HomeMy WebLinkAbout1999-11-02-CEC-min
MEETING DATE 11/2/1999
Hi: Attached are the prospective minutes of the November 2nd meeting of
the
Capital Expenditures Committee. Items 9 and 14, below, suffer from poor
note taking. If anybody has better notes, particularly for proposed
spending on library capital equipment, I would appreciate getting an
upgrade. Item 14, general Town spending on big-ticket items is less
important, because we will have a gazillion spreadsheets with all of
that
itemized before long.
I have not included the usual schedule of upcoming meetings. HOWEVER, I
do
want to remind you that the Monday, August 8th, Selectmen's Meeting
will
hear departmental capital spending requests. -Tom G-
Capital Expenditures Committee
Minutes November 2, 1999 Meeting
1) Meeting was called to order by the Chairman at 7:30pm. All members
present: Shirley Stolz, Narain Bhatia, Tom Griffiths, and new
member
George Burnell. The Appropriation Committee was represented by its
liaison member Deborah Brown. The Library was represented at the
Meeting by Carol Mahoney. The Town Manager, Rick White, also
appeared
at the meeting.
2) The Clerk passed out minutes of the October 26th meeting and a list
of future meetings to those who hadn't received them by e-mail.
3) Condition of the East Lexington Branch Library: Carol Mahoney began
with a discussion of the East Lexington Branch Library. It had a
leak
on the side of the roof that is 25 years old, but the leak was
small
and caused no damage to the library's books. The branch has
structural problems, a bowed beam in the roof, among them. The
branch
can continue to operate, however, until 2002, at the earliest. At
some point, serious consideration will be in order for the East
Lexington branch.
4) Function of the East Lexington Branch Library: The branch will
operate with extended hours during the main library renovation. It
cannot, however, accommodate much overflow from the main library.
The
branch serves, in part, as a reading room, a quieter, less intense
place than the main library. Its collection contains items like
popular fiction and books from the NY Times bestseller list; the
collection is not a research collection. Circulation at the branch
is
about 35,000 items a year, compared with about 600,000 at the main
library.
5) Renovation of the Main Library, Schedule:
Historic District Commission Approval (and Settlement Jan/Feb
2000
of the Douglas suit)
Documentation taking about 5 months
Move to Cary Hall Jun/Jul
2000
Out for Bids Aug/Sep
2000
Review taking about 2 months
Award Oct/Nov
2000
Construction Begins Dec 2000
Construction completes about 16 months later Apr 2002
6) Various Numbers (in $Millions) Concerning Main Library Renovation:
May 98 cost estimate (will be used with 3% inflation estimate) 9.3
Cost to Move to Cary Hall 1.5
State has given approximately 3
Fund-Raising to date 1
From Trustees 2
7) Handicapped access has been designed, but not yet approved.
8) Carol Mahoney raised the issue of maintenance. The Town has no
maintenance budget for Town buildings. Thus, she worries about
maintenance of the renovated library. For example, she expects the
Historic District Commission to require a wood windows, a higher
maintenance alternative.
9) The library capital equipment request will contain amounts for
microfilm and microfiche readers at $10,000 apiece. A self checkout
machine at $25,000 was deemed too costly. Even in these days of
electronic information storage, many valuable resources are
available
only on microfilm, including the Lexington Minuteman, and older
copies of the NY Times and Boston Globe.
10) The Library is trying to bring in efficient, low-maintenance
equipment. Carol cited the example of a gigantic carpet-cleaning
machine. The general maintenance budget is carried in the DPW.
11) Rick White spoke to the Committee about capital matters in general.
12) Rick says the Town is serious about the 5% cash capital plan.
Steady-state investment for small-ticket items is a serious Town
goal. In this context, Rick said that he'd favor a larger
percentage
set-aside for small-ticket capital expenditures, but that
political/economic realities dictated the 5% number as a
defendable
position.
13) Over time, equipment investment has been favored over streets. The
goal has been to achieve efficiencies in labor at the expense of
capital maintenance.
14) The study of our roads classifies them into three states: (1) roads
that need extensive, expensive reconstruction (estimated at
$25-to-30 million), (2) roads in need of repair, but not
reconstruction, and (3) roads requiring only simple maintenance.
We
should ask DPW next week about what estimated maintenance is in
each
category, and what we can accomplish in steady-state with Chapter
90
funds. In any event, major maintenance goals are to keep roads
from
creeping down in the condition categories. Note: the roads in need
of reconstruction don't require more maintenance money as they
deteriorate further: any additional cost of delay is simply that
of
inflation. Rick felt the study was valuable in establishing goals,
but warned that it was, by no means, the final word: further
manual
inspection of the roads will be required for a completely accurate
assessment of where we stand.
15) Rick listed several large ticket capital items the Town is facing,
but the Clerk's fingers were not nimble enough to keep up. Among
the items listed were the elementary schools at $60 million, the
DPW
building at $6 million, and the Senior Center at 30,000 square
feet.
An option for the DPW building is to rebuild on the Hartwell Ave.
site of the current landfill, once that is closed. That would free
up the current DPW site for sale or other use by the Town.
16) Landfill Closure: Rick is exploring whether Lexington can be
granted
an option for a "private sector" closing. This would involve
having
an appropriately certified engineer design an individual plan for
Lexington's closing.rather trying to comply with all the
requirements of state law, regulation by regulation. Rick thinks
would save a substantial amount on the closing.
17) Rick has promised us an update on 14-Dec-99 concerning large
contemplated capital expenditures.
18) Members of the Committee speculated that the Town needs maybe $100
million worth capital expenditures during the next ten-to-fifteen
years. Rick and the Committee discussed the problems of preparing
5-year, or longer, big-ticket capital plans.
19) After some discussion, the Committee decided to have George
Burnell be its liaison to the Committee studying town-side
building
utilization.
20) The meeting ended at 10:17pm. Minutes by Tom Griffiths