[MassHistPres] Verizon Temporary Generator

Eric Hertfelder EHertfelder at fortadams.org
Tue Jun 23 11:51:54 EDT 2009


Jonathan:

A comparable way of looking at the generator is to determine how town regulations apply to large dumpsters parked next to restaurants or other businesses, and also what rules apply to persons who want to park one of the new "PODS" units on their property to create more storage.  Both of these items are mobile, "temporary" and could be fenced.

Eric Hertfelder
Bristol, RI

-----Original Message-----
From: masshistpres-bounces at cs.umb.edu [mailto:masshistpres-bounces at cs.umb.edu] On Behalf Of Jonathan Feist
Sent: Tuesday, June 23, 2009 10:44 AM
To: MassHistPres
Subject: [MassHistPres] Verizon Temporary Generator

Hi all,

Verizon owns a property in the Harvard Common Historical DIstrict. It  
has no driveway, and is very close to the street.

A year ago, they parked a temporary backup generator in front, on the  
street. It is the size of a small truck. Everyone hates it; it's a  
rare blight in an otherwise beautiful and untouched area.

In response to neighbors complaining about it for a year, they have  
applied to enclose it in a tall fence. This would look pretty bad, but  
better than the generator itself. A  similar fence is on the other  
side of the building to hide something else; this was approved by the  
HDC before my time.

The additional fence would really be a blight. The first fence is  
already pretty awkward looking, and we're looking at a second wrong to  
make a right.

Verizon says that there is no other possible place for the generator.  
The town has offered them a parking spot for it in another location,  
and they have declined. The planning board has approved the fence.

So, my question is, does the fence housing the generator make the  
generator itself a permanent "structure," and is there any leverage we  
might have to force them to get rid of the temporary generator?

The neighbors seem to want the fence, after being reconciled to the  
fact that the generator isn't going anywhere. Is it true that  
utilities can put their necessary gear where they please, without  
respecting local ordinances?

--Jonathan




================================
Jonathan Feist
jfeist at charter.net * 978-772-4864
Blog: Delights and Processes http://blogs.townonline.com/delight/
Writing about Music http://jonathanfeist.berkleemusicblogs.com/

******************************
For administrative questions regarding this list, please contact Christopher.Skelly at state.ma.us directly.  PLEASE DO NOT "REPLY" TO THE WHOLE LIST.
MassHistPres mailing list
MassHistPres at cs.umb.edu
http://mailman.cs.umb.edu/mailman/listinfo/masshistpres
********************************


More information about the MassHistPres mailing list