Date: Fri 15-Nov-1996
Date: Fri 15-Nov-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
Advisory-Town-Hall-offices
Full Text:
Advisory Panel Considers A New Municipal Complex
B Y S TEVE B IGHAM
Imagine a municipal government complex in Newtown that would house all of its
administrative offices in one location.
Now imagine Edmond Town Hall no longer being the town hall, instead being a
community center.
That appears to be the direction the newly formed Municipal Space Needs
Advisory Committee is heading, agreeing that town employees need to be
consolidated at one location. Now, it's a question of where this municipal
center would be located.
The advisory committee, charged with investigating possible sites for the
relocation of town employees, met twice this past week to discuss town space
needs.
Committee members say they are still in the brainstorming stage. No concrete
decisions are expected any time soon. However, the newly formed board has a
lot of work to do before making a final recommendation to First Selectman Bob
Cascella in January.
"We're going to brainstorm. We want to throw everything out on the table,"
committee chairman Jim Mooney said.
Indeed, the future of the town's governmental facilities must be addressed.
Employees at Town Hall South will soon be evacuating their offices due to
flooding and general deterioration of the building. According to Mr Cascella,
they are expected to make a temporary move to the eastern wing of the Canaan
House on the campus of Fairfield Hills sometime in December.
At Edmond Town Hall, employees are working in cramped conditions, according to
Mr Cascella, who said the finance department is working in the basement and
social services is headquartered in the attic.
The advisory committee Tuesday visualized a municipal complex that would
initially house administrative offices like first selectman, town clerk, tax
collector and Planning & Zoning, with the police, Board of Education and fire,
eventually being added on.
In all likelihood, according to committee chairman Jim Mooney, the complex
would be located at Fairfield Hills, where the state has indicated it would
lease Watertown Hall and its abutting 20 acres of land.
"Maybe we move everyone to Fairfield Hills," suggested committee member Joe
Mahoney.
A wish list by the town's department managers indicated a need for a
40,000-square-foot building.
State Rep Julia Wasserman urged the committee to seek a spot at Fairfield
Hills, saying the state property is part of Newtown.
As it now stands, according to Mr Cascella, the state has offered the town the
permanent use of Watertown Hall as a municipal complex, but there are other
options. The town is still owed a piece of property on the Fairfield Hills
property from the deal it made with the state over the prison. Bee publisher
R. Scudder Smith has also offered to construct a building at the corner of
Main and Sugar streets to be leased by the town.
As for Edmond Town Hall, members pointed out that it already has a movie
theater and gymnasium (and once had a bowling alley), giving it the makings of
a great community center.
However, committee member Jack Rosenthal reminded the board that Edmond Town
Hall has been the town's governmental center for 65 years.
"I think you'll create a firestorm if it gets out that Edmond Town Hall will
no longer be the town hall," he said.
Edmond Town Hall is governed by its Board of Managers, who's members have been
invited to meet with the advisory committee November 26 to hear their
preferences for Edmond Town Hall and to discuss the limitations and
restrictions put in Mary Hawley's will.
According to Miss Hawley's will, $200,000 was bequeathed to the town for the
construction of Edmond Town Hall. She also desired that "provision be made in
said building for suitable offices and vaults for Town Clerk of said town and
the Judge of Probate."
However, the will, which governs the use of the building, does not suggest
that the offices of town clerk and judge of probate must remain in Edmond Town
Hall.
According to Miss Hawley's will, "any property which may lapse...I give to
Yale University in New Haven."
Mr Cascella said Mrs Hawley's wishes have been broken before and will likely
be broken in the future.
"That will has been broken more times than you can imagine," he explained.
"What was legal and practical in 1929, may not be now."
Mr Cascella said Ms Hawley could have never guessed that Newtown would today
have sewers, a 350-member police force and six schools.
