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The evening session commenced with the Town Manager presenting employee awards, specifically the 14th Annual Joseph Valley Employee of the Year Award and the 10th Annual Public Safety Award, detailing the inspiring life of Joseph Lally, after whom the awards are named. James McRae, the Veterans Services Officer, received the Employee of the Year award for his tireless advocacy for veterans and his coordination of community events. Detective Michael Oracleo received the Public Safety Employee of the Year award for his extensive work as a School Resource Officer and his involvement in various public safety and educational initiatives, including suicide awareness training. Following the awards, the meeting addressed Article 12, which concerned the transfer of real property located at 53 River Street, purchased in 2016. A motion was made to authorize the transfer of the property for open space, historic preservation, or recreation purposes, as recommended by a committee that investigated the site, noting that the associated dam is in an unsafe condition requiring engineering studies funded by Community Preservation Act money.
This document provides an update on the DPW Building Project for the Town of Acton, outlining a two-phase approach. Phase 1 involves the construction of a new facility designed to improve staff safety, working conditions, and meet operational needs with a 50-year life expectancy. Phase 2 focuses on renovating the existing facility for vehicle storage, with planning to be determined at a later time. The objective is to achieve project goals at a realistic cost and ensure long-term functionality.
The meeting was a joint session of the Finance Committee and Select Board to discuss and document the pros and cons of various scenarios for a new Public Works Building (DPW). Discussions focused on five scenarios, including Option One, which was the most expensive but addressed most programmatic needs identified in the feasibility study, though it lacked a washbay and required site evacuation during construction. Option Two involved renovating the existing facility, which was deemed the cheapest construction-type option but widely criticized for being inadequate in size, functionality, and longevity, failing to meet current staffing needs. Scenario Three proposed knocking down half the existing building to add larger fleet storage and renovating the remaining half. A public member attempted to provide commentary regarding the rejected DPW project funding and voter disapproval, but was informed there was no public comment section on the agenda.
The meeting focused on reviewing and discussing project cost estimates for a new Department of Public Works building, which currently stands at an estimated total cost of $47.9 million. Key discussion points included the base construction cost of approximately $37 million for the 46,000 square foot facility, which utilizes pre-engineered metal building construction rather than traditional brick and mortar. The committee addressed the need to value engineer costs down from the current estimate. Potential cost reduction strategies discussed included eliminating phased construction by securing temporary offsite DPW operations, shifting the building footprint to minimize site work, reducing the building's square footage while ensuring future capacity, finalizing the number of geothermal wells required, reducing the extent of the masonry base, and deferring certain industrial equipment and the canopy addition on the salt shed as bid alternates. Furthermore, opportunities for the DPW to perform in-house work such as site clearing, excavation, and installing sound barrier walls were reviewed.
The second day of the annual town meeting commenced with employee recognition, specifically announcing the Joseph A. Lally merit awards for Public Safety Employee of the Year (Firefighter Paramedic Josh Ramos) and Municipal Employee of the Year (Mary Cadis). The primary agenda item discussed was Article 12, concerning the adoption of the state's specialized opt-in energy code for new buildings to help achieve climate goals. Discussion included details about energy rating systems (HERS, TEDi), comparison between the current stretch code and the specialized code regarding fossil fuel requirements, and the impact on new construction. Citizens also inquired about embodied carbon costs and potential state assistance/benefits for implementing these standards. The Finance Committee offered no recommendation on Article 12.
Extracted from official board minutes, strategic plans, and video transcripts.
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Melissa Bible
Executive Director
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