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Tag: select board

  • Tewksbury sees 4 water main breaks in 5 days as Select Board seeks to address aging pipes

    Tewksbury sees 4 water main breaks in 5 days as Select Board seeks to address aging pipes

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    TEWKSBURY — The Select Board met for a working session Oct. 22 to talk about long-term plans to address the town’s aging water pipes, and soon after the issue was highlighted further when the town faced four water main breaks in less than a week.

    Water main breaks were reported on James Street Oct. 30, Veranda Avenue on Nov. 2, Astle Street on Nov. 3 and Pleasant Street on Nov. 4. Town Manager Richard Montuori said in a phone call Monday afternoon the first three breaks had already been fixed, with the Pleasant Street break expected to be fixed in short order as well.

    Montuori said there is nothing extraordinary about four water main breaks in a relatively short period of time, with age being the likely culprit rather than any other external factors.

    “These are the normal water main breaks we see throughout the year,” said Montuori.

    Tewksbury’s water pipes are aging, an issue the Select Board had a working session to discuss recently at the lead of board member James Mackey.

    Mackey said in a Monday phone call about half of Tewksbury’s roughly 160 miles of pipes are past their estimated end of life, and Tewksbury has been averaging about 30 breaks per year in recent years.

    “I have always been fiscally conservative, and I think there are very few things we should be throwing money at to solve our problems, but this is a unique situation,” said Mackey.

    Mackey has taken the lead on the issue for the board for the last three years, working with Montuori and the Department of Public Works, which he joked has given him “a master’s in water.” Some older New England water infrastructure is made up of asbestos cement, which Mackey said is a formerly common water conduit that sags over time. When such pipes are depressurized and then pressurized again, Mackey said this causes micro-cracks to form, compromising the pipe’s integrity.

    The town has a five-year capital plan, as does the Department of Public Works, but Mackey proposed a 10-year plan to address the aging pipes with a higher rate of replacement, which he called “the most realistic timeline we can achieve it in.”

    “Shorter than that, and we run into issues with shutting down too many roads at once. Any longer and more of it would age and have to be added to the plan,” said Mackey.

    During the Oct. 22 meeting, Mackey roughly estimated that plan would be about $200 million over the course of that 10 years.

    Mackey also sought to clear up what he said was misinformation surrounding the water main breaks.

    “There has been misinformation going around about water main breaks having to do with overdevelopment in town. That is unrelated,” said Mackey. “This is because of the aging water infrastructure.”

    None of Mackey’s colleagues on the board disagreed with the idea that Tewksbury needs to address its water infrastructure, and all of them were supportive of at least coming up with a longer-term plan during the recent working session. Some of them though had concerns over the potential costs of replacing pipes faster than the town’s current rate of one to three miles per year.

    “To put it in 10 years, the only way we are going to do that is if we raised taxes,” said board member Mark Kratman during the Oct. 22 working session. “I don’t know if there is an appetite to be able to do that at this time.”

    Board member Eric Ryder called the potential $20 million annual cost “a big ask.”

    “I would love a plan, a plan would be great, but a 30% water increase, or even a 20% water increase and a 7% tax increase, or an override, I just can’t support that right now,” said Ryder, also expressing concerns over the amount of extra staff a faster plan would require.

    Ryder said it would not be economically in the cards for the town right now, but he praised Mackey’s plan and said it would be worth looking at in future years under different economic circumstances.

    Select Board Chair Patrick Holland suggested that the town should continue to seek grant funding or low-interest loans from the state and federal government to avoid the burden on the ratepayers or taxpayers. Getting that funding, Mackey said to Holland in response, will be easier with an actual marketable plan in place like what he put together.

    “I totally agree with having something on the shelf ready to go,” said Holland.

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    Peter Currier

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  • Driscoll appointed trustee of Cape Ann Savings Bank

    Driscoll appointed trustee of Cape Ann Savings Bank

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    A former Manchester-by-the-Sea selectwoman with banking experience is Cape Ann Savings Bank’s newest trustee.

    Margaret “Muffin” Noonan Driscoll was appointed as a trustee by unanimous vote at the the Cape Ann Savings Bank Board of Trustees’ quarterly meeting on July 24.

     “Margaret ‘Muffin’ Driscoll has many of the characteristics that we look for in a trustee,” bank President Marianne Smith said in a prepared statement. “She is deeply dedicated to the Manchester community as exhibited by amongst other things, her years of service on the Manchester Affordable Trust and the Manchester Board of Selectman. She is a lifelong resident and worked in the community for many years, and as an added bonus, she has past banking experience. Muffin grew up with long standing roots in Manchester-by-the-Sea and holds true to the cornerstones set forth by her family of hard work, public service, and generosity.”

    Driscoll worked for the Warren Five Cents Savings Bank for more than 10 years, then spent two decades working in the Manchester Essex Regional School District before accepting a position working with the dean of students at Bishop Fenwick High School in Peabody.

    She sits on and is secretary of the Action Inc. Board of Directors, is a founding member of the Hooper Fund’s Board of Directors and has volunteered with several local non-profit organizations. Driscoll is a corporator of Cape Ann Savings Bank, a position she has held since 2019.

    In Manchester-by-the-Sea municipal government, Driscoll volunteered on a committee to explore affordable housing development, has served as a member of the Manchester Affordable Housing Trust since 2016, chairs the Parks & Recreation Committee, and is the former vice chair of the Board of Selectmen, having served from 2011-2020.

    A graduate of Manchester High School, she received a certificate in paralegal studies through Salem State College. She and her husband reside in Manchester-by-the-Sea and are the parents of two adult children and grandparents to a 1-year-old granddaughter.

    Cape Ann Savings Bank, founded in 1846, offers accounts, products and services to support customers’ financial goals and help grow businesses. The bank’s main office is at 109 Main St., with branches at 38 Rogers St. and 4 School House Road in Gloucester, 247 Main St. in Rockport, and 17 Beach St. in Manchester-by-the-Sea. More information may be found online at capeannsavings.bank.

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  • Planning Board hears updates from marijuana businesses | News – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

    Planning Board hears updates from marijuana businesses | News – Medical Marijuana Program Connection

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    TEWKSBURY — The Tewksbury Plan­ning Board met on Mon­day, June 26, 2023, at town hall. Members Jim Duf­fy and Vinny Fratalia were absent.

    Town Planner Alex Low­der reported that Tree House Brewing Com­pany plans to seek chan­ges to its site plan review application in order to use a parking lot across the street. She noted that the taproom is open; food trucks have been on site for several weeks.

    Lowder also added that the Select Board held retail marijuana licensing hearings throughout the month of June, and expects to revisit the issue at the board’s July 18 meeting.

    The board reviewed and endorsed the town’s 2023-2027 Housing Pro­duction Plan draft.

    The board endorsed an approval not required plan for 1167, 1177, and 1187 Main St. The proponents sought to combine the three lots, then split them into two parcels; an existing building will be moved and other buildings will be removed.

    Anthony Catalno re­quested a continuance for a family suite special permit application to the board’s July 17 meeting.

    Pure Tewksbury LLC, a retail marijuana applicant, requested withdrawal without prejudice of a site plan review ap­plication at 1699 Shaw­sheen St. to July 17.

    A sign special permit application for 1438 Main St LLC was continued to the July 17 meeting.

    Tree House Brewing Company requested a continuance for a site plan review and land…

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    MMP News Author

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