HomeMy WebLinkAbout2002-12-12-CEC-min
Town of Lexington
Capital Expenditures Committee
Meeting Notes
December 12, 2002
Town Hall, Room 111
Committee members present: Bhatia, Burnell, Hornig,
Rosenberg, Stolz
Appropriation Committee jointly hearing presentation on
schools
Schools staff presenters: Tony Close and Tom Griffiths,
School Committee; Joanne Benton, Superintendent; Paul
McGonagle, Director of Office of Facilities, Grounds, and
Support Services
Also attending: John Ryan, Finance Director
Citizen present: Ingrid Klimoff
Minutes of the November 20 meeting were approved, as
corrected, and will be forwarded to Appropriation Committee
liaisons.
Meetings Schedule (new items highlighted)
(Monday, Dec. 16, 8:00 p.m., Special Town Meeting PAYT
Refunds, Clarke Middle School)
7:45 p.m., Lincoln field surfaces, at
Tuesday, Dec. 17,
DPW, 201 Bedford Street
Wednesday, Dec. 18, 7:30 p.m., Town Hall Room 111, DPW
operations facilities and senior center planning
Enablement Committee to follow at
updates/progress reports,
approx. 9:00 p.m.
Tuesday, Jan. 7, tentatively 7:30 at Town Hall, Lincoln
field presentations to the committee to prepare for
forthcoming Special Town Meeting; or a CEC working group
meeting on budget and cash capital policy
Tentative: Wednesday, Jan. 8., Summit III
Tentative: Wednesday, Jan. 15, Summit IV
Tentative: Wednesday, Jan. 22, Special Town Meeting,
Lincoln fields issues
Schools Presentation
Paul McGonagle presented the Lexington Public Schools “Five
Year Capital Plan” (the document should be considered part
of these minutes).
•Status of current projects: Lexington High School
(LHS) renovation contract concluded Nov. 1, but punch list
shows approx. $2 mil. of work/items to be completed;
estimate March completion. Unsure of budget/overrun status,
but should know within a week as architect gathers data, and
will report to committee. Documentation of prior work
somewhat incomplete, hence need to update data; can check
with Permanent Building Committee (PBC). Middle schools
status approximately the same (contract completion date Nov.
1, estimated completion March, punch lists of work to be
completed total approx. $650,000 and $720,000 at the two
schools.
•Status of FY ’03 items: Harrington construction
drawings about 50% complete, and educational program for the
building has been signed-off by teaching and other staff
there; Fiske still in design development phase, with
education program still being refined and aligned with
design. Burnell queried about meeting the 35 dba noise
standard, use of heat pumps at Harrington. Close assured
that hallway-placed individual heat pumps were confirmed to
meet the noise standard in each room; that $200,000 had been
reserved within design to get to that level if needed; and
that maintenance and parts issues would be budgeted to
maintain that initial noise standard. Same system will be
recommended for Fiske, and PBC unanimous for this approach,
based in part on an engineering recommendation pertaining to
noise levels.
Bhatia queried about School Building Assistance (SBA)
reimbursement. Ryan suggested 12-15 years at a minimum (LHS
and middle schools now rank Nos. 30, 32, and 34 on list;
state funding at $13-14 million per year, and list is about
280 projects long; elementary schools not even on the queue
yet.)
Diamond acoustical modification: completed successfully
at $900,000 estimate, reimbursable; remaining funds
($150,00-plus) being used for LHS modification design.
Clarke gym floor complete; unsure if qualifies for SBA
reimbursement.
School Technology budget being spent on replacement
hardware (software is funded from operations); no new
request for FY 0’04; Bhatia asked for depreciation and
replacement schedule, which the Schools will supply.
•FY ’04 requests.
LHS acoustical modification, $1.5 million estimated: 20
rooms to receive sound panels, better ceiling title, some
carpeting, and moving air-handling to roof. Covers general
education, science, math and language labs, black-box
theater, intended to cover all grades. 7 students in system
now, 17 more on way up. Looking at whether could be cheaper
to get rooms on one floor of a sing, rather than two floors,
vent into existing air-handling equipment rather then cut
new roof holes, etc. Asked for SBA reimbursement and expect
ruling in early January, will report to committee. Issues in
SBA determination: whether project considered closed and,
more important, whether have already reached allowable
reimbursement limit for the project. Benton estimates out-
of-district placement of $110,000 per student per year
[Rosenberg has queried off-line to Griffiths.] Envisioned
project includes both physical modification and use of in-
room technology for the affected students (i.e., is not an
either-or situation); rooms currently average 51 dba. Not
likely to have to retrofit whole school, since ADA standards
being discussed are 35dba for new construction.
Hornig questioned about likely funding: bond Feb.’04
for 20 years? Ryan prefers 10 years for item of this size,
since overall cost cheaper. Not likely a debt-exclusion
issue, too large for cash, not carry along short-term.
Diamond gum floor, $125,000: Some water damage during
renovation, issues regarding responsibility for that. Beyond
that, needs to be replaced. 10,000 sf. Would be wood (Clarke
rubber surface only because of moisture problem in
underlying slab).
Harrington gym floor, $65,000: Existing parquet
lifting, tripping risks, and is attached with mastic
containing asbestos. Cost includes removal/abatement, and
replacement, 3,400 sf, estimated use of building as swing
space 10-14 years.
Hastings stress crack, $65,000: Visual inspection
reveals settling where foundation poured over soil (vs.
segment on ledge). Attempt fix by pinning to stable walls
and installing brackets, monitoring subsequent shifting for
two years. If that is inadequate, would have to excavate and
pour subfoundation, a multi-hundred-thousand dollar item.
Discussion: What are School Committee priorities? Close
said the Committee had not yet discussed, would next
Tuesday, would report back end of next week. If LHS
acoustics were reimbursable, most seemed to agree, that
would be a priority; if not, would be deferrable for a year.
The gym floors are safety-related. The Hastings stress crack
was regarded as deferrable. Capital Expenditures wanted to
hear from the Schools what their priorities were, not what
the budget constraints were, and would then recommend its
priorities.
Rosenberg, for example, was concerned about deferring
roof maintenance in cases where those roofs were over gym
floors that are being, or have been replaced. McGonagle said
the existing roof leaks were pinholes or manageable for a
year, pending a more systematic evaluation of roofs overall,
a system-wide strategy for EPDM replacement roofs, and the
anticipated out-year major projects at Clarke, LHS, etc.
FY’05-’08 pr0posals: Regarded as placeholders so far.
LHS auditorium is for replacing lighting, for which there is
o replacement part supply (auditorium was deleted from
renovation project), and replacement rigging is being funded
now out of operating funds.
Bhatia asked again for the computer
replacement/depreciation schedule for the’05 $250,000
request.
Rosenberg asked that the committee compare the school
vehicles vs. DPW’s equipment replacement request, to focus
on the most critical and most obsolete/expensive to maintain
vehicles townwide (schools request deferred while McGonagle
evaluates use, scheduling, possible cooperation with DPW).
Instead of reroofing Estabrook modular roofs, would it
be cheaper to move the ones owned at Fiske, which will be
available in 0’04? To be determined.
Hornig noted that while McGonagle is new and therefore
projecting future years carefully, and is prudently
budgeting, FY ’04 would in fact have more room for capital
improvements, if there is an operating override, than the
subsequent two fiscal years (assuming three-year override
cycles), and that needed to be factored into school
planning.
Horning noted the absence of a request for design funds
for Bowman or Bowman and Estabrook renovation/replacement,
and subsequently for construction funds, and then for design
funds for Estabrook and Bridge. The Schools plan will be
modified to restore these items, assuming the existing
replacement/renovation and debt-exclusion override calendars
(affects FY’05 and’08 requests). Burnell pointed out that
within the year, the School Committee will have to decide on
whether it is pursuing a fallback strategy for the remaining
four elementary schools, in light of state and SBA funding
shortfalls; a 20-year cycle of window, roof, and mechanical
system replacement; accommodating growth would then become
an issue of additions to school sites, or extending use of
“old” Harrington, Hornig noted.
Central Administration offices: horning question
spending any more money on renovation. Rosenberg suggested
trading off this need vs. new DPW office and garage/barn
facilities needs in the committee’s evaluation of town
priorities.
At this point, approximately 9:00, Appropriation Committee
members and Ryan withdrew for a separate meeting elsewhere.
Capital Expenditures continued its discussions; Griffiths
remained to provide School perspective on playing fields.
Lincoln Field Discussion
Hornig pointed out the committee will need to make a
recommendation to the Special Town Meeting. Several issues
are being raised: design, aesthetics, parking, paths, safety
and economics of turf vs. the infilled synthetic turf
material chosen last spring. The decision last spring was
based on infilled synthetic surface’s appearance,
playability, extended-season availability for use, and
minimization of runoff (herbicides, pesticides) vs.natural
turf. In addition, the committee felt then that the town was
much better able to maintain the synthetic infilled turf
material, the use of which it endorsed, rather than planting
grass atop the reconstructed landfill subsurface after
repair, filling, levelling, etc. Who makes proposal to Town
Meeting? Who rebuts (Recreation Committee plub consultant)?
Who else?
Petition for the Special Town Meeting focuses on turf
vs. synthetics, so all other issues are beyond the debate
and this committee’s deliberations. We need presentations
from the two sides and their experts on the economics of
turf vs. synthetic surfacing (try for Jan. 7), and then to
decide on whether we recommend that if there is a change,
the town voters have to weigh in again (or is it just a Town
Meeting issue)? Issues of length of season, use are key to
Schools, given loss of Harrington fields soon.
At Jan. 7, will need to consult Town Meeting debate
language, coverage, ballot item language, flier to voters on
the issue.
Other
Need to know when Selectment will debate cash capital
policy; Stolz to check. And then committee needs to meet for
its deliberations.
Meeting adjourned 9:58 p.m.
John S. Rosenberg