*Community Center Building Committee- November, 2022*

*What will the operating costs of the new Community Center be?*

The short answer is that we can’t know the operating costs of a building
that we haven’t designed yet. However, we can specify some parameters which
would help to narrow the possible answers to the question:

The Town already pays the operating costs of a set of buildings that house
the Council on Aging & Human Services (COA&HS) and the Parks & Recreation
Department (PRD), specifically Bemis Hall and two of the Hartwell Pods. So
the appropriate question is not what the operating costs of the Community
Center will be, but how those costs will be different from the current
costs.

The Town will continue to pay operating costs for Bemis even if the COA&HS,
moves out (though it is likely that those costs will diminish as the
intensity of use diminishes, and the Town’s expenses are likely to be
increasingly offset by rental income and fees from community
organizations). But most plans have at least two of the Hartwell Pods
disappearing --demolished or integrated -- with the construction of the
Community Center, so the appropriate focus here is on the net change in
operating costs for the Hartwell Pods versus the Community Center.

The Hartwell Pods are very inefficient buildings, while the Community
Center would be a very efficient – probably net-zero – building, so there
would be a large savings in utility costs. That savings might be offset by
an increase in custodial costs. The Pods currently have part-time custodial
support (carried on the school budget), while the Community Center would
probably have a full-time custodian. (Additional personnel expenses, such
as staffing for a reception desk, are very hard to model at this point,
because we don’t know if those tasks will be necessary, or if they might be
performed by volunteers or rotating staff or seniors working for tax
abatements.) For planning purposes, it is reasonable to expect that any net
change in operating
expenses from a new Community Center – a decrease in utility costs offset
by a possible increase in custodial costs -- would not have a discernible
impact on property tax bills.
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