February 12, 2013

Public works admits to setbacks, looks to improve

Here's a memo that city Public Works Director Walter Veselka sent to city councilors and other officials on Monday afternoon:

I apologize but started trying to get this out to you at 6:30 this morning.  Today is a transition day as we move from the initial opening of all roadways to widening the streets out.  The depth of snow and now rain saturating what is on the ground we will be moving snow either with blowers or loaders.  Although some will be dumped on lawns we will be trucking a large volume of snow to snow dump areas we are setting up around the City.
 
Residents clearing own road on Chippens Hill.
Our goal was to have all streets opened to at least one pass by 6 p.m. last night but we suffered some setbacks during the day that did not allow us to meet that goal.  We believed that by 7 a.m. this morning we had addressed all the streets with a few known problem areas requiring more effort.  We put the word out to get resident responses on areas we may have missed.  That has resulted in a number of calls; most of the areas we had opened but are checking each and addressing as required.  This checking and preparing for our next phase of work is taking the majority of today's efforts; the potions of the streets that we did not finish last night all require extensive work using heavy equipment.
 
We are in the process of lining up contact equipment, articulated loaders and large capacity trucks, to begin hauling snow.  We will be using City and contract resources for this and will be addressing the arterial and high volume streets listed if the first part of the policy.  Most of these resources will be available beginning tomorrow once the contractors complete hauling snow for their contract areas.
 
At the same time we are doing this widening we will be using City and contract back-hoe/loaders to improve the sightline at intersections, again beginning with the arterial roadways.  Other resources not used will be addressing the sidewalks the City is responsible to clear.
 
In addition to addressing missed streets and other emergent issues we are preparing snow dump areas to receive snow.  We need to clear access into these areas and create place for the snow.  Today and tomorrow you will see equipment in Depot Square, the Peacedale excavation site, one or more of the closed schools and Northeast Middle School making these preparations.
 
For this phase of our operations I will be coordinating and managing the operations.
Bill Wolfe will be assigning the work to our contractors and City crews working through the streets on the list.  He will be checking the streets to confirm they are cleared.
Joe Mone will be on the ground directing the efforts of the City crews.
Ray Rogozinski and Roger Rousseau are lining up Contract resources for our use.
Sheree Gorneault is providing updates on operations via our web site, information line (6224), and e-mail.  She is also doing updates on WebEOC.
Ed Swicklas will be coordinating the efforts to clean non BOE City sidewalks.
George Wallace is coordinating truck and equipment repair efforts.
Dave Oakes (and Dave Clark when he returns) will be reviewing our ability to conduct solid waste collections.
 
We are getting assistance from my Water Pollution Control Division in addition to Park, Water, Police and Board of Education on these efforts.
 
We will be putting out updates on what solid waste routes we will be collecting and the streets the crews will be working on each day.
 
Copyright 2013. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

February 8, 2013

State of emergency declared in Bristol

Press release from Mayor Art Ward's assistant, Mary Suchopar:

Mayor Ward has declared a State of Emergency in the city of Bristol as a result of the impending Storm Nemo, a strong Nor’Easter which has been categorized as a major blizzard. Mayor Ward stated, “This storm has the potential for major damage, drifting snow and hazardous road conditions, I ask that residents keep a clear head and use common sense during the storm hours.”

The Emergency Shelter at Chippens Hill Middle School has been opened as of 12:00 pm today. If residents require the need of the shelter, they should bring warm clothes, snacks, any necessary medications and books, games, etc. for entertainment. This shelter is a pet-friendly shelter. If you bring a pet to the shelter, be sure to have appropriate food, carrier, leash, etc.

As of 6:00 pm this evening, the Mayor has requested all non-essential vehicle traffic off the roads in the City for safety reasons and to give the plows an opportunity to keep the roads clear. A parking ban has gone into effect as of 12:00 noon, today and will remain in effect, until further notice.

The Public Transfer Station will not be open this Saturday, February 9th, as well as the Public Libraries.  If you have an emergency, contact the Police Dispatch at 860-584-3011.  


Copyright 2013. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

February 1, 2013

Bristol's Grand List shrinks sharply

City Assessor Tom DeNoto
In the wake of revaluation and shrinking home prices, the city’s newly compiled Grand List plummeted 12 percent to $3.78 billion.
Driving down the tally of Bristol’s taxable property was the collapse of residential real estate. The median single family home lost 21 percent of the value it had during the last revaluation in 2007.
But there’s a silver lining for most homeowners in that decline: they will likely pay less in property taxes.
City Assessor Tom DeNoto that while home prices have been “falling off the cliff” during the past five years, commercial property dipped only slightly.
That means, he said, there will be a “burden shift” that pushes more of the overall property taxes onto commercial property owners.
That breaks a decade-long trend that has seen homeowners picking up an ever greater share of the tab.
Click here for the full story.
To see a more detailed overview of the Grand List, click here.
Saturday's Bristol Press will have more.

Copyright 2013. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

January 30, 2013

Labor history on the legislative agenda

The state currently requires Connecticut schools to teach math, science, economics, physical education and even "the dangers of gang membership."
But if Senate Majority Leader Martin Looney has his way, the list may grow.
Looney, a New Haven Democrat, has proposed legislation to require the teaching of "labor history and law, including the history of organized labor, the collective bargaining process and existing legal protections in the workplace, as part of the public school curriculum."
The purpose of Looney's measure is to support "a well-rounded education."
Now labor history has its place, for sure. And it's probably too often ignored.
But the existing law doesn't require schools teach anything about the Civil War, the Civil Rights Movement or anything else specific. It just calls for students to learn "government and history."
Requiring only labor history to be studied when so much else is left to teachers to decide is... up to the General Assembly.
The proposal is now before the Labor and the Education committees, where it will probably die.
Here's what the law currently calls for:

In the public schools the program of instruction offered shall include at least the following subject matter, as taught by legally qualified teachers, the arts; career education; consumer education; health and safety, including, but not limited to, human growth and development, nutrition, first aid, disease prevention, community and consumer health, physical, mental and emotional health, including youth suicide prevention, substance abuse prevention, safety, which may include the dangers of gang membership, and accident prevention; language arts, including reading, writing, grammar, speaking and spelling; mathematics; physical education; science; social studies, including, but not limited to, citizenship, economics, geography, government and history; and in addition, on at least the secondary level, one or more world languages and vocational education. For purposes of this subsection, world languages shall include American Sign Language, provided such subject matter is taught by a qualified instructor under the supervision of a teacher who holds a certificate issued by the State Board of Education. For purposes of this subsection, the "arts" means any form of visual or performing arts, which may include, but not be limited to, dance, music, art and theatre.

I'm a little concerned about that English spelling of theater, but perhaps that can be fixed someday.

Copyright 2013. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

January 22, 2013

Ward: Will not seek reelection this year


After three terms at the helm, Mayor Art Ward announced Tuesday that he plans to call it quits come November.
“Serving three terms as the Mayor of the City of Bristol, my birthplace and hometown, has been an honor, a privilege and a most humbling experience,” the mayor said.
Ward came to office just as the recession began hammering the economy, leading him to preside during a time of shrinking resources.
Mayor Art Ward and his assistant, Mary Suchopar
But, with the cooperation of municipal unions that accepted a number of pay freezes, he managed to pull it off without resorting to layoffs or major tax property taxes.
Even so, Ward nearly lost his last reelection bid in 2011 to Republican challenger Mary Alford and split so badly with his own Democratic Party’s leadership that he almost certainly could not have won its nomination for the city’s top job this year.
It hasn’t been clear, though, whether Ward would force a primary, run as an independent or take some other step to retain the office he’s held since 2007.
There is only one announced candidate for mayor so far, Republican city Councilor Ken Cockayne. But Ward’s decision is likely to unleash others soon.
Mayor Art Ward heads into meeting.





Ward, a former state veterans counselor, said that after eight years on the Zoning Board of Appeals, 14 years as a city councilor and a long stint as mayor “the time has arrived for me to take a respite from city government.”
“My longevity as an appointed and elected official has proved most gratifying and will always remain an integral part of my life,” the mayor said.
“My hope is that I have contributed as much to the people of the City of Bristol as I have been blessed to have received as a result of this wonderful experience.”
Ward said there have been considerable achievements during “the economic turmoil of the past five years,” including the opening of two new schools, consolidation of city departments and more regional cooperation.
Gary Lawton, an independent who twice challenged Ward for the position, said that given the mayor’s lack of support on the town committee “he is wise not to see another term.”
For more information, please see Wednesday’s Bristol Press.


 Here's the press release:
 
Mayor Arthur J. Ward Will Not Seek a Fourth Term

Bristol, CT, January 22, 2013 –  In a prepared statement, Mayor Ward announced that he will not be seeking a fourth term as Mayor. “Serving three terms as the Mayor of the City of Bristol, my birthplace and hometown, has been an honor, a privilege and a most humbling experience, said Ward.”

“Serving in local government for almost 30 years has given me the opportunity to learn, to experience and to contribute to the future of our great community.”

Ward served eight years on the Zoning Board of Appeals, fourteen years as an elected member of the Bristol City Council representing the first district, and three terms as Mayor.

The Mayor stated, “Community service can often times prove challenging and formidable, but the mission always remains constant - striving for the betterment of the community by insuring that the public safety, security, education and health needs of the people meet the utmost expectations of performance.

One person is hardly capable of achieving these goals alone, as evidenced by the financial impact of the economic turmoil of the past five years.

Bristol has withstood the economic challenges of this recession through the elimination of nearly fifty positions utilizing  the process of attrition, maintaining the practice of fiscal austerity through cooperative budgetary measures between the educational and city components of city government, the consolidation of multiple departments and positions, the presence of commitment of elected and appointed officials, City department heads, staff, employees and most importantly, the backbone of the community – the volunteers and  the citizens of Bristol, all of whom have dedicated themselves for the betterment of the city by collaboratively providing the foundation for the future of our community. .

Bristol has continued on the path of progress for tomorrow – with the stabilization of our excellent bond rating, solid city pension funds, construction and presentation of two new K-8 schools, multiple  regionalization practices, including regional and local resolutions which address longstanding
environmental and flooding concerns along the Pequabuck and Coppermine waterways, combining with neighboring communities in heavy equipment purchases and addressing lower costs associated in the providing of mutual community services, new energy and environmental efficiency provisions, long term commitments such as the new trash-to-energy contract, the proposed new recycling facility and new revenue enhancements such as the “pay as you throw” solid waste program.”

Ward continued: “Economically, Bristol remains strong as a result of the solid commitment of our business community, the ongoing revitalization efforts of our downtown areas - past, present and future and the dedicated residents of all ages possessing the enthusiastic, positive dedicated energy and involvement for the future of Bristol.

Resolution of these many concerns required negotiation, compromise and hard work by all, ultimately reaching the height of accomplishment for everyone – a better Bristol for us, our families and our future generations.

After much deliberation, I have come to the conclusion that the time has arrived for me to take a respite from city government; accordingly, I am respectfully announcing that I will not be a candidate for reelection to the office of Mayor of the City of Bristol for a fourth term in the upcoming November election.”

Ward concluded: “To my wife Patricia, our families, our friends, our supporters and campaign staffs – this dream would never have become a reality without you. Thank you for all of your love, guidance and support throughout these years

I would be remiss if I didn’t express my extreme gratitude for the abundance of support and the dedication of my administrative assistant, Mary Suchopar for her confidence, allegiance and “go the extra mile” spirit over these past five years.

 I have relished the opportunity to serve with you and to serve for you, I will forever cherish all of the fond memories and assure you that I will continue to exercise the due diligence deserved of both the Office of the Mayor and the people of Bristol throughout the rest of this term of office.

My longevity as an appointed and elected official has proved most gratifying and will always remain an integral part of my life. My hope is that I have contributed as much to the people of the City of Bristol as I have been blessed to have received as a result of this wonderful experience.

As we move forward as a community, I am confident that the people of Bristol will continue the process of responsibly exercising their right to vote and electing a most worthy candidate in the November election.

God Bless the City of Bristol, the State of Connecticut and the United States of America.”
 
 
Copyright 2013. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

January 21, 2013

Picking tobacco in Connecticut, like King did

A story I wrote in 2010:

SIMSBURY – With their weathered red planks and gabled roofs, the long, narrowtobacco sheds of this Connecticut Valley town seem a long way from the civil rights struggle in post-World War II America.

But, oddly enough, they actually played a critical role.
In 1944, a 15-year-old Martin Luther King, Jr headed north from Atlanta to the tobacco fields of Simsbury, a voyage he undertook mostly to get away from home.
He joined a horde of other young people – including many from nearby towns who rose as early as 4 a.m. to catch buses that took them to the jobs – who cared for the famous shade-grown broad leaf tobacco growing under a sea of gauzy cloth beneath the hot summer sun.
Working in the tobacco fields – miserable summer jobs by all accounts – helped shape the giant who stood on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial less than two decades later to proclaim that he had a dream.
For King, the two summers he worked in the tobacco fields of the Connecticut Valley – in 1944 and in 1947 – were among the most crucial times of his life, his first prolonged look at a society without legally mandated segregation and the spot where he decided to devote his life to the ministry.
King looked back on the first trip to Connecticut in a passage published in his Autobiography a few years ago: “After that summer in Connecticut, it was a bitter feeling going back to segregation.
“It was hard to understand why I could ride wherever I pleased on the train from New York to Washington and then had to change to a Jim Crow car at the nation's capital in order to continue the trip to Atlanta.
“The first time that I was seated behind a curtain in a dining car, I felt as if the curtain had been dropped on my selfhood. I could never adjust to the separate waiting rooms, separate eating places, separate rest rooms, partly because the separate was always unequal, and partly because the very idea of separation did something to my sense of dignity and self-respect,” King wrote.
That’s the voice of the civil rights leader looking back on his life years later.
But there are also a few remnants of King’s time in Connecticut, the slim memories of an old friend and a handful of letters that King sent home.
King, who lived in a Spartan work camp at a farm owned by Cullman Brothers, snagged one of the best slots available – working in the kitchen instead of the fields.
“I get better food than any of the boys,” he wrote to his father, “and more I get as much as I want.”
That’s probably why one of his friends that summer later told a biographer of the civil rights hero that King was voted one of the two laziest workers that summer from among their group.
When you consider what the work out in the fields was like, it’s not hard to see why someone in the kitchen seemed to have a sweet gig.
Frank Nicastro, a Bristol politician, recently recalled what it was like working for Cullman Brothers about a decade after King’s first trip to Connecticut.
Catching a bus to the fields from Bristol at sunrise, Nicastro said, workers spent most of the day suckering the tobacco plants, or stripping off the little sprouting leaves in between the larger lower leaves.
“The only way  you could do that was dragging your backside” along the often wet or sandy ground down the long rows of plants, Nicastro said, with dirt seeping its way all over everyone.
As the tobacco grew, the next picking entailed kneeling before plant after plant, he remembered.
“It was tough,” Nicastro said.
Steve Emirzian, a writer who lives in Canton, said that when he headed out to the fields as a 13-year-old from his Farmington home in the 1970s, the bosses “barked orders at us kids. We had to grab the three leaves closest to the ground, which sounds easy except you had to determine if a tobacco leaf was ready to be picked,” a subjective term at best.
“The guys in charge would take delight in yelling at us all day” Not THAT one!’ or ‘"Don't pick 'em like a girl!’” Emirzian remembered.
Glenn Klocko of Southington said that at the age of 13 in 1968 he begged his mother to let him work in the fields. She finally relented so he climbed on a bus in Meriden and headed for a tobacco farm in Windsor Locks.
The youngsters were taught to get on their hands and knees and wrap their fingers around the base of each plant and strip away the suckers, the little leaves.
Within an hour, Klocko said, he felt cramped and filthy. When a thunderstorm rolled in, he got covered with mud, too.
Even his underwear was caked brown with the dirt, he said.
By the time he got home, stinky, sore and sunburned, his mother had to turn a hose on him before he could go inside.
“It was hard, hard work,” Klocko said. He never went back.
Brigid Fitzgerald Arace, a former Connecticut resident who lives in Ohio, said she worked with her sister Anne at an East Windsor farm, where they formed a sewing team after the picking was done.
After tying the young tobacco plant to a string early in the summer, she said, the pair shared a machine in the tobacco shed “and took threading two leaves of tobacco at a time onto a wooden lat.”
“I think it took about 20 pairs of leaves before it was full and then we took this lat and hung it on some kind of holder,” she recalled recently, where the tobacco would be left to cure before its sale for use in wrapping cigars.
Diane Davis, who lasted only two weeks because the job was so awful, said she used to come home stained green and smelling like tobacco.
Miserable as the job could be, King found it eye-opening.
“The white people here are very nice,” the 15-year-old King wrote to his father in 1944. “We go to any place we want to and sit anywhere we want to.”
To his mother, King wrote, “I am doing fine and still having a nice time. We went to church Sunday in Simsbury and we were the only Negroes there. Negroes and whites go to the same church.”
King later wrote that he went to Simsbury just before going to Morehouse College “and worked for a whole summer on a tobacco farm to earn a little school money to supplement what my parents were doing.”
To his mother that summer, King wrote that he’d had a day off so he went into Hartford with friends and “had a nice time there.”
“I never thought that a person of my race could eat anywhere but we ate in one of the finest restaurants in Hartford. And we went to the largest shows there,” he wrote.
King returned to pick tobacco again in the summer of 1947, when he “led religious service for his fellow student workers at a tobacco farm” in Simsbury, according to Clayborne Carson, director of the Martin Luther King, Jr Papers Project at Stanford University.
But it may have been beer that propelled King to declare his intention to become a preacher that summer.
According to Taylor Branch’s magisterial history of King, police accosted King during some sort of beer in the barracks shenanigans, though they didn’t make an arrest. But concern that the episode might reach his father’s ears in Atlanta may have convinced the future civil rights leader to tell his dad about his career choice quickly in order to fend off the possibility of trouble at home.
Carson said that “about all we know” of King’s early forays to Connecticut comes from his letters.
It happened so long ago that few if any people have any memory of King from those summers, he said, and he would look skeptically at claims by others to recall much of anything about King in those days.
After all, he said, King was just a teenage boy at the time with “no real strong connections” to the area.
Other than the summers picking tobacco, Carson said, probably the only other times that King went to Connecticut were to give a speech or two.
Connecticut Public Television’s Connecticut Journal determined that King spoke at least a dozen times at Yale, Wesleyan and in Bridgeport in the years after the Montgomery bus boycott. He also gave at least one address at Hartford’s Bushnell Auditorium.
It isn’t clear whether he ever mentioned his earlier trips to Connecticut during one of his addresses at the height of his fame.
But what is obvious is that Connecticut left its mark on King, who would be 81 years old this month if an assassin hadn’t gunned him down.

Copyright 2012. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

January 20, 2013

Ward may decide soon on mayoral run

I'm hearing from quite a few people that Mayor Art Ward will announce as soon as this week whether  he will seek reelection to a fourth term as the city's leader. The consensus bet? He won't run again.
On the GOP side, only city Councilor Ken Cockayne has declared an intention to seek the office. He may face a challenge from fellow Councilor Henri Martin. Other Republicans may be eyeing the contest, too.
On the Democratic side, if Ward chooses not to run, expect a free-for-all unless former Mayor Frank Nicastro, who's currently a state representative, chooses to reclaim the office. He would make a formidable candidate, by all accounts, having never lost a race in a quarter century.
If Nicastro doesn't run, the possibilities include city Councilor Kevin Fuller, former city Councilors Ellen Zoppo and Kevin McCauley and, well, a host of others.

Copyright 2013. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

December 20, 2012

Cuts still needed, Czenczelewski says

In response to this story, city Councilor Derek Czenczelewski sent out the following statement:

Gifts are welcomed, but solutions are still needed

In a December 20 article on the Bristol Press website titled “City taxpayers get a major $$ ‘gift’”, the article states that the city of Bristol is going to receive approximately $4.7 million from reimbursable expenses on the high school renovations completed more than a decade ago. Of that $4.7 million, approximately $3 million will be able to be used towards the debt services line item in the City budget. Although this “gift” is appreciated, ultimately it is just a one-time source of “revenue” that will be exhausted. Whether that happens in a single year, or over several years, the end result is that this money is not a long-term solution.

It is imperative that the Board of Finance, City Council, Mayor and City employees work together to help trim the budget and our nearly $7.5 million deficit. That deficit figure is based on a flat-line budget, with no increases for any department including the Board of Education. The reality of the situation is still grim, as healthcare costs are projected to continue to increase yearly. Since 2001, the line item in the City budget for healthcare has increased over 108 percent, from $15 million to $31 million. This is a trend that, without intervention, will continue to result in yearly deficits going forward.

Simply put, the City cannot rely on these funds to balance our budget. This was a practice readily used in years past, and is a contributing factor for the reason we are facing yearly budget deficits. For instance, this past budget cycle, $3 million was “borrowed” from the health contingency account in order to reduce the mill rate increase. This was a practice that neither I, nor my Republican colleagues supported. As we said then, and have continued to stress since, Bristol has a structural problem with our budget. The state of Connecticut has similar problems, and the likelihood of state aid decreasing over the next few years only further underlines the importance of getting our fiscal house back in order. We cannot rely on state funding or "gifts" to make ends meet.

The City received a one-time bandage, not a gift. But before we can use this bandage, we need to make cuts.

Copyright 2012. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

December 17, 2012

Let's make sure Newtown is the last massacre

Between Sunday morning's church service and Sunday night's vigil in West Hartford, I saw a lot of candles flickering, tiny flames to stand against the evil that enveloped Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown the other day. It is hard to see how the puny lights we carry can do much in the face of such overwhelming darkness.
And yet the only good that can come of such a nightmare is that it might force us to wake up, to open our eyes and see that we don't have to keep on sleeping. We can build a better world, one in which loopy young men can't get their hands on weapons that could have wiped out a Roman legion or turned the tide in any battle of the American Revolution. These powerful guns, which can wipe out a classroom in minutes, are not something that anybody with a credit card and a trigger finger ought to have the right to buy. That almost anybody could walk into Wal-Mart and walk out in no time with the means to slaughter scores of people is nothing short of sickening. No civilized country allows it, except the United States. So it's no surprise that when a massacre happens -- in a mall, in a movie theater, in a McDonalds, at a church in a classroom -- it happens in America.
We're better than this.
All those little shining faces from Newtown, those precious kids who never had a chance, we owe it to them to make sure that this doesn't again, and again, and again. We have to give up the idea that if we just arm enough people, just station enough cops in enough places, just put bulletproof glass in our schools, just create a mountain of fake security, that it will be enough. It will never be enough. The only answer is to make sure that guns that are capable of firing large magazines of bullets are no longer available and that the bullets they use are also impossible to find.
I believe the Second Amendment, along with many state constitutions, allows people who are stable to have a gun. But we even regulate free speech, allowing time and place restrictions and barring the most idiotic types of speech (like the old yelling "fire" in a crowded theater example). We can surely regulate guns at least as much. Let people have a hunting rifle, a shotgun, maybe a six-shooter. But nobody -- absolutely nobody -- needs a semi-automatic rifle like the one used to mow down children and teacher in Newtown. The se heinous weapons shouldn't be allowed and those who sell them, right now, ought to pull them off the shelves. There are some ways of making money that are simply immoral. This is clearly one of them.
Our elected representatives promise to make changes every time some horror hits the headlines. And then they do nothing. This time, we can't let that happen. We can't just let the National Rifle Association and its most fanatic fringe control the agenda any longer.
We've had enough vigils. We've had enough prayers.
What we need is action.
We have the ability to roll back the darkness, to push back the fear and to make this country one where children don't have to worry about anything more menacing than homework.

Copyright 2012. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

December 12, 2012

Video of Cockayne's mayoral race announcement

Here's a video I shot of city Councilor Ken Cockayne announcing his bid for mayor at last month's Republican Town Committee meeting:

 
Copyright 2012. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

December 10, 2012

Martin 'bothered' by colleagues' choice to reject chamber plan for Memorial Boulevard

City Councilor Henri Martin just issued this statement re the decision of the city's Real Estate Committee recently to reject a plan for Memorial Boulevard School's reuse by the Central Connecticut Chambers of Commerce:

City Councilor Henri Martin, left,
with Mayor Art Ward and
Councilors Ken Cockayne
and Kevin Fuller trailing
I’m bothered and disagree with the recent decision by the Real Estate Committee of the City of Bristol to initiate a new RFP (Request for proposal) regarding the future use of Memorial Boulevard School. Further I disagree with the member’s decision to discuss this matter in an executive session rather than in public.

In its proposal, the Central Connecticut Chamber of Commerce submitted a viable plan which I believe answered the wishes of our community — to protect and find a potential re-use for this historic property. The plan was visionary and provided innovative ideas for economic development to Bristol through the creation of an arts center that included the preservation and future improvements of the theatre, and a business incubator for start up entrepreneurs in the technology, media and bio-fields.

At its last Real Estate workshop, with a change of use from a building educating students to the anticipated use the Chamber was proposing, city department officials offered their views of ADA updates, fire and building code deficiencies, and future capitol improvement costs that may lay ahead for any intended use.  Revealing these facts and costs may have worried the committee, but should not have warranted the rejection of the Chambers proposal or a motion and approval to request a new RFP.

I understand the city’s budget is under pressure, but imagine the unknown costs associated with the innovative idea of ESPN back in 1978/79 that gave city officials reason to pause. Thank God we pressed forward. In my opinion, revealing all the facts and costs only facilitates a better understanding of the risks for all involved.

The proposal was an opportunity for the City and Chamber to develop a Public/Private partnership, thus allowing them to work together to preserve the theatre and building, and simultaneously bring some kind of economic development in the downtown area. We need new innovative vision—not the same old same old.

Downtown needs energy; art energy, entrepreneurial energy, young professional energy, upscale energy, community energy—and the Chamber’s proposal offered all of this. Unfortunately this didn’t happen.  After a questionable executive session meeting, the committee decided to start the process all over again.

The Real Estate committee failed to work collaboratively with the Chamber to determine if a format could be established which met both their and the City’s goal. The process was instead adversarial in nature which was not fair to the Chamber and does a disservice to our citizens.

If the Real Estate Committee was worried about the potential costs mentioned by the department officials or had unanswered questions; those details could have been addressed during negotiations between the City and the Chamber before any final lease document was executed. The concept was still sound.

City officials should be working collectively with our business partners in the Chamber to achieve the goal of the community to preserve the historic Memorial Boulevard School. In the end, we either may have had an agreement that met the needs of both sides, or maybe it wouldn’t have worked for the either, but the decision would have been reached in a cooperative manner rather than the way it did.

Unfortunately, the Chamber has decided to withdraw its proposal and not respond to the new RFP, and given the nature of the process which was followed who can blame them.

Now we’re back to square one…

Copyright 2012. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com