Meetings ▸ Minutes
Legislative Matters Committee — Minutes, Jan 17, 2023
City of Somerville, Massachusetts
City Council Legislative Matters Committee
Meeting Minutes
6:00 PM
Tuesday, January 17, 2023
This meeting was held via GoToWebinar and was called to order by Chair Davis at 6:03 pm and
adjourned at 8:58 pm with a roll call vote of all in favor, none opposed.
Others present: Aneesh Sahni – Mayor’s Office, Neha Singh – Mayor’s Office, Suzanne Rinfret –
Traffic and Parking, David Shapiro – Solicitor’s Office, Nicholas Antanavica – ISD, Meredith Willis –
SPD, Christine Blais – OSE, Dan Bartman – OSPCD, Rachel Nadkarni – OSPCD, Paul Goldstein –
OSPCD, Stephanie Widzowski – Clerk of Committees.
Roll Call
Ward Six City Councilor Lance L. Davis, City Councilor At
Large Charlotte Kelly, Willie Burnley Jr., Matthew
McLaughlin and Jefferson Thomas (J.T.) Scott
Present:
1.
Approval of the Minutes of the Regular Meeting on November 29, 2022.
Committee
Minutes
(ID # 22-2073)
APPROVED
RESULT:
Ward Six City Councilor Davis, City Councilor At Large
Kelly, Ward One City Councilor McLaughlin and Ward
Two City Councilor Scott
AYE:
City Councilor At Large Burnley Jr.
ABSENT:
2.
By Councilor Burnley Jr.
That the City hereby adopts the provisions of Chapter 90, Section 20A of the
Massachusetts General Laws.
Order
(ID # 22-1453)
Taken together with item 22-1452. Dir. Sahni explained that adopting
Section 20A and rescinding Section 20A½ would allow for automated
parking enforcement. Dir. Rinfret presented on the attached slides and spoke
to the advantage of installing automated sensors in problem areas, such as
the bus stop outside of the Bfresh in Davis Square.
Councilor McLaughlin had questions about whether the automated
technology could use the license plate information it gathers for other
means, and whether adopting Section 20A over 20A½ would have other
implications. Councilor Scott raised a question about the timeline and costs
of installation, which led to a discussion about potential ticketing processes
and staffing logistics. Dir. Rinfret stressed that the city will not pay a price
per unit for the parking devices, but that the company will take a percentage
of each ticket paid. Moreover, the devices are expected to catch more
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Legislative Matters Committee
Meeting Minutes
January 17, 2023
violations than a patrolling officer could, which will generate revenue for the
city. A point of concern for multiple councilors was how the automated
technology would interact with the Surveillance Technology Ordinance.
Chair Davis made a motion that the Council amend the Surveillance
Technology Ordinance to clarify that it covers cameras used for traffic or
parking enforcement. Councilor Scott suggested amending the motion to
specify automated enforcement, which Chair Davis accepted. The final
motion text is: “That the Council amend the Surveillance Technology
Ordinance to clarify that it covers cameras used for automated traffic or
parking enforcement.”
RECOMMENDED TO BE APPROVED
RESULT:
Ward Six City Councilor Davis, City Councilor At Large
Kelly, Ward One City Councilor McLaughlin and Ward
Two City Councilor Scott
AYE:
City Councilor At Large Burnley Jr.
ABSENT:
3.
By Councilor Burnley Jr.
That the City hereby rescinds its adoption of the provisions of Chapter 90,
Section 20A½ of the Massachusetts General Laws.
Order
(ID # 22-1452)
RECOMMENDED TO BE APPROVED
RESULT:
Ward Six City Councilor Davis, City Councilor At Large
Kelly, Ward One City Councilor McLaughlin and Ward
Two City Councilor Scott
AYE:
City Councilor At Large Burnley Jr.
ABSENT:
4.
By Councilor Burnley Jr. and Councilor Ewen-Campen
That the Chief of Police report to this Council, any communications between
the Police Department and ShotSpotter regarding ambiguous or contested
detections.
Order
(ID # 22-1057)
Taken together with 22-1056 and 23-0085. Ms. Willis gave an overview of
Shots Fired calls for service and data. There were 19 confirmed Shots Fired
calls citywide in 2022; the same in 2021. Further analysis from Ms. Willis
shows that over 2.5 years, 25% of confirmed Shots Fired calls were reported
only by ShotSpotter and not 911. Councilor Scott noted the number of times
ShotSpotter activated for shots not confirmed by SPD, but Ms. Willis
clarified that unconfirmed shots could still be live gunfire.
Councilor McLaughlin asked about shooting trends in recent years. Ms.
Willis said that there was a spike starting in 2020, but the rates are starting
to decline again. Chair Davis suggested making this request for data annual.
RECOMMENDED TO BE MARKED WORK
COMPLETED
RESULT:
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Legislative Matters Committee
Meeting Minutes
January 17, 2023
Ward Six City Councilor Davis, City Councilor At Large
Kelly, City Councilor At Large Burnley Jr., Ward One City
Councilor McLaughlin and Ward Two City Councilor Scott
AYE:
5.
By Councilor Burnley Jr. and Councilor Ewen-Campen
That the Chief of Police report to this Council, any verified or suspected
false reports of gunshots by ShotSpotter.
Order
(ID # 22-1056)
RECOMMENDED TO BE MARKED WORK
COMPLETED
RESULT:
Ward Six City Councilor Davis, City Councilor At Large
Kelly, City Councilor At Large Burnley Jr., Ward One City
Councilor McLaughlin and Ward Two City Councilor Scott
AYE:
6.
Requesting ordainment of an amendment to Chapter 7, Article X of the
Code of Ordinances, to add a registry component to the short-term rentals
ordinance.
Mayor's Request
(ID # 22-2050)
Dir. Sahni and Dir. Antanavica gave an overview of the most recent draft of
the amendment, noting that the effective date and registration fee fields were
left blank for committee deliberation. Dir. Antanavica suggested a start date
of April 1 and an annual registration fee of $250.
Citing concerns that property owners could exploit the language around
primary residences, Chair Davis moved to add renewal to the definition of
Primary Residence to read: “…Primary residence shall be demonstrated by
showing that as of the date of applying for registration or renewal as a
short-term rental, the operator has resided in said residential unit for nine of
the past 12 months or that the operator intends to reside in the residential
unit for nine of the next 12 months, in accordance with the proof of primary
residence requirements set forth below.” The motion was approved with a
roll call vote of all in favor (Councilor Scott, Councilor McLaughlin,
Councilor Burnley, Councilor Kelly, and Chair Davis), none opposed, none
absent.
Concerns discussed during the meeting include enforcement of the
ordinance, communication with property owners to ensure they are notified
of the changes, and the potential of placing undue burden on residents with
in-house inspections and other additions.
Chair Davis moved to set the effective date to April 1 and tabled the motion.
Then, he moved to revise the proposed amendment to set a registration fee
of $250, and took the first motion off the table to vote together. The motions
were approved with a roll call vote of 4 in favor (Councilor Scott, Councilor
Burnley, Councilor Kelly, and Chair Davis), 1 absent (Councilor
McLaughlin), and none opposed.
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Meeting Minutes
January 17, 2023
Dir. Sahni pointed out missing dates in Sec. 7-254, subsection i. Dir.
Antanavica recommended allowing 90 days past the effective date to apply
for a certificate, and an extra 90 days to obtain the certificate. Chair Davis
made a motion to replace the empty brackets in subsection i with 90 and
180, respectively, such that the new text reads: “Operators offering a
Short-Term Rental that was lawfully operating in conformance with this
article at time of passage of the registration requirements shall apply for a
certificate of registration within 90 days and obtain a certificate within 180
days of the registration effective date.” The motion was approved with a roll
call vote of all in favor (Councilor Scott, Councilor McLaughlin, Councilor
Burnley, Councilor Kelly, and Chair Davis), none opposed, none absent.
Chair Davis made a motion to recommend approval of the proposed
ordinance as amended.
RECOMMENDED TO BE APPROVED AS
AMENDED
RESULT:
Ward Six City Councilor Davis, City Councilor At Large
Kelly, City Councilor At Large Burnley Jr., Ward One City
Councilor McLaughlin and Ward Two City Councilor Scott
AYE:
7.
Requesting the adoption of the Specialized Energy Code, 225 CMR,
Sections 22 and 23, including Appendices RC and CC, in their entirety as
the minimum energy code for the City.
Mayor's Request
(ID # 23-0084)
Dir. Sahni said that the requested adoption date is July 1, and explained that
the adoption would affect both residential and commercial codes and aid in
meeting zero net energy goals. Dir. Blais shared plans to hire a consultant
that will analyze potential impacts of the new code on Somerville
development and the review process, recommend strategic changes, if any,
to zoning, and develop materials and tools for public engagement. Dir.
Bartman explained how the Specialized Energy Code asserts jurisdiction
over some provisions in Somerville zoning meant to give incentives for
energy efficiency and density.
Dir. Antanavica discussed the timelines for residential stretch code, which is
already in effect, commercial code, which will start July 1, and the new
building code, which will be discussed in a meeting this month. He
suggested July 1 as well for the Specialized Energy Code to align with
project timelines. He discussed the threshold at which residential
renovations would be impacted by the new code at the request of Councilor
Scott.
Multiple councilors expressed a desire to delay action on the item to read
through the code more thoroughly. Dir. Sahni explained that the
Administration wants to be aggressive in its adoption of the code, as other
cities are.
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Meeting Minutes
January 17, 2023
Dir. Nadkarni said that there will be a larger impact on large buildings than
smaller buildings, but developers should not see a major difference in costs
between the current zoning and the special code.
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
8.
Chief of Police conveying a response to item 22-1056, an order that the
Chief of Police report to this Council, any verified or suspected false reports
of gunshots by ShotSpotter.
Officer's
Communication
(ID # 23-0085)
RECOMMENDED TO BE MARKED WORK
COMPLETED
RESULT:
Ward Six City Councilor Davis, City Councilor At Large
Kelly, City Councilor At Large Burnley Jr., Ward One City
Councilor McLaughlin and Ward Two City Councilor Scott
AYE:
9.
Requesting approval of a Home Rule Petition to require the adoption of
Institutional Master Plans.
Mayor's Request
(ID # 23-0101)
RECOMMENDED TO BE APPROVED
RESULT:
Ward Six City Councilor Davis, City Councilor At Large
Kelly, City Councilor At Large Burnley Jr., Ward One City
Councilor McLaughlin and Ward Two City Councilor Scott
AYE:
10.
Requesting approval of a Home Rule Petition to provide legal voting rights
in municipal elections for residents aged 16 and 17 years old.
Mayor's Request
(ID # 23-0103)
RECOMMENDED TO BE APPROVED
RESULT:
Ward Six City Councilor Davis, City Councilor At Large
Kelly, City Councilor At Large Burnley Jr., Ward One City
Councilor McLaughlin and Ward Two City Councilor Scott
AYE:
11.
Requesting approval of a Home Rule Petition further defining the purposes
of the Affordable Housing Trust.
Mayor's Request
(ID # 23-0104)
RECOMMENDED TO BE APPROVED
RESULT:
Ward Six City Councilor Davis, City Councilor At Large
Kelly, City Councilor At Large Burnley Jr., Ward One City
Councilor McLaughlin and Ward Two City Councilor Scott
AYE:
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