Remarks at East Acton Village Green commemoration

Excerpts from remarks delivered Sep 9, 2023

Welcome to this dedication  of the revitalized East Acton Village Green. My name is Jim Snyder-Grant, chair of Acton’s Select Board. With me is Bettina Abe, recently retired from the Town of Acton, who has been taking the lead on this project.  Each of us has a few words to say, and then we will be witnessing a ceremony led by Strong Bear Medicine  of the Nashoba Praying Indians.

This park is dedicated to the memory of three of Acton’s environmental foremothers, Alice “Mikki” Williams,  Carol Holley, and Mary Michelman. Each was deeply concerned about the health of Acton, and their sense of what health meant clearly included plants and animals, earth, air and water, and their sense of caring extended well beyond the boundaries of the present Town of Acton.  They were each taken from us way too early, but many of us got to know them while they were with us. They helped to start and run organizations that are still with us, and their spirit of environmental care sparked a lot of us in Acton to seek to do the right thing.

Here’s just one example. Mary Michelman started the stream teams in 1998, organizing volunteers to do the first stream survey of Fort Pond Brook, Nashoba Brook and most of its tributaries. The data still serve as a baseline for stream conditions in Acton. 

Nashoba Brook is right over there, one of the two brooks that together gather all of the flowing waters of Acton and bring them to Concord and beyond to the sea. The name Nashoba comes from the name of the are where the brook begins, the Indigenous territory of Nashope. Part of Nashope became the Praying Indian village of Nashoba created by the cooperation of the local Indians of the Massachusetts tribe and the  Rev. John Eliot, Puritan missionary. The village lasted as a sanctuary for only a part of the second half of the 17th century. We are blessed today to have direct descendants of these Praying Indians who are still keeping their culture alive, including Strong Bear Medicine, who has recently moved back to Littleton, on land that was part of Nashope and the Nashoba Praying indian Village.  If you want to learn more about the  history of the Nashoba Praying Indians, one good way is to seek out Dan Boudillion after the ceremony and ask him about how to purchase one of his new books.  

I would like to invoke the possibility that all of us here today, and everyone who comes here to this inspiring new park in  the future, will learn from Micki, Mary, Carol — and from Strong  Bear Medicine and his family — how vital it is to wake up to the aliveness and light all  around us, how it is our joyful duty to protect and nurture it, as it nurtures us in turn.

Remarks at Employee Professional Development Day

(Delivered Friday Sep 8, 2023 to Town of Acton employees)

Good Morning!  I hope your morning has been as fun as mine.  

The most important thing I have to say is “thank you for all you do” but I get almost 10 minutes up here, and it would get boring to just say thank you, over and over again, so I’m going to add a little bit of context. A little bit of history, a little bit of commentary on how things are organized now, and a tiny sprinkling of speculation about the future.

It’s 1610. If we’re living here we are people who speak an Algonquin language and we are part of the large tribe known as the Massachusetts. Our great Chief is currently Tahatawan, and this time of year Tahatawan has assigned us an area in Acton for our family grouping to hunt and fish. 

A couple of decades later diseases brought in by European settlers have decimated our population causing a lot of rearrangement of what tribe we are in, who our chief is, where we live, and where we get to fish and hunt. Most family bands consolidate mostly to the West of here. The area just west of here is known as Nashoba. The area Chiefs sign paperwork with European settlers to give over control of a big area that includes present day Acton, Concord, Sudbury, Lincoln and more. 

It’s 1725. if we live here, we are European settlers, or their descendants, trying to make a living on our land, by farming mostly, or maybe working in one of the mills. We are one of  just a few dozen families living here and each Sunday we are required to travel all the way to Concord Center to go to the mandatory church services. That’s enough of a pain that we go to Concord and then the Commonwealth legislature and say “Hey, how about we build a meeting house where we can go to services and we will hire a minister. What do you say?” Concord and the legislature allows the creation of Acton in 1735. In addition to church services, we have Town Meetings in that new meeting house where decisions about how to run the town are made by all the residents, or more precisely, since it is 1735, all the land-owning white men.  At first, the only employee is the minister. We do have a three-person Select Board chosen from the town meeting members, but no Town Manager. There are some very part-time jobs for certain specialized important roles like the constable, the assessor, the clerk and the moderator.

It’s 1845. The train now makes it all the way out to Acton and beyond, the new noises pissing off Henry David Thoreau who is camping out near Walden pond at that point. The trains allow the expansion of the industrial operations and the mills around Nashoba Brook and Fort Pond Brook. The Town starts hiring more people, but we’re still working out the budgets line item by line item at Town Meeting.

After World War II, people who commute to the Boston area start moving into Acton in big numbers with their families, and Acton makes a rapid transition from being a town to being a suburb, doubling in size each decade for three decades. Increases in population leads to increased complexity. More people are hired and finally in 1969 Town Meeting adopts a new charter that allows the hiring of our first Town Manager, and an expansion to 5 selectmen. 

Today, with a vibrant and skilled staff of more than 250 people, an excellent Town Manager, a 5 person select board, and almost 50 volunteer  boards and committees, we are a complex organization trying to do our best.

So, I want to take a pause to say “Thank You” again. We are in a time when many people don’t understand or appreciate the work you do; the complexities you deal with every day; in a situation constrained by the realities of our budget. You are getting so much important stuff done. Thank-you.    

The boards and committees, including the select board, proceed openly and democratically to make recommendations, permitting decisions, policies, and a very small set of staff appointments. That democratic aspect means the volunteer side of the operation moves relatively slowly and deliberately, taking time to have public input and have open debate about alternatives. The employee side, on the other side, needs to work much more quickly and decisively. You are organized via an organization chart that gives individual people or departments clear authority to make important decisions and execute complicated projects that often can’t wait for a long public process. The big differences in speed between the volunteer side and the employee side requires a good synching-up process. That’s the job of the Town Manager and the Select Board. Think of us as the transmission between the volunteer side and the employee side. 

I believe the most important annual decision made by the Select Board is our annual list of short and long-term goals, where we take public and staff input and create a list of priorities. The Town Manager then has the job of working with the department heads to work out how what combination of budget and personnel allocation can best get these goals accomplished while still doing all the other regular work that needs to get done because of the multitude of requirements from state regulation, union agreements, the health and safety of residents, etc. 

You can see the last few years of goals linked from the select board web page. This year’s top three short term goals are:

  1. Make progress with Great Road safety and complete street improvements
  2. Advance efforts to study and implement services and programs that address housing insecurity
  3. Explore ways to diversify and expand our public transportation program 

There are many more (probably too many more, but that’s a story for another day) that cut across most of our departments.

What happens from here?  I did the brief history review to remind us that our structures keep changing. Change doesn’t stop now. Some possible changes to consider:

  •  Do we find a way to add more democracy to the employee side without slowing down the need for quick and certain decisions?
  • Do we find a way to add more professionalism to the volunteer side, while still keeping the process open and democratic ?
  • The internet has enabled many-to-many communication (and then distorted it by creating advertising driven social media), and we’ve only begun to figure out how that changes what we do. 
  • Right now, it is more and more difficult for those that work in Town to live in Town, or even in nearby Towns. What sort of transformation will allow that to change?
  • The climate struggles we are being driven into may mean that larger systems around us may be changing or even collapsing, which will call on all of us to build more resilience and interdependence within our town and our region.   

Whatever the future may bring, I know this group is ready to meet the challenges. I’m proud to be a part of the municipality of Acton, alongside all of you, doing our best to understand and meet the needs of a 21st century Acton. Thank-you.

Citizen’s Petitions – 2023

Article 40 # Non-Binding Resolution – Sewer Commission Analysis
(Majority vote)

To see if the Town will conduct an objective analysis, either by establishing a working group or committee, commissioning a study, or engaging a consultant, to determine the pros and cons of creating a Sewer Commission independent of the Select Board or an advisory Sewer Committee, or take any action related thereto.

Direct Inquiries to:

Alissa Nicol: alissa.nicol@gmail.com

Article 41 # Non-Binding Resolution – Anti-Bias Training
(Majority vote)

Be it resolved that this Town Meeting requests the Select Board to find a way to ensure that all officials have anti-bias training

Direct Inquiries to:

Madeline Cruz: morenacruz1980@yahoo.com
(978) 606-9885

Article 42 # Non-Binding Resolution – Code of Conduct
(Majority vote)

Be it resolved that this Town Meeting requests the Select Board to institute a more comprehensive code of conduct for officials

Direct Inquiries to:

Madeline Cruz: morenacruz1980@yahoo.com
(978) 606-9885

Article 43 # Non-Binding Resolution – Reduce Transfer Station Sticker Prices
(Majority vote)

Be it resolved that this Town Meeting requests the Select Board to find a way to reduce the transfer sticker price for low income residents.

Direct Inquiries to:

Madeline Cruz: morenacruz1980@yahoo.com
(978) 606-9885

Article 44 # Non-Binding Resolution – Composting Facilities at Apartment Buildings
(Majority Vote)

To reduce the amount of food waste, this Town Meeting requests the Select Board to bring to a future Town Meeting a change in the bylaw and/or to institute town policy which would require multi-family housing owners to ensure onsite access to composting facilities for renters to use.

Direct Inquiries to:

Madeline Cruz: morenacruz1980@yahoo.com
(978) 606-9885

Article 45 # Non-Binding Resolution – Slow Increase of New Single Family Homes
(Majority vote)

Be it resolved that this Town Meeting requests the Select Board to find a way and/or ways to slow the increase in the number of new single family homes

Direct Inquiries to:

Terra Friedrichs

Article 46 # Non-Binding Resolution – Reduce Size of New Single Family Homes
(Majority vote)

Be it resolved that this Town Meeting requests the Select Board to find a way and/or ways to reduce the size of new single family homes

Direct Inquiries to:

Terra Friedrichs

Article 47 # Non-Binding Resolution – Stop Odd Sized Lots
(Majority Vote)

Be it resolved that this Town Meeting requests the Select Board to find a way and/or ways to stop developers from using “extremely odd-shaped lots”, so Acton have fewer new McMansions

Direct Inquiries to:

Terra Friedrichs

Article 48 # Non-Binding Resolution – Renters’ Access to Confidential Health Department Inspections
(Majority vote) 

As indicated by state law, the Town of Acton Board of Health must adopt and comply with all current Massachusetts laws and regulations concerning indoor air quality and the remediation of moisture and mold in rental and condo properties. The state Minimum Standards of Fitness for Human Habitation apply to all dwelling units, including rental units, and rental building owners must maintain structural elements (including foundation, floors, walls, doors, windows, ceilings, and roofs) in good repair and free from chronic dampness (the regular and/or periodic appearance of moisture, water, mold or fungi.)

To improve compliance with these State standards, Town Meeting recommends that:

Acton shall publish an informational brochure for renters on health inspections, and requires that the brochure be issued to renters by landlords at the initiation of their lease agreement.

When a renter calls to report a complaint in their unit or in a rental property, the Health Department and the Board of Health shall inspect the premises complained of with the occupant prior to notifying the property owner. In compliance with State Sanitary code 105CMR410,the Board of Health will only contact the property owner if a violation or citation is issued or if further information is needed. The purpose of this policy is to keep renters safe from being retaliated against or harassed prior to an inspection.

Direct Inquiries to:

Mike Gowing: mikeg.acton@gmail.com
(339) 222-2950

Article 49 # Non-Binding Resolution – Kelley’s Corner Improvement Initiative Update
(Majority Vote)

Be it resolved that this Town Meeting requests that the Select Board ask the Kelley’s Corner Steering Committee to review and update the 02/04/2016 Kelley’s Corner Improvement Initiative Plan this year, and to work with the Planning Department to develop an updated draft zoning plan for Kelley’s corner.

The Kelley’s Corner Improvement Initiative documents, including the 2016 Plan, can be found in Town of Acton documents:http://doc.acton-ma.gov/dsweb/View/Collection-7424.

Direct Inquiries to:

Frances Osman: frannyola@gmail.com
(978) 621-7330