I know some people will roll their eyes at me, but I think we need to
set the record straight when talking about population numbers.

In the email below, it is said: "There are two primary sources for
information about who lives in Lincoln: the decennial U.S. census, and the
annual Town census." *This is an inaccurate statement.* There is a third
source: the ACS survey conducted by the US Census Bureau. There is a good
reason to to use the ACS: the decennial survey does NOT provide a count of
residents over 60.

*It is remarkable the CCBC fails to mention this third source given that it
is precisely this source that the CCBC uses for all TEN towns in their
benchmarking exercise except for Lincoln*. *The CCBC also used the ACS as
their source for Lincoln in the November 2022 Special Town Meeting
presentation.*

The email below also states: "[...] for comparisons with other towns, the
CCBC has opted to use the Town numbers rather than the federal numbers." A
reasonable person would assume that if the goal is to compare with other
towns, we should use the same source for all towns, not a different one
just for Lincoln. The practice in Lincoln for town counts has been to keep
people on the roll even if they do not return the form (they could have
moved, passed away or registered in other towns where they also have a
home). There is a good reason for keeping them on the roll from a voter
perspective, as we want to make sure we enable everyone to vote, but it
does render the town count data unreliable for statistical and comparison
purposes. This practice will tend to inflate the data. Towns do not report
such counts publicly, therefore comparisons on this basis cannot be
established.

We need to be using the same source for each and every town in a comparison
exercise, and not switch to a different source just for Lincoln. This is
particularly true when the difference between town counts and the US Census
is 40%. *I understand the CCBC may not like the comparison to Harvard,
which has approximately the same senior population as we do, yet they spent
less than $3M on their Senior Center, or to Wayland, which has almost three
times our total and senior population, yet they are spending $12M on their
community center. *


> ---------- Forwarded message ---------
> From: Krystal Wood <ccbccommunicationscommit...@gmail.com>
> Date: Fri, Sep 29, 2023 at 18:26
> Subject: [LincolnTalk] CCBC FAQ's
> To: Lincoln Talk <lincoln@lincolntalk.org>
>
>
>
> *COMMUNITY CENTER BUILDING COMMITTEE:FAQ*
> September, 2023
>
> *The vision:* *what is a Community Center, and why would Lincoln want to
> build one?*
> A Community Center not only reflects the community at whose heart it sits,
> it strengthens that community. A Community Center is a year-round,
> intergenerational gathering place and activity center. A Community Center
> is a locus for a wide variety of activities – health and fitness, social
> services, learning, eating, socializing, creating, playing, participating.
> A Community Center enriches the community by fostering organizational
> collaboration and by housing an array of programs, for all ages.
>
> At its heart, the Community Center is a home for the Lincoln Council on
> Aging & Human Services and the Parks & Recreation Department, both of which
> do much more than most people realize, and both of which run constrained
> programs in their current homes. The Community Center also provides a base
> for 25 other community organizations whose work is critical to the quality
> of life in Lincoln. But the vision of a Community Center on the Lincoln
> School campus is of a building that exists not only to serve important
> organizational needs and to optimize programming, though those might be
> adequate reasons for building a new building, it is also of a building that
> will attract residents of all ages to gather for coffee and meetings and
> informal activities.
>
> Lincoln has a sense of community – we have impromptu encounters at the
> transfer station and at Donelan’s, we have annual events like the Scarecrow
> Classic, the Girl Scouts Pancake Breakfast, the July 4 parade, and we have
> Town Meeting. But the everyday contribution of a Community Center to the
> life of the community and to the sense of community can be far greater, and
> the possibilities are exciting – because the number of people using the
> Center will be so much higher, because the range of activities will be much
> greater, because the opportunities for intergenerational interaction will
> expand, because the provision of social services will be improved and the
> organizations providing those services will be more robust.
>
>
> *What is the CCBC – which stakeholders are represented, what are its
> tasks, and how canothers participate?*
> We encourage questions, and have been asked for information on the
> Community Center Building Committee (CCBC), including its role and
> responsibilities.
>
> In March, 2022, the Lincoln Annual Town Meeting voted with near unanimity
> to restart the Community Center planning and design process, and to request
> that the Select Board appoint a building committee. (The specific motion is
> appended below.)
>
> So the Select Board appointed a Community Center Building Committee
> (CCBC), which started work at the beginning of June. (The membership list
> is appended below.). The initial task of the CCBC has been to prepare an
> initial funding proposal – if the Town approves this proposal, for up to
> $325,000, at the Special Town Meeting on November 30, then the CCBC will
> hire an Owner’s Project Manager and a project architect to prepare
> schematic designs. The Town will have the opportunity to select its
> preferred design, and then it will have the additional opportunity to vote
> on funding for the construction of the Community Center. (The specific
> charge of the CCBC is appended below.)
>
> The CCBC will be building on the work of a series of town committees that
> have developed the concept and parameters for a Community Center in
> Lincoln. The CCBC will refine the concept, incorporating lessons from COVID
> and from the school building process, continuing the search for cost
> savings, and incorporating input about programmatic priorities.
>
> The CCBC and its subcommittees hold open meetings and invite public
> participation. The schedule of those meetings is available on the town
> website, and the CCBC will use other forums to inform residents about
> upcoming meetings and their agendas. We particularly urge residents to look
> for information on the CCBC website (https://lincolncommunitycenter.com/).
>
> *Members of the CCBC:*
> *AT-LARGE MEMBERS: *Sarah Chester, Chair; Timothy Christenfeld; Alison
> Taunton-Rigby; Krystal Wood
> *BOARD REPRESENTATIVES:* Jonathan Dwyer, Select Board; Rob Stringer,
> Parks & Recreation Committee; Susan Taylor, School Committee; Ellen
> Meyer-Shorb, Finance Committee; Dilla Tingley, Council on Aging & Human
> Services
> *BOARD LIAISONS: *Kim Bodnar, Select Board; Lynn DeLisi, Planning Board;
> Andrew Glass, Historical Commission; Steve Gladstone, Water Department; Roy
> Harvey, Green Energy Committee; Indrani Kharbanda, Library Board of
> Trustees; David Levington, Friends of the Lincoln Library
> *EX-OFFICIO MEMBERS:* Abigail Butt, COA & Human Services Director;
> Jessica Downing, Parks and Recreation Director; Timothy Higgins, Town
> Administrator; Brandon Kelly, Facilities Director; Daniel Pereira, Asst.
> Town Administrator
>
> *Motion approved at Town Meeting, March, 2022:*
>
> That the Town provide the Select Board with a sense of the meeting as to
> restarting the Community Center planning and design process, and, if such
> sense of the meeting is in the affirmative, to request that the Board
> appoint a building committee, by whatever title, to review the results of
> previous planning efforts and to present its findings in an expedited
> manner so that a request for funds for planning and design services could
> appear on the warrant for a fall 2022 Special Town Meeting.
>
> The official tasks of the CCBC:
> 1. Review and become familiar with previous plans and existing materials.
> 2. Create a plan for gathering stakeholder input, and for regular
> communication with, and input from relevant Town boards, committees, and
> the community. As appropriate, this will require collaboration with the
> School Committee and/or Building Committee.
> 3. Work with the Town Administrator to ensure that the process for
> contracting with an Owners’ Project Manager (OPM) and project Architect are
> carried out in compliance with state law and with an emphasis on diversity.
> 4. Review the program again, taking care to consider how COVID experiences
> and lessons might inform programs, interior space layout, outdoor
> amenities, and design, and the role the new and renovated school spaces
> might play.
> 5. Review the two CCBC design concepts and schematics to identify
> opportunities for improvement, including potential cost savings that may be
> achieved through re- evaluating the project scope or by other means.
> Develop the schematic designs to the extent required to ensure reliable
> cost estimating.
> 6. Lead the public engagement process which will culminate in a Town
> Meeting vote to select a preferred design concept and budget.
> 7. Once funds are approved, oversee the process for finalizing the design,
> bidding,
> contract award and construction, including repaving of Ballfield Road and
> any new paths serving the Community Center. Lead public engagement process
> as necessary for input into value engineering.
>
> *Why would Lincoln build a new Community Center rather than use existing
> buildings?*
> For over 10 years, Town Committees have studied and evaluated options for
> a Community Center, and have consistently concluded that it is
> inappropriate for COA&HS to continue to offer activities and services under
> the existing conditions of Bemis Hall, and that the Hartwell Pods, built as
> temporary classrooms over 60 years ago are no longer acceptable for the
> programs and activities of PRD. 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 to solve
> these and several other challenges.
>
> These are the relevant findings about the COA&HS at Bemis Hall, from a
> series of town committees:
> • 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 wrotemore 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 do not
> match the programmatic needs, the possibilities for extensive expansion or
> reconfiguration are very limited, and Pierce House could not accommodate
> the Parks & Recreation Department (PRD).
>
> *Why would the Community Center be on the Hartwell campus?*
>
> If Lincoln decides to build a Community Center, that Center is expected to
> be on the Hartwell Campus, adjoining the Lincoln Public Schools. There are
> several reasons for this determination, but it is worth highlighting two of
> them here:
>
> First, there is a set of practical reasons, having to do with the
> inclusion of the Parks & Recreation Department (PRD) in the Community
> Center. It is much more efficient to build a Center that houses both the
> PRD and the Lincoln Council on Aging & Human Services, because almost every
> space in the shared building would be a shared space. And because it is
> very important for the PRD to remain close to the Lincoln Schools, so that
> the schoolchildren have easy access to the PRD after-school programming, it
> makes sense to locate the Community Center where there is space on the
> school campus.
>
> Second, the Community Center is expected to be at Hartwell because that is
> the clearly stated preference of the residents of Lincoln. For instance, at
> the State of the Town Meeting on November 15, 2014, 350 residents expressed
> their preferences for a Community Center site, with a very large majority
> choosing the Hartwell site, among five options. The Community Center Study
> Committee therefore concluded:
> The overwhelmingly favored choice for a location by Lincoln residents is
> at the Hartwell complex, where it would help to anchor an entire “community
> campus” consisting of the Community Center, the Lincoln Public Schools, the
> Town playgrounds and playing fields, and the Codman Pool.
>
>
>
> Public feedback on the preferred site for the Community Center (State of
> the Town, November,
> 2014)
>
> *What is the recent history of official discussion of a Community Center
> in Lincoln – what questions have previous committees asked and what answers
> has Lincoln given to those questions?*
>
> In 2012, the Select Board appointed a Community Center Feasibility
> Committee to evaluate existing and future space needs of the Council on
> Aging & Human Services (COA&HS) and the Parks & Recreation Department
> (PRD). The Committee concluded that Bemis was not well- suited for use as a
> senior center, and that the Hartwell Pods, home to PRD, were long past
> their life expectancy. The Committee recommended that the Select Board lead
> a public process to assess the Town’s interest in a new community center
> and to study potential sites.
>
> In 2015, the Board appointed a Community Center Study Committee to
> determine the Town’s desire for a community center and to examine sites.
> The Committee concluded that COA&HS’s needs are acute and immediate, and
> that PRD’s needs are significant. After extensive and multiple
> opportunities for public participation and input were provided, the
> “overwhelming” choice for location, among five site alternatives, was the
> Hartwell Campus.
>
> In 2016, the Select Board and School Committee jointly appointed a Campus
> Master Planning Committee to determine whether the Ballfield Road Campus
> has the capacity to absorb additional uses, including a community center.
> The Committee concluded that there is no engineering or regulatory reason
> precluding a community center on the Ballfield Road campus.
>
> In 2018, the Community Center Preliminary Planning and Design Committee
> (CCPPDC), the most recent Community Center planning Committee, issued its
> report. CCPPDC advanced the process to the point that we now have two
> conceptual design options for a new Community Center in the Hartwell area
> of the Ballfield Road school campus. CCPPDC’s contributions include:
> further definition of the program; development of a range of site plans;
> preliminary design development for two building concepts; and more refined
> cost estimates. CCPPDC’s work culminated in a Special Town Meeting
> presentation on June 9, 2018. In the end, both CCPPDC and Town Meeting felt
> that both conceptual designs that were presented (i.e., a new building
> concept that was titled “Central Secondary Green”, and a plan to repurpose
> the pods titled “Infill of Pods”) were equally worthy of further
> consideration. 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.
>
> *When will town residents have decisive input in the Community Center
> planning process?*
>
> December 2, 2023:
> The CCBC will present comprehensive design and budget options at a Special
> Town Meeting, and town residents will select the preferred option.
>
> March, 2024:
> At Town Meeting and in a subsequent ballot vote, town residents will vote
> to authorize the financing for the construction of the Community Center,
> based on the design and budget selected in November. For approval, the bond
> vote requires a 2/3 majority at Town Meeting and a simple majority at the
> ballot.
>
>
>
>
> *What comparable facilities exist, or are being created, in towns similar
> to Lincoln?*
> • Dover (population 6,180, seniors 1,489) is rebuilding its Caryl
> Community Center. The new design involves the demolition of the 1971 and
> 1931 additions to the original 1910 Caryl School. The new building complex
> will be ~ 18,400 sf and will focus on the creation of a new pavilion
> addition to support congregate dining, small performances, presentations,
> and theatrical rehearsals. The other addition will be the Recreation Room
> which will be half the size of a regulation basketball court, but lined to
> support pickleball, elementary school level basketball, and a regulation
> half-court (for team practices or adult games). Town funds of $25.4 M were
> approved in June 2023. Ground was broken in August 2023.
> • Harvard (population 6,829, seniors 1,435) has a new 5,400 sf senior
> Center, built in 2022/2023 by partial renovation of an acquired 1995
> existing medical building. The town PRD has administration in the town
> offices, and activities in a number of
> locations. The cost of the Harvard senior center was $2.86 M.
> • Stow (population 7,210, seniors 2,164) renovated an existing 33,000 sf
> building in 2016 to house a Fire Dept location, shared storage, and the
> COA. Estimated space for the COA is 1/3 of the building (~11,000 sf), cost
> details not found. Rec administration is in the town center, with
> activities in many locations.
> • Weston (population 11,806, seniors 3,045) built a freestanding 22,500 sf
> Community Center in the style of a New England Barn in 2001. The building
> contains activity rooms and administration space for both COA and Rec, and
> the 2 1⁄2 story Great Room (~3,200 sf) for large events, performances,
> receptions, dinners etc.
> • Wayland (population 14,325, seniors 4,323) is developing an existing,
> never-
> occupied, 10,500 sf, building shell as a Community Center, to house COA
> admin and activities, and Rec activities. The Rec administration is
> remaining at the Town
> Building. The finished building will be 12,900 sf, and the interior
> construction and
> with parking/landscaping is expected to cost $11 M. Funding was approved
> late June 2022. The construction documents are expected to go out to bid in
> late 2023.
> • Bedford (population 13,631, seniors 4,180) has an ~18,000 sf building in
> the Town Center that houses the Health Department, Recreation Department,
> Youth & Family Services, and the Council on Aging. The Rec dept also has
> facilities in an extension building, with the Bedford Kids Club, and has
> activities in many locations.
> • Concord (population 18,424, seniors 4,975) has the Harvey Wheeler
> Community Center in West Concord for the Council on Aging/Senior services.
> It is in a repurposed, unused school building (2007) in West Concord, and
> includes space for the COA admin and activities. The Rec dept has a number
> of facilities including the Hunt Recreation Center (which includes Rec
> admin) at Emerson Field, the Beede Swim and Fitness Center, and multiple
> school playing fields and playgrounds,
> • Sudbury (population 18,709, seniors 4,722) is currently
> rebuilding/adding to the
> multipurpose complex at Fairbanks, which houses school space, Rec admin and
> facilities (including gym and pool) and CoA admin and activity space, and
> shared
> space. Size is about 42,575 sf and town has approved funding of $27.5 M.
> • Acton (population 23,829, seniors 5,004) has separate locations for COA
> and Rec dept.
> • Wellesley (population 29,266, seniors 6,739) built the 12,400 sf Tolles
> Parsons senior center in 2017. Wellesley has also renovated its recreation
> center.
>
> *How will COA&HS and PRD use other town facilities?*
> COA&HS currently runs many programs in facilities other than Bemis Hall,
> and PRD runs many programs in facilities other than the Hartwell Pods. The
> Directors of COA&HS and PRD have, as part of the planning process for the
> new Community Center, invested considerable time in developing a plan for
> dispersed programming, so that it will not be necessary to build a new
> facility scoped to accommodate all programming.
>
> Based on the current programming, PRD expects to run at least 19 programs
> outside the Community Center. The locations for the dispersed programs
> include Bemis Hall, Pierce House, and the school buildings. COA&HS expects
> to run at least 16 programs outside the Community Center. The locations for
> the dispersed programs include Bemis Hall and Pierce House. COA&HS also has
> six programs that have moved online since the beginning of COVID, and that
> could continue to operate online. There are many locations in town that
> would be
> suitable venues for these programs if the participants decide that meeting
> in person would be preferable.
>
> There is a short list of programs that are currently operated outside the
> core facility but that would operate more effectively in the new Community
> Center. The most important one is Senior Dining, which is currently run in
> the First Parish Church, but which could run more efficiently and more
> often in the Community Center. There are also several exercise programs
> that run outdoors at Pierce House in summer months that could be improved
> by a move to the Community Center (because Pierce House does not have
> accessible bathrooms, nor does it have an evenly paved area for the
> classes).
>
> *How many seniors live in Lincoln?*
> There are two primary sources for information about who lives in Lincoln:
> the decennial U.S. census, and the annual Town census. Both sources rely on
> citizens’ self-reporting, and so neither is completely valid. Every 10
> years, the U.S. Census Bureau invites all U.S. households to complete an
> online survey, and then uses census workers to follow up with households
> that fail to complete the survey (roughly a quarter of the total). For
> intervening years, the Census Bureau issues population estimates. The Town
> Census is conducted annually – residents
> complete and return a form that they receive in the mail – and the
> population count is based upon the returned forms, supplemented by
> information from voter registration rolls, the Registry of Motor Vehicles,
> and birth and death records.
> *Massachusetts General Laws require that cities and towns conduct an
> annual census of its residents as of January 1 of each year. The local
> census is used to maintain voting and jury lists as well as aid in school
> enrollment projections, public safety, and senior citizens’ needs and for
> certain privileges such as veterans’ benefits and proof of residency for
> state colleges and universities.*
> For planning purposes, and for comparisons with other towns, the CCBC has
> opted to use the Town numbers rather than the federal numbers. The U.S.
> Census provides a useful picture of overall demographic trends, and allows
> broader comparisons (with, for instance, localities that are not required
> to conduct their own censuses). But, because the Town Census is conducted
> and updated at the local level, it provides a more complete and verifiable
> list of town residents.
>
> According to the most recent Town Census, the population of Lincoln is
> 6,524. Of that total, 979 are residents of Hanscom Air Force Base, and 248
> are residents of The Commons. The number of residents aged 60 and over is
> 2,181. While the population of Lincoln has been somewhat stable over the
> last 10 years -- the Town Census reported a total population of 6,216 in
> 2012 and of 6,730 in 2017 – the number of residents aged 60 and over has
> been growing steadily. In 2012, 29% of the total population was age 60 and
> over (1,814 out of 6,216), while in 2022 33% of the population is 60 and
> over.
>
> For reference, the U.S. Census reported in 2020 that the population of
> Lincoln was 7,014, and the population estimate for 2022 is 6,855. According
> to the U.S. Census estimate, 23% of the population is over 60 (which would
> be a senior population of 1,576).
>
> *DOCUMENTS AND MATERIALS*
> Can be found on our website at www.LincolnCommunityCenter.com.
> <http://www.LincolnCommunityCenter.com>   You can sign up for our
> notifications there as well!
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