Meetings ▸ Minutes
Legislative Matters Committee — Minutes, Apr 2, 2024
City of Somerville, Massachusetts
City Council Legislative Matters Committee
Meeting Minutes
6:00 PM
Tuesday, April 2, 2024
Roll Call
Ward Six City Councilor Lance L. Davis, City Councilor At
Large Willie Burnley Jr., City Councilor At Large Wilfred
N. Mbah and Ward Three City Councilor Ben
Ewen-Campen
Present:
Ward Two City Councilor Jefferson Thomas (J.T.) Scott
Absent:
1.
Approval of the Minutes of the Legislative Matters Committee Meeting of
February 27, 2024.
Committee
Minutes
(ID # 24-0253)
ACCEPTED
RESULT:
Ward Six City Councilor Davis, City Councilor At Large
Burnley Jr., City Councilor At Large Mbah and Ward Three
City Councilor Ewen-Campen
AYE:
Ward Two City Councilor Scott
ABSENT:
2.
Requesting ordainment of an amendment to Sections 11-1, 11-3, 11-4,
Article V, 11-121, 11-124, 11-125, 11-126, 11-176, 11-182, and 11-183 of
the Code of Ordinances to reflect current department name, titles, and
operations of the water and sewer department.
Mayor's Request
(ID # 24-0331)
Chair Davis explained that most of the changes deal with correcting
references resulting from splitting the Water and Sewer Department out
from the Public Works Department. Liaison Carrillo informed the
committee that the Administration is not yet ready to move forward with this
item and will be submitting a new proposal in the fall.
RECOMMENDED TO BE PLACED ON FILE
RESULT:
3.
Requesting ordainment of an amendment to Sections 2-371, 11-125, and
11-164 the Code of Ordinances to reflect current operations of the water and
sewer department, and provide time and flexibility for financial planning
and development of rate forecast models.
Mayor's Request
(ID # 24-0324)
Chair Davis stated that he has reviewed the changes with the
Administration, noting that the bulk of changes address an enterprise
account and some language refinements. Director Vidalis addressed the
change of the dates for the required public hearing, saying that by doing so,
the Water and Sewer (WS) Department would be able to have more accurate
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April 2, 2024
forecasts of costs prior to setting the WS rates. He noted that some financial
data, e.g., interest rates for borrowing, is not available until mid-May. He
also mentioned that the department is taking up a greater share of the city’s
debt service due to infrastructure upgrades. Director Vidalis said that the
anticipation is that Council approval of the WS rates would be completed
prior to the end of the fiscal year. He warned that if the dates were pushed
out further, it could potentially affect the WS rates and the overall city
budget. Liaison Carrillo informed the committee that the Water and Sewer
Department’s budget review will be scheduled towards the end of the city’s
FY-25 budget process.
Chair Davis expressed his desire to have the full Council weigh in on this
matter and Liaison Carrillo stated that she and Director Vidalis met with
Finance Committee Chair Wilson to make him aware of the proposal. Chair
Davis asked Liaison Carrillo and Director Vidalis to be present at the April
11th City Council meeting to answer any questions.
Councilor Mbah asked for a clarification of section 11-125 and Chair Davis
explained that WS is currently using a tiered rate and that this proposal
aligns to the actual practice. As to subsidies, to the extent they exist, this
proposal does not change anything.
Chair Davis motioned that the word “superintendent” be replaced by the
word “director” throughout this ordinance proposal.
The motion was approved on a roll call vote of 3 in favor (Councilors
Ewen-Campen, Mbah, and Davis), none against and 2 absent (Councilors
Scott and Burnley).
Chair Davis motioned that the words “Chapter 93” be changed to
“Chapter 59” in Sec. 11-164, (a), (3).
The motion was approved on a roll call vote of 3 in favor (Councilors
Ewen-Campen, Mbah, and Davis), none against and 2 absent (Councilors
Scott and Burnley).
RECOMMENDED TO BE APPROVED AS
AMENDED
RESULT:
Ward Six City Councilor Davis, City Councilor At Large
Mbah and Ward Three City Councilor Ewen-Campen
AYE:
City Councilor At Large Burnley Jr. and Ward Two City
Councilor Scott
ABSENT:
4.
By Councilor Burnley Jr.
Amending Section 12-116 of the Code of Ordinances to create a Safe Streets
ordinance, to expedite protected bike lanes.
Ordinance
(ID # 23-1461)
Chair Davis said a proposed amendment in committee is attached but will
not be used as there is a new proposal based on best practices. Policy
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Analyst Salisbury gave a summary and said that the process is ongoing and
that Councilor Burnley has been involved in the discussions. The new
proposal was emailed to committee members during this meeting.
Director Rawson commented that the city has made progress in creating safe
streets and is continuing its outreach. He noted that the City Council has
been a partner in working on a series of traffic policy plans, adding that in
2023, the dialogue began with multiple departments in the city. That
dialogue, he said, has gone as far as it can and this item may be considered
as the high level kick off.
Mr. Schreiber said the ordinance is presented as an update to the Complete
Streets Ordinance and deals with designing streets for various modes,
protected bike lanes, and providing yearly reports to the City Council.
Director Rawson explained that the Somerville ordinance is more
multi-modal than the one used by Cambridge. Mr. Schreiber noted that in
the section on pedestrian transit improvements, there are 12 different related
actions. Additionally, there is a section on ADA compliance actions. He
also noted that the Priority Network must be done by the end of 2030.
Director Postlewaite explained that the ADA Transition Plan, (which is
being updated), is being rolled into the document to put it on a level footing
with other goals and also serves to further codify the plans. Councilor
Ewen-Campen inquired about plans for a community process and Director
Rawson explained that several sections will function as placeholders for
policy plans and/or policy tools, with some elements coming after the plan is
developed. Mr. Schreiber pointed out that the city must also put out a public
facing website. Director Rawson commented that every intersection is
different and relevant data will be evaluated when designs are created.
Councilor Burnley said that the language presented here reflects the research
that was performed, but there are still some questions that need to be
answered. There’s also the effort of trying to bridge the gap between what
the city is capable of and what its goals are. He went on to say that some
areas need to have language refined and some ambiguities need to be
addressed. Additionally, definitions of improvements should be reflective of
state regulations and written so that triggers are avoided in certain
circumstances so that a minor project does not become a major one.
Councilor Burnley moved to replace the older version of the ordinance
with the one presented and distributed at this meeting.
The motion was approved on a roll call vote of 4 in favor (Councilors
Ewen-Campen, Mbah, Burnley and Davis), none against and 1 absent
(Councilor Scott).
City Solicitor Amara told the committee that the proposed ordinance has not
yet been submitted to the Law Department for review so she doesn’t know
how long a review would take. She suggested putting the item off until May
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to allow time to address any outstanding issues.
KEPT IN COMMITTEE
RESULT:
Referenced Documents:
•
Legislative Matters 2024-04-02 Safe Streets Updated Draft (with 23-1461)
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