Date: Fri 08-Nov-1996
Date: Fri 08-Nov-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
FHH-Town-Hall-South
Full Text:
with cut: Town Hopes To Move Employees Temporarily To Fairfield Hills
B Y S TEVE B IGHAM
A final lease price from the state appears to be the only thing standing in
the way of a temporary move to Fairfield Hills Hospital for some town
employees.
First Selectman Bob Cascella said he was expecting to receive a proposal from
the state's Department of Public Works sometime late this week. If a deal is
worked out, those 20-plus employees from the all-but-uninhabitable Town Hall
South will likely move their headquarters to Canaan Hall, a massive structure
at the south end of the Fairfield Hills Campus.
The move is expected to be made by mid-December, according to the first
selectman.
Of course, a move to Canaan Hall would only be short-term - only about 18
months. A permanent location is still being sought by the town.
Mr Cascella recently formed a search committee charged with investigating
possible sites for the relocation of Town Hall South employees.
At a cost of $840,000, Mr Cascella had planned to renovate the Main Street
building, ravaged by flooding and general deterioration in recent years, but
that proposal was turned town by taxpayers in August, leaving the first
selectman with a bit of a dilemma. He knew town employees didn't want to put
up with the often wet conditions they endured last winter and there was no way
he'd find a permanent spot by the first snow fall. That's where Canaan House
fits in.
"We've got to get these people into an adequate, safe working environment,
then think of a permanent solution to the problem," Mr Cascella said in
September.
Town Hall South houses the police department upstairs and land-use agencies,
building offices, and the parks & recreation and health departments
downstairs. The police department will remain at Town Hall South.
Those working in the planning & zoning office are especially looking forward
to the move. That department has been flooded with work recently in addition
to the flood of water that has oozed through the walls, destroying maps,
creating a chill and leaving mold on the walls and a musty odor in the air.
Others, though unaffected by the water seepage, are also eager for the move,
citing other Town Hall South drawbacks. Parks & Recreation Director Barbara
Kasbarian said she and her staff are looking forward to finally getting a
window or two. Since moving to Town Hall South in 1981 the recreation
department's office has not seen the light of day.
Mr Kasbarian said the office often gets hot and stuffy, creating unpleasant
working conditions.
Canaan House has plenty of windows. The large building, which currently houses
what's left of the Mental Health Department's western district office, is four
stories tall and has the amenities required to allow workers to do their jobs.
The building, one of the largest on the campus, was once a ward to hundreds of
mental patients.
The town still plans to renovate portions of Town Hall South to allow for
expansion of police department space.
