Volunteers Gauge Successes, Drawbacks For FFH Planning
Volunteers Gauge Successes, Drawbacks For FFH Planning
By Kendra Bobowick
Sharing their thoughts on Fairfield Hills, several residents participated in informative and thought-sharing meetings on the first weekend in March. The Fairfield Hills Master Plan Review Committee hosted the meetings as part of its charge to seek and include public input on the future of the former state hospital campus. The committee dubbed this focus group the Microcosm Council.
Robert Keegan and Michael Marinaccio were among the roughly 18 residents to volunteer their time Saturday and Sunday, March 5 and 6, discussing the background, history, and future of Fairfield Hills. They shared their perspectives.
Did you learn anything new about Fairfield Hills?
Michael Marinaccio: âItâs the first time we had a comprehensive and whole view of Fairfield Hills history, current status, and critical issues.â Understanding the complexities âreinforces the valuable piece of propertyâ the town owns. Seeing âthe whole thingsâ offers a better perspective.
Robert Keegan: He talked about âchange.â He sees what has changed since the 2001 vote to acquire Fairfield Hills until now. The town went from a âgo-go economyâ to todayâs tougher climate. Demographics have also changed, school populations and projections have âgone up and down,â and overall, he said, âthe town has changed.â
Understandings of costs and financing between the 2001 vote to buy the property and today have also changed, he said.
Other changes came in discovering what shape the property was âreallyâ in, ânot what everybody thought,â he said.
He also stressed that âthe way the property was presented to the business community didnât work.â He said, âLearning from history so we can go forward is what we need to do.â Regarding tendencies to place blame, he said, âWeâve got to stay away from that.â
What do you feel will be necessary for the town to successfully renovate the campus?
 Michael Marinaccio: âFrom my perspective, we need more clearly defined strategic options than exist now.â He notes that the master plan for campus redevelopment provides themes, but not strategic options.
âMy hope is that the review committee â based on [March 5 and 6 Microcosm Council meetings] and the communitywide meetings [March 16 and 23] â will be able to define options more clearly.â
Building on that thought, he said, âWhatever option is selected in the future will have to be implemented in phases because of economic terms.â
Robert Keegan: âTo succeed, you have to bring the town along to an extent that most people agree with what youâre doing.â
He said, âThatâs why weâre looking at a destination center.â He described a place that would appeal to many people, and draw them to use it âas a community place, so itâs self-sustaining.â They âkicked aroundâ ideas of sports centers, cultural arts centers, etc where âyou pay as you go,â he said. âItâs a concept. It pulls people together.â
Also, âWe have to yank down the buildings there.â Drawbacks, however, include the costs of tear-down. To wait for capital improvement plan funding several years out means the costs will go up. âThe sooner we tear them down, the cheaper it will be,â he said.
âGetting the community behindâ proposals is key, he said.
What do you believe to be the townâs biggest hurdles toward progress?
 Michael Marinaccio: He had a list, beginning first with the depressed economy, âwhich is probably going to remain. Itâs not going away.â
Secondly, he said, âA project of this size is more complex than probably anticipated. The town has to ask, does the town have enough resources and skill to manage the project?â
Demolition is third on his list. âWe need to demo most of the remaining buildings except the ones considered architecturally significant.â He sees a need to âfind a way to do the demo, there is going to be the cost.â Regarding potential investors, the need for demolition âcertainly doesnât help someone wanting to come in.â
Saving âone of our biggest hurdles,â for last, he noted the âdifficulty of making tough decisions,â and âknowing you wonât satisfy all the special interest groups.â
Decisions must be carried out âin a timely way so it doesnât drag out another year.â
He said, âTough decisions have to be made by the Board of Selectmen once recommendations [about the master plan review] are made.â He also said that âthey wonât be able to satisfy everybody.â
Regarding the many opinions he has seen, he added, âSo many opinions, so many narrow views of what should be done â the Board of Selectmen has to step back, see the whole view and address what can or canât be done. That is one of the toughest things that needs to be done.â
He said, âPeople are getting tired of hearing Fairfield Hills. There is âFairfield Hills Fatigue.ââ
Robert Keegan: âThings may sound great and grand, but youâve got to sell it to voters; thatâs a tough hill to climb,â he said. Another hurdle is âgetting past history. You donât want to spend the whole time defending what youâve done.â The town âneeds to get that out of the way,â he said. Be straight with the voters, then move on, he said.
However, âsome people donât want to move on.â Regarding placing blame, he said, âSome people will spend their lives on it.â
He mentions demolition. Regarding plans for the future, he said, âEven if a building sits, you still have to take it down, so weâre talking a huge chunk of money.â
Looking ahead at what decisions may arise for future uses, he said, âIt canât be one thing, just schools, just sports, you name it. It needs to be a community destination point. I think it can be done.â
Gauging the needs for a road to success, he said, âYou need a rallying cryâ in support of an idea from the public. âItâs important.â
What are your thoughts or reactions to the council meetings from March 5 and 6?
Michael Marinaccio: Speaking generally, the number of people that showed up formed a diverse group. The volunteers were âenergetic and all engaged,â in the weekend, which produced âthoughtful discussion and a lot of opinions.â
He found that all members were respectful and a âgood working group.â
He felt his was a great experience and found that the people attending were âglad for the opportunity to participate in such a meaningful manner.â He noted that the review committee âdid a lot of work ahead of time.â
He thinks that his group âprovided the [review] committee with a lot of information that should help them develop recommendations or changes for the master plan.â
Robert Keegan: âI thought the meeting was very good. It was well run,â he said. Regarding the information made available for participants, he said, âDo I agree with everything? No, but they have done a terrific jobâ of informing the volunteers. âThey should all be gigantically praised, that needs to be said.â
He also found that the group was highly diverse. âSome people had broader views, some had predisposed opinions,â he said. âThey could not have cut it wider of they tried.â
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March 16 & 23
The early March meetings will provide information to begin a communitywide discussion scheduled for March 16 and 23.
An Open Community Conversation will be held in the Alexandria room of the Edmond Town Hall, 6:30 to 9 pm. Participants are welcome to arrive as much as 15 minutes early. Light refreshments will be available. The second conversation will build upon the first, so participation in both is encouraged.
The early and mid-March meetings will assist the review committee in generating a townwide survey in coming weeks, and finally in preparing its final master plan review to the Board of Selectmen.