0 257,379 Expenses 43,438 (27,938) 13,227 0 13,227 2,273 34,543 Police & Fire Medical 35,430 0 33,809 1,621 35,430 0 52,393 Salary Adjustments 356,069 (203,913) 0 152,156 152,156 0 187,279 Municipal Services 180,706 7,005 174,900 7,356 182,256 5455 173,790 Appropriation Committee Expenses 800 0 800 0 800 0 800 Reserve Fund Expenses 150,000 (150,000) 0 0 0 0 150,000 Finance Personal Services 653,976 18,627 667,732 0 667,732 4,871 712,843 Expenses 343,613 (61,179) 256,982 23,646 280,628 1,806 419,217 Law Legal Fees 205,000 0 204,882 0 204,882 118 211,150 Town Clerk Personal Services 122,620 0 120,313 0 120,313 2,307 124,450 Expenses 13,239 (10,378) 2,032 55 2,087 774 13,536 Election P.S. 44,237 10,762 54,999 0 54,999 0 19,140 Election Expense 20,400 3,027 22,224 0 22,224 1,203 15,590 Registration Personal Services 1,825 0 1,825 0 1,825 0 1,825 Expenses 19,875 0 13,067 4,533 17,600 2,275 19875 Conservation Commission Personal Services 60,670 3,216 63,886 0 63,886 0 62,704 Expenses 7,417 (7,417) 0 0 0 0 7,523 Page 80 Comptroller Schedule of Appropriations, June 30, 1997 (cont'a) Account Planning Board Personal Services Expenses Board of Appeals Personal Services Expenses Public Works Personal Services Expenses Town Reports Expenses Police Personal Services Expenses Fire Personal Services Expenses Art. 18 of 1996 Dispatch Personal Services Expenses Building & Zoning Officer Personal Services Expenses Dog Officer Personal Services Expenses School Pers. Svcs. & Exp. Vocational Board of Health Personal Services Expenses Visiting Nurse Council on Aging Personal Services Expenses Budget Transfer Expended Carry Total Balance 1998 17,972 211,706 66,198 Forward Expended 28,090 Budget 123,421 4,066 126,999 0 126,999 488 127,488 18,124 (11,510) 6,613 0 6,613 1 18,522 28,933 0 28,673 0 28,673 320 28,783 2,374 (2,374) 0 0 0 0 2,244 2,710,474 3,710 2,806,589 0 2,806,589 (92,405) 2,839,623 3,899,650 (314,639) 3,392,130 255,217 3,647,347 (62,336) 4,063,804 6,000 0 4,692 0 4,692 1,309 6,000 2,781,563 104,170 2,852,005 0 2,852,005 33,728 2,943,752 549,554 (246,708) 293,539 9,655 303,194 (348) 543,834 2,519,367 101,201 2,620,567 0 2,620,567 1 2,597,383 530,830 (293,277) 194,590 10,753 205,343 32,210 581,997 60,000 0 60,000 0 60,000 0 277,974 0 309,038 46,377 (29,379) 12,846 185,313 17,972 211,706 66,198 (12,980) 43,127 28,090 0 28,932 1,969 (1,969) 0 39,921,213 (3,032,041) 36,784,277 472,415 0 472,415 97,327 0 88,381 2,023 (2,023) 0 7,500 (7,500) 0 127,424 0 106,748 194,620 (27,588) 155,061 Page 81 0 309,038 (31,064) 326,502 0 12,846 4,152 43,688 0 211,706 (8,421) 196,116 7,798 50,925 2,293 80,585 0 29,932 (842) 28,932 0 0 0 1,969 104,895 36,889,172 0 42,403,743 0 472,415 0 721,950 0 88,381 8,945 98,620 0 0 0 450 0 0 0 0 0 106,748 20,676 117,935 11,872 166,933 99 188,022 Comptroller Schedule of Appropriations, June 30, 1997 Account Budget Human Services Youth Services Veterans P. S. Veterans Exp. Develop. Disabled Lexpress Personal Services Expenses Misc. Boards & Comm. Library Personal Services Expenses Art, 15 of 1996 Historical Commission Personal Services Public Celebrations Expenses Debt Service Principal Interest Pension/Retirement Noncontributory Contributory Insurance Personal Services Expenses Unemployment Expenses Unpaid Bills of Prior Yrs. 69,384 21,414 34,982 12,800 45,230 184,365 8,500 1,007,282 309,692 Transfer Expended Cara Total Balance 1998 3,301,000 0 Forward ded 0 Budge 0 66,330 0 66,330 3,504 71,929 1,562 22,975 0 22,975 1 22,568 (5,069) 16,498 0 16,498 13,415 34,942 0 12,800 0 12,800 0 13,164 2,184 47,334 0 47,334 80 47,414 (4,907) 159,148 16,749 175,897 3,651 188,529 (2,500) 4,097 249 4,346 1,654 8,500 9,744 1,017,026 0 1,017,026 0 958,205 (81,277) 225,687 0 225,687 2,728 306,744 68,000 68,000 0 68,000 0 3,120 2,492 5,590 15,500 0 13,434 3,301,000 0 3,301,000 716,871 0 785,924 189,736 (29,736) 136,375 3,125,709 (831,562) 2,294,147 49,510 (49,510) 0 511,550 (564) 416,262 65,000 0 33,840 0 18,443 17,133 Page 82 0 5,590 22 5,011 0 13,434 2,066 17,050 0 3,301,000 0 3,191,000 1,563 787,487 (70,616) 554,779 0 136,375 23,625 183,036 0 2,294,147 0 3,121,803 0 0 0 70,995 81,628 497,890 13,096 504,859 31,160 65,000 0 50,000 0 17,133 1,310 0 ti Comptroller Schedule of Appropriations, June 30, 1997 Agggun Budget ransfe Ex en arr Total Balance 19_98 Forward Expen d Budget Total General Fund 67,031,662 &130.619 61.245.722 721,633 1 6 (66,312) 69 9 7 General Fund Prior Year Selectmen 0 20,000 20,000 0 20,000 805 0 70 Town Manager 0 0 875 350 805 350 0 350 0 Professional Services 50 0 50 70 Tuition & Training 0 120 0 0 0 1,719 Travel within State 0 0 1,719 75,000 0 75,000 75,000 0 Salary Adjustment Art. 19 of 95 100 2,700 2,700 0 2,700 100 Finance 0 5,919 2,899 0 2,899 3,020 Conservation Commission 0 340 270 0 270 70 0 Art. 47 of 77 Meagharville 2,019 0 0 2,019 2,019 0 Art. N.O.I. Fees 4,499 4,662 2,310 6,851 9,161 0 Board of Appeals 0 0 21 272,324 21 241,667 0 0 21 241,667 30,657 Public Works 0 11,033 10,659 0 10,659 374. Police Department 0 1,581 1,500 0 1,500 81 Art. 37 of 89 0 5,000 2,983 0 2,983 2,017 Fire Department Art 17 of 96 262,150 0 248,193 13,957 262,150 0 Art. 22 of 91 4,580 0 0 4,580 4,580 0 85 Dispatch 0 7,000 6,915 0 6,915 1 Dog Officer 0 0 210 231,674 209 225,789 0 0 209 225,789 5,885 Public Schools Art. 23 of 96 20,000 0 20,000 0 20,000 0 Board of Health 0 499 499 0 0 499 270 0 2,716 Visiting Nurse 0 2,986 270 0 437 0 Council on Aging 0 437 0 437 60,000 0 60,000 0 Art. 16 of 96 60,000 0 0 0 53 Veterans Services 0 0 53 2,024 328 0 328 1,696 Lexpress 0 83 0 0 0 83 Library Debt Service - Interest 0 1,067 935 0 935 132 Insurance 0 9,649 8,675 0 8,675 974 Total Prior Year(s) 353,348 657,326 858,464 102,407 960,871 49,803 Page 83 Comptroller Schedule of Appropriations, June 30, 1997 Account Budget Transfer Expended Carry Total Balance 1998 Enterprise Funds Forward Expsnded Budge Sewer Personal Services Expenses 182,402 0 160,306 0 160,306 22,096 183,464 Debt Service 4,765,618 965,352 (7,473) 4,802,163 33,898 4,836,061 (77,916) 5,237,104 Art. 20 of 1991 80,478 0 18,020 965,349 83,424 0 1,863 965,349 85,287 3 13,211 985,895 Art. 11 of 1993 9,942 0 0 0 0 9,942 0 0 Art. 12 of 1993 14,877 0 0 0 0 14,877 0 Art. 10 of 1994 2,035 3,179 5,214 0 5,214 0 0 Art. 9 of 1995 Art. 13 of 1996 299,000 1,000 236,021 47,912 283,933 16,067 0 Art. 9 of 1996 600,000 560,000 0 0 0 7,723 0 2,125 0 9,848 600,000 550,152 0 0 Art. 11 of 1996 45,000 0 45,000 0 45,000 0 0 Total Sewer Fund 7,524,704 14,726 6,305,200 85,798 6,390,998 1,148,432 6,406,463 Water Personal Services Expenses 406,086 0 389,714 0 389,714 16,372 388,915 Debt Service 2,917,792 300,151 (41,109) 3,731,394 52,697 3,784,091 (907,408) 3,117,238 Art. 8 of 1993 13,974 0 9,500 300,150 20,070 0 420 300,150 20,470 1 2,984 286,182 Art. 8 of 1994 Art. 8 of 1995 0 37,891 14,605 2,666 17,271 20,620 0 0 Art. 8 of 1996 86,315 280,000 688,467 697,226 74,267 771,493 3,289 0 Art. 11 of 1996 45,000 0 0 441 42,789 249,038 0 249,479 30,521 0 Art. 17 of 1993 0 303 0 0 42,789 2,211 0 Total Water Fund 4,049,318 694,749 5,196,389 379,088 5,575,477 (831,410) 3,792,335 Recreation Fund Personal Services Expenses 440,393 0 335,958 0 335,958 104,435 442,649 Art. 23 of 1991 676,294 5,532 37,578 898,535 46,371 944,906 (231,038) 624,969 Art. 31 of 1987 3,342 450 1,380 1,409 4,660 4,573 0 5,982 0 0 Art. 16 of 199,2 7,158 0 0 0 4,660 62 0 Art. 19 of 1992 11,111 1,800 1,800 0 0 1,800 7,158 11,111 0 0 Art. 15 of 1993 0 2,868 0 0 0 2,868 0 Art. 17 of 1993 0 303 0 0 0 303 0 Art. 18 of 1993 Art. 12 of 1995 493 11,208 8,704 1,386 10,090 1,611 0 Art. 13 of 1995 95,160 35,105 684 1,787 12,740 7,572 312 7,493 13,052 15,065 82,792 0 Art 19 of 1996 150,000 (150,000) 0 0 0 21,827 0 Art. 20 of 1996 50,000 0 9,825 600 10,425 0 39,575 0 0 Art. 11 of 1995 4,251 0 0 0 0 4,251 0 Art. 11 of 1996 15,000 0 0 0 0 15,000 0 Total Recreation Fund 1,493,839 (91,946) 1,281,203 60,735 1,341,938 59,955 1,067,618 Page 84 Debt Service Summary Tax Levy Supported Debt FY98 FY99 FY00 FY01 FY02 FY03 FY04 FY05 Total Ambulance 21,820 20,920 42,740 DPW Equipment 168,185 141,210 309,395 Dispatch Center 221,520 214,320 206,960 199,440 191,760 183,920 176,000 168,000 1,561,920 Pine Meadows Land Purch. 187,397 178,116 365,513 Planning/Facilities Study 42,410 40,720 83,130 Refuse Tech Judgement 81,483 78,820 66,235 226,538 Conservation, 1986 149,320 141,229 133,750 125,445 19,377 569,121 Schools 1,696,164 1,593,159 1,185,824 1,122,474 1,053,425 295,023 282,468 225,750 7,434,287 ego Subtotal 2,568,299 2,388,494 1,592,769 1,447,359 1,264,562 478,943 458,468 393,750 10,592,644 00 Tax -Exempt Debt Pine Meadows Subtotal 1,100,500 1,033,500 2,134,000 1,100,500 1,033,500 2,134,000 Enterprise Fund Debt Water 286,232 272,056 558,288 Sewer 550,232 579,233 649,280 613,060 518,103 494,358 56,183 3,459,449 SWPAT 435,663 435,663 435,662 435,663 435,663 271,831 2,396,145 Subtotal 1,272,127 1,285,952 1,084,942 1,048,723 953,766 712,189 56,183 6,413,882 Totals 4,940,926 4,707,946 2,677,711 2,496,082 2,218,328 1,191,132 514,651 393,750 19,140,526 Members at Large Margery M. Battin, 15 Paul Revere Road Daniel P. Busa, 6 Farm Road Norman P. Cohen, 56 Coolidge Avenue Elizabeth B. Eddison, 20 Nickerson Rd. Peter Enrich, 35 Clarke Street Donna Hooper, 47 Emerson Gardens Dan H. Fenn, Jr. 59 Potter Pond Jay R. Kaufman, 1 Childs Road Leo P. McSweeney, 84 Shade Street Precinct 1 - Term Expires 1999 Nancy M. Adler, 22 Village Circle James E. Barry, 10 Crescent Hill Avenue Mary Bowes, 32 Arcola Street Francis V. Busa, 42 Lowell Street John E. Curry, 33 Sanderson Road Marsha S. Goldberg, 49 Sanderson Road Albert P. Zabin, 1 Page Road Precinct 1, Term Expires 1998 John P. Breen, 8 Crescent Hill Avenue Jonathan G. Cole, 23 Whipple Road Joseph J. Dini, 16 Sanderson Road Nancy C.Gordon, 10 Fiske Road Barry E. Sampson, 8 Brandon Street Carol J. Sampson, 8 Brandon Street Markus Pinney, 62 Fottler Avenue Precinct 1, Term Expires 2000 Joel A. Adler, 22 Village Circle Laura L. Boghosian, 4 Russell Road Jean W. Cole, 23 Whipple Road Charles E. Shaw, 219 Lowell Street Paul G. Topalian, 46 Circle Road Judith L. Zabin, 1 Page Road Rae Zuemdorfer, 31 Sanderson Road Precinct 2, Term Expires 1999 Robert W. Cunha, 10 Stevens Road Leonora K. Feeney, 4 Moon Hill Road Paul H. Lapointe, 224 Follen Road Daniel A. Lucas, 3 Tower Road Rene D. Varrin, 30 Dawes Road Christina J. Welch, 41 Locust Avenue Carolyn C. Wilson, 33 Oak Street Precinct 2, Term Expires 1998 Thomas R. Diaz, 10 Tower Road Karen A. Dooks, 5 Mohawk Drive Timothy P. Enright, 241 Worthen Rd. E. Myla Kabat -Zinn, 58 Oak Street Andrew McAleer, 121 Follen Road Barry Orenstein, 132 Follen Road David Rudner, 47 Carville Avenue Directory Town Meeting Members Precinct 2, Term Expires 2000 Marian A. O. Cohen, 8 Plymouth Road Heather L. Hartshorn, 28 Locust Avenue Marita B. Hartshorn, 28 Locust Avenue Michael J. O'Sullivan, 12 Aerial Street Alan B. Wilson, 33 Oak Street Donald D. Wilson, 36 Fern Street James S. Wilson, 43 Locust Avenue Precinct 3, Term Expires 1999 John P. Carroll, 29 Allen Street Richard R. Eurich, 7 Pitcairn Place Gloria V. Holland, 38 Webster Road Eric Jay Michelson, 16 Emerson Gardens Richard L. Neumeier, 2 Pitcairn Place Paul J. Rose, 748 Waltham Street Francis W. K. Smith, 4 Clematis Road Precinct 3, Term Expires 1998 Robert N. Cohen, 10 Grassland Street Bruce Collier, 2 Barberry Road Shirley R. Frawley, 68 Potter Pond Paul E. Keane, 17 Woodcliffe Road Marjorie K. Madoff, 27 Normandy Road Marilyn K. Mairson, 29 Lawrence Lane Mary E. Neumeier, 2 Pitcairn Place Precinct 3, Term Expires 2000 Samuel Berman, 11 Barberry Road Jacqueline B. Davison, 86 Spring Street Carol J. Grodzins, 15 Barberry Road Jeanne K.Krieger, 44 Webster Road Douglas M. Lucente, 71 Farmcrest Ave. Robert Rotberg, 14 Barberry Road Caleb Warner, 546 Concord Avenue Precinct 4, Term Expires 1999 Donald A. Chisholm, 166 Lincoln Street Ronald W. Colwell, 127 Kendall Road Margaret F. Rawls, 9 Winthrop Road Nicholas Santosuosso, 2 Washington St. Jeanette P.Webb, 22 Fair Oaks. Trerrace Martin K. White, 50 Bloomfield Street Precinct 4, Term Expires 1998 Nyles Nathan Barnert, 142 Worthen Rd. Nancy M. Cannalonga, 942 Waltham St. John L. Davies, 18 Prospect Hill Road Frederick L. Merrill, Jr., 22 Downing Rd. Kenneth A. Reich, 23 Lincoln Street Sandra J. Shaw, 51 Wachusett Drive Ruth S. Thomas, 10 Parker Street Judith J. Uhrig, 15 Vine Brook Road Page 86 Precinct 4, Term Expires 2000 Nicholas Cannalonga, 942 Waltham St. Stephen E. Coit, 32 Vine Brook Road David J. Harris, 5A Eliot Road Carol B.Hartman, 16 Bloomfield Street Peter C. Kelley, 24 Forest Street Barrie Peltz, 8 Jackson Court Michael Wagner, 44 Prospect Hill Road Precinct 5, Term Expires 1999 Wallace Cupp, 141 Woburn Street Elaine Dratch, 2 Maureen Road John Hayward, 358 Woburn Street Samuel L. Powers, 7 Dunham Street Ephraim Weiss, 462 Lowell Street David G. Williams, 1433 Mass. Avenue Precinct 5, Term Expires 1998 Howard Cravis, 6 Rogers Road Irene M. Dondley, 22 Leonard Road Andrew J. Friedlich, 22 Young Street Paul E. Hamburger, 18 Cooke Road Sally Huebscher, 52 Solomon Pierce Rd. Carol A. Liff, 19 Douglas Road Charles T. Vail, 66 Woburn Street Precinct 5, Term Expires 2000 Marsha F. Byrnes, 3 Blodgett Road Douglas C. Boyer, 19 Peachtree Road Margaret C. Nichols, 4 Rumford Road James M. Shaw, 20 Vine Street Sam Silverman, 18 Ingleside Road Melinda D. Vinton, 11 Leonard Road Mary K. Wolf, 116 East Emerson Road Precinct 6, Term Expires 1999 Cynthia Blumsack, 15 Holmes Road Marshall J. Derby, 23 Suzanne Road Peter Diamond, 15 Franklin Road David L. Kaufman, 152 Burlington St. Richard Pagett, 10 Oakmount Circle Anne A. Ripley, 83 Hancock Street John S. Willson, 16 Hathaway Road Precinct 6, Term Expires 1998 Michael R. Barry, 159 Burlington Street Suzanne E. Barry, 159 Burlington Street Florence A. Baturin, 11 Alcott Road Priscilla Diamond, 15 Franklin Road Alan J. Lazarus, 22 Woodland Road Dennis M. O'Connor, Jr., 16 Seaborn Pl. William B. Simmons, 82 North Street Precinct 6, Term Expires 2000 Marjorie M. Daggett, 9 Burroughs Road Bebe Fallick, 4 Diehl Road Edmund C. Grant, 27 Grove Street Jane Pagett, 10 Oakmount Circle Edith Sandy, 353 North Emerson Road Frank Sandy, 353 North Emerson Road Sheldon A. Spector, 26 Suzanne Road Precinct 7, Term Expires 1999 Catherine M. D. Abbott, 38 Eldred Street Robert M. Farias, 21 Eldred Street Audrey J. Friend, 84 Fifer Lane Jonathan Lederman, 15 Drummer Boy John E. Taylor, 11 Linmoor Terrace James C. Wood, Jr., 51 Gleason Road Martha C. Wood, 51 Gleason Road Precinct 7, Term Expires 1998 George A. Burnell, 4 Eaton Road Neal E. Boyle, Jr,. 23 Pine Knoll Road Clark A.Cowen, 104 Fifer Lane Gordon M. Hardy, 52 N. Hancock Street David Kanter, 48 Fifer Lane David G. Miller, 23 Fifer Lane Joyce A. Miller, 23 Fifer Lane Precinct 7, Term Expires 2000 Marsha E. Baker, 46 Burlington Street Steven L. Colman, 52 Gleason Road Robert G. Coyne, 2 Heritage Drive Alan Garber, 7 Linmoor Terrace Fred H. Martin, 29 Dewey Road Mary W. Miley, 29 Robinson Road Alan A. Wrigley, 205 Grove Street Precinct 8, Term Expires 1999 Roger F. Borghesani, 24 Hastings Road Florence E. Connor, 12 Cedar Street John T. Cunha, 11 Homestead Street Ione D. Garing, 157 Cedar Street Charles Hornig, 75 Reed Street Richard A. Michelson, 54 Asbury Street Margaret B. Schwartz, 48 Bellflower St. Precinct 8, Term Expires 1998 Elizabeth J. Bryant, 18 Liberty Avenue Anne E. Frymer, 64 Asbury Street Diana T. Garcia, 3 Gerard Terrace Alan M. Levine, 54 Reed Street H. Bigelow Moore, 50 Hancock Street James A. Osten, 8 Revere Street Robert V. Whitman, 5 Hancock Avenue Directory Precinct 8, Term Expires 2000 Richard H. Battin, 15 Paul Revere Rd. Steven J. Hurley, 70 Reed Street Donald Jenkins, Jr., 19 Childs Road Paul W. Jenkins, 19 Childs Road Morton G. Kahan, 44 Hancock Street Carolyn H. Tiffany, 109 Reed Street Elizabeth C. Whitman, 5 Hancock Street Precinct 9, Term Expires 1999 Alice J. Adler, 10 Nickerson Road Michelle L. Ciccolo, 215 Wood Street Louise V. T. Kava, 60 Shade Street Janice A. Kennedy, 135 Wood Street Isabel H. Mroczkowski, 4 Francis Road Richard Schaye, 7 Jean Road Michael E. Schroeder, 2 Welch Road Precinct 9, Term Expires 1998 Anthony B. Close, 174 Wood Street Margaret E. Coppe, 12 Barrymeade Dr. Thomas O. Fenn, 15 Shade Street Frank J. Kava, 60 Shade Street William P. Kennedy, 135 Wood Street Henry Norman Manz, 14 Ellison Road Dawn E. McKenna, 2564 Mass. Avenue Precinct 9, Term Expires 2000 Richard L. Canale, 29 Shade Street Susan R. Cusack, 58 Middle Street Susan A. Elberger, 10 Ellison Road Paul E. Mazerall, 32 Roosevelt Road Janet M. Perry, 16 Ellison Road Loretta A. Porter, 2318 Mass. Avenue Fred D. Rosenberg, 76 Wood Street Page 87 Town Meeting Member Changes, 1997 Precinct 1. Markus Pinney replaced Thomas B. Sullivan who moved from town in September. Precinct 2. Andrew McAleer replaced Karen Gray, who resigned in April. David Rudner replaced Katherine Kiefer, who resigned in October. Precinct 4 Frederick L. Merrill replaced Peter Enrich, who resigned when elected to the Board of Selectmen. Precinct 5 Ira W. Crowe replaced Joseph Gilbert, who resigned in September. Precinct 9 William P. Kennedy replaced Richard M. Perry, who passed away April 12. Voters' Information Voter Registration: Residents may register at the Town Clerk's office on any business day from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The town clerk will provide additional registration sessions (including one Saturday) before each election. Voting Places: Precinct 1: Harrington School Precinct 4: High School Precinct 7: Estabrook School Precinct 2: Bowman School Precinct 5: Cary Memorial Hall Precinct 8: Central Fire Station How to Contact Your Representatives United States Senators: Edward M. Kennedy (D) Phone: 617 -565 -3170 Room 2400, JFK Federal Building, Boston, MA 02203 Phone 202 - 224 -4543 315 Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C. 20510 John F. Kerry (D) Phone: 617 -565 -8519 1 Bowdoin Square, 10th Floor, Boston, MA 02114 Phone: 202- 224 -2742 421 Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C. 20510 U. S. Representative, 7th Congressional District: Edward J. Markey (D) Phone: 617 - 396 -2900 5 High Street/Suite 101, Medford, MA 02155 Phone 202 - 225 -2836 2133 Rayburn House Office Bldg, Washington, D.C. 20515 Governor: Paul Cellucci (Acting) (R) Phone: 617- 727 -3600 Room 360, State House, Boston, MA 02133 Governor's Executive Council: 3rd Dist: Cynthia Creem (R) Phone 617 - 727 -2756 Ext. 3 6th Dist: Dorothy Kelly Gay (D) Phone 617 - 727 -2756 Ext. 6 State Senator, 4th Middlesex District: Lexington Precincts 1, 5, 6, 7 Robert A. Havern III (D) Phone: 617 - 722 -1432 Room 513, State House, Boston, MA 02133 35 Bartlett Avenue, Arlington, MA 02174 State Senator, 5th Middlesex District: Lexington Precincts 2, 3, 4, 8, 9 Susan Fargo (D) Phone: 617 - 722 -1572 Room 413F, State House, Boston, MA 02133 House of Representatives, 15th Middlesex District: Jay R. Kaufman (D) Phone: 617 - 722 -2017 Room 489, State House, Boston, MA 02133 Phone: 781 - 862 -6181; 1 Childs Road, Lexington, MA 02173 e -mail: rep .jaykaufman @house.State.ma.US Page 88 Emergency Numbers DIAL 911 for Police • Fire • Ambulance Public Works Emergency: 862 -1618 Emergency Signal on Town Fire Whistle 4444 -Alert Warning, turn on radio/TV for information • 2222 -Final Warning Lexington Town Offices Town Hall, Main Number 862 -0500 TTY# For Hearing Impaired 861 -2739 Animal Control 862 -0500 x240 Animal Shelter 861 -2701 Assessor 862 -0500 x203 Board of Appeals 862 -0500 x207 Board of Selectmen 862 -0500 x208 Building Inspection 862 -0500 x211 Cemetery 861 -2718 Comptroller 862 -0500 x289 Conservation 862 -0500 x226 Council on Aging 861 -0194 Engineering 862 -0500 x231 Fire, Non - Emergency 862 -0272 Health Department 862 -0500 x200 Human Services 861 -2742 Lex. Chair Car (SCM) 861 -1210 LEXPRESS 861 -1210 Library (Main) 862 -6288 Library (East Branch) 862 -2773 Personnel 862 -0500 x277 Planning Board 862 -0500 x245 Police, Non - Emergency 862 -1212 Public Works Admin. 862 -0500 x252 Public Works Operations 861 -2757 Dispatcher 862 -1618 Highway 861 -2759 Mechanics 861 -2760 Park and Tree 861 -2758 Water and Sewer 861 -2757 School Department Recreation Selectmen Tax Collector Town Clerk Town Manager Transport Services Treasurer Veteran's Services Water /Sewer Bills Westview Cemetery Administrative Office & Receptionist 861 -2580 Estabrook School Facilities 861 -2577 Personnel 861 -2556 Fiske School Superintendent 861 -2550 Senior High School 861 -2343 Harrington School Adult Education 862 -8043 Hastings School Clarke Middle School 861 -2450 Minuteman Tech. Diamond Middle School 861 -2560 Community Education Bowman School 861 -2500 No- School Recorded Message Bridge School 861 -2510 Holidays for Town Offices, Libraries and Trash Collection 862 -0500 x262 862 -0500 x208 862 -0500 x266 862 -0500 x270 862 -0500 x276 862 -0500 x241 862 -0500 x269 861 -2742 862 -0500 x279 861 -2718 861 -2520 861 -2530 861 -2540 860 -5800 861 -6500 861 -7150 861 -2552 New Year's Day, Martin Luther King's Birthday, Presidents' Day, Patriots' Day, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day, Veterans' Day, Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day. Following a holiday, all trash and recycling collections will be one day later that week TOWN OF LEXINGTON ANNUAL REPORT 1997