Saturday, November 21, 2020

68m in grants go to 35 cities and Towns ... but not Framingham

 In yesterday's Globe, reporter Travis Anderson writes about Governor Baker's Mass-Works program. The works grant program supports building projects, road repairs and other initiatives. When I first read the piece and saw that Framingham was not on the list, I wrote to Maria Robinson and asked if we had applied and with-in minutes she wrote back the we had not. So I called the EDIC office and left a message, then I wrote to the Mayor and asked why we didn't at least apply for a chance at a few dollars.  Lastly, I wrote to Cannon and he responded that the lack of action was disturbing. And what about our council women who has LT Governor Polito on speed dial? The Globe piece is much more detailed, but has a paywall. I used the MMA url for everyone to read.


https://www.mma.org/administration-announces-68m-in-massworks-grants-for-infrastructure-projects/

Gov. Charlie Baker, Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito, and Housing and Economic Development Secretary Mike Kennealy joined members of the Legislature and local officials today to announce the 2020 Round of the MassWorks Infrastructure Grant Program.

This year’s awards will invest nearly $68 million in 36 projects to support housing, economic development and road safety projects in 35 cities and towns across the Commonwealth. The awards, announced during a virtual ceremony, are part of the administration’s Partnerships for Recovery initiative.

“MassWorks provides essential funding to cities and towns for infrastructure projects that spur housing production, create jobs and attract private investment, which are particularly important during our economic recovery,” said Gov. Baker. “We are grateful for our partnerships, both with the Legislature and with local officials, that make these investments possible, and we look forward to continued collaboration to support Massachusetts’ economy.”

Lt. Gov. Polito said MassWorks “plays a critical role in filling in the needed funding gaps that would otherwise keep these key projects from moving forward and inhibit substantial private investments in the main streets and downtowns of municipalities across the Commonwealth.” She added that the flexible funding empowers communities “to move ahead with projects that will have an immediate and lasting impact on their commercial districts, housing stock and residents.”

In total, the 2020 MassWorks awards will help create more than 3,500 new housing units, including more than 1,000 affordable units; result in more than 3,900 new jobs, support more than 7,000 construction jobs, and leverage more than $1.6 billion in private investment, according to the administration.

Among this year’s projects, 23 are reactivating underused sites, 20 are transit-oriented developments, 14 have a mixed-use component; nine are in Gateway Cities, and eight are roadway projects in small and rural communities. Additionally, eight towns are receiving their first-ever MassWorks award. The transformative projects funded by the 2020 awards were selected through a competitive process that received 100 applications, totaling nearly $208 million in requests.

The cities and towns include Acton, Amherst, Avon, Ayer, Beverly, Boston, Brockton, Buckland, Burlington, Chelsea, Dracut, Erving, Hanover, Harvard, Haverhill, Lawrence, Leominster, Lynn, Methuen, Nantucket, Northfield, Warwick, Orange, Phillipston, Pittsfield, Plainfield, Sheffield, South Hadley, Stoughton, Ware, Wayland, Wellfleet, West Brookfield, Westborough, Wilmington, and Worcester.

 


12 Comments:

At November 23, 2020 at 1:24 PM , Blogger jim pillsbury said...

i just learned from Sue Petroni, that one could have applied for the second round of grant money, but it appears we did not. I'm not saying we would have gotten any more money, but if we don't try, then we are not in the running at all. The Mayor's new senior advisor is supposed to make sure we are applying for any grants that we can be considered for.

 
At November 23, 2020 at 3:05 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Why did we not apply for any of this money? Has anyone asked the mayor or COO why? Seems like a no brianer to me.

 
At November 23, 2020 at 3:06 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Jim is right you don't get anything if you don't apply. Who in the administration made the decision to not apply is what I would like to know. Jim can you find that out?

 
At November 23, 2020 at 3:42 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

This begs the question what else is the current city government not doing that is costing all of us taxpayers money?

 
At November 23, 2020 at 4:20 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Just to be clear, did we not apply, or did we just not get awarded a grant?

 
At November 23, 2020 at 4:47 PM , Blogger jim pillsbury said...

This e mail I just received from Erika Jerram, AICP | Deputy Director EDIC. So we didn't apply for the grant as you can read below.

Your voicemail about the Massworks grant landed in my inbox and I’m aware that you reached out to the Mayor’s office as well, so I am replying on behalf of our office, the Mayor’s office, and the DPW.

Regarding the MassWorks Grants, the city did not apply for any MassWorks grant funding this year. These grants are highly competitive and most successful when they can be tied directly to an imminent development project, allowing the state to leverage public investment with related private-sector investment. In addition, the EOHED looks for alignment with state priorities and the recent moratorium hurts our chances with these types of competitive grants in the short term.

As we have received these grants in the past, we are aware of what makes a viable potential project and we do not apply every year. We currently do not have any projects that we felt would be good candidates for this type of funding. We discuss this and other grant opportunities internally throughout the year and will apply again if we think we have a good candidate project.

Thank you for your interest.

Erika



Erika Oliver Jerram, AICP | Deputy Director

 
At November 24, 2020 at 3:05 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

The moratorium? What a lame excuse that is as I am sure the grant applications were due in long before the moratorium passed so it is pretty obvious they know they blew it and are trying to spread the blame around which makes me think very poorly of this Erika Jerram

 
At November 24, 2020 at 4:12 PM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Do we have anything pending that we could have submitted a grant request for? Seems like with all the screaming Cannon is doing about downtown businesses needing help there must be something we could have asked for. My second question is what is the process for this in Framingham? Do we have someone whose job description includes applying for grants? And why don't the district councilors know about these grant opportunities so they can make sure we are applying for them?

 
At November 24, 2020 at 4:35 PM , Blogger jim pillsbury said...

my thought after reading her reply about the leveraging private sector and the moratorium is, were they waiting for an Andy Rose to come along and propose a major housing development type project that will forever change Nobscot.

I don't know of anything pending, but when you look at what DPW has asked for regarding waste water, pumping stations and major intersection changes, I would have guessed we had more than one shovel ready project, other than building more apartments.

I believe I heard the Mayor talk about the job description of her senior advisor was back when. Part of her job was to research grants for State and Federal sources. But I do know, each department seems to have it's own grant writers.

I have a question for Maria about the State process pending. She will give me the skinny on State grants I believe.

 
At November 25, 2020 at 10:46 AM , Anonymous Anonymous said...

Jerram is still there? I thought we finally cleaned house of that whole department.

 
At November 25, 2020 at 10:50 AM , Blogger Jim Pillsbury said...

I thought she was new.. I guess I never had to deal with them much in the past.

 
At November 25, 2020 at 11:10 AM , Blogger jim pillsbury said...

From Maria Robinson:

Hi Jim,

My understanding is that municipalities are regularly made aware of grant funding opportunities; the legislature is aware of some, and municipalities are encouraged to reach out to their legislators to support any grant applications. Sometimes we are contacted, sometimes we are not. But the decision to apply or not apply is a municipal one, not a legislative one. We’re not part of that process, just the process to support any asks in the works.

 

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