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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2023-05-23-SLC-minSustainable Lexington Committee Minutes of Meeting of May 23, 2023 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 (chair), Lin Jensen, Andy Joynt, Rick Reibstein, Todd Rhodes (vice-chair), Dan Voss, Charlie Wyman Members Absent: Celis Brisbin, Paul Chernick Staff Present: Maggie Peard Other Attendees: Atreyi Basu (SustainabLY), Tanay Dalmia (SustainabLY), Dora Liao (SustainabLY), Joe Pato (Select Board), Mark Sandeen (Select Board), Charles Hornig (Planning), Marcia Gens, Tina McBride, Ricki Pappo, Gerry Yurkevicz The meeting was called to order at 6:04 pm. Cindy 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 April 25, 2023, were approved as written. Comments from residents; emails to committee mailbox; new business. •Joe reported that the Select Board was looking at the potential for applying fees for pickup of mattress, white goods and bulky items as a result of mattresses being banned from trash by DEP. However, they have decided not to at this time, and are learning towards going to Town Meeting just with an amendment to the general bylaw language regarding a "suitable place or method for free public disposal for the inhabitants of the Town to deposit ashes, cinders, papers and other refuse and rubbish” and a long-term waste reduction plan. •Ricki noted that the 4th grader who spoke at Town Meeting would like to do more, and asked if SustainabLY could help. •Todd said there were no notable emails raising new issues. SustainabLY update: Tanay reported that the event at the library went well, with a number of different interactive stations and good attendance/participation. This is Tanay’s last meeting, as he will be graduating shortly, and the committee thanked him and wished him well. SustainabLY’s new member, Dora Liao, introduced herself and received welcomes from the .1 Sustainable Lexington Committee Minutes of May 23, 2023 committee. Atreyi reported that they had their last meeting of the year the day before and are looking for more high schoolers. She also said they’d be happy to help engaging the 4th grader. Sustainability & Resilience Officer presentation and updates. Maggie reported: •BEU-D: The official deadline has been moved to May 31 to sync with water bills. So far 21 connections have been made through Portfolio Manager, encompassing 25 buildings, in addition to 30 Town buildings, out of a total of 120. •Clean Heat Outreach Specialist hire: LexCAN and the Town partnered on a grant to hire a Clean Heat Outreach Specialist, and Andy Joynt has been hired. •Fossil-fuel Free Pilot: The state has issued the final regulations, opening the door to the application process, and everything points to Lexington being one of the 10 chosen. •Upcoming Noise Bylaw education & enforcement: The Town will be hosting an educational event Thursday night on the noise by-law (both current seasonal restrictions as well as eventual ban) to help with the transition. •Launch of compost pilot: Sign-ups went live on May 17, with over 1,000 on the first day. The list currently stands at 1,537 (out of 2,000 total authorized). •Upcoming Zero Waste Plan meeting: This will be held tomorrow evening to introduce and seek input on the draft Zero Waste Plan for the town. It will be a hybrid meeting, with both in-person and Zoom break-out rooms. •Home Performance Contractors: There have been a number of complaints about HomeWorks, the current MassSave contractor that the town partners with to conduct home energy assessments. Some discussion followed about why we partner with a particular contractor and what we need in one (capacity, willingness to invest in promotion of the program). Maggie will explore options. •Resolution Framework: Maggie briefly reviewed it again, focusing on changes since the last meeting. It is now being circulated to committees, with the next step being to bring it to the Select Board. The question of whether to incorporate the Climate Emergency Resolution as well was brought up earlier; she explained that it is less actionable but should be referenced. Tina noted that the Climate Emergency Resolution was championed by young people and noting it is another way to demonstrate that we are listening. Following discussion, it was moved, seconded and voted unanimously that the Sustainable Lexington Committee supports the framework that Maggie and Hemali have assembled. •Climate Action Plan GHG Inventory: The Climate Action Plan working group meets again on June 7 to generate implementation blueprints for climate actions. There was some discussion about the methods, purposes, and uses of the greenhouse gas inventory. Mark .2 Sustainable Lexington Committee Minutes of May 23, 2023 explained that the purpose has always been to guide the actions we take as a community and provide a baseline against which to measure progress. •Existing Buildings Operations Policy (EBOP): There are four documents which were circulated to the committee before the meeting. Maggie walked the committee through the metrics document. Some questions and discussion followed. The next immediate step is to continue to circulate it among staff. Eventually the path to follow might be similar to the one used for adoption of the Integrated Building Design and Construction Policy, with an ad hoc group that might include members of the Select Board, School Committee, Sustainable Lexington Committee and staff assembling to polish the document and recommend its adoption. Other Updates: Police Station Solar and Storage: Todd reported that the Select Board has discussed it, the HDC has previously voted in favor of the current design (it was a vote of the sense of the commission, not a full certificate of appropriateness), the Dept. of Public Facilities has been working with residents on other designs, and there have been several design charrettes. The latest version from the architect, which is both shorter and a more cantilevered system, will be presented to the HDC on June 1, and needs approval by July 7 to be folded into the current construction contract. Todd presented a motion that was discussed and slightly amended. It was then moved, seconded, and unanimously voted: The Sustainable Lexington Committee strongly supports the approval of a police station solar canopy and energy storage design that satisfies the following criteria: •Generates sufficient energy to the Police Station for the building to at a minimum be net-zero (i.e., the annual energy generated by the solar system – rooftop and canopy – is equal to the expected annual energy consumed by the building). •Includes electric battery storage to address peak electricity demands from EV fast chargers and support building resilience. •Can be designed and constructed within the budget approved by Town Meeting. •Fits within the Town’s construction schedule so that infrastructure and footings can be installed in 2023 so that full construction can be completed in 2024. It is critical that the Town maximizes the amount of solar installed on impervious surfaces as part of Town projects. There are limited opportunities to install solar on impervious surfaces in town. Therefore, the Town needs to get as much of out of each opportunity as possible to reduce the amount of solar that may need to be placed on green spaces in the future. .3 Sustainable Lexington Committee Minutes of May 23, 2023 Integrated Building Design and Construction Policy. Todd explained that the IBDCP now goes to the Select Board on June 5 for review and approval, and then the School Committee. The June 5 meeting may be a joint meeting. EV school buses. Todd explained that the $350K in funding for Lexington may be on shaky ground; the schools need to make a change in their contracts that would allow for the earmark, which will otherwise expire in 2026. The next question to address is where the charging stations should go. Discovery Day: Todd has obtained our permit and there was a brief discussion of logistics. Library HVAC improvements. Cindy reported that the library is starting an upgrade of the lower level, which will include a move to heat pumps for that level. The library director and chair of the board asked that Cindy report this to the committee. Statement of Concern for Lexington’s Trees. Charlie reported that the statement has been signed by almost 1,000 individuals who live and/or work in Lexington and endorsed by 24 organizations, both public and private. The group presented to the Select Board Monday evening and were well received. No specific commitment was sought at that time; the tough decisions will come at budget time and when draft amendments to the tree bylaw are presented. Continuation of discussion on Town solar build-out gap analysis. Todd walked the committee through the working group’s updates. Considerable discussion followed, focusing primarily but not exclusively on the question of what our goal should be, if any, and next steps. Discuss possible solar requirement/bylaw suggestion to Planning Board. Lin briefly introduced her interest in exploring this, but because of the lateness of the hour, discussion was postponed to the next meeting. Next Meeting: The next regularly scheduled meeting of the Sustainable Lexington Committee will be held online at 6 pm on June 20, 2023. The committee voted to adjourn at 9:55 pm. Respectfully submitted, Charlie Wyman .4