Above: Though not as packed as Special Town Meeting, there was a lot of community interest in the Select Board’s “next steps” discussion for dealing with the Neary building. (image cropped from hybrid meeting video)
This week, the Select Board and the Neary Building Committee (NBC) had a follow up discussion on voters’ rejection of the big building project for a new 4 grade school to replace Neary School.
They agreed that more community input is needed on how to handle issues over Neary School building maintenance and safety issues, “housing” Southborough Public School PreK-8 students, and any potential maintenance investments, or building/renovation projects.
But there wasn’t agreement on the next steps needed. That included differences over how soon to start work and the pace for researching and communicating options to the public.
In the end, a decision on next steps was paused to give the board time to think before voting on a course of action. They will reconsider at their next regularly scheduled meeting on the evening of Tuesday, June 3rd.
Here are my highlights from Tuesday night’s discussion and the prior week’s Neary Building Committee meeting.
Move with Urgency or Hit Pause?
Select Board member Al Hamilton, who had publicly opposed the building project as too expensive for the Town, agreed that some kind of solution needs to be determined and that it won’t be “zero cost”. But he advocated for “a 30-day cooling off period” before deciding next steps.
The meeting was chaired by Kathy Cook, who also serves on the NBC.1 Cook was among those who argued that now is the time to act, while the community is still actively paying attention.
Not everyone involved in the discussion weighed in on the timing. But of those that did, the majority appeared to favor capitalizing on “momentum” to keep the community more engaged. Those expressing some urgency for solving the Neary problem included the new Select Board Chair Andrew Dennington and Vice Chair Marguerite Landry.
And residents like Mary Tinti argued for the pressing need to address issues that had been raised through the process. She described parents as being “in limbo” worrying about their children headed towards being schooled in a “substandard building that is getting worse”.
During the discussion, the point was raised that the Mass School Building Authority’s (MSBA) approval to reimburse the Town $35M for the school building project expires if the Town doesn’t get voters’ approval by late August.
However, the Town could request an extension. In a meeting last week, Malinowski noted that many communities that had failed votes received extensions. (He didn’t specify how long those were granted for.)
The NBC is required to send a letter to the MSBA next week. In it they should note whether the project is being dropped, or dialogue is continuing.
Time to Ditch Silo Thinking
In their May 15th meeting, Malinowski discussed the big takeaway from the Town Meeting and ballot vote was that voters were upset they weren’t presented with choices.
Malinowski also acknowledged that they didn’t have the community’s pulse on the issue. He blamed part of the problem as caused by the committee composition (under MSBA rules) that put them on “an island”.
Last week, Advisory Committee member Marcy Jones argued that it wasn’t just the MSBA rules. She highlighted that by having the chairs of the Select Board, Advisory Committee, and Capital Planning Committee on the NBC, it gave the impression that there was no outside vetting of the project.
Everyone agreed that whatever form a new/revamped committee takes for researching alternatives, it should include “No voters”, and maybe even some new “yes” voters and parents.
During the meetings, NBC and Select Board members expressed that the vote was a humbling experience. And some members of the public commented that they were happy to hear the board’s humility and willingness to listen to the community.
But there was some frustration by members that the public waited so long to pay attention, ignoring public forums that they held during their planning period. (In fairness to voters, those forum invitations never stressed that feedback would impact future tax bills. And it was the sticker shock that got voters’ attention.)
The Select Board Needs to “Sharpen Pencils” and/or Step Back
Malinowski asked for the Select Board and Advisory Committee to start “sharpening pencils” on the Town’s budgets looming for future years. He pointed to the dire financial forecasts as having contributed to the No vote. He pointed out that those costs were outside of the NBC’s control.
The tough forecast was pointed to this week by Hamilton as a reason for the Select Board to “step back” from the school building project efforts.
Hamilton called the votes against the project a “rebuke” of the Select Board. He had been the only member to vote not to endorse the project. (Also worth noting, Tim Fling, the newest member of the board, was elected through the ballot after publicly stating that he was not in favor of the project. He received more votes than Cook and unseated Sam Stivers.)
Hamilton pointed to the likelihood that the Select Board will have to ask voters to pass a proposition 2½ override next year (just for Town operations/regular budget needs, not a building project). He asserted the board couldn’t afford to “antagonize” already angry voters.
In discussing the financial context around the vote at the NBC’s meeting last week, member and Advisory Chair Andrew Pfaff opined that Town Meeting voters need to better “understand what they are looking at”. He highlighted “selective” choice of voters to oppose the school building project after not opposing the over 7% tax increase approved at the Annual Town Meeting just the month prior. He referred to the police and fire department staff additions and their new collective bargaining agreement as 52% of “the cost of Neary”. He opined that if voters were going to hold Town Meeting budgets to the fire they should be consistent.2
Committee to Explore Alternatives
At multiple times during the long discussion and the prior week’s NBC meeting, officials referred to the work needed to solicit 2/3 support and “get to a yes”. Some residents appeared to mistake that as a public plan to push through the failed project. But the “yes vote” referred to was repeatedly described as the support that would be needed for whatever path community feedback tells officials is the right one to take.
Last week, the committee discussed potential paths for exploring alternative projects, collecting feedback, and presenting the community with a full range of options before an extended timeline from MSBA expires. That way if the community decided that the original proposal was the best choice, they could still take advantage of it.
Malinowski reported that MSBA officials confirmed that the Town could potentially re-offer the original proposal to voters at the same meeting and on the same ballot as alternative projects are proposed.
Only the original proposal would be co-funded by the MSBA. (And officials confirmed that any changes to the site, grades, etc would result in losing that funding.) The alternatives would need to be fully Town funded, and the MSBA’s legal counsel would need to approve the language in the Articles/Ballot Questions.
Malinowski noted that alternatives could include a two grade school and they might end up learning the community wants to go with the “status quo” or a “band aid” approach to building issues. He advocated for soliciting community feedback, starting with whether the community was opposed to any project on the Neary School site. (That refers to the environmental concerns some residents raised about the school being downhill from an old landfill.)
Select Board members agreed this week that multiple options need to be explored. They didn’t vote on what that list would be.
Fling “screen shared” a draft spreadsheet itemizing the options he would like a committee to research and report on. Those included versions for closing Neary and using other schools to house students, replacing the school, or fixing it:
- Trottier 3-6/Woodward 7-8
- Finn PreK-2/Woodward 3-4/Trottier 5-8
- Neary-Minimal Renovation “deferred maintenance”
- Finn-4-Grade Renovation
- Neary – Full ADA & Code-Compliant Reno
- Neary-New 4-Grade School
For each of the options, he wanted info researched to cover:
- Estimated Cost
- Summary of Costs
- Estimated State/Federal Reimbursement
- Neary Site Demolition & Remediation Cost
- Operational Savings or Added Costs (e.g additional busing, reduced staffing, etc.)
- Operational Savings or Added Cost Summary
- Net Town Cost
- Expected Renovation or Build Timeframe
- Expected Future Renovation Timeframe (yrs)
- Safety Considerations
- Educational Considerations
- Domino Effects (Reuse/Sale of Other Town Properties)
- Tax Base Impact (e.g., sale of land)
Embrace Expertise or Oust Untrusted Officials?
A major point of disagreement on Tuesday was whether NBC members should take part in the next steps. Some argued that their involvement would be a poison pill for whatever findings or recommendations come out of the work.
Hamilton pushed for the need to form an entirely new committee. Many, including Cook and Select Board member Marguerite Landry countered that the amount of time the NBC spent over the last few years gave them valuable expertise to contribute. Kelly Conkline argued that dismissing them would be throwing the baby out with the bathwater.
Betsy Rosenbloom said the idea of the NBC working over the summer while “the rest of us are on vacation” made her “nervous”. As a “trained advocate” she believed their involvement would lead to lack of public faith in the process. Andrea Hamilton agreed that there was a trust issue, admitting that her initial reaction to the NBC’s proposed next steps was “not a particularly generous interpretation”.
Joanne Pearson demonstrated her reservations with the committee by highlighting that Malinowski had also chaired a prior committee for the Public Safety Building and noting:
I think we also have to look from the perspective of, “How grandiose do these buildings have to be to perform their functions?”
There was consensus among most that the committee at the very least needs a revised charge, expanded membership, and probably a new name.
Lower the Temperature or Not?
During the discussion, there was a lot of sentiment that heated rhetoric “from both sides” needed to be toned down. NBC Chair Jason Malinowski encouraged everyone involved to “take a deep breath” to focus on finding the best solution for school children. Many echoed the need to “breath”, or cool down. Resident Jenna Lin called for collectively letting go of “Yes and No side” thinking, and come together on finding a solution.
Yet, public comments were also peppered with passionate statements from some residents either upset at a perception that No votes weren’t really being “heard” or instead angered at the town being painted into a corner by “No Voters”.
Is Better Communication the Simpler Answer?
A few public commenters who supported the Neary Building Project appeared to believe that it failed mainly due to lack of community knowledge and understanding.
At their meeting last week, NBC members expressed dismay at the large number of registered voters who didn’t participate. They also discussed surprise they felt at the vehement opposition to the project that popped up as the Special Town Meeting was approaching, since they had very little community response to their outreach and engagement efforts for the year leading up to the vote.
But they also opined that simply communicating more with the public and scheduling new votes wouldn’t work. (The 26% participation of ballot voters was low compared to state elections but very high for a Town election.)
On Tuesday, NSBORO Superintendent Gregory Martineau argued against trying to convince the community to embrace the “clear result” of the failed project:
I don’t think for the community a solution where there are people who lose and win is healthy for the town in the short term and the long term. I think we need to identify the problem, which I think we’re fairly clear about, identify potential solutions where people can support 2/3, and then move a project forward that we all feel is in the best interest of the town not only in the short term but the long term
Referring to issues beyond Southborough’s borders, he called for project supporters to “recognize” the impact of “the moment we’re in”:
I think if you look back on history many years from now, I think the moment we’re in is very unique. And I think every project and timing of the project has a context and appropriate time. I think this project wasn’t the right time for this community. And I’m committed to working with the Neary Building Committee, the School Committee, and identifying solutions that the town can get behind.
But whatever the next steps and action plan are, there appeared to be agreement that more public outreach and communications will be needed.
- Cook was the Select Board Chair until the end of the May 20th meeting, when the board held its annual election of officers. Vice Chair Andrew Dennington was promoted to Chair (3-2 over Al Hamilton), and Marguerite Landry was elected the new Vice Chair (4-1).
- It’s worth noting that the public safety cost increases weren’t bundled together and presented to voters as a big tax increase. Instead they were split in separate budgets and Articles for police budgets, fire budget, benefits, and CBAs. Some costs were “phased in” by having new job start times begin partway through the year so full tax increases aren’t felt until the next year. It also wasn’t highlighted as a concern in Advisory’s letter to Town Meeting. And there was no report clarifying to voters the impact that approving Collective Bargaining Agreements would have on their future year’s taxes.
Thank you, Beth, for providing your detailed recap of the most recent meeting. I just have one observation. Tim Fling, who won a seat on the Select Board and who advocated slowing the process and considering all the important factors involved in this kind of decision for the Town, used the phrases, “Fresh perspective. Grounded in reality. A better path forward.” Note: “A better path forward.” I sincerely hope our Town does just that: create a BETTER PATH FORWARD.
I also have a question for the Town citizens. (And, Beth, if you mentioned this already in your post, I apologize for rehashing it.) A person on Zoom who attended the meeting, and whose name I don’t have readily available, mentioned her concern about the vote that was done by a show of hands. Would anyone happen to have any thoughts about that concern?
I didn’t cover that. I tried to find what you referred to. I think that you are talking about a public comment made in the May 15th Neary Building Committee meeting. (Correct me if that’s wrong.)
Ashley Kerwin referred to the vote on a $108M project being done by the raising of hands. She didn’t specify if she had a problem with using hands to determine the vote. But she indicated that the method meant they didn’t know how many of the voters who showed up at the meeting actually stayed long enough to vote.
I’m wondering if that is the issue you are asking for public feedback on. Or is there a different aspect of counting votes by hand that you want to hear people’s opinion on?
As a person who likes data, I agree with this commenter that a show of hands is too informal of a voting process when talking about budgets, policy changes, and proposal approval.
A good case study for this points us to the September 2024 meeting which failed by initial hand raising, but when asked for official recount found to have passed by a narrow margin.
I particularly feel it is difficult to do this vote with true confidence when the voting body is in more than one room.
Kelly – I think you’re right on target that the recount in September 2024 highlighted a concern that visually counting raised hands can be problematic. The meeting moderator has mentioned several times that it’s difficult for him to see the audience portion of the theater, particularly when theater lights are aimed at his podium.
In the recent meeting, it appears that the theater overwhelmingly voted No while the gym was much closer to being evenly split. Voters can see what’s happening in their own room but not the other, and that also can promote skewed perceptions of whether the raised hands were assessed correctly.
Is there a reason why the Special Town Meeting didn’t offer a mail-in ballot option? If allowed, that might help to increase the participation statistics.
Going forward, we may be looking at 2 or more options. Such choices are challenging, because voters who are vehemently against Option C may be spit between Options A and B, resulting in Option C winning the most votes yet not a majority of all of the votes. Game Theory offers some approaches toward finding out what the majority really prefers. The town lawyer will need to describe what processes are allowed, and the Select Board should probably describe in the “new K-8 committee” charter a maximum number of options that can be offered to the voters.
Let me finish this note by repeating what I offered to the Select Board earlier this week. I start by assuming that the New Neary proposal that was coordinated with the MSBA is dead. We’re now on the clock, because Neary has an expiration date after which it will require more refurbishment expenses than would be warranted for a building that should be torn down. Even if we successfully re-enter MSBA’s process, that won’t get us a new building for another 5 or more years, and that is probably 2-3 years beyond Neary’s expiration date. I encourage all parties, especially the townsfolk, to stay engaged and to be prompt in finding a path forward.
Legally, a mail in ballot isn’t allowed for Town Meetings. TM is the Town’s legislative body which currently requires in person voting. Some Towns have passed Articles to petition the state legislature to allow them to hold Town Meetings where remote attendance is allowed – but none have succeeded as of yet.
I know that some residents wish that would change. Personally, I believe it should remain in person so that people have to hear the comments and questions from other voters before casting their final votes.
But the most important reason for in-person voting may be that voters are able to make motions to amend Articles. A ballot wouldn’t allow you to respond to that possibility (and voter at home waiting for the moment to vote on an Article they care about might not pay enough attention to realize the wording of what they are voting on has changed.)
The only reason that wasn’t an issue for this particular Article was that the NBC informed the public that any changes to the language approved by the MSBA wouldn’t be accepted by the state. Other controversial Articles have frequently prompted attempted (and sometimes successful) amendments on Town Meeting floor.
The alternative form of governance our Town could decide to adopt is Representative Town Meeting. That would mean that we would elect “Town Meeting Members” to to serve as our representatives to vote at Town Meetings. (To switch to a city form of government with city councils, Towns have to exceed 12,000 residents.)
[Note: The following paragraph, as pointed out by the Moderator, was incorrect. To avoid confusion, I’m striking out the text but leaving it in.]
I did learn an interesting fact in trying to verify I was providing accurate info — apparently, if TM had voted to approve the building project, that decision could have been appealed within seven business days. But the bar is very high: “To try to overturn decisions described in the previous paragraph, voters may circulate petitions within seven days after Town Meeting dissolved. The petition must be signed by at least 3% of the town’s voters, with their names and addresses. The petition must be filed with the selectmen.”Beth, the last item cited by you just above (referencing a process for overturning decisions within 7 days after TM dissolves) applies specifically to Representative Town Meetings only, and not to our Town.
I tracked down your source, and for what it’s worth it seems that the “Citizen’s Guide to Town Meetings” published by the Commonwealth is not clearly written on this point, and it’s susceptible of being missed (https://www.sec.state.ma.us/divisions/cis/download/Guide_to_Town_Meetings.pdf).
Thank you for clarifying! I realize now that it was under the section headed as referring to Rep Town Meeting. Some paragraphs referred to Rep TM and others did not. I thought misread that paragraph as the process for TM, and thought the other language referred to a different process for the Representative TM.
As a Select Board member I usually don’t comment on posts due to potential OML issues if multiple members start weighing in but I am making an exception on this one. This is not an area that the Select Board has jurisdiction over.
I agree with all commentors who would like to see Town Meeting votes actually recorded by number rather than merely pass or fail thru a show of hands. We have had votes recently that appeared very hard to determine if they had passed or failed (e.g. the MBTA vote at last year’s STM) by merely viewing the hands raised. It makes it even harder when there are voters in multiple locations as there were at the MBTA STM.
The electronic clickers to count votes that we have purchased will be available to be used at future Town Meetings. (It is solely the discretion of the Town Moderator how votes are counted.) And we believe the kinks experienced at our recent STM have been worked out. Clickers are now in widespread use and are reliable. Clicker votes will not only potentially speed close votes up but will provide an exact count of votes that will be recorded and preserved in the meeting minutes. Knowing the actual margins of a vote is useful information. For those interested in this topic you may want to reach out directly to our current Town Moderator, Paul Cimino, and let him know your opinion.
A Perfect Storm of a Bad Idea
What’s being proposed for the new school isn’t just a mistake—it’s an overreaching, overpriced, environmentally risky, and wildly disruptive plan that manages to upset almost every stakeholder in town.
Let’s break it down:
Overreaching: The current proposal stretches beyond what Southborough needs or can manage. It attempts to bulldoze ahead with a multi-phase, multi-year construction project wedged onto a site next to a capped municipal dump—an area with known environmental sensitivity. This is not a simple school replacement; it’s a sprawling infrastructure gamble.
Expensive: This isn’t just a big price tag—it’s an open checkbook. We’re talking about tens of millions of taxpayer dollars spent not just on new construction, but on temporary classroom setups, phased moves, and site remediation. All this while facing inevitable delays, legal reviews, and cost overruns. And once the dust settles? We’ll still be asking if it was the right location.
Disruptive: For 2 to 3 years, students will be learning in temporary classrooms or shuffled between facilities like pieces on a game board. Educators will be forced to adapt—repeatedly—to new layouts, new logistical constraints, and constant noise. Continuity of learning will take a backseat to the construction calendar.
Environmental Threat: Building next to a former town dump invites real long-term risk. Disturbing capped land—even indirectly—carries consequences, including potential contamination, community health concerns, and increased scrutiny from environmental agencies. And the truth is, the regulatory entanglements of the future are completely unknown. New laws, shifting standards, or reclassification of waste sites could force costly mitigation, legal fees, or operational restrictions—years or even decades down the line.
Or We Could Just Do the Sensible Thing
Replace Neary with a one-for-one modern school on a safe, clean site. No dump, no reshuffling of classrooms, no multi-year disruption. A plan that actually lets teachers teach and students learn—without the sound of bulldozers in the background or the looming threat of environmental liability.
Sometimes the best solution is the simplest one. Let’s not complicate this with a plan that tries to do everything and ends up pleasing no one.
Where?
If there is a will there is a way…,