Belated Town Council meeting review
By Will Collette
After pressing the issue with Town Hall, Clerkbase
coverage of the December 10 Town Council meeting was finally posted last Thursday.
Due
to technical difficulties, your intrepid Progressive Charlestown team could
not cover that meeting and had hoped for timely access to ClerkBase to fill the
gap. But as seems to be a more and more frequent occurrence, ClerkBase wasn't there on time. But at least it eventually got posted this time – there was NO
ClerkBase coverage for the Planning Commission’s November 28 meeting. They are
scheduled to meet again on December 19 (Wednesday).
Anyway, the Council’s December 10 meeting was very sparsely
attended, largely due to the awful weather and pretty uneventful agenda. For me
(as well as the Westerly
Sun’s Dave Pepin), the most noteworthy event was the Council’s discussion of
its legislative laundry list with state Rep. Donna Walsh and Senator-elect
Cathie Rumsey.
Donna said that now Charlestown was asking not for a
one-year moratorium but for one that extends into 2016. She said that it was
unusual for any moratorium to extend
that long and chances of passage without sizable and broad support
among other municipalities are slim to none.
Gentz,
echoed by CCA Councilors Dan Slattery and George
Tremblay, explained how perfectly logical it is to have the moratorium run
concurrent with the time it will take for Charlestown to produce a new
Comprehensive Plan, due by 2016. Slattery said that there were extensive
discussions in Charlestown, involving the Planning Commission and Affordable
Housing Commissions (and presumably the CCA clubhouse), and they all agreed this
was a sensible way to go.
Perhaps this is so, in the CCA world where Charlestown
is special and entitled to the privileges its CCA masters are accustomed to
receiving. But just because Dan, Tom and George and presumably Ruth Platner and
the rest of the CCA think something is so doesn't mean the part of the world
that is not Charlestown will agree.
The Town Council also wants the General Assembly to revive
its joint legislative commission on affordable housing so that this commission
can review and presumably adopt all of Charlestown’s desired changes to the
state affordable housing statute. This would include allowing Charlestown to
count homes that have dropped in value due to the real estate crash as
“affordable” without doing anything further – and certainly doing nothing for
the owners of those now “Affordable” labeled homes.
The Council also wants an end to state mandates on the
Chariho School District, more dredging money and a pony. Actually, three
ponies.
If wishes were horses….
Little controversy was generated by this surreal
discussion. The Council presented its pointlessly optimistic wish list to
Donna, assuming that now it’s all Donna’s problem. Donna gently explained that
while she will introduce these bills, nothing is going to happen unless
Charlestown organizes the political force to give its wish list life.
But this new Town Council seems perfectly content to allow
symbolic activity to substitute for action.
In other Council matters, the Council heard Frank Glista, who lost his bid as a Democratic-endorsed Planning Commission
candidate, recommend to the Council that the next highest vote-getter last
November be picked to fill the Planning Commission vacancy created by George
Tremblay’s resignation from Planning so he could take his Town Council seat.
Frank noted that the next highest vote-getter is
CCA-endorsed Peter Herstein and that, by the will of the voters, Herstein
should be offered the seat. The Council members seemed surprised that Frank
would strongly propose that one of his opponents be given the seat. Councilor
DiBello added to her record number of questions-to-the-Solicitor by asking
Peter Ruggiero if Frank’s suggestion was proper. We’ll have to wait until the
minutes are published to find out what Peter answered since he never once
during the several times he spoke during the meeting spoke into the microphone.
So, “answer inaudible.”
Also, Dan Slattery walked his colleagues through a series of
procedural motions regarding Council rules, public participation and citizens’
forums. He loves this stuff. In a nutshell,
Slattery proposed keeping all the rules that the Council adopted in 2010,
including the jumbled agendas that have led to Progressive
Charlestown’s new monthly feature where we re-arrange the agenda items to
actually reflect the order of presentation.
Slattery also wants to keep the Citizens’ Forums – which are
generally the only time the CCA’s
titular President Virginia Wooten is heard in public – and to actually make
them quarterly. Slattery cited the bizarre
search for Charlestown’s “phantom properties” as one of the great successes
of his Citizens’ Forums. Presumably, more such Forums will lead to more such
quests. Somehow, I guess holding them more often will make them better attended.
Finally, the Council did its bi-annual division of town
commissions and quasi-public agencies. As a rule, each of these bodies gets a member of
the Town Council assigned to it as a liaison. That Council liaison is supposed
to help that commission and carry its messages and interests back to the
Council. In the 2010 term, the Council members each served this function on
three or more commissions, except for Lisa
DiBello, who picked the Cross Mills Public Library, attended one meeting and then never showed up again.
This time around, DiBello made a point of noting that she
was liaison to the Library, but never showed up because she had a time conflict
(apparently every single time they met over a two-year period). So, DiBello
said, she would not “serve” again. She did
not pick another assignment.
Gentz asked for, and was given, the liaison role for
Affordable Housing and Washington County Planning. Slattery asked for, and was
given, Budget, Senior Citizens, Zoning and Tri-Town. New
Democratic Council member Paula Andersen was given Economic Improvement as
well as Parks and Recreation, which she chaired before being elected to the
Council. Similarly, new CCA
Councilor George Tremblay was assigned to Planning, where he served two
years of his six-year term as a Commissioner until his election to the Council.
That only leaves DiBello without a gig. But I suppose it is
better to make no commitments if that means she can avoid criticism for failing
to carry out her promises, following the principle that the secret to success
is to under-promise and then over-achieve.