Title: Fall Town Meeting
1Fall Town Meeting
- October 16, 2006
- Kerry A. Speidel, Acting Town Manager
2Article 21- Amend Zoning BylawsCitizen Petition
- I move that the Town vote to amend Section 195-3
of the Chelmsford Zoning Bylaw by rezoning from
RB Zone to a CD Zone, the land known as 1 Academy
Street/ 6 North Road, shown on Assessors map 73
as Parcel 315-10, containing 27,428 Square feet
of land, more or less
3Article 21- Amend Zoning BylawsCitizen Petition
- Situated on the northerly side of Academy Street,
and being shown an a plan of land recorded with
the Middlesex North District Registry of Deeds at
Book of Plans 127, page 173.
4Article 21- Amend Zoning BylawsCitizen Petition
- 1 Academy Street/ 6 North Road
- Currently multi-family residential
- Planning Board recommends approval of petition
- Area is primarily commercial
- covenant to require preservation of exterior of
structure
5Article 21- Amend Zoning Bylaw Citizen Petition
6Article 6- Acceptance of MGL Chapter 32B, Section
18
- I move that the Town vote to accept Massachusetts
General Laws, Chapter 32B, Section 18, that
requires all retirees, their spouses and
dependents insured or eligible to be insured
under this chapter, if enrolled in Medicare part
A at no cost to the retiree, spouse or dependents
or eligible for coverage there under at no cost
to the retiree,
7Article 6- Acceptance of MGL Chapter 32B, Section
18
- Spouse or dependents, shall be required to
transfer to a Medicare extension plan offered by
the Town, provided that the benefits under said
plan and Medicare part A and B together be of
comparable actuarial value to those under the
retirees existing coverage.
8Article 6- Acceptance of MGL Chapter 32B, Section
18
9Article 6- Acceptance of MGL Chapter 32B, Section
18
10What is Medicare?
11Who is eligible for Medicare?www.medicare.gov
12Medicare Supplement Plans
13Monthly Cost Comparison
14Monthly Cost Comparison
15Monthly Cost Comparison
16Monthly Cost Comparison
17Monthly Cost Comparison
18Monthly Cost Comparison
19Retiree Group
- 688 people in retiree group, including spouses
- 409, or 59, are already enrolled in Medicare
- 279, or 41, are enrolled in active employee
plans - Retirees under age 65
- Retirees age 65 or older who are not Medicare
eligible - Retirees age 65 or older who are Medicare
eligible, but have waived coverage - 78, or 11, are eligible for Medicare, but have
waived coverage
20Only 78 peoplewhat can that cost?
- Premium rates for active plans are blended rates,
meaning when determining the rate, the insurer
considers the group as a whole - Its a fact, that premium rates would be lower if
the average age of the insured group was lower - Average age of the group of 78 is 71
21Only 78 peoplewhat can that cost?
- The actuarial determined annual premium for this
group is 11,570. The Towns share is 60, or
6,942. - Under the Medicare supplement program, the
actuarial determined annual premium for this
group is 3,800. The Towns share is 60, or
2,280. - The gross savings to the Town, before penalty, is
423,636.
22Only 78 peoplewhat can that cost?
- Estimated penalty in Year 1 is approximately
100K - Estimated net savings to the Town in Year 1 is
approximately 323K - Every dollar of savings counts!
23Implementation
- Medicare open enrollment is January 1 March 31
- If accepted, eligible persons must enroll during
the 2007 open enrollment period - Transition will occur July 1, 2007
24Adoption of Section 18 is the fiscally
responsible choice
- 144 of the 351 cities towns in MA have adopted
Section 18, including - Acton, Arlington, Belmont, Billerica, Burlington
- Chelsea, Dedham, Fall River, Franklin
- Haverhill, Lexington, Littleton, Needham, North
Reading - Sudbury, Tewksbury, Wakefield, Weston, Winchester
- More more are considering adoption due to
rising costs
25Adoption of Section 18 is the fiscally
responsible choice
- Since 1986, the Town and new employees each began
contributing Medicare taxes. Weve been paying
into the system, but are not receiving the full
benefit - Soon, all employees will be Medicare eligible.
- Medicare supplement plans are less costly to the
Town and in some cases, to the retiree
26Adoption of Section 18 is the fiscally
responsible choice
- GASB 45 requires each town to quantify its
unfunded post-employment benefit liability - The real savings is seen here
- Preliminary GASB 45 liability has been
determined. - Present value of liability assigned to Medicare
eligible retirees who have waived Medicare
coverage is 16M - Liability is reduced to 4M if these eligible
retirees convert to Medicare
27Adoption of Section 18 is the fiscally
responsible choice
- Most Medicare eligible retirees are already
enrolled in Medicare - Medicare Medicare supplement benefits are
equivalent to active employee plans - In some cases, retirees will save money under
Section 18 - Town will save money- approximately 1.6M in the
first 5 years alone- through the adoption of
Section 18. - Adoption of Section 18 is the fiscally
responsible action
28Article 6- Acceptance of MGL Chapter 32B, Section
18
- I move that the Town vote to accept Massachusetts
General Laws, Chapter 32B, Section 18, that
requires all retirees, their spouses and
dependents insured or eligible to be insured
under this chapter, if enrolled in Medicare part
A at no cost to the retiree, spouse or dependents
or eligible for coverage there under at no cost
to the retiree,
29Article 6- Acceptance of MGL Chapter 32B, Section
18
- Spouse or dependents, shall be required to
transfer to a Medicare extension plan offered by
the Town, provided that the benefits under said
plan and Medicare part A and B together be of
comparable actuarial value to those under the
retirees existing coverage.
30Article 7- Establish PEB Stabilization Fund
- I move that the Town vote to raise and
appropriate the sum of 10,000 to establish a
post-employment Benefit Stabilization Fund to
assist the Town in the financing of future
benefits costs for current and former employees.
31Article 7- Establish PEB Stabilization Fund
- MGL does not currently provide for a secure
mechanism to set aside funding - A few towns have obtained special legislation to
do so. It will only be a matter of time before
MGL is changed. - Only mechanism currently available is the
establishment of a Stabilization Fund - Article seeks to establish such a fund as an
acknowledgment that the liability is real and a
show of good faith to the credit rating community - In future years, will look to deposit Medicare
Part D subsidy in this account
32Article 8- Community Preservation Fund
- I move that the Town vote to appropriate from the
Community Preservation Fund, Historic
Preservation Reserve, the sum of 25,000 for use
by the Chelmsford Cemetery Commission for the
purpose of historic preservation activities at
Heart Pond, Riverside and West Chelmsford
Cemeteries.
33Article 8- Community Preservation Fund
- Appropriate a total of 25K from Historic
Preservation Reserve General Reserve for
preservation activities at - Heart Pond Cemetery
- Riverside Cemetery
- West Chelmsford Cemetery
- Resetting headstone, tree removal granite
restoration
34Article 9- Community Preservation Fund
- I move that the Town vote to appropriate from the
Community Preservation Fund, Open Space
Preservation Reserve, the sum of 60,000 for the
purpose of open space preservation activities at
the Cranberry Bog Reservation.
35Article 9- Community Preservation Fund
- Appropriate a total of 60K from Open Space
Preservation Reserve General Reserve for
preservation activities at the Cranberry Bog - construction of a parking lot
- reimburse DPW for dam reconstruction
36Article 9- Community Preservation Fund
37Article 9- Community Preservation Fund
38Article 9- Community Preservation Fund
39Article 9- Community Preservation Fund
40Article 9- Community Preservation Fund
41Article 9- Community Preservation Fund
42Article 9- Community Preservation Fund
43Article 9- Community Preservation Fund
44Article 10- Community Preservation Fund
- I move that the Town vote to appropriate from the
Community Preservation Fund, Community Housing
Reserve, the sum of 120,000 and from the
Community Preservation Fund, General Reserve, the
sum of 30,000 for use by the Chelmsford Housing
Authority for the creation of community housing
on land off Harding Street and Putnam Road.
45Article 10- Community Preservation Fund
- Appropriate a total of 150K from Housing Reserve
General Reserve for creation of community
housing - Initial engineering design work for a new
37-unit elderly housing rental project at Putnam
Road/ Harding Street - Actual construction will be paid for with
federal funds.
46Article 11- Community Preservation Fund
- I move that the Town vote to amend its acceptance
of the Community Preservation Act, as voted under
Article 1 of the Special Town Meeting of February
26, 2001, and as approved by the voters at the
2001 Annual Town Election by increasing the
Community Preservation Act surcharge on real
property as a percentage of the annual real
estate tax
47Article 11- Community Preservation Fund
- Levy against real property from 0.5 to 1.5 and
that the Town accept the following exemptions
from such surcharge permitted under Section 3 (e)
of said Act property owned and occupied as a
domicile by any person who qualifies for low
income housing or low or moderate income senior
housing in the Town, as defined in Section 2 of
said Act,
48Article 11- Community Preservation Fund
- And 100,000 of the value of each taxable parcel
of residential real property, with such amendment
to take effect for Fiscal Year 2008.
49Article 11- Community Preservation Fund
- Seeks authorization to increase surcharge from
0.5 to 1.5 - Adoption of exemptions
- first 100K of Assessed Value (already have)
- low income households
- low-to-moderate income senior households
50Article 11- Community Preservation Fund
51Article 11- Community Preservation Fund
52Article 11- Community Preservation Fund
53Article 11- Community Preservation Fund
54Article 11- Community Preservation Fund
55Article 11- Community Preservation Fund