Date: Fri 13-Nov-1998
Date: Fri 13-Nov-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
edink-office-space-needs
Full Text:
ED INK: The Hundred Million Dollar Decade
When Kaestle Boos, the architectural firm, presented the committee studying
town office space needs in Newtown with cost estimates last week, everyone
gulped. The firm meticulously outlined 13 different scenarios for addressing
the cramped conditions in offices, the structurally unsound Newtown Hook &
Ladder Firehouse, and Town Hall South, where leaks and floods over the years
have failed to wash away the building's intrinsic ugliness and make-do design.
The price? Depending on the scenario, $16.5 million to nearly $20 million.
It seems Newtown has become a high stakes town. Having completed construction
of a $32.5 million sewer system, $29 million in renovations to Newtown High
School and Hawley School, and a $4 million upgrade of the Booth Library, the
town is contemplating a $22 million school for grades five and six and now up
to $20 million more in improvements to municipal facilities. If anyone had
told us in 1995 that Newtown would be spending more than $100 million on
capital projects in the next decade, we would not have believed them. It seems
$100 million should buy us something more than relief from growing pains -- it
should buy us Xanadu.
But the proposals for a new school and for more and better office space for
town employees are, for the most part, not pie in the sky. (Though one
suggestion we heard this week -- that the Legislative Council needs its own
reserved "council chambers" -- seemed a little extravagant.) The need to
relieve the increasingly crowded conditions in the middle school has been
adequately documented. The makeshift way town employees are dispersed around
town, some in temporary quarters in Canaan House at Fairfield Hills, has
always been seen as a stop-gap measure meant to buy some time. That time is
now running out.
Taking on this new list of projects will have to be done in a measured way.
Slapping another quick $40 million on to the debt already encumbering the town
will put Newtown into a pretty deep hole and will have the effect of
ratcheting up public resistance to the inevitable budget increases. We would
hate to see Newtown's relatively calm and rational budgeting process become an
annual battleground pitting one interest group against another. Once the best
options are selected, priorities will have to be established, even voted on by
the townspeople, so the town can take care of first things first, leaving some
of the less critical capital needs for later.