*Community Center Building Committee- **November, 2022*


*Why would Lincoln build a new Community Center rather than use existing
buildings?*



Lincoln has known for a long time that Bemis Hall is not an appropriate
building for the Council on Aging & Human Services (COA&HS):



·      A 2008 needs assessment “determined that Bemis Hall not be the
long-term home for the COA.”  (Since that assessment, the Lincoln senior
population has increased by 50%.)

·      In 2012, the Community Center Feasibility Committee (CCFC) concluded
about Bemis Hall that it was “not built to be a modern senior center with
myriad programs and services.”

·      The CCFC reiterated in a 2013 follow-up that Bemis is “not well
suited for a senior center.”

·      In February, 2015, the Community Center Study Committee (CCSC)
reported that, “compared with neighboring towns, the quality, size and
condition of Lincoln’s COA facility is vastly inferior, and its physical
deficits limit the programs and services which can be offered to elders.”

·      The CCSC provided additional detail about the shortcomings of Bemis
Hall: “the interior space does not allow for congregate meals, a
significant drop-in area, adequate and confidential office space for staff
and volunteers, private restroom locations, or all programming needed to
meet the needs of Lincoln’s growing population of older adults.”

·      In 2018, the Community Center Preliminary Planning & Development
Committee wrote more broadly that:



Doing nothing to provide adequate facilities for the COA, PRD [Parks &
Recreation Department], and community organizations is not an option.  The
physical plants of both Bemis Hall and the pods continue to age, and it
makes no sense for the Town to continue to expend scarce tax dollars to fix
up, patch up and make do with facilities that do not suit their purpose.
Just as important, every year that these departments and organizations are
not able to provide the range of activities and programs that are standard
in other towns and are located in buildings that discourage residents from
making use of their services means that opportunities to improve residents’
quality of life are lost.



In 2012, the CCFC studied other town facilities, asking whether any
existing building could serve as a better home for the COA&HS than Bemis
Hall.  The CCFC concluded that no other existing building could serve the
needs of the COA.  Pierce House, for instance, has two assets – a good
location and plentiful parking – but fails on every other criterion as a
potential home for the COA&HS: the spaces in the existing building don’t
match the programmatic needs, the possibilities for extensive expansion or
reconfiguration are very limited, and Pierce House couldn’t accommodate the
Parks & Recreation Department (PRD).



For over 10 years, Town Committees have studied and evaluated options for a
Community Center., and have consistently concluded that continuing to offer
activities and services under the existing conditions of Bemis Hall and the
pods is no longer feasible or acceptable.  Other existing town facilities
do not offer a solution to the problem.  If Lincoln wants a Community
Center, then building a new one is the most efficient use of town resources.



We welcome all input and questions from town residents, and will make every
effort to solicit, hear, and address the priorities, values and concerns of
Lincoln residents concerning a new Community Center.
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