so well said. build it and they shall come😊

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On Tuesday, September 26, 2023, 7:48 PM, Lis Herbert <[email protected]> 
wrote:

I'm sorry, but the hair-splitting -- 13,000 vs. 11,400 sq. ft. -- so clouds the 
discussion that it becomes meaningless, especially when there is a suggestion 
to make up that 1,600 sq. ft. with other spaces in town. Aren't there 
administrative costs -- time and staffing -- associated with that way of 
thinking? What is gained by slimming things down by less than 10%?
I've read through these threads, and the numbers -- oh my god the numbers. When 
I listened to a podcast this week from the London Review of Books related to 
this piece (which I urge you to read) all I could think of was the Community 
Center, and the discussions that go round and round about the usage, the square 
footage, the justification (or not) for those numbers, the need to survey 
further, the need to start again, etc. To quote Mr. Lanchester:

Discussions that were once about values and beliefs – about what a society 
wants to see when it looks at itself in the mirror – have increasingly turned 
to arguments about numbers, data, statistics.

And:

As the House of Commons Treasury Committee said dryly in a 2016 report on the 
economic debate about EU membership, ‘many of these claims sound factual 
because they use numbers.’

The idea that numbers convey credibility is nonsense. We are meant to believe 
that some people possess some level of numeracy that the rest of us can't, and 
that only they pay keen attention to stats and figures. And yet these same 
people really just don't want to see anything built, at all: some of them voted 
against the trimmed down, tiered budgets at the vote last winter, after loudly 
proclaiming by email (spewing numbers everywhere) that what we need are trimmed 
down, tiered budgets to choose from. This is not arguing in good faith, this is 
muddying the waters so people feel like they can't agree to anything.
Outside Donelan's last weekend I heard a woman tell CCBC volunteers "I only 
know we're going to be screwed". Really? How can anybody feel good about 
convincing people (or trying to convince people) of things that simply aren't 
true? And should a decades-long initiative be scuttled because the numbers are 
off a little bit, because a few years have gone by and things have changed, or 
population has shifted, or or or?? What happens when you survey people again, 
and the slow churn of committees and bureaucracy means that new number is 
outdated? (Hint: that's the point of the exercise.)
And has anybody bothered to ask how many people don't take advantage of these 
programs -- all of them -- because the facilities aren't up to par, accessible, 
pleasant, etc.? That is a number worth talking about.
Lis



On Tue, Sep 26, 2023 at 8:28 AM Lynne Smith <[email protected]> wrote:

Dennis,
Thank you for your thoughtful discussion of the Community Center size.  I agree 
that the CCBC has not responded to the questions that many have been asking 
regarding space needs for existing programs.
The 13,000 sq ft space not including LEAP or Maintenance is clearly too much.  
In fact, I think the 11,400 sq ft proposed as a minimum by ICON is still too 
much. We could easily accommodate most programs with 10,000 sq ft on the 
Hartwell Campus, supplemented by use of space at Pierce House, Bemis Hall, 
First Parish Stone Church, and/or St Anne’s Church. 
CCBC maintains that a single building offers many casual encounters: people 
coming for one activity run into people coming for another.  This may be true 
but I do not think it is justification for abandoning activities in the other 
lovely buildings with convenient parking that Lincoln uniquely offers.  I also 
agree that there is no reason a staff person has to be at off-site activities 
if the designated teacher or a COA volunteer will be present.
Lincoln needs to 'do something’ about the state of the COA/HS facility  but if 
the ‘something’ is too costly, I fear the Town will vote it down.  I still hope 
to see a really good option for the cost of $12.5 million. That amount probably 
cannot include LEAP so other funding must be ‘found’ for this school-related 
activity.


Lynne Smith5 Tabor Hill RoadLincoln, MA 01773cell:  [email protected]



On Sep 25, 2023, at 7:30 PM, Dennis Picker <[email protected]> wrote:

The amount of finished interior space is a major driver ofthe cost of the 
proposed community center. There are some who believe that even the bloated 
2018 proposal is notlarge enough. That design included yet another lecture hall 
(Bemis, the LearningCommons and the Brooks auditorium are not enough for a town 
of this size?),  a sound recording studio, an appliance fix-itshop, and 
facilities for cooking classes.




In May, 2023, ICON architects presented the CCBC with atrimmed down space 
proposal of 13,000 sq ft (not including space for the Lincolnschool maintenance 
needs or for LEAP). This a 10,000 sq ft reduction from the 2018 proposal, and 
was achievedby removing some of the obvious excesses of that earlier proposal.  
In its communications, the CCBC proudlystates how big a reduction they have 
achieved with this proposal.  This was a good start, but it was an easyfirst 
step.  The CCBC has never deliberatedover key aspects of that proposal, and 
instead continues to use it as a benchmark, claiming that it represents what 
Lincoln needs. The CCBC has pointed out how much each of the three options 
falls shortof the 13,000 sq ft proposal and in doing so, they seem to have 
convinced somepeople that the proposals do not allow the town to offer the set 
of PRD andCOA/HS programs currently offered, let alone account for future 
growth.




I have repeatedly asked the CCBC to discuss the assumptionsleading to the 
13,000 sq ft proposal at public meetings.  They discussed and voted to accept 
capacitynumbers for various programs (many of which are quite large compared to 
one-time peak,let alone average attendance—ie, these numbers have lots of 
growth built intothem).  These capacity numbers drive the size of various 
program spaces.  But the CCBC did not review theprogramming schedule matrix 
which leads to utilization figures which in turn leadsto the type and number of 
program spaces to be built, nor the size and type of administrativespaces.  
They did not explore the prosand cons of holding some programs at Bemis or 
Pierce instead of providing spacefor them in the community center.  When 
Iquestioned some of those aspects at multiple meetings, ICON responded that 
“thisis what is needed” and there was no further discussion.




I urge you to carefully examine the assumptions behind the13,000 sq ft 
proposal, which are presented in the document that ICONsubmitted.  Those 
assumptions build in ahuge amount of growth in program attendance and 
offerings.  You can find that 5/31/23 document hereas posted on the CCBC web 
site.  Studythe material, ask questions of the CCBC and come to your own 
conclusions.

Here are some points to explore:

1.      ICON architects have said that they targetutilization of program spaces 
to be in the 60-70% range.  They said that this utilization strikes abalance 
between not having underutilized space, while still providing capacityfor new 
programs to be added to the schedule for the various rooms.  The utilization 
numbers in the 5/31 document,which the CCBC did not explore, are grossly 
overstated:
a) The utilization %  were based on howmany hours a space is used out of a 40 
hour  9-5 week. However, many programs are offered in the evening hours.  
Taking this into account corrects thedistorted utilization figures of 96% shown 
for multipurpose room 2, forexample.

b) Many programs are not held every week, but the utilization numbers count 
themas if they were offered every week (examples: Men’s coffee & coffee with a 
select occurs 1x/month for each,  foreign language groups occur 
2x/month,ukuleleoccurs 1x/month, memoirs occurs 1x/month, somesupport groups 
meet 1x/mo, some 2x/mo, special events are listed as1-2x/mo).  To be 
representative ofreality, the utilization numbers should be based on a full 
month, to accountfor non-weekly uses.

c) Correct utilization numbers would come in well below the 60-70% 
target,meaning there is plenty of room for adding programs or second sections 
of oversubscribedprograms.  Remember that ICON said that at 70% you still could 
fit new things in.


2.      The utilization numbers assume that seniordining (for 50 people!) is 
expanded to accommodate that number of people3x/week, although the long-running 
program has been offered 1x/week, to much smaller numbers.  Again, lots of 
growth assumed.


3.      The utilization figures assume that programsthat could plausibly be 
conducted at Pierce House or Bemis  first floor meeting room (suchas mahjong, 
bridge, chess,  languagegroups) are scheduled to be held in the community 
center.  The CCBC has not explored the pros and consof such possibilities.  At 
CCBC meetings, various members have madestatements such as “holding such 
programs offsite is a myth because the offsitespaces are already at capacity.”  
Nottrue.  It has also been said that holdingsuch programs offsite would require 
extra staff time-to go to the remotesite.  That does not pass the commonsense 
test.  Just have a regular attendeeof a particular offsite program take 
attendance and bring the mahjong tiles, chesspieces, etc.


4.      The size and number of administrative spaces hasnot been deliberated.  
For example, theCCBC never explored what PRD operations might be like if they 
did not get adedicated conference room capable of accommodating 20 people and 
instead held theirmeetings in other spaces in the community center or at town 
offices in roomsthat are typically unused during the daytime, as most town 
board meetings arein the evening. Or why we need a dedicated reception area for 
COA and anotherfor PRD beyond providing a building lobby.  Can some part-time 
COA staff share offices instead of having a dedicated space?

The bottom line: there is lots ofassumed growth plus some fat in the 13,000 
foot proposal. It is inappropriateand misleading to say that any option that 
does not provide that amount ofspace falls short of meeting the town’s needs.  
Don't be misled into supporting a too-large for our needs new building.

Dennis Picker, Page Road  

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