HomeMy WebLinkAboutApproved Minutes LCPC 062922 June 29, 2022Planning & Development Department
367 Main Street, Hyannis, MA 02601 – Phone: 508-862-4678
Local Comprehensive Planning Committee
Minutes
Wednesday, June 29, 2022
6:00 PM
Elizabeth Jenkins, Director of Planning & Development, provides an opening statement that Steven Costello, the
Chair of the Planning Board shall preside over this meeting until the Local Comprehensive Planning Committee
(LCPC) organizes. Organization (appointing Chair, Vice Chair, and Clerk) will be the first agenda item at the next
meeting. She turns the meeting over to Steve.
CALL TO ORDER
Presiding member Steve Costello opens the meeting.
NOTICE OF RECORDING
This meeting is being recorded and broadcast on Channel 18 and in accordance with Massachusetts General Law
Chapter 30A Section 20, the Committee must inquire whether anyone is taping this meeting and to please make
their presence known.
No response.
TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION
Member Present Absent
Cheryl Powell X
Felicia Penn X
Wendy Northcross X
Mark Hansen X
Amanda Converse X
Sue Rohrbach X
Meaghan Mort X
Carlos Barbosa X
Fran Parks X
Lindsey Counsell X
Tom Lee X
Jennifer Williams X
Bob Twiss X
Avery Revere X (late)
INTRODUCTIONS
Each committee member introduces themselves and offers relevant information about themselves:
Steven Costello lives in Osterville and has been in Barnstable for 27 years. He has 3 children who all
attended Barnstable schools. He is the second-longest-standing member of the Planning Board, and
served as Chair until recently. He currently works as an insurance broker for a firm out of Boston, and
also owns a commercial real estate building in Hyannis promoting minority business interests.
Cheryl Powell is a mental health practitioner and has been a member of the Barnstable Historical
Commission for 7 years, Chair of the Hyannis Main Street and Waterfront Historic District Commission
for 5 years, the 1199 representative for clinicians of outpatient behavioral health for Cape Cod
Healthcare, and is the Chair of Human Services. She has been on cape since 1998.
Felicia Penn has been on the cape since birth. She lives in Hyannis. She spent 9 years on the Planning
Board, was a member of Cape Cod Economic Development Council (now Barnstable County Economic
Development Council) for 21 years, and takes part in too many community activities to list.
Wendy Northcross is the retired CEO of the Cape Cod Chamber of Commerce, where she served for 24
years. Prior to that, she was the Executive Director of the Hyannis Area Chamber of Commerce. She is
the co-founder and Executive Director of the JFK Hyannis Museum. She’s a resident of West Barnstable
and has spent most of her life on cape.
Mark Hansen is originally from Toronto, Ontario, Canada. He has two twin girls who are 9. He’s involved
mainly in the housing industry. He worked in sales for 15 years. He is currently in development and
building—mainly workforce and family housing in the Hyannis downtown core.
Amanda Converse was born and raised in Falmouth but now lives in Barnstable. She worked for the
Hyannis Main Street Business Improvement District, and then opened her own small business in
downtown Hyannis, which she ran for 9 years. During that time, she started an organization called Love
Live Local, which communicates the importance of shopping local and supporting small businesses
across Cape Cod. She lives in Marstons Mills and serves on the board of the Hyannis Public Library and
Amplify POC Cape Cod.
Sue Rohrbach lives in Centerville and has been on cape since 1984. She served on the Planning Board
and the first Town Council, and also on the Community Preservation Committee and the Charter
Commission. She spent several years working on getting the land bank passed and saving the land on
the Mass Military Reservation. She spent 14 years working for Senator Rob O’Leary and Senator Dan
Wolf. She’s retired now, and is on the board of the Housing Assistance Corporation of Cape Cod and the
Community Action Committee of Cape & Islands, Friends of Baybridge, and the Cape Women’s Coalition.
Meaghan Mort was born and raised in Marstons Mills. She is a nurse on cape and serves on the
Barnstable Housing Committee and the Barnstable Human Services Committee.
Carlos Barbosa is from Brazil but has lived here for 35 years. He is a resident of Hyannis. He’s the Vice
Chair of the Community Action Committee of the Cape and Islands, he’s on the board of directors of
National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) Cape Cod and Health Ministry (which is an organization that
supports all the immigrants on the cape), and is on the Barnstable Human Services Committee. He wants
to be a representative for the immigrant community on the cape.
Fran Parks grew up in Cotuit and is a 1965 graduate of Barnstable High School. She is a retired pediatric
physician’s assistant after 40 years. She’s the Chair of the Prudential Committee of Cotuit Fire District
and the Town of Barnstable Historical Commission, and is also on the Trust Fund Advisory Committee for
the Barnstable Town Manager.
Lindsey Counsell was born and raised on Cape Cod. He is retired, and was formerly the Chairman of the
Conservation Commission and the Land Bank Committee, and is the Chair of the Community
Preservation Committee.
Tom Lee lives in Marstons Mills. He moved here from Canada 23 years ago. He’s been the Chair of the
Conservation Commission for 7 years but has been on the commission for 16 years. He’s been on the
Board of Health for 4 years and Community Preservation Committee for 8 years.
Jennifer Williams is the Director of the Osterville Historical Museum. She supports the Osterville
Farmers Market, lives in Osterville, serves on the Osterville Village Association Board, the Osterville
Business & Professionals Association, the Cape and Islands Historical Association, and the Wellesley
College Club of Cape Cod as President.
Bob Twiss lives in Osterville. He is on the Planning Board and before that the Zoning Board of Appeals.
The Planning & Development staff and the Barrett Planning Group (who are the Lead Project Consultant for the
LCPC) introduce themselves:
Elizabeth Jenkins is the Director of Planning & Development.
Jim Kupfer is the Senior Planner. He has worked with the Town of Barnstable for about 7 months in a
professional position. His wife was born and raised in Barnstable and they’ve been coming here for 12
years or so, so he is not new to the town in that sense. He is a professional planner, and has been
supporting municipalities for 15 years.
Kate Maldonado is the Assistant Director of Planning & Development. She has been with the town for
about 1.5 years. Before that, she worked in Maryland. She grew up in Connecticut.
Lead Consultant Judi Barrett of Barrett Planning Group has been in the field for 35 years. Barrett
Planning Group does lots of planning work, housing work, economic development, and zoning work.
They have worked extensively on the cape. Their firm has been working with the town but is excited to
get started in this new context.
Elizabeth Haney is a Community Planner for Barrett Planning Group. She spent summers in Orleans and
Brewster so has some familiarity. Her professional background is mainly in housing.
Carly Venditti is a new addition to Barrett. She worked in Texas working for the state prior to this role.
She is from Connecticut.
Judi informs the committee that there will be other members of their team joining as the project goes forward.
They also have Horsley Witten Group working on this project—they will be focusing on sustainability, water, and
energy issues. Dodson & Flinker are also working on the project—they will be involved later in the process when
it comes time for the visioning pieces.
LOCAL COMPREHENSIVE PLAN 101 POWERPOINT, ICEBREAKER, AND LCPC WEBSITE OVERVIEW
Kate and Jim provide a PowerPoint Presentation for the committee: Local Comprehensive Plan (LCP) 101. This
covers what a local comprehensive plan is, why it’s important, and starts a dialogue for what the contents of the
plan will entail.
After the presentation, Elizabeth Haney leads the committee in an icebreaker activity. During this activity,
member Avery Revere arrives.
After the icebreaker, Kate Maldonado brings up the LCPC website to point out some features, and identifies past
LCPs and their locations on the site for the committee to review at their leisure. In reference to the LCPC
website, Steven Costello asks whether there is a way to gauge success or growth based on the older LCPs.
Elizabeth Jenkins says that’s a process the staff is currently working on: engaging other departments and subject
matter experts across the community to evaluate success. That information will form the basis for the next set
of workshops this group will have—the committee will be breaking down where we are today from an existing
conditions perspective (what was in our prior LCP? did we achieve it? is it still relevant? etc.).
INTRODUCTION TO 2010 LOCAL COMPREHENSIVE PLAN AND ASSOCIATED PLANNING EFFORTS
Elizabeth Jenkins wants to touch upon two of the main plans associated with the LCP: the Housing Production
Plan and the Comprehensive Wastewater Management Plan (CWMP). Having a plan for how to achieve the
town’s low- and moderate-income housing goal is a required element of local conservation planning, and it’s
also a plan that is updated on a regular 5-year basis. That process has already begun, but this committee should
be aware of and follow that same process because it will run parallel.
In regards to the wastewater plan: Elizabeth Jenkins wants the committee to know that it is one of the main
things that propelled her forward to make this committee. There is a need to respond to nutrient management
challenges from a regulatory perspective. The town adopted the current CWMP and is in the process of planning
to sewer 12,000 parcels in Barnstable over the next 20-30 years. This has incredible implications for potential for
induced growth and how we potentially grow and change as a community—it necessitates knowing how we
want to do that and what we want to preserve. She will have subject matter experts from DPW come in and
break down the timeline and process. Those are just two plans that are in process and will impact the work of
this committee. She wants to make sure the committee is using existing plans to inform their work.
DISCUSSION OF CURRENT LCP UPDATE: TIMELINE AND NEXT STEPS
Jim hands out the draft of a Phase 1 schedule. The document outlines what staff has looked at in terms of needs
for the minimum standard process, and laid it out as a monthly schedule. A homework assignment for the
committee is to look at the schedule and help fill in some blanks. He asks them to come to the next meeting
with topics they want to dive further into. One of the biggest charges for this phase is outreach. What groups
are they missing? What groups should they be going out to? In order to get to the final deliverable of a vision
statement, they need to hear from as many people as possible from the community.
The committee discusses which days of the week and times work for them to meet. They are unable to come to
a consensus, and Elizabeth Jenkins says staff will email out a survey and collate that with the boards, the
availability of staff, and a room, and will send out preferred dates. Presiding Member Steven Costello clarifies
that all meetings going forward will be in person, but will be recorded and available online.
Elizabeth Jenkins reiterates that the outcome for Phase 1 of the project is to develop a community vision for our
future. She wants to be sure to have a plan going into that to involve as many people into that process as
possible. In preparation of the next meeting, staff will provide the committee with some ideas, concepts, and
resources about how to engage the community, and will ask for feedback from the committee. She
acknowledges that it may sound silly, but it’s important to get public input into our public engagement plan.
PUBLIC COMMENT
Presiding Member Steven Costello opens for public comment.
No response.
MATTERS NOT REASONABLY ANTICIPATED
The committee has some final clarifying questions for staff, and Judi Barrett offers some background on their
interview process and how to prepare for it:
Avery Revere takes this moment to explain that she was late, but is here to represent the village of Barnstable.
She wants to clarify whether people are on the committee to represent their village or to represent the town
commissions/committees they’re affiliated with. Elizabeth Jenkins answers that there is no right or wrong way
to represent the places or things you are passionate about or affiliated with, but overall, she wants the voices of
the public to speak for themselves. The way staff is thinking about this committee is that all members are
appointed as representatives of the town of Barnstable. She knows this town has 7 very unique villages with 7
very unique perspectives that need to come through in this process. One of the criteria that was important in
forming this committee was to make sure it had at least one representative from each village, as well as subject
matter experts from boards, committees, and commissions, from the business community, and so on—but
ultimately the goal of the committee is to get more public outreach so it’s not just one person speaking for each
village.
Avery Revere asserts that she thinks it is important that a person puts on their “cap” to be aware of what they
may be representing. She thinks it’s important to be clear when they’re speaking about their specific village, to
make sure the committee maintains a balance and is fair to the process.
Carlos Barbosa asks if there are there any tools to have comments or questions in different languages be
translated to the committee, in order to have full participation from the community. Elizabeth Jenkins says
that’s the exact kind of feedback needed—what tools and resources does the committee need to be successful?
Yes, she will provide those resources for the committee, whether it’s translation or something else. It’s one thing
to translate and it’s another to meet the community that needs those translation services where they are so
they know the town is engaging and they trust us to engage.
Judi Barrett wants to explain to the members that she tries to start this process by just talking to people. So it’s
helpful for the members to think of who they are connected with—beyond just which village they’re affiliated
with, but what organizations or people in town are they connected with? This will help the members to be
ambassadors of the process—to know where there may be gaps in terms of community members who don’t
have a voice on this committee and how to overcome those gaps. One of the great challenges of a committee
with representatives of different groups is that sometimes the people who have particular needs in the
community have a very different experience than those on the committee that’s meant to represent them. To
be successful, they need to get beyond the people who are known enough to have ended up with a seat on this
committee. In the next few weeks she will be organizing interviews through the Planning and Development
office, so asks the members to reach beyond their circle of advocates and think about who the real stakeholders
are.
Felicia Penn inquires about how the interviews will be formatted: will they just be listening to people’s lives? Or
asking them about economic challenges, housing challenges, educational challenges, language barriers, etc.?
Because it will make a difference in who they pick to be interviewed. Judi Barrett responds that they have an
initial script to start conversations, but are fully flexible to change that script or throw it out altogether if the
situation supports that. She muses that in a process like this, you often start out with a set of questions you
think are “important” but end up down a different path altogether. Every time they interview someone, they
ask, “Who else should we be talking to?” After a while they get to someone who has a particular body of
knowledge or experience that’s important.
Amanda Converse asks if Barrett Consulting will be providing members with a “pitch” to interest people that
isn’t all acronyms and town speak. In essence, how will the members convince people to give their time and
understand why they should care? Judi Barrett responds that that is something they all should work on early on
in this process—she will probably leave that task to the committee, but it’s a great question to consider how
members, as ambassadors, are going to make people care.
Mark Hansen asks the committee to consider that their natural instinct is to pay attention to the things that they
have a personal identification with, but it’s important to remember that this plan is meant to eventually identify
and provide the most benefit to the largest amount of people in our community. He asks that members keep
their minds open to what they’re trying to achieve, and keep listening.
Elizabeth Jenkins informs the committee that the next meeting will be a traditional nomination from the floor
election for Chair, Vice Chair, and Clerk.
ADJOURNMENT
Steven Costello makes a motion to adjourn.
Tom Lee seconds.
All in favor.