Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Location…Location…Location

If there were 80 or 90 acres in an industrial park with good highway access in Lakeville where Sysco could relocate to, this might make sense. However, 68 acres on Main Street doesn’t.

So…let’s look at the site of the Industrial C Overlay District and the proposed Sysco distribution center…There is a lot here, its important stuff, and trust me it’s quicker to read than it was to write!

Main Street, Lakeville…As you enter our town from the north and encounter the largest food service distribution warehouse and trucking operation in New England operating 24 hours a day, I’m sure we can all agree it won’t give anyone who passes by that ‘welcome home’ feel, unless you live in an industrial park. For the distance of the entire length of the property frontage, which stretches ¼ mile, you will drive by a warehouse building up to 50 feet tall, an employee parking lot and yes, possibly a waste water treatment site.

In most towns the development of Main Street is done in such a way as to bring value to its residents. A place in town to go to that serves a purpose to its residents; a town center atmosphere, usually some combination of commercial and cultural that generates commerce and enhances quality of life. An area that encourages activity not discourages it.

Not with this proposal. Our most valuable land resource will be used for a 24/6 warehouse and trucking operation! This will provide no value for anyone; you won’t go there for anything…on the contrary it will be a place to stay away from. Apparently our town leaders don’t have a problem with this, maybe that’s because they don’t have any vision. How could anyone with the least amount of foresight not see this mistake? A former short-term Selectman Chuck Evirs even went so far as to publicly compare Sysco to the Pilgrim nuclear power plant in Plymouth, and SEMASS in Rochester! Yikes! The kicker is, he supports this project!

I would think most Lakeville residents would want to raise the bar some from this subterranean level. As an example, a quick look at the new Meditech proposal in Freetown highlights the following: 800 – 1000 NEW professional jobs (not 75), 128,000 sq. ft. office building (not 650.000 sq. ft. warehouse operating 24/6), No TIF…that’s correct they will pay full tax rate (not 43% tax reduction for 13 years). http://www.southcoasttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=201010050313 Gee, who would have guessed!

For quite some time our town leaders have looked at the Hospital property as a liability rather than an asset that should be developed properly to enhance the appeal of our town. Rather they have continually looked at this as a problem, not an opportunity.

The result of this Overlay District if approved will be to remove all the possibilities for reasonable, responsible growth on Main Street and shatter a positive vision for our town’s future development. Don’t let that happen.

The Infamous Dump Site…We have repeatedly heard some town officials misinform and scare residents regarding the town’s exposure for clean up costs of the former dump site on the property if Sysco were denied. They have portrayed this as a toxic waste sight that “no one else would ever pay to clean up if Sysco went away”, and “the town could get stuck with the clean up cost.”

After extensive study the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection, in a report to National Development, dated May 24, 2006 concluded the following.

“Observations during test pitting identified solid waste consisting primarily of cans, bottles, rags, paper, plastic and construction and demolition debris including concrete, brick, asphalt, wood, roofing shingles, bulky waste items (appliances), flooring materials and scrap metal. No observation of medical waste was made during site reconnaissance exploration work.” The report goes on to say, we have “concluded there is sufficient data to indicate that the Landfill does not pose a significant threat to the surrounding environment and nearby sensitive areas.” The corrective action recommended is to excavate and remove solid waste material down to granular soils.

Unlike what some would have you believe, your hair won’t turn green and a third eye won’t pop out from the center of your forehead from contact with this dump site.

Currently the estimated cost for site clean up, including building demolition is $5M. That is part of the ‘$20M property purchase and related cost.’ If Sysco doesn’t purchase this property it will still be developed. Don’t believe the paranoia that this will sit vacant for 20 years. National has owned the property for eight years and has had opportunities that didn’t work out for a variety of reasons, not the least of which was a global financial meltdown.

Contrary to public comments made by Janet Black, our town Assessor and Nancy Yeatts our Selectwoman regarding the town getting stuck with the clean up costs; Planning Board Chairman Jim Marot has discounted these claims as false and has explained that there are no circumstances that would necessitate the town to pay for the clean up if it didn’t choose to.

The 40B Housing Scare…Again some of our town leaders would have you believe if not Sysco; it could turn into a 40B housing complex. First of all Lakeville has its percentage of qualified units which means that we are in a position to be able to refuse additional projects of this type...they know that.

Secondly, a project of that nature would not be cost effective for a developer on this site. It would not make any financial sense, and consequently just not happen.

End of discussion.

Gridlock on Main Street…The installation of four new traffic lights from the Rte. 495 ramps to Bridge Street will be synchronized with each other so; we’re told traffic will just flow through the area. Glad to hear that. The addition of close to 460 truck trips every day, which averages one every two minutes for the time period from 3:00AM to 6:00PM, was starting to concern me.

Depending on what time of the day you are in the area you could have the pleasure of experiencing gridlock Lakeville style from a combination of the MBTA Station traffic, the largest apartment complex in Lakeville, Kensington Court, normal traffic from existing business activity in the area, and now tractor trailers everywhere! That’s what will be waiting for you on Main Street, after you navigate the backup coming off the Rte. 495 exit ramp.

Let’s not forget the early morning and afternoon bus routes that travel in this part of town and the children standing at those bus stops and traveling on those buses. As we turn the calendar and enter the winter season, imagine all this activity in the dark!

Size Matters…Forget about everything else for a minute and just look at the inappropriate scale and size of this monster. By Sysco’s own building standards and past practice, this is too big for the site. When compared to every other Sysco ‘cookie cutter’ building around the country there are none this size on a lot this small! None, Nada, Zero, Zip. As a point of reference, this build out is comparable to the entire Galleria mall complex, including their parking lots! Think about that for a second.

When asked why they would be cramming an operation this size on a lot this small, Sysco Project Manager, Thomas Bond responded that this project did present some “challenges”, and that in this area of the northeast it was very difficult to find a big enough piece of land with highway access. So…jam and cram it in, that’s what the Overlay District will allow them to do; don’t let it happen.

Stop the madness…vote NO on October 18th. We can do better!

13 comments:

  1. Excellent post!!! Get it out to the masses!

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  2. Excellent Post!!!! You hit all the reasons this project should go somewhere, anywhere that's zoned Industrial, and a minimum of 80 acres. My wife and I went over to Sysco in Norton to check it out. Between 4:30AM-5:30AM, it was a steady stream of trucks and employee cars, then all at once there were 7 delivery trucks....according to Sysco, deliverys don't start till 6:00AM, so much for control over the traffic. Oh and those back-up alarms are loud enough to wake you up.....you don't need an alarm clock....you may never get a good nights sleep again..... the smell of deisel fuel was very strong....and lights like a night football game....this is crazy...."we can do better"....Vote NO on 10-18-2010!!!!!!!!

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  3. This post should be in the Enterprise, the Call, Middleboro Gazette, and Taunton Gazette as an editorial and informational article. Great work again by our concerned citizens of Lakeville.

    Stop the madness and vote "No" on October 18th.

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  4. I can't believe that Sysco would want to come to our beautiful town and apset nieghbors that will suffer and will have to move and also change the character of the Town. I don't live near them but I do live in Lakeville, please have a heart and see what these neighbors will be facing if Sysco does come. Don't believe that you will get a break in Taxes if Sysco does come, that is not true. Please help and say NO on October 18th

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  5. Sysco's postcard advertisement, received in the mail today, states that Sysco has received support from the Planning Board. Is this true?

    I ask because it goes on to say "there are a few residents who are spreading false information about this project." Is Sysco spreading false information?

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  6. Check letter to editor, last Middleboro Gazette,just read this blog and LRRG, it's all there.....ask any question and someone will get back to you.....this is the BIGGEST thing to hit Lakeville Ever...we can do better....Vote NO 10-18-2010

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  7. You've got to read this!!!

    “Selectman Maksy did not think that workers will be spending money in Town; they will hit the highway and go home. A development like this belongs in an industrial park and doesn’t need valuable road frontage, which is retail frontage. He was concerned about the 150 trucks a day. Selectman Maksy said when a Sysco representative spoke with him, they told him he would not want to live near this facility.”

    Heck... just read the whole thing.

    http://www.lakevillema.org/selectmen_minutes/4-7-10.pdf

    Selectmen Minutes from 04-07-2010, 4th page, last paragraph.

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  8. Much better to have an abandoned old hospital with broken windows, overgrown weeds and an unknown amount of hazardous substances. Nothing says “Welcome Home” like a complex of abandoned buildings.
    The fact is this is a perfect location. Sysco trucks will leave the site and go about 700 feet before they are out of Town and onto Route 495. The part of Main Street where this project is already has a bowling alley, two chain drug stores and other commercial properties. The blog post makes it sound like some quaint Main Street from the 1950’s. This is a commercial area and this part of Main Street is a state highway.
    Opponents again overstate the traffic issue and act as though the trucks are going to run over little kids waiting for school buses. This is a scare tactic. There will not be one truck leaving the facility every two minutes. Sysco’s trucks will be gone by 6am. They go out onto Route 105 and are in town for all of 700 feet. They will not interfere with school bus routes.
    Meditech’s proposal for Freetown is the latest straw man proposal opponents keep whipping up. National Development, the owner of the site, has said there are no other interested parties who want to develop this site. Every previous proposed project has fallen through, including the shopping mall that would have put ten times the number of vehicles on our streets.
    Opponents keep saying that there are no other Sysco facilities on lots this size. This is not true. Sysco’s building and parking lots would take up 70% of the size. This is not much larger than Sysco facilities in other states.
    And it’s amazing that they try to downplay what kind of waste is on the site. The site is so polluted that it will have to be cleared and soil will have to be removed and replaced. So, don’t let anyone tell you there are only a few candy wrappers and old bottles.
    What’s at work here is a small group of people who live close to the site who don’t want ANYTHING built there. And they are willing to sacrifice $6 million in tax revenues for our schools and other services, 75 new jobs and all the money that more than 900 employees will spend in our Town.

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  9. Removed and replaced, huh? Where were you when Sysco decided to cap the site? Sounds like they don't feel the pollution is such a big deal after all.

    We won't get anywhere near even a million dollars in taxes for YEARS; none of the employees will spend ANYTHING here. Nobody is going to be hired from Lakeville beyond the token employee they can bandy about for PR gain.

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  10. Sox19182004:
    This is NOT "a small group of people ...who don't want ANYTHING there".
    Most of us PREFER retail development for this site. I'd rather deal with cars than tractor trailers. Most of the cars ALREADY drive by to get to stores in Middleboro. Retail shuts its lights off at 11 pm, while Sysco will be loading & unloading trucks ALL NIGHT (back up beeps, slamming cargo doors, truck brake and engine noise for starters).
    Retail will provide far MORE jobs to a larger segment of the population than Sysco will. And where will all the Sysco employees spend their money?? At Walgreens? At Starrs or Baldies?? Really? $1.5 million??? That's a lot of beer, subs and tampons! You know the money will be spent in Middleboro. Too bad Lakeville doesn't have any stores like a supermarket or a Kohls or a Best Buy, but if the town re-zones for Sysco, there aren't any adequate commercially zoned parcels of land left. All we'll have is a huge truck depot that we'll have to struggle to drive by. Did you know the entrance to the facility that the trucks will use will NOT have a traffic light??? Just use your imagination as to how the trucks will inevitably pull out across both lanes of Rt.105 to block on-coming traffic to get onto the road, in between the new light at Bridge Street and the new light at Commercial Drive. (The Bridge Street light is for the Sysco employee CAR entrance).
    I don't see any of you proponents knocking at my door looking to buy my house since you see this project as such a plus to my quality of life and proprty value. Where do you NON-abutters get off telling ME that I should prefer industrial/truck traffic to retail/car traffic going past my house?? Where do you get off telling me a should just put up with all the noise & lights? If it's not good enough for Derek Maksy to live next to, then why is it good enough for ME???

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  11. First rule of real estate, location location location.

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  12. If the first rule of real estate is location, location, location then the second rule is smart Zoning, Zoning, Zoning.....we can do better......Vote NO 10-18-2010

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  13. COMCAST
    channel 95 – LAKEVILLE

    View the LRRG Press Conference taped on 10-12-2010:

    Friday 10/15/2010 at 8:00pm.

    Saturday 10/16/2010 at 8:00pm.

    Sunday 10/17/2010 at 5:00pm.

    Monday 10/18/2010 at 10:00am.

    …and please don’t forget to attend the Special Town Meeting, Monday evening 10/18/2010.

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