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Tuesday November 18, 2008
Tax Incentives for River Eels Approved by Plymouth Town Meeting PDF Print E-mail

Plymouth town meeting OKs wind turbine bylaw

Town meeting has approved a wind-power bylaw that will allow turbines of up to 350 feet tall in height on plots of land 5 acres or more.

A special permit from the zoning board will be required, however.

Some town meeting members thought the height allowance was too great.

But the town’s planning director, Lee Hartmann, said Plymouth already had bylaws governing smaller windmills for residential use. The new bylaw approved last night is intended to regulate wind turbines for commercial use.

Voters last night also approved every other request on the town meeting warrant, including property tax breaks for 11 companies.

Town meeting member Laurien Enos opposed the tax breaks. 

“The goal of getting more businesses is to get more taxes,” Enos said. “This is giving away taxes.”

Member Brian DuBois said Plymouth should not be granting property tax breaks to companies without getting something in return. 

But economic development director Denis Hanks said Plymouth needs incentives to lure business.

“We’re in competition for these businesses,” Hanks said. “Other communities have offered free land to the baseball team. A tax break will help to keep the $35 million investment in Plymouth.”

Hanks was referring to Bay Colony Baseball and Athletics LLC that wants to build a stadium near Sam’s Club off Route 3 for an independent baseball team.

Town meeting approved the tax breaks for all 11 companies in one vote.

In addition to Bay Colony Athletics, they are STS Properties, Sager Precision/Autocam Corp., Alternate Energy Corp., Pilgrim Hill Plaza LLC, Pre-Press Co., Cardelli Italian Deli and Groceria, Pine Hills Racquet and Fitness, Senior Health Services, Companion Animal Trust and Court Street Animal Hospital, and Play Sports Dome.

Voters spent the most time debating a regulation that would allow a planning board member to miss one hearing on a project review and still vote on the project’s permit. 

Planning director Hartmann proposed the regulation for selectmen, zoning board, conservation commission and other town boards, but finance committee members amended the request to cover just the planning board. 

Several town meeting members wanted the original language reinstated. 

Town meeting member Richard Serkey said the rule was intended to help neighbors or other community groups opposing a controversial development. 

Neighbors often show up at hearings only to have them continued to another date if a board member is absent, Serkey said.

The developer usually knows about the continuance ahead of time, but not the neighbors, Serkey said.

Several other town meeting members agreed with Serkey, but his motion failed and voters narrowly approved the new rule for the planning board only. 

A few voters questioned spending $185,000 on a  water system at Forges Field when the town has 13 other fields that also need improvements.

But town meeting member Kevin O’Reilly said Little League and the family of Jennifer Kane, who died in the Sept. 11 attacks, intended to donate money for further improvements at the site if water were available.

October 24, 2006 | Patriot Ledger  - Source
By Tamara Race, Patriot Ledger


Bring on the tax breaks

PLYMOUTH – Though they had issues with the 11 tax increment financing agreements (TIFs) presented to them, Town Meeting Representatives approved all of them in a single vote, at Monday night’s Annual Fall Town Meeting.

Town Meeting Representative Laurien Enos, Precinct 5, opposed the tax breaks saying they were in effect splitting the tax rate for some businesses.

“The goal of getting businesses is raising the tax base, this is giving away taxes,” Enos said.

Despite Enos’s remarks, the 11 TIFs passed by more than the 2/3 requirement.

Economic Development Director Dennis Hanks negotiated the TIFs and explained the process, saying not every company that came to him received a TIF, despite the rumor that they did.

“There were a number of them considered that were not approved,” Hanks said.

Brian DuBois, Precinct 9, said if the town was handing out TIFs, it should receive something in return.

Hanks said the town does receive something - jobs. He said the town needs TIFs as an incentive to lure businesses into Plymouth, giving Bay Colony Athletics LLC and the stadium it wants to build near Sam’s Club in Colony Place Plaza as an example.

“They were offered free land in other communities,” Hanks said. “A tax break will help keep the $35 million investment in Plymouth.”

In the end, TIFs were approved for STS Properties, Sager Precision/Autocam Corp., Pilgrim Hill Plaza LLC, Pre Press Co. Inc. Cardelli’s Italian Deli & Groceria, Pine Hills Racquet and Fitness Center, Comfort Keepers, Court Street Animal Hospital, the Plymouth Sports Dome, and Bay Colony Baseball Athletics LLC.

October 25, 2006 | Old Colony Memorial
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