HomeMy WebLinkAbout2021-07-27-SLC-min RECEIVED
2021 29 IIMov, 3AI puiT°m
Sustainable Lexington Committee TOWN CLERK
LEXINGTON MA
Minutes of Meeting of July 27, 2021
A meeting of the Sustainable Lexington Committee (SLC)was held by Zoom conference. A
quorum of at least five was present throughout.
Members Present: Cindy Arens, Celis Brisbin, Paul Chernick, Rick Reibstein, Todd
Rhodes (vice-chair), Dan Voss (Chair), Charlie Wyman
Members Absent: Archana Dayalu
Staff Present: Stella Carr
Other Attendees: Joe Pato (Select Board), Mark Sandeen (Select Board), Mary Hutton
(Mothers Out Front), Ricki Pappo (LexGWAC), Griztko A Erickson
(BU student), Michelle Wu (SustainabLY), Tanay Dalmia
(SustainabLY), Charles Hornig (Planning Board), Robert Peters
(Planning Board), Jeanne Krieger
The meeting was called to order at 6:02 pm. Todd referenced the opening statement requested by
the Town Clerk, and all members present responded that they could hear.
Approval of minutes. The draft minutes of May 25, June 4, June 22, and July 23 were all
approved as written.
Comments from residents, New business. Cindy reported that someone from the Special Permit
Residential District Committee (?) contacted her to inform her about potential changes to the
Zoning By-Law, including language about sustainability, and to ask if Sustainable Lexington has
any interest. Charles Hornig replied by directing the committee to the Planning Board agenda the
following evening, which lists a number of by-law changes they are considering for either a fall
Town Meeting (if one is held) or Annual Town Meeting in the spring; these include amendments
to the by-law's special permit criteria, Open Space Residential Development provisions, and
solar energy systems provisions, in addition to the adoption of regulations that relate to
sustainability and landscaping.
Cindy also reported that the testimony that she and other members of the Lexington panel
delivered to the Joint Committee on Municipalities and Regional Government earlier in the day
went well. Mark added that their testimony was well received and the response of the committee
to all the home rule petitions on this subject was pretty positive; they will be grappling with the
question of whether to approve such petitions town-by-town or to recommend statewide enabling
legislation.
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Sustainable Lexington Committee Minutes of July 27, 2021
Sustainability Director's Report. Stella introduced Michelle and Tanay, members of
SustainabLY, who each spoke briefly about initiatives they are exploring, including a
Sustainability Day at the schools and other hands-on activities. Stella provided updates on the
new charging stations; the RFP for solar panels for the new fire station; a Police Department test
drive of a Tesla; the water webinar she presented the previous week; and the Town's hiring of a
new Equity Officer.
Fleet Electrification Policy. Stella walked the committee through the latest draft of the fleet
electrification policy. Some discussion followed about the logistics of obtaining approval of both
the Select Board and the School Committee. After further discussion, the committee voted to
endorse the policy as drafted, 7-0.
Report on siting solar arrays without need for greenfield sites. Rick introduced a student of his at
BU, Griztko Erickson, who had taken on the project of identifying feasible solar array siting
alternatives to forest conversion. Gritzko led us through his presentation. Some discussion
followed, especially focused on the opportunities that powerline corridors and roadway canopies
might present. Dan suggested that a second student project that explored impediments and
regulatory pathways to approval of these alternatives would be very useful.
Updates to the solar bylaws approved by Town Meeting last fall. Charles explained that the
Planning Board was considering amendments to the Zoning Bylaw to remove restrictions and
streamline permitting to make it easier for people to install small scale solar systems, for
consideration at town meeting this fall or next spring. The committee voted to express our
support of the proposal, 5 in favor, none opposed, with 2 abstentions (members who wished to
study the details further).
Update on Article 45 working group. Charles explained that the Planning Department is current
planning to bring back Article 45 in a substantially different form that will apply town-wide and
not just to the Hartwell corridor.
Separately, there is a working group (that includes Charles, Cindy, Mark)working on the
emissions issue. Cindy added that Amanda Loomis, Sandhya Iyer, and Building Commissioner
Jim Kelly are or will also be involved. The Town Manager has set the scope of the working
group to focus on establishing a number for the minimum BTU/hour/square foot baseload that
can be required from non-fossil fuel combustion for space heating as part of any hybrid system.
The group has spoken with one consultant who might help but are trying to meet with others, and
would like to have an answer by the end of August. The result of this effort could be
incorporated into a general by-law, if not the zoning by-law.
Ricki Pappo expressed concern that the Planning Department/Board is not planning to bring
Article 45 back to Town Meeting as previously expected following the resolution of work by the
working group. The Sustainable Lexington Committee will continue monitor progress on both
activities.
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Sustainable Lexington Committee Minutes of July 27, 2021
Update on Comprehensive Plan. Cindy identified that there has been no direct communication
with the Comprehensive Plan group since she and Dan were interviewed last month. Charles
reported that a lot of outreach is planned for this fall and the plan is targeted to be completed by
the end of the year.
BEUDO —Continuing Conversation. Todd provided the overview that a building energy use
disclosure ordinance (BEUDO) has been discussed at recent committee meetings and has been
kept on the agenda for continued discussion. Stella reported that she has no updates but will
continue to look into what other communities are doing. Mark commented that Boston has had a
BEUDO for about 7 years and is beginning to transition to a Building Emissions Reduction and
Disclosure Ordinance (BERDO)that would include requirements that building owners meet
targets for emissions per square foot based on the building type. The program sets 5-year targets
and is not prescriptive on the approach to reduce emissions. Fees are imposed if targets are not
met.
The committee discussed that such an ordinance would need to go before Town Meeting and a
warrant article for spring 2022 Town Meeting would need to be submitted to the Select Board by
December. Cindy, Dan, and Todd agreed to lead an effort with Stella to begin the work to
prepare language and plan outreach for the warrant article. Dan identified that starting with
municipal buildings (i.e., the buildings operations/performance policy) would be a needed first
step to set the example for commercial buildings. Mark commented that Town buildings
represent about 20% of the buildings over 25,000 sq ft. Residents Jeanne Krieger, Ricki Pappo,
and Mary Hutton expressed interest in supporting the effort.
Heat Pump Promotion— Continuing Conversation. Stella identified that she is looking at grants
for heat pumps and is working to set up a webinar to educate residents about heat pumps. At
spring Town Meeting, Stella plans to request funding to support a community outreach program.
Neonicotinoids: Stella contacted DPW and they reported that they do not believe that use
neonicotinoids on Town property. No input has been received yet on whether Conservation has a
policy of the use of these chemicals on leased Town land. Todd asked Stella if she would ask
DPW if they would be willing to allow a representative of the committee to review their list of
purchased chemicals (Jeanne Krieger offer her support). Todd commented that the state passed
restrictions earlier this year that only licensed professionals were allowed to apply these
chemicals. Ricki suggested that Lexington Living Landscapes might be able to take up a larger
effort to educate residents and landscapers about neonicotinoids.
Capital Planning Tools: There have been no discussions with the Department of Public Facilities
(DPF) since they presented the Capital Planning Tool to the committee. The committee discussed
that the implementing performance requirements into this tool would be a valuable way to
implement the planned Building Operations/Performance Policy. The team looking into the
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Sustainable Lexington Committee Minutes of July 27, 2021
BERDO warrant article will contact the DPF to begin the process of establishing building
performance targets.
Next Meeting: The next regularly scheduled meeting of Sustainable Lexington is at 6 pm on
August 24, 2021.
The meeting was adjourned at 8:35 pm.
Respectfully submitted,
Charlie Wyman and Todd Rhodes
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