HomeMy WebLinkAboutLocal Comprehensive Plan_Phase 1 Public Comment
Town of Barnstable
Local Comprehensive Plan
Phase 1: Public Comment
Submitted through January, 19, 2023
Table of Contents
Local Comprehensive Plan
Phase 1 Public Comments
Village Comments Pages
Barnstable Barnstable Village Association Meeting 2-8
Centerville Centerville LCP Workshop 9-15
Cotuit Cotuit Civic Association Meeting 16-24
Hyannis Greater Hyannis Civic Association 25-30
Hyannis Port Hyannis Port Cotuit Civic Association Meeting 31-32
Marstons Mills Marstons Mills Civic Association Meeting 33-36
Osterville Osterville Civic Association Meeting &
Osterville LCP Workshop
37-44
West Barnstable West Barnstable Civic Association 45-50
Town-wide
General Public Comment 51-65
Comment Wall Responses 66-69
Barnstable 55+ Community Safety Day 70
Hyannis Open Streets 71-85
Youth Soccer Questionnaire 86-87
Barnstable High School Vision Statements 88
Winter Open House 89-93
1
Barnstable
2
Barnstable Village Association Meeting
Local Comprehensive Plan Comments
October 11, 2022
STRENGTHS
Group Response
Keeping Barnstable Village historical. This can be achieved through funding opportunities like CPC.
Walkability of Barnstable Village
Barnstable Harbor is a gem for the Village and for the Town and should remain protected. The
harbor provides both business and recreation opportunities including shellfishing and charter boats.
Aquaculture is a sustainable economic driver.
Barnstable trails
Barnstable libraries
Barnstable Village has been delayed with regard to development which is beneficial as residents can
see what is happening in the other villages and better plan for what the future could be.
Success in maintaining and fostering marsh growth which can continue to be achieved with
collaboration among Town groups.
Restaurants
Our historic Committees/Commissions. We need to continue to be careful about blending and
balancing historic preservation with growth/development.
Barnstable Market
Our parades and holiday stroll
Nirvana is a central point
Concerts
A lot of the Village is sewered
Our people. Always running into friendly residents. Small town feel; it is special here. Connections
are formed through our school networks and youth athletics.
Fire Department
Clean water
Beaches, sand bars and safe places to swim
Safe place for kids to walk around
3
OPPORTUNITIES
Group Response
Extend sidewalks to West Barnstable and improve accommodations for bicycles. Balance pedestrian
circulation and scenic roads. Guidance can be taken from the Cape Cod Commission’s Scenic Byways
report.
Safe routes to school
A playground; BWB had a playground.
Need more businesses in our Village. Businesses are leaving because they are getting pushed out due
to factors like high rent. Too many real estate law offices. Residents would like an ice cream shop
and desire first floor retail. Consider opportunity to coordinate additional parking spaces with the
County.
Local employment for small businesses
Second floor of historic buildings become rental for lower income residents
Existing houses could be repurposed for group housing
Bike trail is coming and we should tie the Village into it. Could take pressure off 6A.
Consider incentive for property owners with flexibility in zoning for more than one use.
Improve the natural environment. Would like to see everywhere on Cape Cod but specifically here
in Village first remove invasive species including phragmites. Only native plants should be planted in
public spaces. We need to get aggressive to ensure that we will have natives.
Re-direct stormwater from running into Barnstable Harbor. Water quality is degrading.
Residents need to have a better understanding with regard to drainage and stormwater systems
specific to their property and their collective neighborhood to ensure that future development, such
as an ADU, will maintain and not disrupt existing systems.
Noise pollution
There is potential to improve Town roads that are under our jurisdiction such as portions of 6A. We
can save up and budget improvements to tackle existing conditions noted to cause noise and
vibration.
Desire for consistent policy on Town sidewalk as far as snow clearing. There is desire to walk to
work instead of driving but not all residents maintain their property. Same for tree trimming.
Long term goal of installing utilities underground. This would really help especially as a coastal area,
from a visual standpoint and it would improve our sidewalks.
Tree branches and roots that are embedded in the sidewalk create a dangerous walkway.
Balancing historic preservation and development growth.
Wider sidewalks for enhanced security and safety and connectivity among our sidewalks.
Providence preservation society in the past would put together renovation funds with subsidies to
restore and rebuild neighborhoods. The concept of having a revolving fund could help us.
Our churches, post offices, and grocery stores should be accessible locally as opposed to having to
travel across Town. Consider redeveloping historic structures to provide public facilities.
4
WEAKNESSES
Group Response
Lack of smart growth strategy across Town like the development at Mashpee Commons with
residents above stores and offices and Post Office nearby. This is sprawlsville.
Need to establish an identity for each of our Village centers which should be coordinated with the
sewer plan.
Need to keep historical and looking the way it always have looked. That keeps people coming back.
The 35 Wilkens development. We need housing and having that density is fine but there is nothing to
do with energy issues and open space. The Cape Cod Commission undermines what we want. We
need to ensure that our community goals are achieved.
The Cape Cod Commission
We need a vision for what we want. We need development that is human scaled. The Cape Cod
Commission should improve aesthetics and energy review.
Barnstable isn’t a Green Community and we are missing out on grants.
We need more access to the water and beaches accessible for all residents as opposed to private
property. For instance, residents used to have more access at Scudder’s Lane Landing.
5
CHALLENGES
Group Response
Understanding that people want more housing but the cost for housing has increased tremendously.
It is difficult to achieve normal housing let alone dense housing.
Desire to see the Town meet national standards for tree replacement. Too much pavement.
Need for stricter tree removal regulations at the State level. Here in Hyannis trees were removed in
order to upgrade sidewalks. Less trees equates to lower property value.
Need to establish a maintenance agreement to ensure that trees are replaced.
We have the pressure of being a “resort” for tourism and a rich/wealth destination. How do we
avoid massive/vacant houses?
Water restrictions need enhanced communication to better inform residents. Need to provide
further information to residents with regard to restrictions and the restrictions need to be enforced.
Solid waste pickup in the Town with 7-8 companies. This should be coordinated by Precinct.
Desire to get our school districts more concerned about the waste that they produce such as solid
food waste and cardboard. Students should be more aware of this. Schools should be composting.
The State has Climate Action Plan with goals and it needs to translate into actions that must be
achieved by the Town. The State can’t complete the goals of the Climate Action Plan alone.
6
If you had one day, where would you bring a visitor?
Comment Wall #1 Responses
Barnstable Harbor at low tide
Cape Cod Airfield
Hyannis Port
What is your favorite road to travel down?
Comment Wall #2 Responses
Bone Hill Road
Bone Hill Road
Wianno Avenue
General Comments
Individual Comment Box Responses
Accident waiting to happen at the intersection of Phinneys Lane and 6A
The comment at the meeting regarding the Town of Barnstable planting public spaces with native
species was important. There are two projects in Barnstable Village where I feel that the town made
poor decisions. The first (mentioned at the meeting) was the re-do of The Hollow. It can be argued
that The Hollow needed a facelift, but aside from planting non-native water guzzling decorative plant
species, why does a recreational area that has been in the town for at least the past 65 years suddenly
need an automated irrigation system for its grass? It would be more cost effective for the town to
plant greens with resilient fescue grasses (i.e. the Cape Cod lawn), these grasses can survive a
drought and don’t require irrigation after they have become established. Yes, they do sometimes go
brown amidst a hot summer, but they come back with the fall rains. The other project was the
relocation of the sewer pump on Rendezvous Lane. The relocation plan was important in the face of
rising sea levels. Communication with the neighbors by the town was excellent. However, a
tremendous amount of money was wasted on landscaping. Not only did it employ another
automated irrigation system (that ran full tilt throughout this summer’s drought), the green was
planted with water hungry “sod” that has been trained to want a lot of water. On top of that are a
bunch of decorative pilings wrapped in rope that are supposed to look nautical or something. I guess
they are meant to keep cars and trucks from driving on the grass over the sewer pump, but they do
look silly and simply dropping some larger rocks/boulders there would have been a lot less
expensive and equally effective. Further, the fancy irrigation system is exposed to car tires I have no
doubt that several of the sprinkler heads will need to be replace annually.
7
There was a lot of talk about how important the harbor, and the marina, are to the community. Mark
Ells has heard me talk about this before, nevertheless in an effort to preserve “blue economy jobs”, I
believe that consideration should be given to the traditional charter boat businesses that run out of
the marina. There only five boats left from the “old school” 6-pack charter boat business. These
boats have been around for close to 70 years. These 40' boats rely on having one of only several
larger slips in the marina. These slips are part of the harbormaster’s lottery system. I would love to
see these slips held “in perpetuity” for use by the charter boat fleet. Doing so would allow some of
the current captains (who are aging out) to sell or pass down their businesses to the next generation
with the assurance that there will be dock space for their boats. Without the ability to retain the
slips, these businesses will not be able to continue. I believe that this charter boat fleet not only
provides an opportunity for maritime commerce, but that they are a historic aspect of the harbor and
our village. Allowing the slips to be passed down to the new owners of the charter boats will help to
preserve that tradition.
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Centerville
9
Centerville LCP Workshop at Recreation Building
Local Comprehensive Plan Comments
January 18, 2023
If together we could take action on one thing to strengthen our community,
what would be important to you?
Listen to our residents; give them a voice
15 MPH – slow down traffic to preserve character
Pine Street needs speed limit repair and we need more signage
“Preserve” quality of life here, our natural resources and community feel
Telephone pole removal
Reroute Avangrid wind off Main Street to preserve trees
Speed cameras and speed tables at crosswalks
Community engagement and involvement
Establish center/hub of Centerville here at and around the recreation building – add street lights,
etc.
Better communication between Boards/Committees/Commissions and understanding and
involvement in LCP
Caring and looking out for each other – we are not an island to ourselves. Have a better voice in the
community.
Coordinate for telephone poles to be underground
10
What concerns you most about maintaining the quality of life in Barnstable?
Traffic
Pedestrian safety
Accidents/safety
Speeds – huge trucks cut through – redirect trucks off of Main Street
(4) crosswalks are not raised/protected, pylons – slow down traffic
Need speed tables
No one stops at crosswalks
Speed of drivers going to elementary school drop-off
Regional traffic solutions
Limited careful development
Need affordable year-round and seasonal housing
Garbage – roadside (nips) and at our beaches
Free stuff on sidewalk (looks bad)
Noise pollution (leaf, etc.)
Changes that will increase density in village and that will increase traffic
Speeding and noise pollutions (motorcycling) – Centerville Beach. Consider installing speed cameras
on our roadways and within our parking lots
Cut thru traffic @ Lake Elizabeth including 8-wheelers and impact on private roads
Current construction – impacts and rerouting – stress of being displaced
Prefer to travel to Falmouth, not Hyannis, for shopping due to construction and traffic here which
also impacts access to schools and local businesses. Need to coordinate enhanced communication for
during and post construction notices.
Better communication and transparency from town
Phinneys – trees taken down, impacts on lawn, towers in water, construction impacts to
homeowners
Noise pollution worse – early in AM, trucks, landscaping, leaf blowers, drag racing
Work from home – noise, 2-cycle leaf blowers. We need regulations. Priority to limit noise on
Sundays.
Enhanced transparency – earlier notice, citizen recourse, enhanced notification of major projects in
neighborhoods
Install speed limit signs on side roads and cul-de-sacs
Private roads and obligation to homeowners
Setting priorities, interagency communication, continual metrics, the right people need to be present
Jobs and attitudes, must unite more in some wholesome interest. Housing why so many empty
buildings could be used for something and get the homeless off the streets. Covell and Craigville
Beach what are they doing digging etc.
Traffic – speed of traffic, trucks and speed and volume of delivery trucks
30 trees, 100’ tall – concern about loss of trees
11
What makes Barnstable a great place to live?
Past beauty of our community
Beaches
Location, center of everything
Natural resources and open spaces – trails, beaches, fields, recreation
Concerns about congestion
Lakes and ponds
Local business and business mix
Historic resources
Library systems (CLAMS) – all with different personality
Many events (July 4th, Memorial Day, Christmas, old home week)
4th July parade – kids event
Historic look – innocent time, Rockwell, but some of those places are going away
Large percent of family and year-round neighborhoods
Historic character
Playground in middle of Main – is a huge benefit that we should take advantage of it and celebrate
more as an anchor for our community
Open space for children
Neighbors/community but fewer young families because they can’t afford to live here
Centerville Elementary School in walking distance
Great schools and proximity from village to schools
Strong sense of community and our Civic Association
Centerville Museum and South Congregational Church
Mature trees
Craigville – drive, beauty, character
White holiday lights – and sense of community
Many beautiful public beaches
4 Seas Ice Cream
COMM is an asset
Playground
Locations to do things. Beaches, quaint but see some neighbors etc. who are loud and don’t respect
each other
12
If you had one day, where would you bring a visitor?
Comment Wall #1 Responses
Sandy Neck
Route 6A
Craigville Beach
Hyannis Port
What is your favorite road to travel down?
Comment Wall #2 Responses
Craigville Beach Road to Ocean Street along the beach
Craigville Beach Road to Ocean Street along the beach
6A
If you could add one thing to Barnstable, what would it be?
Comment Wall #3 Responses
More bike trails and improve existing bike trail on 6A
Housing available for young working families
Paved bike trails
Twin Brooks
Listen to the needs of the residents of Barnstable
13
General Comments
Individual Comment Box Responses
The working on roads has been very trying especially near Phinneys Lane people are having hard
times to get to work. The men will say you can go thru an area then you get up the road some and
you can’t get thru. Surprised nothing on cape for Martin Luther King Day there was a breakfast
somewhere but that was it. Ways to keep the community together some of my neighbors hardly
speak. And the culture needs to unite better. Youth needs more wholesome things to do. The senior
center needs community more events for all ages of a community. This cape needs to change its
theme of a retirement place.
I felt half the suggestions from residents presented at the meeting should have been heard by our
council and town manager. I'm not sure what crosses the line of what's under your division's
umbrella. For instance, I just learned this week the council voted unanimously in favor of changing
the zoning for Simon properties. A full month after the vote was taken? Their answer of course is
"everything's online", the agenda etc. but good luck finding that buried stuff! Town wide speeding,
pedestrian, bicyclist safety is paramount and a genuine bonafide dilemma and crises! There needs to
be a meeting with the police, council and all stakeholders. I've emailed the Barnstable sergeant in
charge of traffic but he is overwhelmed!! This along with the housing shortage is a statewide
perpetual issue. I know for a fact the police feel overwhelmed with other more serious issues,
understaffed and consider traffic enforcement a nuisance. Try driving the speed limit on old stage
road and you get tailgated. We the people [including all of you] who try to be interested, caring,
concerned residents are currently spread thin in Barnstable. Wind power, development of Twin
Brooks, Jenkins cranberry bog, THE AIRPORT are all taxing us as a community!
I attended an airport meeting and we only had 10 residents. Those airport folks are steamrolling
along with Mr. Ells blessing? VERY CONCERNING. The airport director speaks out both sides of
her mouth stating "we're not Logan" yet the expansion is ridiculous. THE AIRPORT IS EMPTY
EVERY DAY I DRIVE THROUGH IT? One resident was right on when he stated the airport was
"catering to the Oliguards"! The airport seems to become an airplane gas station. Don't laugh but I
think we should close the "gateway airport" and use the 700 acres for housing, which is in dire need
and paramount to someone taking a vacation from NY to fly over to the islands. I'm so glad you folks
are working with Hyannis Main st businesses who are our town's backbone!
14
What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Individual Comment Box Responses
Preservation
Historic
Attentive to natural resources
15
Cotuit
16
Cotuit Civic Association Meeting
Local Comprehensive Plan Comments
September 20, 2022
STRENGTHS
Group Response
Finally started sewer program
Friendly staff
State Representatives and Town Councilors
Parks and recreation
Fire Department staff
Library
Waterways
Individual Comment Box Responses
Good financial position
Wonderful village
Variety of beaches
17
OPPORTUNITIES
Group Response
Enhance parks and recreation specifically here in Cotuit
Traffic
Desire for a new Fire Department building and an emergency shelter
Alternative septic systems can be coordinated, for the time being, in advance of sewer
Collaborate with adjacent towns, like Mashpee, for best practices related to sewer
The elementary school could be converted to a community center
Streets can be improved to be more bike friendly and improved for enhanced pedestrian safety
Residential trash pickup
Review and consider updating current zoning to provide more opportunities for businesses
Individual Comment Box Responses
Start planning for preventing water pollution from happening…rather than trying to remediate
pollution once it's affecting our water resources
To protect water now we need sewers!
Ability to address weaknesses and threats
Develop more senior housing
Draw and keep medical professionals
18
WEAKNESSES
Group Response
Traffic control and speed enforcement
Absence of open space and recreational areas in Cotuit. Particular concern for lack of play areas for
younger children was noted. And the fields at the school property are in very rough shape -
especially given that they are the only readily available recreation area.
Current condition of Pomponesset Bay and Cotuit Harbor. Efforts should be coordinate to restore
and "bring back to life"
Poor planning in the 1970s. During the 1970's neighborhoods were developed and coordinated with
Town staff without infrastructure, drainage, or sidewalks and now we are paying for it.
Individual Comment Box Responses
Inadequate beach parking/poor enforcement of non-stickered cars
Lack of traffic patrol and speed enforcement
Beach cleanliness
Overdevelopment in sensitive natural areas
Diminution in health of habitat, ecosystems, waterbodies, and watersheds
Popponessett and Shoe String Bay DEAD and Cotuit Harbor dead, dead, dying
Septic systems
Housing for low/middle income
Building Department
Lack of affordable housing and professional blue and white collar employment
19
CHALLENGES
Group Response
Coordinating common values that balance the Towns varied geography and economic development
Capturing the voice of summer residents
Communication. It can be challenging to ensure that all residents are informed and it is important to
consider all opportunities to spread the word about current and future efforts.
Water quality. Extremely poor and degrading condition of area waterways. This includes our fresh
water aquifer and the sludge in Cotuit Harbor as well as the Marstons Mills River, Santuit River and
Little River. Sewer is not expected for 20+ years. A west bound sewer plan should be developed
immediately. We cannot wait 20 or so years for sewer. We need to act now. Innovative systems
need to be considered; we have failed our septic systems. Additionally, connecting to sewer is
expensive and funding opportunities for residents should be coordinated. The waters are a great asset
and a major weakness is the absence of steps to take care of that great asset.
Continued growth of AirBnB rentals and desire for regulations
Inadequate beach parking/poor enforcement of non-stickered cars
Desire for more funding and Town resources to be allocated to Cotuit. Cotuit does not seem to rank
evenly with other villages.
The Cotuit Elementary School should be protected in perpetuity and we should consider adding a
playground
We have an aging population and we need to plan ahead for residents to be able to age in place
Seasonal fluctuation which impacts population, traffic and economic development
Maintaining our character. Cotuit needs a village design criteria to ensure that our character is
preserved. There has been an invasion of traffic signs.
Traffic and speed of vehicles is a major concern, especially for families. Speed enforcement.
Subsequently, if speeding is addressed we could limit the amount of traffic signs. Speed needs to be
addressed both on land and on water.
Lack of existing healthcare facilities and need to retain existing healthcare facilities.
Pressure to expand mooring field. Desire to review how moorings are passed down and consider
establishing a limit on the number of moorings.
Need for mental health facilities that are accessible for all residents
Need to develop strategies for recruiting and retaining public services especially entry level positions
Maintenance of our private and public roads and coordination with future sewer development
including the need to coordinate easements
20
Our waterways are both a strength and a weakness; they need to be protected
When goals are established, we need to promptly prioritize actions that are defined for immediate
action. We need to ensure that performance measures are developed to keep track of progress in
achieving goals.
Individual Comment Box Responses
Environment
Water quality
Continued growth of AirBnB rentals with no parameters on minimum length of stay and no
enforcement of noise/nuisance ordinance
Lack of availability of healthcare providers
Water pollution is increasing: nitrogen -phosphorus; contaminants of emerging concern; virus-
pharmaceuticals; PFA’s
21
What is your favorite place in Barnstable?
Comment Wall #1 Responses
Sandy Neck Beach
Kalmus Beach
Craigville Beach
Prince's Cove
Shoestring Bay
Crocker's Neck
Dead Neck
Meadow Point
Loop Beach
Dead Neck
Cotuit Harbor
What is your favorite road to travel down?
Comment Wall #2 Responses
6A
149
22
General Comments
Individual Comment Box Responses
The sewering infrastructure project started 10 years too late. Now the bays and their estuaries are
under pressure from accelerated eutrophication. Some bays like Shoestring Bay/Popponesset may
not be able to sustain the estuaries due to nitrogen input from Title 5 septic. The plan for sewering
must be amended to:
Eliminate all Title 5 permitting for new construction and replacement systems within
nitrogen-sensitive areas
Accelerate the sewering infrastructure project to a 10-year timeline
Approve more nitrogen-removal systems for septic
Without a serious change to the current approach, our waterways will be diminished leading to a
falloff in tourism and real estate property values.
Sewers and water quality can NOT WAIT!
Why does the town have so many private roads?
Desire a multi-use path for access from village center to Marstons Mills, Osterville and then Hyannis
without vehicle traffic.
Get rid of 2 acres zoning. Allow easier construction of living quarters besides detached houses.
Consider a sidewalk from 28 along Putnam into the center of the Village be considered? I know
there was talk of it pre-Covid.
Consider a remapping of the mooring field in Cotuit Bay. The moorings could be more efficiently
placed if they were in rows or a grid and quite possibly more moorings could be made available.
Could an exception be made by Conservation in the summer months to allow for beach raking at
Loop and Oregon to take the seaweed not just from the high tide mark but from the low tide mark
also? The birds have plenty to eat over at Sampson’s. The odor from the decaying seaweed is
obnoxious and the bacteria levels which closed Loop for over a week this summer are hazardous to
our residents.
Harbor Congestion: As an active CMYC sailor for near 60 years, I’m concerned about the future of
sailing in the harbor. The good news is that Cotuit’s iconic Skiff fleet is as healthy as ever. The bad
news is we are quite constrained with where we can sail. The massively expanded mooring field
(once two separate fields at Town Dock and Ropes) has cut off much of the area where we once
raced. In 1994 the Waterways Committee and Harbormaster agreed to a boundary the mooring field
but have pushed out that boundary in recent years. At the same time, the CMYC has agreed with the
Cotuit Oyster Company to make their oyster cages out of bounds and thus the racing area is pinched
down to a fairly narrow corridor. We do get out of the harbor some, but the parade of speeding
motorboats on weekends renders the waters near the outside channel to choppy for small boat
sailing. It will be hard to get those genie’s back in the bottle but it’s critical to the future of the 116
year old institution that any more shrinkage be curtailed and that the Waterways Commission ensure
the mooring boundaries expand no further. Water Quality in the harbor is also a big issue, of course,
but I don’t have any particular inputs on that.
Common Space: Our beautiful little village is surprisingly short of common space for the citizenry.
Memorial Park and the school are about it for open space. Thanks to the BLT, we do have some
woods and trails but very little of that even in the heart of the Village. Where can kids go? In theory
23
they could play pick up soccer at the school, but the state of the turf is…well calling it turf is
generous. It’s probably a pipe dream to think that we might expand community space, but the
shortage shines a light on the importance of renovating Memorial Park and maintaining and
improving the open space at the school.
Traffic and Noise: These problems are certainly not unique to Cotuit and solutions aren’t clear. I
believe that the raised cross walks in the CIP queue combined with fairly recent Stop signs will
help. Is there any way to reduce the speed limit? And residents of the Village remind us that it’s not
only Main St where traffic is dangerous. As you may know, I and the Civic Assn are also concerned
about gas power leaf blowers in the Village. They are highly polluting and amazingly noisy. The
Town and Councilors are not interested in following other towns in the Commonwealth in curbing
their using during the summer months. It would be great if, at minimum, the DPW could set a good
example and the Town study the issue.
What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Individual Comment Box Responses
Quiet
Connected
Calm
Inclusive
Involved
Open space to gather
Character
Share your ideas & stories
Individual Comment Box Responses
We need clean water - wells, town water, and in the ponds and sea
24
Hyannis
25
Greater Hyannis Civic Association Meeting
Local Comprehensive Plan Comments
November 8, 2022
STRENGTHS
Group Response
Great hospital
Hyannis is the transportation hub which is both positive and negative
Waterfront and beaches
Good education system with diversity of schools particularly Sturgis
We live in a place where people want to live; we are a destination
Thriving downtown
Sea Captains Row on Pleasant Street is a beautiful development/community with market rate units
within walking distance of Downtown
26
OPPORTUNITIES
Group Response
Hyannis has infrastructure for development including sewer and transportation
Coordinate effort to beautify our village especially Downtown
People come from all over country here. The waterfront is visitor’s first impression and it should be
pristine.
Expanding sewer to help improve environment and water quality
New roads
Burry the power lines
To make our community more walkable and safer
Hyannis is the hub and there is huge opportunity with all of our transportation. The village has
significantly grown in the last 10 years and now it is less safe. Enhanced safety needs to be a priority
especially with future growth.
Unique village with issues that only relate to Hyannis
Enhance and develop additional recreational opportunities
To celebrate our diverse community
Old homes on South Street can be restored into show pieces
TD Bank and Cascade are opportunities for future redevelopment
Enhanced and preserved architecture can be coordinated to ensure a greater sense of community
pride indicating that residents value and take care of their homes
Clean up parks and beaches
Maintenance of Main Street Hyannis should be improved and budgeted for. Volunteers could be
coordinated with the schools. Another opportunity would be to connect with local landscape
companies to see if they could volunteer to maintain a section of Main Street.
Take inventory of Hyannis rental units and open space
Consider smaller developments like those on Ridgewood Avenue and High School Road that do not
feel like a box and the properties are maintained
We can move parking away from the harbor
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WEAKNESSES
Group Response
Homeless population and social services are concentrated in Hyannis. There is a lot of money in
social services. We need a better plan for human resources and relationships.
We have resources but there has not been success using them
Over the years, required affordable housing from projects among the various villages have been
placed in Hyannis.
Low income should be shared among all of Barnstable. Right now, Hyannis has significant amount of
the Town’s low income housing.
We do not have the life like we had in the past before businesses closed Downtown.
Our middle class is disappearing. We have high and low class housing; we need to develop the
middle class.
Transportation among our villages and neighboring communities should be enhanced
Main Street streetscape maintenance. We need to enhance maintenance of our Downtown including
leaf removal as this impacts visitor’s impression of our Downtown.
Roadway maintenance. It is difficult to see painted line work on our streets at night which is
dangerous. While there is an associated cost increase to enable this maintenance more regularly the
cost is worth the improved safety.
Safety
Significant amount of land is not taxed
Lack of communal character within our neighborhoods which was more prevalent 10-15 years ago
Negative reputation of being dirty and unsafe despite helping people and having a big heart. Hyannis
is always on the receiving end of negativity. Concentration of social services and affordable housing
in Hyannis impacts reputation. We need to spread the wealth. Not everything needs to be
concentrated in Downtown.
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CHALLENGES
Group Response
No other village is interested in incorporating social services
Properties are not being maintained and taken care of. Owners should be held accountable especially
for lots that are empty and vacant.
Builders come here thinking development should exclusively be for low income
Property owners allowed to keep properties in poor condition as long as they pay taxes
Properties with numerous cars parked such as on Ocean Street
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What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Individual Comment Box Responses
Safe
Safe
Safe
30
Hyannis Port
31
Hyannis Port Village Association Meeting
Local Comprehensive Plan Comments
November 7, 2022
OPPORTUNITIES
Group Response
Better access for transient moorings – harbor front is underutilized
More waterfront restaurants around Kalmus Beach with trolley service from terminals
Extending sewer to Hyannis Port
Build large facility outside Downtown Hyannis to assist homeless population
CHALLENGES
Group Response
Future re-development of Melody Tent property
Paving over green space
Single-family housing turning into multi-family housing with ADUs
WEAKNESSES
Group Response
Lack of snow plowing on Hyannis Port roads (Irving Avenue specifically)
Roads are not bike-friendly
Transparency regarding review of development projects
Large homeless population in Hyannis
Need more affordable recreation
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Marstons Mills
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Marstons Mills Civic Association Meeting
Local Comprehensive Plan Comments
January 12, 2023
What Makes Barnstable A Great Place to Live?
Group Response
Sense of community
Activities and things for kids and community to do (bringing events back to villages)
Character of town, close to water, rural roadways
Water quality priority
Understand ADU provisions
Wonderful place to raise kids
Challenges of opiate crisis
Keep great place for next generation
Activities for kids – preserve sports and improvements and grow opportunities
Going to beach – best access to beaches on Cape
Unique character of each village and center of county
Opportunities: golf courses, pickleball, access to water
Opportunity for young people to work and reinvest in community and connect with diverse
community
Challenges of family living here
Address housing needs in villages
Bring back village day
Atmosphere – “old cape”
MM – limited access to family and recreational resources in village (playgrounds, splash pad,
fields)
Mills is a “drive through it” village – we need a village anchor here in MM
Woods, ponds – bringing back community
MM visioning plan – continue progress
MM is family, but little else to define the community
More recreation, young villages, many kids
Kids continue to be kids – entertainment and recreation
Playgrounds for young kids, for next age, splash pads
Interaction with kids and family from your village
MM feels like New Hampshire with Sandy Neck
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What Concerns You Most About Maintaining the Quality of Life in Barnstable?
Individual Comment Box Responses
The population of families – we need to provide experience that is attractive
Concern for cost of living, need places to play
Growth of town and the shifting schools
We need more family opportunities
Some people live here because they can work remotely but we need more year-round well-paying
jobs
Housing, employment and need adequate facilities here especially for our young families
HYCC falling into disrepair – need to maintain our facilities to attract and retain young families
Each village has unique population and we need to consider where sports facilities should be located.
MM has been for fishing etc.
Cost for affordable housing is huge problem and why some people are leaving. Need to combine
sports and housing
Our community does not understand the impact of the housing crisis – impact on employees such as
town and hospital. We need people to staff our restaurants. We don’t have housing to support our
needs.
MM school was the heart of our community
MM has been the “forgotten village”
We need a real playground and we need to plan when the recreation will be implemented
Need to collaborate with schools on future improvements and talk among groups to ensure parties
are on the same page and engage residents in public comment
Improve communications across town. Enhance communications and support each other.
Consider using electric signs across town and bulletin board at fire department
Affordable is not actually affordable – we need studio apartments. We need housing that supports
our residents who need low-income housing
Need housing for residents that make $60,000-$80,000 a year
Need bold ideas respectful of context
Title V has not been an appropriate solution and we need the appropriate solution for our future
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If you had one day, where would you bring a visitor?
Comment Wall #1 Responses
Meadow Point in Cotuit
Sampson’s Island
The ponds in Marstons Mills
If you could add one thing to Barnstable, what would it be?
Comment Wall #3 Responses
More safe spaces for children
Greater sense of community
Safety
Focus on creating safe spaces for children
A gathering space – an anchor – a place to have fun, be safe, a place to call home to be proud of
What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Individual Comment Box Responses
Family friendly
Playground splash pad
Senior friendly
Inclusionary
Multifaceted
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Osterville
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Osterville Village Association Meeting
Local Comprehensive Plan Comments
November 1, 2022
STRENGTHS
Group Response
Access to our beaches
The Town’s website
Reviewing what we loved about Osterville 10 years ago would be a great start as not much has
changed and that is what we love about Osterville. We do not want to be changed to Long Island.
Appreciate Osterville’s simplicity and beauty
Dowses Beach. Particularly, residents appreciate handicap access, the peaceful and beautiful scenery
and the fact that it is accessible all year round.
Osterville Village as it is now
Osterville schools as they are now
Our natural resources both land and the sea for their character and recreational opportunities. In
particular, Joshuas Pond, Dowses Beach and Nantucket Sound.
Osterville’s historic character and unique relationship to the sea
Public access to natural resources is fabulous
Our neighborhoods and the people; we have a great community. People care for and stand up for
each other.
Osterville is a walkable community. Residents from other Villages come to Osterville to use our
sidewalks.
Our Churches
Osterville’s Public Library
The scale of each of our Villages. Our Villages are less dense than other communities and are set up
so that they are not overrun. Village scale and our water bring people here. It is desired that the scale
remains as is and it not changed in order to preserve nostalgic feeling.
Our first responders
Our water which is recognized as being the best in the Country and draws people to visit our Town.
We planned ahead with installation of our wells which is a huge asset.
Prior Local Comprehensive Plans were well done and are a good wealth of information.
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OPPORTUNITIES
Group Response
Develop a well-structured questionnaire to be circulated to all residents.
CHALLENGES
Group Response
We need to think about and plan for coastal resiliency
AirBnBs. Properties within residential neighborhoods are being purchased and converted to AirBnBs.
Changes to our geology over time
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Osterville LCP Workshop at Osterville Museum
Local Comprehensive Plan Comments
December 13, 2022
If together we could take action on one thing to strengthen our community,
what would be important to you?
Water quality and housing issues (connection)
Keeping neighborhood character and village character
Historic preservation
Iconic elements of villages: buildings, beaches, boatyards
Looking ahead—what do we need to do to keep things?
Right-sized healthcare system
Specialty care access → need to travel off-cape
Quality communication
Access to broadband/fiber
Competition for service
Connections to support each other
Preservation of open space and balancing with affordable housing
Downtown Hyannis and Cape Cod Mall
Safety (not safe)
Stores closed
Corporations/generic—character missing
Worn down, biz not back
Limited selection of retail shops
Housing/open space/water
Takes a good transportation system
Viability of regional transportation but service
Communication and how to incentivize new business
Children: places and things to do for kids (besides mall and sports)
Hyannis: parking opportunities
lighting
alleys
Hyannis: Touristy economic driver
Adding sidewalks: East Bay Road and Sea View Avenue
Preserving public access to water: beaches, ways to water
Strength of village concept → avoiding homogenization of the town
Strength of villages → each their own character and economic driver
Diversity and vibrancy of community while understanding interests of each village
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What concerns you most about maintaining the quality of life in Barnstable?
Water and health (30-40 years late) and public health
Hyannis as hub → draw for services and those who use them → creating fear and misperception
Thinking broadly about not concentrating
Local transportation in Town
Need a car
If need to travel for services, no choice for housing or transportation
Knowing options for transportation (ex. DART, NFP Services)
Connection and communication and scheduling transportation services → more sharing
Subsidizes ride share? Cord services
What makes Barnstable a great place to live?
Beaches
Walking town
Diversity of businesses
People
Community experiences
Great place to raise a family
Concern about quality and reputation of public schools
Burden of families, esp. with children
Barnstable recreation- programs for kids (summer, after school)
Challenges of and for teachers:
developing community and developing connections and communications
Missing neighborhood feeling:
losing kids and family
Do kids have summer jobs?
Kids working in local community and supporting local businesses
Walkability
Importance of buying local
Opportunities for volunteerism in community and creating those opportunities in schools
Ramping up “wrap around” services for children in BX
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What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Village
Neighborly
Idyllic
Welcoming
Delightful
If you had one day, where would you bring a visitor?
Comment Wall #1 Responses
Sampson’s Island
Long Beach in Centerville
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Barnstable Local Comprehensive Plan Committee
Osterville Village Session, December 13, 2022
I. If together we could take action on one thing to strengthen
our Community, what would be important to you?
1. Affordable housing;
2. Water quality, both drinking and ponds and streams;
3. Keep village(s) character;
4. Historical Preservation;
5. Healthcare system “right-sized” for community, i.e.,
Access to necessary specialists locally without leaving the Cape.
6. Public Facilities:
a. Libraries
b. Beaches
c. Sidewalks
d. Places for youth activities
e. Places for adult activities
7. Quality Communications, i.e. broadband and internet;
8. Preservation of open space;
9. Balance of growth and open space;
10. Improved Main Street Hyannis as a place to go:
a. Safety
b. Closed stores in Cape Cod Mall
11. A good local transportation system;
12. Put in “full-fledged” sewer system;
13. Improve Public Communications;
14. Incentivize new businesses;
15. Youth activity center(s);
16. Public access to seawater plus freshwater ponds and waterways;
17. Village Community;
18. Town of Barnstable use existing facilities like museums for organized community
recreation activities;
19. Educational resources [adult continuing education];
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20. Development of Social Communities;
21. “Wrap-Around” services for children in Town.
II. What concerns you most about maintaining the quality of
life in Barnstable?
1. Quality of drinking water;
2. Quality of recreational water;
3. Prospect of bringing Wind Power electrical lines into Barnstable through Covell
Beach, Craigville Beach and Dowses Beach.
--
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West Barnstable
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West Barnstable Civic Association Meeting
Local Comprehensive Plan Comments
January 17, 20233
STRENGTHS
Group Response
Great bricks from West Barnstable
Rural character and proximity to amenities
Maintain strong financial status
Beaches and harbor
Open space (land, trees, and conservation area) and community activities/feel
Resource Protection Overlay District ( RPOD) requiring 2-acre zoning
Allowing “Illegal” apartments to be used would help solve housing crisis
Downtown Hyannis (proposed two-way roadway)
Parks and recreation
Low crime
Churches
Thriving arts community
Great relationship and communication with our fire department
Friendly community and friendly drivers
Large protected open space
Wildlife
Communication – sign boards around town
Working farms with produce
Meeting House Farm
The roundabout at 14
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OPPORTUNITIES
Group Response
Develop tiny homes (6-8 units) on Town property to pay rent to the Town
Village streets aren’t safe – need more sidewalks
Missing low-income family housing. Impossible to find this housing here. Also need starter homes
for young families.
Our kids won’t be able to live here. Need less age-restricted housing.
Can’t walk on sidewalks as they are overgrown. We need to enhance and maintain our sidewalks.
Traffic – other communities have turning lanes at choke points
Paid parking in Downtown Hyannis would be unfair to restaurants and merchants. Suggest that we
incorporate paid parking when other cape communities do as well and that when we incorporate
paid parking we do so across all of our villages.
Need to create affordable housing; currently it is slow to be developed
More restaurants
Need to coordinate efforts to protect Bridge Creek
Abandoned schools
Climate resiliency – require solar and protect forest coverage. Also consider Transfer of
Development Rights (TDR)
Oak Street is awful; consider roundabout there
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WEAKNESSES
Group Response
Access to internet and associated cost for residents and businesses
Expense of cost of living
Lack of diversity
No municipal trash/sewer/water
(5) different fire departments
Concern BWB elementary – shortage of staff requires investment for infrastructure etc.
Abandoned schools (also an opportunity)
Future drinking water source will be lost to Hyannis. We need it here. Protect drinking water
source. Consolidate wells across town.
Our Water Commissioner is underfunded and lacks a voice
Working too fast to drill water here to Hyannis yet years away from Town-wide water
Not all roads are owned by the town. If improvements are made on private roads to engineer’s
standard why can’t the Town then take ownership of the roads? It is up those who live on private
roads to pay the costs associated with improvements and they are also required to pay the same taxes
as people who live on public roads.
The stretch of 6A between 132 and 149 is very dangerous. The speed limit varies and it particularly
dangerous for school kids. Public safety concern. Suggest increasing signage.
Vehicle speed on 149
Need to create affordable housing; currently it is slow to be developed
Aging population
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CHALLENGES
Group Response
Drinking water
Retaining service workers with cost of housing
Year-round work opportunities and people to fill those jobs
Increasing severity of storms
Threats to shellfishing
Litter and garbage
Independence Park is zoned industrial; we should change zoning for job creation
No municipal water in WB and the threat of salt water in private wells
Zoning – consider amending and establishing lot coverage thresholds
Rental capacity is diminished
Wind energy and our beaches and lack of public involvement
Frightened about water capacity here in WB
Septic systems
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If you had one day, where would you bring a visitor?
Comment Wall #1 Responses
To the bus station
Sandy Neck
Bone Hill
What is your favorite road to travel down?
Comment Wall #2 Responses
The South Street drag strip from Sea Street to Ocean Street
Cotuit
If you could add one thing to Barnstable, what would it be?
Comment Wall #3 Responses
Save Twin Brooks
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Town Wide Comments
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General Public Comment (submitted through 1-19-2023)
Local Comprehensive Plan
General Public Comment
Hyannis Residents
Instead of a vision I would like to offer the following:
Great job transforming Hyannis Main Street thus far. It's important the remaining vacant
commercial buildings get repurposed / re-leased; we should encourage existing businesses to
improve their facades as well (grants?). More upscale businesses would be welcome on Main
Street.
One easy thing we could do in Hyannis is to remove the trees / small building in front of the
Village Green / Bandstand to improve visibility from Main Street. For all the times I have
been on Main St., I never notice the village green which is really nice (but feels very hidden).
I think Sea Street could become an extension of Main Street and serve as a connection
between the beaches and downtown Hyannis. It would look nice if we had a couple upscale
coffee shops, country store, news stand on Sea St.
Barnstable beaches seem very restrictive in terms of allowable activities (no ball throwing,
frisbee, boogie boards, etc). This basically says families are not welcome and is why a number
of our friends now travel to Road Island, Maine, or Virginia beach for their summer
vacations.
Is it me or does there seem to be an increase in homeless folks on Main Street over the past
couple of years? We need to help these folks for sure but I am not sure you want this so
prevalent on Main Street.
Some of the markets such as the Ocean Street Market off Old Colony and Sea Street
Provisions off of Sea Street need to be re-imagined. Not a good look for the town especially
being so close to the beaches.
Thanks for asking for input and for all of your hard work.
Beautification of downtown Hyannis to attract more local business owners to join the community.
Clean up the streets by getting rid of all the trash , concrete confetti, rotten plants and move all the
homeless people somewhere and also fund or restore housing program buildings or make respectable
apartments or houses cheaper.
Stop. Slow down and look around. What do you see? Too much traffic, not enough drinking water,
not enough wastewater treatment, no parks, polluted estuaries, outdated housing stock and very
limited employment outside the trades.
How do you fix this?
1) 18 month building moratorium until necessary wastewater infrastructure is approved and funded.
2) New drinking water wells with adequate safeguards to remove contaminants.
3) Tax incentives for updating and expanding existing properties whether they be ADUs or more
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floors on existing apartments.
4) Town lead efforts to build senior housing and more affordable housing in all villages
5) Aggressive home purchase program to buy housing in established neighborhoods for updating
6) Consider developing more parks in Hyannis and start planting trees in established neighborhoods.
7) Buy some of the older vacant buildings in downtown and start business incubators
8) Change the Town Charter to allow for an elected mayor and at large councilors.
No more smoke shops, tattoo shops expansion of high school more space for businesses. More
property have multiple commercial vehicles, equipment construction waste homes multiple in
register vehicles. Starts a trend that more households do the same. They been reported nothing done.
Totally agree we have affordable housing shortage but allowing homeowners to increase housing in
their homes many homes are already beyond capacity limit. Town land businesses develop more
housing. Thank You!
An (business) environment where people can earn a great living through the economic development
of opportunity - similar to the Falmouth WHOI Model. Barnstable too should share in the
opportunities that a Blue Economy offers - yet to date we do not. No longer can Barnstable rely on
primarily lower income service and tourist jobs - we must expand our horizons. This would be
congruent with the Strategic Plan and offer residents a better life. Economic Development is
essential and must be broader than simply real estate and building development which increases the
wealth of a select few.
I want to live in a healthy, safe, culturally diverse, friendly/welcoming community that is attractive
and provides at minimum: (not in order of priority)
adequate infrastructure and resources, such as clean, safe water; sewers; utilities
adequate, affordable, varied housing to meet the different needs of its residents,
well-equipped and adequate in number fire, police and emergency personnel;
high-quality educational schools/programs pre-k thru Senior continuing ed;
wide variety of opportunities for recreation spanning youth-Senior population;
governed by a representative, transparent and accountable town government,
timely access to primary, preventive, emergency, rehabilitative AND mental Health care
preserve the historical and aesthetic "charm" of Cape Cod that makes Barnstable what it has
been...maintain and enforce guidelines on zoning, signage, encourage commercial
cooperation in development of malls, etc.
preserve precious open space and undeveloped land
plan for potential climate change, eroding coastlines, etc.
BEWARE of out of town developers
Widespread bicycle, pedestrian, and public transportation infrastructure.
Strong enforcement of traffic laws.
Greatly reduced light and noise pollution.
Along with the ocean and ponds, one of the things which drives tourism is Cape Cod's older
architecture. Zoning regulations for development of residential and commercial buildings
should enforce external styling that employs and pays tribute to historic Cape Cod.
Strong, widespread, and proactive enforcement of town code.
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Ban the sale of nips and single use alcohol containers.
Town Department of Public Works collection of trash and recyclables rather than individuals
bringing same to transfer station.
Ban use of most fertilizers, weed killers, and other poisons on lawns and in gardens.
P.S. Thanks for the opportunity to comment.
Better regulations on occupancy outside storage vehicles. Better appearance and more shops not
restaurants.
Vibrant / modernized Main Street. I’d like to see the Main Street buildings improved and those that
are vacant / aging re-purposed. Too many notable vacancies. The liquor store draws too many
vagrants.
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General Public Comment
Barnstable Village Residents
Safer roads with less congestion and limited future building in already overcrowded locations.
Protect water supplies. Create safer bicycle access on roads and create new bike trails to connect
existing trails.
Here are some suggestions:
More shops in the Village. Shopping draws visitors.
The Village also needs an ice cream shop.
Finish putting a sidewalk all the way down Bragg’s Lane.
Maybe give out tickets for speeding
More reliable internet. Very hard to work here as Comcast keeps dropping
Sustainable, walkable, accessible to all with emphasis on reduced use of gas in both public and private
vehicles.
Just a comment: I would like to see the Swap Shop at the Town Dump reopen. I was told that a new
structure to house it is required. Am wondering if anyone is working on that. The Swap Shop was
very popular and an asset the community. Very sorry it is closed.
Beautify the downtown, increase usable open spaces and parks, increase pedestrian and visitor
interest, add a major museum or attraction, increase winter attractions and business, ease
congestion, and improve connections to other towns and off-cape hubs via biking, rail, and more
To see Hyannis made into a safe and updated tourist destination: no homelessness, low crime, newer
lodgings, updated restaurants, etc. Hyannis has the ocean and all the basics right there to make it like
another Naples, FL. Yet it also has a lot working against it. I live here and never go there--don't feel
safe.
To maintain its historical significance, to improve transportation in order to lessen traffic, to
maintain population level in keeping w/protection of land/water sources, to support initiative to
widen two existing canal bridges.
To clean up Ocean Street to North Street, as these streets are priceless to the town of Barnstable, as
you can see in The Historical time of Hyannis.
HYANNIS should be The Place on THE MAP, instead to the off season people we are a laugh upon.
We could be so much better than Nantucket and SHOULD BE, as we don’t have to catch the ferry in
bad weather…..
The town should buy the old movie theater on MAIN STREET gut it…..rent it out as market,
music, weddings…..
Save the water front of Hyannis as it is Historical and PRICELESS and should be on The Map places
to go!
The Kalmus Beach should have a Town High End Trailer Park of 50….$200-$300 a night.
Bringing in some jobs for the disability….
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We need to bring more High End things for people to spend their money on so The Town of
Barnstable will be wealthy again, as those people are leaving the big cities…
Attended meeting this week at St Mary’s Church. Lots of great ideas, however, control of PARKING
issues should be addressed before any plans are put in place.
In regards to community planning, the most logical long term plan for Barnstable (specifically
Cotuit) is to utilize the elementary school as a community center.
The first step would be to allocate tax dollars to help assist with asbestos remediation. Once this is
achieved a planning committee can set out to program the space. What is needed in the area is a
space for events, youth sports, technical help, community garden, a dog park etc.
Once planned I strongly think the community and businesses would be very willing to make
donations to help achieve this goal.
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General Public Comment
Centerville Residents
Build up Hyannis into the year round capital of Cape Cod, protect the coast and no more building
near marshes, rivers.
The ~2-3 foot diameter corrugated pipe under Old Stage Road, adjacent to the Nottingham Drive
intersection, that drains northeast from the cranberry bog is largely filled with mud. It needs to be
cleared regularly. Annually, during autumn, I have raked leaves from the bog ditch leading to the
drainage pipe. In past years, with well above average rain/snow events, the bog’s pond, directly
opposite our property, has filled to the point that our basement floods, and stays flooded for weeks,
necessitating frequent sump pumping! The basements of the homes south of us on Old Stage Road
have also flooded.
The recent effort, by the Town, to remedy the flooding on the northeast end of Old Falmouth Road
may enhance our problem. It is the Town’s responsibility to remove debris accumulating in the pipe
under Old Stage Road.
The problem was exacerbated years ago when Hyde Park Road was constructed and houses built.
The small pond there, and the one beyond it, were blocked in hopes of them not becoming dry mud
holes in summer. This has prevented the natural flow of high-ground water toward Wequaquet Lake.
On behalf of the bog owner, and local residents, I request that the ‘Barnstable Development Plan’
prioritize this request to remove the debris from the drainage pipe under Old Stage Road.
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General Public Comment
Cotuit Residents
Healthy, open-minded residents who care about each other. We have become noted for our
tolerance and acceptance of all legal points of view. Our residents and business owners are proud to
be in Barnstable, as noted by how well they maintain their properties.
Connect Hyannis’s three transportation Hubs and ocean access to the rail trail by utilizing the area
adjacent to existing rail bed that runs parallel to Yarmouth Road into Hyannis.
Complete the trail to the bus station with a “spur” along the route into the airport terminal. Convert
the length of Old Colony Road into a “Green Space” providing walking/bike riding access from
Hyannis’s East End to the harbor and Sea Street Beach.
Partner with the utility Eversource to fund the project exchanging the right to lay conduit beneath
the new green space/ bike lane which will enable them to connect the Outer Banks wind turbines to
their existing electrical grid along Route 6.
As for the continuation of the trail beyond Mary Dunn Road how about establishing an arrangement
with the Barnstable County towns of Sandwich, Mashpee, Falmouth and Bourne that would create an
agreement in which Eversource would support the building of bike ways within the power line
easements with the ultimate intention of connecting up with the Canal Trail and Shinning Sea Trail in
Falmouth.
Hopefully not to disrupt the peaceful environment that we all love! Projects that have been proposed
disrupt people’s lives and cause uncertainty and stress particularly for the elderly! Please do not run
over the people who have little time left in this world. Additional taxes levied for projects should
come from the businesses and tourist industry. Not the simple quiet home owners!
To clean up the ocean, have clean and cancer free ( from carcinogens ) water to drink.
Improved roads, especially side roads and those heavily traveled roads that are labeled private. Better
drinking water quality, increased police presence, affordable senior housing. Better beach cleanup on
town beaches and increased seasonal life guards.
Barnstable needs to remain a small town. Being a small town is what makes this a great place to live.
Large scale construction and bowing to the wishes of the ultra rich, who spend only a matter of
weeks per year in our community, is not how this town should proceed.
Re-open the public shooting range. Restrict the hours if needed to reduce noise. Install acoustic
buffers. Increased membership costs is acceptable, having it closed is simply not in any way
acceptable. When the nearby property owners complain, remind them that the range was in place
before they bought their homes and that it was acceptable to them when they purchased.
Work with the state government to ensure that large portions of the states infrastructure funding
makes its way to the Cape. I'm getting tired of the terrible roads, terrible internet options and
speeds, and the fact that cell phone coverage in certain areas is a joke. We lose calls all over
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Barnstable.
While it is true that housing in Barnstable is hard to find for young families and persons with lower
income there are fewer options here that present themselves well to the existing town residents.
Large apartment complexes and condo's are not the answer. They may seem like a good short term
solution but when they are built as low cost they tend to be low quality and they look very
unappealing after short periods. I have seen this in other towns and cities off Cape. It is also
inevitable that as soon as the property owner can increase rent, it will happen and force low income
tenants out, I have seen this in the past too. A good solution is difficult to institute but if the town
decided to limit the number of large construction projects (over 3000sqft) and favor unlimited
development of homes at 1200-2000sqft this may help the issue. I see too many >3000sqft and huge
waterfront homes going up where no one will live and not enough smaller homes being built.
Resource protection is also extremely important. The town should hire trained resource monitors
and advisers to track not only natural resources but industrial resources too. The Cape Cod
Commission does not do enough here after construction. Resource Advisers could travel to
businesses and advise on ways save energy. This is beyond what programs like Mass Save does. I
have worked at companies and been in stores around the area that waste so much energy because of
lazy practices. Things like leaving lights on in empty rooms, leaving door open the allow outside
temperatures in, wasteful use of water, as well as many others. There should also be town water
department inspectors that actually enforce water restrictions in time of drought. Over the summer
I saw the big multi-million dollar homes watering their lawns twice a day while we were under
extreme drought conditions. The rich should not be allowed to pay their way past restrictions, while
the rest of us follow the rules and suffer the consequences.
The economy on Cape Cod is very hospitality oriented which is great. We all love to go out to eat,
enjoy a day trip to a great attraction, enjoy the beaches, and other Cape Cod specific things. The
problem is these businesses are closing, either for good or cutting hours due to staff shortages. This
affects Barnstable and the people that live and visit here. Over the summer restaurants and
businesses were severely under performing and have been since March 2020. Stores and restaurants
have sold, closed, or severely reduced hours. This is a drain to the economy and is also difficult to
fix. Perhaps the town should look to assist those businesses. If a business has had to cut hours, turn
away business, lay off employees or reduce its size in anyway the town should assist with a refund of
taxes for that period to help increase available funds which might help the business get more help or
increase pay to retain employees. This can be a partial refund or allow future taxes to be postponed
or eliminated for a preset time frame. Proposing new taxes on large chain stores or increasing them
would be a good idea as well. Stores like Best Buy, Harbor Freight, Dicks Sporting Goods, etc,
should be paying more local taxes since a large portion of the money made in those stores is taken
out of the local economy. These can be temporary taxes or permanent.
Barnstable needs to be more than the Cape Cod home for big box stores, big apartment/condo
complexes, hotels, and other mega businesses that detract from the small town feel. The less
Barnstable looks like a small town, the less it actually is a small town.
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Clean water, better sewage management, controlled growth with emphasis on expanded lower cost
housing, improved transport to Boston.
WATER USE MANAGEMENT
Develop an incentive program for large (consumer, not commercial) water users to dig their own
wells for irrigation.
GOING GREEN
I believe that the town has an opportunity during sewering to install water gardens that can also help
to mitigate runoff.
BETTER CIVIC/ SERVICE PARTICIPATION PIPELINE
Currently, our District (7) suffers from relatively low civic participation and is challenged to recruit
participants with diverse skills, experiences etc. My vision for the Town of Barnstable is that we
dedicate resources and efforts to become an exemplary town of civic participation from all walks of
life/ constituencies.
POLICE/ FIRE RECRUITMENT
As with many towns across the nation during this post-COVID era is suffering from understaffed fire,
rescue & police personnel. I would like to see the Town of Barnstable address this issue proactively,
from providing affordable housing to recruits to developing a cadets-type program either through
Cape Cod Tech or on their own to develop (hopefully) a pipeline of recruits, as before.
WORKING WITH PROXIMATE TOWNS
Further, I hope that Barnstable will engage in active ongoing collaborations with abutting
communities. Personally, as a resident on almost-dead Shoestring Bay, which is fed by basically dead
Santuit Pond in Mashpee (with a large percentage of homes on the pond without even septic tanks at
this time!!!), I have not seen much in the way of collaboration to address these issues, which is
worrisome, as water flows in and out of towns. I understand that Yarmouth currently does not have
a Water Treatment plant, which is dumping into Hyannis.
PUBLIC/ PRIVATE ROADS STANDARDS
This is an issue that seems primed to address as part of the 30 year sewering program. I hope
Barnstable to be able to sort out the Public/ Private roadway standards (requiring private roadways
be held to a standard that allows for safe *at speed* driving for emergency vehicles (which is not the
case on parts of Santuit Rd, for example)). New regulations/ laws needed.
COMMUNITY SPACE
For Cotuit, I hope we can establish a location somewhere where we could have a clearer gathering
place where the village can congregate on occasions other than Christmas in Cotuit... perhaps a
bandshell by the library or space at the elementary school or something... no clear space really does
that (that is not religiously affiliated).
Public sewer sooner rather than later. The elementary school renovated into a community center for
young and old including an open gym
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Maintain the small village atmosphere that it has during the off season.
More bike lanes or multiuse paths for major roadways such as Putnam & Main. The town
doesn't own a wide enough roadway to add bike lanes everywhere but the major higher speed
roads extend well beyond the current pavement. If biking felt safe, we could cut the car
traffic in town, especially in the summer when it is at its worst.
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General Public Comment
West Barnstable Residents
I am a resident of West Barnstable, age 75. I have tried to take the LCPC survey twice and both
times gave up. The survey is WAY too long and it does not ask the right questions. For instance
there is no mention of crime. It asks too many details about the respondent. This survey seems
designed to NOT find any problems. Barnstable suffers the same problems that many small cities
suffer – too many regulations. There is too much crime and not enough punishment. The town
services seem to be mostly efficient. The roads are OK. Recreation is good. The school dept. needs
serious consideration. I have opinions but I am not willing to answer a pointless survey.
Clean up the drug issue and the gangs, and please get someone to restore the rail road bridge on 6-A
before someone gets killed!
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General Public Comment
Marstons Mills Residents
Barnstable needs to be a place where people in all levels of the middle class flourish. We are, at our
core, a town made of hard-working people. We need a public school to which residents want to
send their kids. We need recreational activities to be accessible to the people. And we need citizens
who work full-time jobs to be able to comfortably live here and enjoy the beauty of this town. I
envision a Barnstable that celebrates all diversity and makes people want to live here full-time and
make the community better.
I would like to see bicycle friendly roadways and public transportation that makes the commercial
areas easily accessible without needing a vehicle. I would like to see growth limited by the
environment's ability to absorb that growth. I would like to see regulations that encourage multi-
family residences and discourage the single-family sprawl that has chewed up so much of the
environment in Barnstable. I would like to see efforts to actively reduce the current residential
sprawl that has taken over so much of the Town.
Maintaining and develop a tree canopy in Hyannis and public areas of the town of Barnstable for
future heating/cooling of the urban center. Make shopping areas like in Marstons Mills accessible by
walking-need sidewalks on Rt. 28. Provide support/resources for local companies to help employ
local people and help with finding housing. Encourage trade organizations to offer resources for
safety training for new companies. Support entrepreneurship in the arts and trades with supportive
land zoning.
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General Public Comment
Osterville Residents
Osterville should remain a lovely historical village that first serves its residents and visitors. Main
Street should offer small shops, coffee shops and small restaurants for social gathering and creating
community. Osterville does not need to be a complex of larger buildings and commercial activities.
It is an intimate town that is slowly being taken over by real estate and construction offices. This does
not promote a sense of belonging to a community. In town offerings should be for community
experiences like meeting friends for ice-cream and dinner. Osterville needs to support more small
stores and restaurants, not bigger stores and restaurants! The residential area surrounding town
should remain relatively sparse and small town like. That is an essential part of Osterville’s appeal!
Osterville is not Hyannis!! Please don’t make it that. Be careful of Airbnb’s that consume our
housing and create unpleasant havoc for surrounding neighbors. Dense housing should be in places
with large box stores like the complex in Marstons Mills that is already complete with Grocery,
hardware, banks, pharmacy, etc. This kind of location is ripe for dense housing. Not the back yards
of Osterville that impose crowding, noise, more septic issues on neighbors. Airbnb units will NOT
help Osterville as a vibrant and successful community though it may make a few investors richer.
Thank you for your consideration.
My vision is that our beloved beaches will remain as they have always been to nurture and protect
our wildlife and marine life and for the enjoyment of Barnstable residents and not be destroyed by
major industrial ill-conceived plans to bring in large high voltage cables from a yet to be built wind
farm off MV.
Local residents have had no ability to vote against this insidious project as there has been no
transparency at all from our Town of Barnstable officials and most of the residents know nothing
about this and the threat it poses to the business district in Osterville as the roads are dug up and
indeed the toxicity threats from the planned substation on Oak Street to our water supply. These
threats were well expressed by the attorneys for the Town of Barnstable in their response to the ENF
by Avangrid/Commonwealth Wind. Hopefully a solution can be found to this threat to our whole
way of life and a more appropriate landing site will be enlisted; i.e. New Bedford, Brayton Point or
even the decommissioned nuclear plant at Plymouth or the plant in Sandwich.
For Barnstable, and EACH of its villages, to become a more appealing place for both residents and
tourists. The new Tractor Supply Store in Hyannis does the opposite (an eyesore for visitors and for
its local residents). Businesses like this should be restricted, for example, to the Independence Drive
area of Hyannis. Furthermore, with plenty of empty business buildings around, new ones should be
encouraged to locate in them rather than on undeveloped land. And when undeveloped land like this
is at risk, Community Preservation Funds should be used.
NEXT, the local housing crisis. Barnstable needs to address the current trend of
individuals/developers (in state & out of state) buying homes to be vacation rentals, reducing the
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available housing stock for our residents. Limit AirBnB’s to homes that are owner-occupied at least
9 months of the year? No short-term rentals in our residential neighborhoods? Higher taxes on these
to make them less profitable? And to increase housing options for middle & lower income residents,
focus on new rental units, such as apartments & townhouses, with exteriors that “fit in” on Cape
Cod, and carefully located (walk to transportation & jobs). These can more efficiently/quickly
increase our housing. As I proposed above for businesses, this should never be on undeveloped land
(which should be preserved).
Finally, historic preservation is always important - our old architecture is partly what draws visitors
to the Cape.
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Comment Walls
Town of Barnstable
Submitted through 1-19-2023
If you had one day, where would you bring a visitor?
Comment Wall #1 Responses
Osterville and Craigville Beach
I would take them to the waterfront, Ocean St. docks, craft cottages, Baxters.
Dowses beach, Marconi beach, Sandy Neck beach
Woods Hole
Kalmus Beach
The beach
Osterville Main Street
Provincetown
Mashpee Commons
Provincetown
Beach
The beaches
Provincetown
National Seashore
Kids to the beach and adults to Main Street Hyannis
Sandy Neck
The beach
Provincetown
Dowses
Sandy Neck Beach
Chatham
Sandy Neck, Sturgis library, four seas ice cream/historic Centerville
Nantucket
Chatham
Shopping down 6A and a sunset Jeep ride on the ORV beach at Sandy Neck followed by dinner &
cocktails at Tugboats.
Mashpee Commons
Sandy Neck Beach
Kalmus Beach
Barnstable Harbor
Sandy Neck
Keep Dowses Free! No electric lines. No wind turbines.
Open this beach all the way year round! Open the point (Sandy Neck)
Fishermen go here (Cotuit Bay/North Bay/West Bay)
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Wequaquet Lake
Sandy Neck
Scudder Lane boat landing launch
Barnstable Village
Paddle boarding (Wequaquet Lake)
Hyannis Harbor
Eugenia Fortes Beach
Mall and try diff foods, go shopping
Old Mill Road/Main Street, Osterville
Craigville Beach
Dowses Beach
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What is your favorite road to travel down?
Comment Wall #2 Responses
Main Street through Centerville & Osterville
Craigville Beach Road
Route 6A in the Dennis/Brewster section
Wianno- Sea View Ave - Parker Rd. Osterville
Main Street Hyannis
6A
6A
6A
6A
6A
Road from dowses beach to Craigville beach
6A
6A
6A
Main Street Hyannis
Old Jail Road
Independence Drive
6A
I didn't realize how much I needed Phinney's Lane
Rte 6A if I have time. Rte 6 if I need to get somewhere quickly
Rt 28
6A
Rt 81
6A
6A
6A
6A
6A
Ocean Street
6A anywhere it goes!
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If you could add one thing to Barnstable, what would it be?
Comment Wall #3 Responses
A coffee shop/bakery in Centerville near 4 Seas ice cream
A bike trail that connects to the Rail Trail in both directions, toward Falmouth and toward Yarmouth
Walkable streets including Route 28 Marstons Mills and more tree canopy in Hyannis
More respect for and better response to public comment
Community gardens
Winter indoor activities for families
Public transportation
A roller skating rink
A bustling downtown with new live, work, and play buildings
Affordable housing for families and couples-middle income people with jobs but can’t afford anything
here
Dowses beach true resident only, no renters
Add more sidewalks
Better pedestrian and bike access
Dependable public transportation so we don’t have to drive everywhere
Need an attraction for kids on Main Street Hyannis. This would allow entire families to spend more
time and money at our local stores.
A sidewalk/bike lane on Phinney’s lane between 132 and 28. We are missing a one mile link for
pedestrian traffic between Barnstable village and Centerville. People would be able to safely ride a
bike from Craigvillle beach to Millway and connect to the future rail trail extension.
A great steakhouse
Bike paths
More walking trails in the inaccessible so-called conservation land that millionaires "donate" to the
town for tax breaks. It's disgraceful to not have walking trails and parking areas that make this
actually useable by the public.
Affordable workforce housing would make it a lot more pleasant to live here.
Apartments!!!!
Regulations restricting air bnbs and corporate ownership of residences in traditional residential
neighborhoods
Sanity
Someone to pick up trash on roadways
Dog friendly beach opportunities “in season”. Like Tuesday-Thursday 5pm to close. Fine jerks that
don’t pick up poop. I would pay for a pup pass in season….
A safe thriving downtown
Town swimming pool
Walmart
Consistent rail service to Boston
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Barnstable 55+ Community Safety Day
Local Comprehensive Plan Comments
September 22, 2022
If you had one day, where would you bring a visitor?
Comment Wall #1 Responses
Audubon Long Pasture Sanctuary
The Courthouse
Rendezvous Lane way to the water
Tour of local Churches in Barnstable
Route 6A
Sandy Neck
Hyannis Yacht Club
Sandy Neck
Sandy Neck
Senior Center
Barnstable COA
Whale watch
Sandy Neck
4 Seas Ice Cream
Craigsville Beach
Dowses Beach
Audubon Long Pasture Sanctuary
Dowses Beach
Sampson’s Island
General Comments
Individual Comment Box Responses
Speed humps in Centerville Main Street
Sidewalk along Phinneys Lane to connect residents both from the North and the South to the beaches
We need asphalt walking paths
We need a good boardwalk
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Hyannis Open Streets
Local Comprehensive Plan Questionnaire
October 16, 2022
What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Hyannis Residents
Quality education
Welcoming
Friendly
Accepting
Clean
Patience
Walkable
Intergenerational activities
Nice
Interactive
Safe
Walkable
Good for kids
Safe
Safe
Inclusive
Together
Unified
Friendly
People
Open spaces
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What is your favorite thing about your community?
Hyannis Residents
Safe sidewalks
Programming and events, recreation department
Beaches
The mall and shopping
The events on the streets
A quiet community
Walkable community
Everything is convenient
In the middle of everything
Convenient to bus, ferries, transportation
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What is one thing that you would add to the Town of Barnstable?
Hyannis Residents
More stores, more people, better property maintenance
Events, educational quality is low, more city life
Fix power outages, Drive around and look at museums
Trash pickup
Deal with homelessness in Hyannis
More programming and accessibility to events
Community playground
Lighting streets
Sewer
Educate about the difference between homelessness and mental illness/addiction
Market Basket where Kmart is and sustainable housing
Face painting
Need to have storefront with items with refill products, no more containers. Transportation for
elderly population.
Water park
More big box stores, more national restaurants, more shopping choices, like a Walmart
More bike paths and more walkability
It's pretty perfect
Affordable housing
Grocery store, bike lanes, speed enforcement on Main Street Hyannis
More programming
More recreation
More of these street festivals
More affordable housing
Program to assist homelessness
Kids museum, more activities ,particularly in for kids, splash pad, foods trucks, indoor playground
More [saftey roadway] signs for kids, need lights on strawberry hill roads, better fences between
commercial to residential development
Less traffic
Bakery on Main Street in Hyannis
More speeding signs
More kid friendly outdoor
Fix power outages, drive around and look at museums
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General Comments
Hyannis Residents
Need more housing for teachers
More police enforcement
Festivals
Need a Ninja gym
Plan for global warming. Worried about rising tides and health, beaches.
Repainted roads
Playgrounds
Winter and off season activities that would get residents out to support local businesses
We need a grocery store within walking/biking distance main street in Hyannis
DPW work on east end sidewalks, more accessible, improve snow plowing
More kids events like Open Streets
Need more housing for teachers
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What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Barnstable Village Residents
Community culture
Safe
Friendly
Inclusive
Walkable
Friendly
Safe
Local
Connected
What is your favorite thing about your community?
Barnstable Village Residents
JFK Museum
What is one thing that you would add to the Town of Barnstable?
Barnstable Village Residents
Coffee, sidewalks, open streets in Hyannis
More public transportation
More plowing
Housing
Make the beaches free
More kids activities
Public salt water access
Less zoning regulation, easier process for businesses
Better recycling
More things for kids, indoor in winter
General Comments
Barnstable Village Residents
We love where we live
More of open streets festivals and things like it
Greener community ex. solar panels
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What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Centerville Residents
Inclusive
Family friendly
Older
Kid friendly
Caring
Nice
Friendly and safe
Safe
Inclusive
Crime free
Accessible
Inclusive
Safe
Amazing
What is your favorite thing about your community?
Centerville Residents
The food and everything here (convenient)
Walkable community
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What is one thing that you would add to the Town of Barnstable?
Centerville Residents
Year round music venue
Community swimming pool, more kids museums like Masphee
More community stuff
Swimming pool
More community centers and after school childcare
Playgrounds
Fishing, sidewalks on Phinneys
Decentralize homeless problem from Hyannis
Better housing for 20 somethings
Better roads
Deli in downtown
Citizens committee that reports to Town Council that comprises A WIDE RANGING AGE
GROUPS
Market Basket
More kids playgrounds
Parks and recreation for middle age adults (youth center, senior center, nothing in between)
Public transportation, shared bikes or scooters
Spanish food
General Comments
Centerville Residents
More stuff in winter
Better sidewalks
Update traffic lights. Private streets should revert back to town.
It is good to see advocacy groups and information is important, don't see them doing it as much as in
the past.
Like the library
Need speed enforcement
Happy about connections to sewer
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What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Cotuit Residents
Safe
Fun
What is one thing that you would add to the Town of Barnstable?
Cotuit Residents
Bike trail
More rooftop restaurants, bars, and outdoor dining, preferably by the water
General Comments
Cotuit Residents
Town does have noticeable improvements with transportation
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What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Marstons Mills Residents
Nice
Accessible
Fun
Crime free
Scenery
What is your favorite thing about your community?
Marstons Mills Residents
Festivals
Events and gatherings
What is one thing that you would add to the Town of Barnstable?
Marstons Mills Residents
Playgrounds
More bike trails, redoing playgrounds
Water park
Water park
Affordable housing
Clean water, improve the main roads
Skate park
General Comments
Marstons Mills Residents
My road Trotters Lane was made private and now I don't get plowed
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What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Osterville Residents
Togetherness
Safe
What is your favorite thing about your community?
Osterville Residents
Environment and the clean water
What is one thing that you would add to the Town of Barnstable?
Osterville Residents
More stuff Downtown
More unity
More kids activities and events
General Comments
Osterville Residents
Likes expanded outdoor dining, bring barriers back, safe walking streets
Allow more housing
Need something for our children
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What is one word to describe your ideal community?
West Barnstable Residents
Safe
Clean
What is your favorite thing about your community?
West Barnstable Residents
Beaches and transportation
What is one thing that you would add to the Town of Barnstable?
West Barnstable Residents
Connected bike trails and paths
Better diversity within schools and programs. Making sure no one gets left behind
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What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Anonymous & Non-Residents
Clean
Beaches
Walkable
Nice
Friendly
Helping people
Safe
Safe
Diverse
What is your favorite thing about your community?
Anonymous & Non-Residents
Hyannis Main Street, shopping, village green, artist shanties
Beaches
Lots of recreational and kids activities
Friendly people, neighbors looking out for each other
What is one thing that you would add to the Town of Barnstable?
Anonymous & Non-Residents
More affordable kids activities
Bike lanes, transportation, more cafes
Carnivals and fairs
Friend’s houses
Improve Route 28
Local transportation around town, particularly on weekends
Affordable housing
More accessible kids recreational activities
More activities especially in winter, more gatherings
Community art center
Snowball fights
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General Comments
Anonymous & Non-Residents
Beaches should be free, keep locals, more families
More playgrounds
More electric cars
Like 6A and West Barnstable; like Main Street Hyannis
More parking at beaches for residents
More family friendly spaces indoors, options hard in the winter
More after school activities for kids
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Hyannis Open Streets
Comment Wall Responses
October 16, 2022
If you had one day, where would you bring a visitor?
Comment Wall #1 Responses
Mashpee Wampanoag Indian Museum
Oyster Harbor
Crosby Boat Yard
Craigville Beach
Veterans Beach
West Beach
Hyannisport
Hyannis Harbor
Hyannis Harbor
Main Street Hyannis
Downtown Hyannis
Adult Community Center
Whydah Museum and Chatham Harbor
Sandy Neck
Sandy Neck
Sandy Neck
View at courthouse
Port and art walk
Joshua’s Pond
Joshua’s Pond
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What is your favorite road to travel down?
Comment Wall #2 Responses
6A
6A
6A
6A but not in the summer
Commerce Lane
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Hyannis Main Street
Wianno Avenue
Sea View Avenue
Rendezvous Lane
If you could add one thing to Barnstable, what would it be?
Comment Wall #3 Responses
Water park
Save Twin Brooks
Bike path extended from Yarmouth
More open green space
More indoor activities in winter
Playground/indoor pool
Sewers
Sewers all over
Sidewalk
Local coffee shop
Affordable housing
Housing apartments and 1 BR annual rentals
Grocery store
Extend sidewalk to Eugena Fortes
An art wall
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Barnstable Youth Soccer
Local Comprehensive Plan Questionnaire
October 10, 2022
What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Hyannis Residents
Safe
Healthy
Special
Big
Fun
What is one thing that you would add to the Town of Barnstable
Hyannis Residents
Free beach access
Public park
Things to do
More soccer fields
More sports stuff
General Comments
Hyannis Residents
Young families in Hyannis don’t have options for outdoor spaces
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What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Marstons Mills Resident
Friendly
What is one thing that you would add to the Town of Barnstable
Marstons Mills Resident
Clean up groups
What is one word to describe your ideal community?
West Barnstable Resident
Affordable for all residents
What is one thing that you would add to the Town of Barnstable
West Barnstable Resident
Consolidation of fire districts
What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Centerville Resident
Caring
What is one thing that you would add to the Town of Barnstable
Centerville Resident
Community football and soccer fields
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Barnstable High School AP Government
Vision Statements
Vision Statement #1
The Town will preserve its summer tourist boom and conservation of ecologically vulnerable areas
while expanding non-summer economic viability and availability of affordable housing options. The
COVID-19 pandemic has shown our vulnerability to an economic freeze when tourist attractions are
unable to bring capital revenue.
Vision Statement #2
In the future, we hope the Barnstable community has more interactive seasonal activities (specifically
for the winter) to ensure more entertainment for residents. One of the major issues this town faces is
its lack of environmental concern. Our beaches and marshes are what make our town so special and
we need to enhance our focus regarding their downfall.
Vision Statement #3
Better roads, more snow plows and improve smell coming from the wastewater treatment plant.
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Winter Open House
Local Comprehensive Plan Comments
December 14, 2022
Strengths
Individual Comment Box Responses
Village character and variety
Natural resources
Historical interest
Beaches
Recreational opportunities
Opportunities
Individual Comment Box Responses
Create more green space particularly in underserved Hyannis
Improve trail system and recreational opportunities for residents and visitors
Weaknesses
Individual Comment Box Responses
Crowding
Inattention to critical environmental issues: water, tree cover, marshes, ocean, use of pesticides, etc.
Challenges
Individual Comment Box Responses
Water quality
Lack of open space
Overbuilding
Fragile sole source aquifer
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If you had one day, where would you bring a visitor?
Comment Wall #1 Responses
Port Cargo
Cotuit
Covell Beach
Sandy Neck
Beaches
Drive down 6A
Ocean Street
Beaches
What is your favorite road to travel down?
Comment Wall #2 Responses
6A
6A
6A
6A
Hyannis Avenue
If you could add one thing to Barnstable, what would it be?
Comment Wall #3 Responses
Better mass transport
More open green space in Hyannis
More bike trails
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General Comments
Individual Comment Box Responses
Would like expanded rail including NY. Would like more air service.
Priority 1: Wastewater treatment ASAP
Support for IA
Funding and guidance
IA that addresses phosphate and N
Consider other innovative TX
2: Affordable housing—focus on infill development and ADU and off season rental of summer
properties
3: Transportation—safer facilities for pedestrian, cycling
Would love to see more housing for young adults 18-35. Many have full-time employment but are
living with parents because housing is not available. 55+ apartments are building built maybe 18+
without kids could be an option at new complexes.
What is one word to describe your ideal community?
Individual Comment Box Responses
Interesting around the Town
Environmental
Environmentally healthy
Friendly
Unified
Collaborative
Balanced diversity
Diversity
United
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What kind of new residential development would you
like to see in Barnstable in the future?
Individual Responses
Mixed uses 7
Apartments 5
Single-family homes 4
Condominiums 4
Live/work spaces 4
Townhomes 3
Two-family homes 2
Housing for older adults 2
Tiny homes 2
None 1
What are the top (3) priorities the Local Comprehensive Plan
should focus on improving?
Individual Responses
Redeveloping vacant and underutilized properties 11
Parks, beaches and open space 7
Housing 6
Downtown Hyannis 5
Schools 4
Improving water quality 4
Natural environment 4
Historic preservation 4
Sidewalks, trails and connectivity 3
Job opportunities 3
Neighborhoods 2
Healthcare and human services 2
Commercial/shopping areas 1
Development and growth potential 1
Encouraging private investment 1
Public safety (police, fire etc.) 1
Roads 1
Community engagement 1
Town government and services 0
Community beautification 0
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Where do you most often do your shopping?
Individual Responses
Big box stores in Barnstable 12
Small businesses in Barnstable 19
Small businesses in other Cape Cod towns 8
Businesses off-Cape 4
E-commerce businesses (Amazon, eBay, Etsy, etc.) 19
How does the quality of life in Barnstable compare to ten years ago?
Individual Responses
Much Better 5
Somewhat Better 14
About the Same 6
Somewhat Worse 5
Much Worse 5
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