Meetings ▸ Minutes
Land Use Committee — Minutes, May 4, 2023
City of Somerville, Massachusetts
City Council Land Use Committee
Meeting Minutes
6:30 PM
Thursday, May 4, 2023
The meeting took place virtually via GoToWebinar and was called to order at 6:30 PM by Chair
McLaughlin and adjourned at 7:07 PM on a roll call vote of 4 in favor (Councilors Wilson,
Ewen-Campen, Davis and McLaughlin), none against and 1 absent (Councilor Gomez Mouakad).
Others present:
Tom Galligani – OSPCD, Jenn Mancia – OSPCD, Greg Karcewski – US2, Peter Forcellese -
Legislative Clerk.
.
Roll Call
Chairperson Matthew McLaughlin, Vice Chair Lance L.
Davis, Ben Ewen-Campen and Jake Wilson
Present:
Beatriz Gomez Mouakad
Absent:
1.
Approval of the Minutes of the Land Use Committee Meeting of March 30,
2023.
Committee
Minutes
(ID # 23-0520)
ACCEPTED
RESULT:
Chairperson McLaughlin, Vice Chair Davis, Ward Three
City Councilor Ewen-Campen and City Councilor At Large
Wilson
AYE:
Ward Five City Councilor Gomez Mouakad
ABSENT:
2.
By Councilor Gomez Mouakad
That the Superintendent of Inspectional Services review the durability and
structural stability of materials used to comply with Section 10.8 of the
Zoning Ordinances and explore rewriting that section to provide more
specific requirements.
Order
(ID # 22-0669)
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
3.
By Councilor Clingan and Councilor Ewen-Campen
That the Administration present specific plans to this Council to advance the
long-awaited affordable housing components of the Union Square
redevelopment on the "D2.4" and "D4.3" parcels.
Order
(ID # 22-0050)
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
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Land Use Committee
Meeting Minutes
May 4, 2023
4.
By Councilor Ewen-Campen, Councilor Kelly, Councilor Wilson and
Councilor Scott
That the Director of Planning & Zoning update this Council on a proposed
zoning amendment to "separate and define arts and creative workspace as an
Arts and Creative Enterprise (ACE) use subcategory" as recommended in
the Somerville Arts Space Risk Assessment.
Order
(ID # 22-0567)
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
5.
By Councilor Ewen-Campen
That the Director of Planning, Preservation and Zoning update this Council
on current draft zoning requirements of the MBTA Communities Act.
Order
(ID # 22-1593)
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
6.
By Councilor Ewen-Campen, Councilor Pineda Neufeld, Councilor Burnley
Jr., Councilor Clingan, Councilor Davis, Councilor Gomez Mouakad,
Councilor Kelly, Councilor McLaughlin, Councilor Scott, Councilor Strezo
and Councilor Wilson
That this City Council's Committee on Land Use work with the Director of
Planning, Preservation and Zoning to draft an amendment to the Zoning
Ordinances to remove the prohibition on more than four unrelated adults
living together.
Order
(ID # 23-0052)
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
7.
Conveying the Somerville Linkage Nexus Study Final Report.
Mayor's
Communication
(ID # 23-0356)
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
8.
By Councilor Ewen-Campen, Councilor McLaughlin, Councilor Burnley Jr.,
Councilor Clingan, Councilor Davis, Councilor Gomez Mouakad, Councilor
Kelly, Councilor Pineda Neufeld, Councilor Strezo and Councilor Wilson
That the Director of Economic Development update this Council on the
implementation of the Union Square Covenant, which includes local and
veterans preference in hiring.
Order
(ID # 23-0458)
Director Galligani explained that the city entered into a covenant with the
master developer of Union Square in 2017. Much of the covenant relates to
development impact fees, but Section 5 has to do with hiring Somerville
residents and veterans. Greg Karcewski, from US2 and Jenn Mancia from
OSPCD addressed the committee on this matter.
Mr. Karcewski said that building a diverse workforce takes a lot of resources
and US2 has committed to reaching the goals set forth in the Community
Benefits Agreement (CBA) of trying to hire 20% residents, 20% people of
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Land Use Committee
Meeting Minutes
May 4, 2023
color and 8% women to work on the project. City staff is provided with
quarterly updates on these numbers and Mr. Karcewski reported that through
January of 2023, 622,000 worker hours were expended, with 232,000 of that
number have been performed by people of color, 42,000 hours by
Somerville residents and 26,000 hours by women. Contractors have been
employing veterans and there are now 20 on the job. US2 is sustaining
effort with its partners and conducts monthly virtual meetings with them.
Additionally, US2 performs outreach to trade unions, participated and/or
hosted job fairs in 2021and has conducted 4 engagement sessions with
students at Somerville High School to show how their education fits into the
overall project. A website has been created, in 4 languages, to encourage
people to apply to work on the project. Mr. Karcewski also noted that
walk-ins are accepted.
In 2020, a list of local contractors was complied subsequently contacted to
work on the project. Somerville Community Corporation’s (SCC) First
Source has been collaborating since 2020 to identify construction candidates
and US2 contributed $100,000 to SCC to assist in this effort. One of the
challenges faced is that each union has different criteria for entry to their
trade. These have been documented for use by SCC.
Mr. Karcewski provided comments in letter form for inclusion in the record.
Councilor Ewen-Campen related that at least 1 contractor was requiring
applicants to go to RI to apply for a job on the project and Mr. Karcewski
explained that the company was headquartered in RI. That company has
hired a significant number of people of color but has underachieved on the
number of local hires. US2 will try to find a local contractor so that people
can apply locally. Mr. Karcewski addressed efforts to hire veterans and he
thinks that more emphasis can be put on this.
Ms. Mancia came on board in September, 2021, and her efforts led to a
stronger relationship with SHS. She spoke about her work, including
funding, programing, career navigation, and long term planning to better
serve the local population. Meetings will reconvene with representatives
from the School Department and unions, along with the Director of
Veterans’ Affairs in conversations to grow participation numbers.
RECOMMENDED TO BE MARKED WORK
COMPLETED
RESULT:
9.
By Councilor McLaughlin
That the Director of Planning, Preservation and Zoning update this Council
on the status of the property on Palmer Court, purchased by the city for the
purpose of creating green space.
Order
(ID # 23-0459)
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
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Land Use Committee
Meeting Minutes
May 4, 2023
10.
By Councilor Scott
That the Director of Planning, Preservation and Zoning and the City
Solicitor assist the City Council to draft language requiring that
departmental review conditioned by the Planning Board contains a
requirement for public outreach when concerning modifications by private
developers within the public realm.
Order
(ID # 23-0503)
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
11.
By Councilor Scott, Councilor Wilson, Councilor Davis and Councilor
Strezo
That the Director of Planning, Preservation and Zoning assist the City
Council in modifying the density incentives for NetZero/Passive House
development in light of the recently adopted Specialized Stretch Code.
Order
(ID # 23-0505)
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
12.
By Councilor McLaughlin, Councilor Davis, Councilor Burnley Jr.,
Councilor Pineda Neufeld, Councilor Strezo, Councilor Wilson, Councilor
Ewen-Campen and Councilor Gomez Mouakad
That the Director of Planning, Preservation and Zoning draft an amendment
to the Zoning Ordinances for transit oriented height and density bonuses for
additional affordable housing and other enumerated community benefits.
Order
(ID # 23-0612)
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
Referenced Documents:
•
Land Use - 2023-05-04 Land Use Committee re Workforce to CITY (with 23-0458)
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