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Via the "Sustainaville" monthly newsletter from the city:

It has been just over one year since Somerville Climate Forward was released and departments across the City have been hard at work implementing the priority actions identified in Somerville's community climate action plan. We are thrilled to report progress in each of the thirteen priority action areas of the plan. The new progress report summarizes work completed over the past year and provides a preview of what is underway for 2020. We are committed to completing annual reports of our progress towards our ambitious climate goals.

Some highlights from the past year include:

  • Over $500,000 of the Fiscal Year 2020 budget was dedicated to implementing Climate Forward priorities.
  • The Office of Sustainability and Environment added a new Energy Manager position, growing the office to 4 full-time staff.
  • The City's Engineering Department developed a detailed stormwater model of the city and used it to understand what parts of the city are likely to flood during storms today and with the changing climate in the future.
  • The 2020 Somerville Community Choice Electricity program doubles the additional amount of renewable electricity in the standard option from 5% to 10% above the state requirement.
  • Somerville’s first bi-directional bus lanes were installed on Broadway and over 4 miles of bike facilities were installed throughout the city.

You can download and read the full report at somervillema.gov/climateforward.

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Via the city's Economic Development team email:

Updated Timeline on Consideration of a Winter Hill Urban Renewal Plan

Since December, the City has been gathering feedback about whether the community would support an urban renewal plan in Winter Hill.

Councilor Clingan has asked us to extend the conversation for another month to ensure that even more voices can be heard before we make a recommendation for next steps to the Somerville Redevelopment Authority. That means you have until March 15 to share your feedback on next steps! Here's how:

Reunión de la comunidad de Winter Hill / Community Meeting in Spanish
La ciudad de Somerville está reuniendo comentarios sobre un posible plan de renovación urbano en Winter Hill. Esta iniciativa ayudaria a saber que te gustaria ver en el sitio vacante de Star Market y podría apoyar otros objetivos de la comunidad en el vecindario. Únase a la conversación en español y comparta su perspectiva.
Jueves, el 13 de Febrero de las 6:00 - 7:00 pm / Thurs., Feb. 13, 6:00 - 7:00 pm
Escuela de Winter Hill / Winter Hill Community School, 115 Sycamore St, Somerville, MA

Councilor Clingan's Community Meeting [Corrected Date]

Ward 4 Councilor Jesse Clingan will be hosting a meeting at the Mystic Activity Center, and staff will be present to discuss the possibility of an urban renewal plan and gather more feedback.
Monday, March 2, 6:00 pm
Mystic Activity Center, 530 Mystic Ave, Somerville, MA


Online Feedback
You still have time to share your feedback online as well! Click the "Surveys & Forms" tab and you can provide the same feedback we are gathering at our community meetings.
Sunday, March 15
SomerVoice


Somerville Redevelopment Authority Meeting
Staff will be sharing the results of our community engagement and recommending a path forward at the March SRA meeting. We will still be providing an update at the February 19 meeting as previously planned, but not making a recommendation about whether to move forward with an urban renewal plan until March. We will share slides from both meetings on SomerVoice.
Wednesday, March 18, 5:30 pm
Location TBD
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From the city Somerville Economic Development Team :

Thanks for Attending Our Meeting!

We had about fifty people join us Monday night for our latest community meeting on a possible Winter Hill Urban Renewal Plan. Thank you to Councilor Clingan and Winter Hill Brewing Company for having us, and to everyone who came by.

Below is our voting sheet that participants updated last night; we're still seeing support for an urban renewal plan including all sites except for the Brewery Block. This does not include voting on SomerVoice, which will be open until 2/17.

Beyond the voting, we heard a variety of different priorities highlighted:
  • Community Land Trust parcels for affordable housing and/or commercial
  • Commercial use / grocery stores
  • Some wanted no housing, some wanted affordable housing
  • Center for youth as well as space for the elderly
  • The importance of keeping parking/traffic in good shape, especially near the Elizabeth Peabody House.
 

Next Steps

  • 2/13 - Reunión de la comunidad de Winter Hill: La ciudad de Somerville está reuniendo comentarios sobre un posible plan de renovación urbano en Winter Hill. Esta iniciativa ayudaria a saber que te gustaria ver en el sitio vacante de Star Market y podría apoyar otros objetivos de la comunidad en el vecindario. Únase a la conversación en español y comparta su perspectiva. Jueves, el 13 de Febrero de las 6:00 - 7:00 pm, Escuela de Winter Hill, 115 Sycamore St, Somerville, MA. (We have one more meeting, to be held in Spanish, on February 13 at 6pm at the Winter Hill Community School.)
  • 2/17 - Online Feedback: You can still weigh in online at SomerVoice.SomervilleMA.gov until February 17.
  • 2/19 - Presentation to the Somerville Redevelopment Authority: Staff will be sharing the results of our community engagement at the next SRA meeting on Wednesday, 2/19 at 5:30pm at the Somerville Public Library Central Branch Auditorium. There will be an opportunity for public comment, and we will share the slides on SomerVoice. 


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Via newsletter from the City of Somerville:

In June 2019, City staff held a community meeting to explore whether the community would be interested in the City taking aggressive action on the site. Specifically, did residents want the City to use eminent domain to take the property? As you can see from the meeting notes, the overwhelming majority of participants wanted the City to consider taking the property.

At this meeting, staff presented two similar paths to take the property: a demonstration project or urban renewal. The demonstration project received the most votes as the preferred path, we think because it would be a quicker process and only focus on the Star Market site. Unfortunately, subsequent conversations with City legal counsel suggest that pursuing a demonstration project plan on this particular site may stall the project. Therefore, the remaining options are to wait for private development on the site or to pursue an urban renewal plan.

What Do You Think?

Given the two possible strategies that remain, we have two questions:
  • Is an urban renewal plan the right path forward for the Star Market site?
  • If the City does create an urban renewal plan, what should it look like?
Share your thoughts about these questions at our next open-house style community meeting.

Winter Hill Community Meeting
Tuesday, December 17
6:00 - 7:30 pm
Healey School
5 Meacham St Somerville MA

Please help us get the word out! Forward this email to your neighbors or post our graphic to social media.
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Lauren Drago from the City of Somerville wanted to alert our group to an upcoming panel about ways to create community vibes in an area with various strategies. Something to think about as we talk about changes that might come to Winter Hill. 

Details here: 
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/commercial-district-placemaking-panel-tickets-70816015609

Tue, October 15, 2019
6:00 PM – 8:00 PM ET

Workbar - Union Square
31 Union Square
 

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Via Ben Ewen-Campen on twitter--the overview of the agreement. In the text you can also find a link to a PDF that has the actual Benefits Term Sheet.

https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1163830404580724736.html 
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Via Sue Thomas from the City of Somerville:

Thank you to the approximately 70 people who joined us for the City and the Gilman Square Neighborhood Association’s co-hosted Community Meeting on July 15 at 6pm at the Winter Hill Community School. We also would like to thank Councilors Clingan, Ewen-Campen, Mbah, Rossetti, and White for attending. [snip, see full email for the rest]

Web link to the full email:
https://mailchi.mp/d58ba047242d/prospect-hill-park-january-28-meeting-update-3536593?e=8c7389028e

Link to the slides (PDF):
https://gallery.mailchimp.com/4295afe228ec6bb6d10f44dca/files/48815690-4d42-4177-a937-7c92b5348772/Gilman_Square_Refresh_Materials.pdf

https://gallery.mailchimp.com/4295afe228ec6bb6d10f44dca/files/53f8d6dc-f7ab-4dbd-bda1-8df5fb04cd36/Gilman_Square_July_Meeting_2019.pdf

L
ink to the handout provided (PDF): https://gallery.mailchimp.com/4295afe228ec6bb6d10f44dca/files/48815690-4d42-4177-a937-7c92b5348772/Gilman_Square_Refresh_Materials.pdf


Link to what the community members wrote on the easels with their suggestions for things in the neighborhood:
https://gallery.mailchimp.com/4295afe228ec6bb6d10f44dca/files/08d6d375-6f06-4a93-aec9-1901745f7a22/190715_Gilman_Square_Meeting_Notes_EDITED_.pdf
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Hello Hillens: join us for our next regular meeting (typically the first Wednesday of the month). We will meet in the smaller room at the Mystic Activity Center.

Items to discuss include:
  • Winter Hill Derby ideas. A representative from the Arlington Derby group will attend and explore ideas with us.
  • Resistat: some new things came up at Resistat. The delay of the Winter Hill in Motion plan we were expecting. The upcoming June 19 meeting on the Star Market site (see my other post on that).
  • Florence (Fluffy) Bergmann wants to talk with us about some looming changes to the Mystic Learning center.

A lot to discuss as we continue to build community and share information about the neighborhood. Also: wheeeeeeee!

Winter Hill Neighborhood Association
June 5, 6:30pm
Mystic Activity Center, small meeting room
Mystic Ave


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Via the Resistat meeting:

Hey neighbors--this one is important. The City of Somerville wants to meet with the neighborhood to discuss what's going on with the Star Market site.

As many of you will recall, the proposed purchase that was brewing last year has evaporated. And so there is nothing underway from the private purchase side, as far as we know. 

The city wants to discuss what some future options might be around the site. I think this is a crucial meeting learn about what tools the city might have at this point. But we want have knowledge and input on whatever the next steps might be. 

UPDATE:
 via Lauren Drago, from the city:

"The purpose of the meeting is to get a sense for whether the community would prefer us leaving the Star Market be and waiting for another bite from a private developer or whether people would prefer us to take a more active approach. We'll be laying out a few different options and explaining how community process would work for each."

Please turn out, if you can.

The Future of 299 Broadway
Wednesday, June 19
6pm
Healey School cafeteria



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Via Ben Ewen-Campen on twitter:
https://twitter.com/BenForWard3/status/1087725630362476544

An article about displacement in Somerville, and the possibility of a Tenant's Opportunity to Purchase Act (TOPA).

More housing alone won’t solve housing crisis

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Via the city: https://www.somervillema.gov/news/somerville-seeking-applicants-newly-established-office-housing-stability-advisory-board

The City of Somerville is currently seeking applications for the newly created Office of Housing Stability (OHS) Advisory Board. The Advisory Board will work with the OHS Director to identify policy and programmatic priorities for the OHS to further its mission of preventing the displacement of Somerville residents. The Advisory Board will:
  • Identify gaps in existing homelessness prevention and rehousing services and potential strategies for addressing identified service gaps
  • Identify and evaluate potential policy solutions to help prevent displacement, increase the supply of affordable housing and enhance tenants’ rights
  • Provide guidance for housing policy
  • Review available data relating to housing and homelessness in Somerville, and
  • Identify additional data needs and strategies for obtaining such data


And more--go to the link to see the full details.
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Tenant Rights Workshop:
 
Wed, Nov. 14 @ 6:30pm The Mystic
Activity Center, 530 Mystic Ave

We know that nearly 70% of the residents of Somerville live in rental housing situations. But how many would know what to do if they run into issues with disaster relocation, property sales, eviction notices, or other scenarios that might arise?

The Winter Hill Neighborhood Association and the Mystic Tenant Association invite you to come ask some experts about the rules and the resources that exist for renters. We’ll be joined by Ellen Shachter from the City of Somerville’s Office of Housing Stability and Susan Hegel from Cambridge And Somerville Legal Services.

All are welcome, 
whether you rent or not! And there will be food!

Questions? Email: winterhillneighbors@gmail.com
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I don't have a Globe subscription, so I used my Somerville Library card access to the ProQuest database to read the story for free. I can't check on the story link, but if you have a subscription you can go here:

https://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2018/08/30/researchers-examine-nimby-factor/uVws4Lrm6Sa2qa6UdyHIiO/story.html

Anyway, this article talks about the objections faced to development, that are kind of interesting. There was a study done that showed a lack of diversity of voices, and some common demographics, that we need to probably consider as we are talking about local development issues. We need to be sure the issues are tangible for people across a broad spectrum.

They, broadly speaking, are the people who show up to comment at planning and zoning meetings across Eastern Massachusetts, according to a new paper by three Boston University professors. The researchers combed three years worth of meeting minutes from 97 cities and towns in the region, and found nearly two-thirds of residents who stood up to speak about proposed housing developments did so to oppose them, while just 14 percent spoke in support.

[snip]

There are lots of reasons for the narrow range of meeting commenters, Einstein said, from the busy schedules of younger families and people with inflexible work hours, to the less-rooted life of renters. There's also the fact someone living next door to a proposed construction site is keenly aware of how it might affect them, whereas the notion of a few more housing units is more abstract to a community's general population.


Here's is the journalist's tweet to the story, in case that works better: https://twitter.com/bytimlogan/status/1035537429678239744
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Our monthly meeting this time will be an agenda-structured meeting, since our previous meeting was social. And it's time to focus back on some of the issues associated with the Star Market and Neighborhood Plan items.

Steph has kindly reserved the Mystic Community Center room for us. So this means the time will be 6:30-8:30pm for that room. Note the time change from our previous room.

Summary:

WHNA monthly meeting
Wednesday September 5 2018
6:30pm-8ish
Mystic Community Room
530 Mystic Ave, Somerville, MA 02145

Current agenda items:
  • Lauren and Su from the city wanted to engage us again on Star Market status, and more on the neighborhood plan.
  • Updates from neighbors on committees they are on, or city meetings they attend
  • Proposal from WHNA organizers for a renter-targeted kind of event. Hoping to hear from the new person at the city, maybe local tenant activists. We'd like to schedule this in an upcoming meeting slot if the group agrees.
  • Please submit any other ideas and topics, here or by the mailing list or facebook.

BTW: meetings are often followed by an optional trip to the Winter Hill Brewing Co deck for pints and snacks and casual conversation while looking over at the Star Market site. This is what happened the last time we did that....


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I'm always interested in solutions to issues that other communities have faced. Although not everything will work everywhere, there may be nuggets of things to adapt locally that can have impact on issues we care about. 

Rarely does a story about a community that managed to resist gentrification also include specific policy items that contribute to the retention of the community character. So this story was kind of useful, I thought.

Why One Neighborhood In The Middle Of San Francisco Hasn't Been Gentrified Yet http://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2018/08/09/tenderloin-san-francisco-gentrification
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Coverage of one of our neighbor's efforts with Somerville Stands Together. https://somervillestandstogether.com . I like that logo a lot.

(credits: The Somerville Stands Together logo is built with images licensed under Creative Commons via Wikimedia Commons [1][2] and with permission from Chris Devers [3].)

Somerville Stands Together Aims to Put Pressure On Aldermen, Mayor at Somerville Scout

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Google's boundaries for Winter HillRecently on Reddit there were 2 different discussions about the Hill and Hillens. It's an unsolicited (by us) and unvarnished view of what people really think about Winter Hill when describing it to other people.

I just thought you might be interested in seeing what the perceptions are.

First recent thread: https://redd.it/8rvqm3

Second recent thread: https://redd.it/8z4i4g

Related:

Separately, I mentioned to some folks at our last meeting that someone on Reddit was drawing conclusions about our Star Market discussions, that I tried to explain were community discussions and not obstruction, but you should know this sentiment is out there. https://redd.it/8xf1o9 .



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Imagining the future of 299 BroadwayWe had a great meeting of neighbors at the Star Market site discussion. People are really interested in having something other than a parking lot and empty store.

WWS (Where We Stand): there is no update on whether the current deal will proceed. There are no significant developments on the process with the current proposal. At this point, though, we assume that if it's not this developer, another one will come along. So we are using this time to think in general ways about what the features and bugs of our area are.

We looked over the space on maps, thought about what we like in our neighborhood, and things that would be important to maintain. But we also thought about things that might improve the neighborhood. We've captured some of these thoughs on our worksheets at the meeting.

Then there was more discussion while we sat on the deck at Winter Hill Brewing. I'd encourage you to go over there and look at the space. Think about neighborhood and what matters to you, and what could be better. And try that new brew with the lime/lemon/ginger. It's very nice. And the rosemary fries. Or any of the other nosh.

There are folks who can't get to the meetings, though, we know. We'd love for you to add your thoughts to the discussion with a survey.

Please add your thoughts to our new survey. It has been refined from our earlier pilot survey and includes more details and visualizations.

https://goo.gl/forms/PsQek7XWAyclu2Np2
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Via Stephanie Hirsch email:

Some updates:
 
·       Sign up to help: https://tinyurl.com/SomHousingChallenge
·       Please bring a computer if you have one to the event (and no worries if you don’t have one).
·       Share the FB event (https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=336710526862714 ) or forward this email.
 
 
See many of you Sunday at 1 PM at SCC, and I’ll talk to some of you before that about logistics.
 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++
 
Somerville Housing Challenge, Sunday, July 15th, 1-5pm (Attendees may come for all or part)
 
WHAT: The Somerville Housing Challenge Pilot Workshop will be the first of what we hope will be an ongoing process to explore publicly available data related to housing (and, eventually, other topics!) We hope to bring together people who understand housing challenges and people interested in data analysis/coding. We hope to ask and begin to answer some questions about aspects of Somerville’s affordability and housing crisis. Teams may also wish to begin to design applications that relate to housing. It’s an all-hands-on-deck invitation – join in whatever background, interests, and experiences you bring!
 
WHY: Somerville has many housing challenges. Our city has grown more expensive. Property taxes and fees are increasing. We have very little open space. Data is available at the city and state level that can help us figure out more about the challenges we face and inform our choices about how to solve them. The public data we have includes the city census and the city assessors database as well as data on building permits, parking permits and campaign finance data.
 
WHEN: Sunday, July 15, from 1-5pm, with happy hour following
 
WHERE: Somerville Community Corporation, 337 Somerville Ave, Somerville (with report-outs at nearby bar/restaurant)
 
RSVP: Please register so we know how many people to expect: https://goo.gl/forms/57dYhvgkckb2Clzg2 Whether or not you can attend Sunday, join our mailing list to be part of the planning conversation: https://groups.google.com/forum/#!managemembers/housinghackathonchallenge/add
 
 
AGENDA:
 
1-1:10PM: Introductions and overview of day
1:10-1:30PM: Overview of the housing challenge, including personal and professional experiences with the city/region’s housing crisis.
1:30-2PM: Overview of basic and more advanced techniques to analyze the data available.
2-2:15 PM: Coordinators of break-out groups will introduce the data they have available and what questions the data may help us answer.
2:15-4 PM: Teams will split up to explore questions we have, and to clarify questions and begin to answer them.
4-4:45 PM: Groups will present out on their work and attendees will share feedback, questions.
4:45-5PM: Discussion of next steps (We expect this will be the first of an ongoing series of housing challenge discussions)
5-6PM: Post-event happy hour.
 
CONTACT: Stephanie Hirsch (stephanie@stephaniehirsch.org, 617-512-4847) and Jamie O’Keefe (jokeefe@jamesokeefe.org) with questions or suggestions.
 
DATASETS, TEAMS, & QUESTIONS TO EXPLORE: We expect that we will break into the teams listed below, though more may be added before or at the event (please suggest your ideas for a team!) We hope teams will be a mix of people with experience of the housing crisis, policy experts, and data experts or software engineers that can begin to answer questions raised plus ask new questions. See list for initial questions raised.
 
Property Ownership & Sales (Leaders: TBD)
 
Questions: This team will work to answer questions like: Who is buying? Who is selling? How has that changed over time? How many property sales are speculative purchases? How many rental units have been lost to condominium conversions? How many short-term rentals are there and what’s their possible impact on the housing market? What does an investor purchase, renovation, convert to condos, and re-sell process look like in depth?
 
Potential Datasets: A de-identified dataset of properties (https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/18UL0isExCiUJJxJJG7v03NYygdMl74pOSBuXjmONx-s/edit?usp=sharing), property transaction data from Middlesex Registry of Deeds (http://www.masslandrecords.com/middlesexsouth/default.aspx?AspxAutoDetectCookieSupport=1), business ownership (such as for LLCs) from the Secretary of State Corporations Division (http://corp.sec.state.ma.us/corpweb/CorpSearch/CorpSearch.aspx), Somerville building permits (https://data.somervillema.gov/City-Services/ISD-Building-Permit-Daily-Applications/q3yh-mp87), Somerville commercial building permits (https://data.somervillema.gov/City-Services/Commercial-Building-Permits/h9ng-teu4), AirBnb Listings (https://www.airbnb.com).
 

People’s Living Situations (Leaders: Laura Evans)
 
Questions: This team will work to answer questions like: How many residents are owner occupants? How many naturally occurring affordable housing units exist and who are the benevolent landlords in the city? How can we encourage landlords to rent for below-market rate? Are there seniors living in large homes who would like to rent some of their space but face hurdles? How much housing is there by living arrangement, life stage, income level, ownership, etc.? How many students live in the city outside of university dorms, where do they live, and where would they prefer to live? How many households have 4+ unrelated people, and what would be the impact of changing this policy?
 
Potential Datasets: A de-identified linked dataset showing home occupants with type of home (https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/10plmL5ibDF8ZfBz0R6tQASgZsPV2q2i1xJ2gTy6h9co/edit?usp=sharing ), US Census data.
 

Parking & Land Use (Leader: Chris Allen)
 
Questions: This team will discuss the relationship between parking and affordability, open space, and streets. With one of our four miles dedicated to streets and parking spaces, parking policies are important (and not as frequently discussed) land use decisions.
 
Potential Datasets: Parking permit data (https://data.somervillema.gov/City-Services/City-of-Somerville-Parking-Permits-2017/xavb-4s9w) and City Assessing data (https://data.somervillema.gov/Finance/City-Of-Somerville-Assessors-Valuations-FY16/7rxe-3ase)
 
 
Housing Policy Formation Exercise (Leader: Joseph Crupi)
 
Question: What’s the best way to resolve differences, find common ground, and use information to form policies that address our region’s housing crisis? Joseph Crupi developed a tool while at Harvard Law School that tries to answer this question. He will work with team members to pilot a policy formation exercise to find workable solutions for this intractable problem.
 
 

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