Date: Fri 12-Mar-1999
Date: Fri 12-Mar-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
edink-office-space-town-hall
Full Text:
ED INK: Too Tight A Squeeze At Edmond Town Hall
When the ad hoc municipal space needs committee makes its report to the Board
of Selectmen this month, it appears the panel will recommend the $18 million
expansion and renovation of Edmond Town Hall. The plan would consolidate all
town offices, including the Board of Education in the Main Street facility,
ensuring that town goverment will remain on Main Street as it has always been.
The plan would follow, true to form, the town's tendency in recent years to
expand on the legacy of Newtown's legendary benefactress Mary Hawley. The
Hawley School and the Booth Library, both built with Miss Hawley's money, have
been enlarged and upgraded by the town for $4 million each. In the case of
Edmond Town Hall, however, the same strategy presents problems.
By concentrating all municipal business at one Main Street location, the town
will exacerbate the existing parking nightmare at Edmond Town Hall. The
proposal calls for a 23,000 square foot addition to the back and sides of the
building (an expansion roughly the same size as the Booth Library's addition),
creating a demand for new parking while eliminating some existing parking. In
their attempt to address a calculated parking space shortfall of 90 spaces,
the space needs committee last week decided that the problem could be solved
not adding spaces but by eliminating demand. They proposed to do away with the
Tuesday afternoon matinee at the town hall movie theater.
We thought the premise of the space needs committee's work was to upgrade and
improve the town's aging facilities. Their best proposal, however, is
predicated on eliminating $2 movies on Tuesday afternoon, which are enjoyed by
hundreds of senior citizens in the area who are reluctant to drive at night.
What kind of future are we planning for if the first step is to eliminate
something so popular with a segment of the population that, frankly, we should
be serving better? This is not improvement. This is making do. If we are going
to spend $18 million on town facilities, we should do more than make do.
Edmond Town Hall is an important part of Newtown's history, and the town's
government should continue to maintain a presence there. It is not practical,
however, to try to cram all the town's boards, agencies, and services onto a
site not suited for such an intensive use. For the past 20 years, town
services have been delivered effectively from more than a single location, and
it is reasonable to expect that good service can continue from more than one
place. With the new land and facilities at Fairfield Hills that have come to
the town from the state, and with the long-shot possibility of the town's
aquisition of the 186-core campus of Fairfield Hills, the Newtown does have
better options for solving its office space needs.