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May 23, 2013

                                  WEB SITE http://macedontown.net

 

The Regular Meeting of the Town Board of the Town of Macedon held May 23, 2013 at the Town Complex, 32 Main Street, in the Town of Macedon was called to order by Supervisor William H. Hammond at 7:30 p.m.

 

Pledge of Allegiance.

 

Upon Roll Call, the following members of the Board were

Present:

Councilperson

Paul Kenyon

Councilperson

David Maul

Councilperson

David McEwen

Councilperson

Sandy Pagano

Supervisor

William Hammond

 

Also Present:

 

Engineer

Scott Allen

Accountant

Kim Leonard

Police Chief

John Colella

Town Clerk

Judy Gravino

 

 

Village Board

 

Village Trustee

David Sliney

Village Trustee

David Kelly

Village Trustee

Beverly Bassage

Village Mayor

Marie Cramer

Village Deputy Clerk/Treasurer

Kathy Reilly

 

Absent:   

Village Trustee

Don Lohse

 

A statement was read by the Town Clerk as follows:

On behalf of the Town and Village Boards we thank the residents for attending the joint meeting this evening.  The objective of this meeting is to reconcile outstanding differences regarding sewer only.  This is an open meeting between the boards and not a public hearing; therefore, no questions or comments will be taken from the public unless agreed upon by both boards. 

 

We will start the meeting with comments from Mayor Cramer and then Supervisor Hammond will follow.  We ask that individuals limit themselves to one speaker at a time, with respect and calmly discuss the differences at hand.

 

Upon completion of the joint meeting the Town Board will take a short break before beginning their regularly scheduled meeting.

 

Mayor Cramer - Requested the Board touch lightly on fire also and asked why we are here?

 

Supervisor Hammond – Lets move forward on the sewer treatment facility and if time we will talk about fire.  I had a lengthy document to read but instead of how we got here we need to look to the future.  What is the relationship between the Village and Town in regard to the sewer treatment facility?  Does the Village want the Town as a customer or a partner?  That is the question this board needs to have an understanding of this evening.

 

Mayor Cramer – Define partner and customer

 

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May 23, 2013

 

Supervisor Hammond – A partner is one that works together owning a percentage of.  Our board believes in the contract drafted in 1989 with the Town having a vested partner, vested interest in.  We would like to continue that partnership.  A customer has no interest and pays necessary fees for treatment of our material.

 

Mayor Cramer – Interpretation of what the vested interest is?

 

Councilman Kenyon – The Town has invested $2.5 million in the expansion of that facility in 1989.  The Village at that time would not have been able to do the expansion without the Town because it did not need the capacity.  The Town participated in that expansion to that amount of money with the understanding that it would have a property interest in that facility.  According to the Comptroller at that time the Town would not have been able to participate in the facility if we did not have a property interest.  It’s just like buying something and not having any interest in it.  Our position is that we have invested heavily in the facility and have a property interest. As a partner we would have a vested interest in the facility rather than just a partner that has no investment at all.

 

Mayor Cramer – What was the vested interest?  Where else are you getting your facts from other than the Comptroller?

 

Councilman Kenyon – The 1989 contract.

 

Supervisor Hammond – Both parties relied on the Comptroller’s opinion.  They were looking for a way for the Town of Macedon to invest dollar wise into something the Village owned.

 

Councilman Maul – The opinion first came from bond council saying that the only way you can do this is if you acquire undivided interest, which means ownership in the plant.  The Comptroller backed that up with his own letter saying that he agreed.

 

Supervisor Hammond - That was after he (State Comptroller) received a letter from the Village’s Attorney Mr. Sapienza asking questions.

 

Mayor Cramer – That’s where we are in disagreement because I was told by the people that were involved at the time that the Town had come to the Village asking because they didn’t want to build their own facility. They wanted to get  some capacity for the growth of their township.  In order to get the vested interest and get the bond the bank said you needed to show the vested interest. The vested interest was for capacity.

 

Councilperson Maul – First of all I don’t know who you spoke to, and I don’t care  because we have the documents here showing the bond council opinion showing your village attorney at the time requesting the State Comptroller’s opinion and the Comptroller’s opinion.  So what you heard from whomever you heard from is not relevant.  Second of all nobody would interpret a vested interest as temporary capacity that would disappear at some point. 

 

Mayor Cramer – It wasn’t temporary capacity.  It was to provide the capacity for you to be able to build so you could get the capacity that you would like. And it is relevant because they were the key people that were part of it.

 

Councilperson Maul - But it doesn’t trump the official actual documents that I have in front of me and you probably have in front of you as well showing the legal history of the agreement.  You can’t combat the legal opinions of the comptroller and the bond council with hearsay of something somebody told you

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May 23, 2013

 

whatever it was they told you.  As somebody told me versus the actual documents to me there is no contest.

 

Councilman Kenyon – It goes back to the question are we a partner or a customer?

 

Trustee Sliney – What are you after 10% or 90%.

 

Councilperson Maul – The contract calls for a maximum based on pro ratta share of the sewer units with a maximum of 50% of ownership.

 

Trustee Sliney – When it was written it was about 20/80.  You never came close to 50%. 

 

Trustee Kelly – It’s 30/70 now.

 

Supervisor Hammond – I want my Board aware that the Attorney for the Village is here Mr. Welch.  Gene I was led to believe that neither one of the attorneys would attend this evenings meeting.  I’m fine with you staying if you want to stay. I’m just making my Board aware of the fact that you are here representing the Village I assume.

 

Attorney Gene Welch – I was here because it was a public meeting.  I am very hopeful that you folks can come to some agreement and when that agreement is reached I will probably have a hand in putting it to paper so I would like to hear where you are going.  Let’s keep the attorneys out of it. Let’s let you folks sort it out.

 

Councilperson Maul – I don’t know what the number is. I thought it was 50/50.  If it is not the number what it is is what I would expect us to get.

 

 

Trustee Sliney – The contract says it would keep increasing as the Town grew but would never exceed 50%.  Is the Town ignoring the $1.5 million that we put in for lines to get to the sewer plant?

 

Councilperson Kenyon – We just want what we thought the investment was.

 

Trustee Sliney – Why back in 1989 did you want to expand this, for the Village or the Town? 

 

Supervisor Hammond – At that time I attended a Town Board Meeting and I was concerned that people outside the district would be paying to enlarge the facility.  When I went to the public meeting and listened to both sides of the boards had decided that it was in the best interest of all the residents of Macedon for future growth for making jobs available for making areas available that have problems with personal septic systems that it was in the best interest for all of Macedon that we invest in this facility.   They all agreed with that.  In 1989 it was a very wise conclusion that they came to that everybody would benefit the Town would grow and we would create jobs and it’s done that. We’ve done that and if we continue to work together we can continue to create more jobs and we can continue to call businesses here.  We need to be a part of that.  Why don’t you want us as a partner?

 

Trustee Sliney – Let’s not get into that.

 

Supervisor Hammond – That’s what we are here tonight to discuss, either we are going to be partners or we are going to be customers.

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Trustee Sliney - Every time I picked up a piece of paper from the Town it talked about partnerships. But then we walk away the fire is a perfect example.  We sat in here and we agreed to this #1 that was worth pursuing. And with a blink of an eye you signed with Macedon Center. 

 

Councilperson Kenyon – We have a right to do that.

 

Trustee Sliney – You had a right to do that, of course you had a right to do that.  But that’s not what a partner does.

 

Councilperson Kenyon – We had a right to sign with Macedon Center and we have a right to continue our relationship with the Village.  That’s our business.  The Village has nothing vested in what we do with Macedon Center.  Macedon Center is as much of this town as the Village.

 

Trustee Sliney - Why did we all set that night and within a matter of less than 72 hours you guys passed a contract with Macedon Center?

 

Supervisor Hammond - If you turn to the fellow next to you it was his suggestion that it was something we could do.  It was cooperation between those two fire departments.  Again we are not here to talk about the fire department.

 

Mayor Cramer – Yeah but it’s affecting us too.

 

Supervisor Hammond – I think we’ve been a good partner for 20 years.

 

Trustee Kelly – I’ll debate that for one reason the sewer use law.  For 20 years you have been going without a sewer use law.

 

Supervisor Hammond – David we were made aware of the sewer use law about 2 years ago.  We started to work on that which is a large document.  There were a number of changes to be made.  Scott has spent a number of days on it.  We knew the contract was coming up very shortly and maybe in the best interest to rewrite that in a new contract so that we both matched.  We always anticipated that we would be signing a new contract where we would be continuing with this partnership and at the same time we would write all that down and make it into one document.

 

Trustee Kelly – Let me give you my interpretation when I came on board we talked and I spoke to you and you would have it in place in 6 months.  It’s been over a year and seven months.  The contract has come and gone.  We and you are required by DEC to have a sewer use contract equal to ours.  Twenty years have come and gone.  In twenty years it has cost our customers money.  Our customers paid for an industrial user when the industrial should have been paying for themselves. I find that was lack luster on both boards’ parts.  This contract was monitored by a group of three people from the town and the village apparently didn’t happen too well.

 

Supervisor Hammond – If there was a BOD problem 20 years ago why didn’t you bring it to our attention?

 

Trustee Kelly – I don’t have a clue.  I wanted to get that done to go on with the contract.

 

Supervisor Hammond – We don’t have employees at the sewer plant telling us that there is a BOD problem.  We weren’t made aware of that until the Bakewise issue 2 years ago. 

 

 

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Trustee Kelly – I guess with the sewer use law you would have recognized the industrial user.

 

Supervisor Hammond – David we wouldn’t have recognized them as an industrial user where their levels were high unless we were told they were.

 

Trustee Kelly – Just from the product they were using would make their levels high.  I don’t know what happened between you guys. I don’t know what happened between us.  All I know is it did not happen.  When I brought it to your attention I brought it to your attention because we needed that to go on with that agreement.

 

Mayor Cramer – Did you let them know that.

 

Trustee Kelly – Yes I did.  That’s what we spoke about.  A year and seven months went by.  That’s not what I call a partnership when we are out there floundering and we have DEC on us.

 

Supervisor Hammond – You made us aware of it less than 2 years ago.  It took time to go through the document #1. #2 during that time the DEC said your plant was out of compliance. We had a letter that your plant was out of compliance.  We thought it would be in the best interest of everyone to do them at the same time and have it reviewed by DEC and that didn’t happen.  All this other stuff started happening and it got left aside.

 

Trustee Kelly – Why did it ever get to litigation?

 

Councilperson Kenyon – We couldn’t get an answer on the contract.

 

Councilperson Maul – The Supervisor and I attended 2 village board meetings where we tried to get this topic engaged. We were told we are busy we’ll get to it eventually.  That eventually never came.  Our Attorney wrote a letter May, June, July 2012 warning of the approaching end of the contract and asking for engagement from the Mayor and her board to handle a smooth transaction to a new contract.  And we got no answer.  We didn’t hear anything else until very late in the year when it was basically the contract is about to expire and once it does if you have not withdrawn your notice of claim you are not going to get service anymore.

 

Trustee Kelly – That was not said.

 

Councilperson Maul - I have it in front of me in the form of a letter from the attorney.

 

Mayor Cramer – We were actually there and the first two times it was to talk about ambulance because of the mutual aid agreement.

 

Supervisor Hammond – I met with you in June and talked about several things.  Ambulance was one and I said the contract for the sewer treatment facility was going to end in December.  We need to sit down and hammer out a new agreement.  I went to a July Village Board meeting, we talked about ambulance and before I left I stood at the podium.  I said we need to sit down and discuss a sewer treatment facility agreement the sooner we get to it the better it is.  Councilperson Maul was also at the meeting. We heard nothing.  Our attorney wrote a letter indicating his concern in the need to get together and write a contract. I met again in August and we discussed ambulance and I brought it to the board’s attention again that time was running out on the sewer agreement.  We needed to get together.  We heard nothing.  Town Attorney again sent a

 

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second letter asking you to please meet with us to discuss a sewer treatment facility agreement.

 

Mayor Cramer – Actually he wrote it in July.  I told him I was still acclimating.  I was busy. I will get back to him.  A month later he wrote again and basically said you are ignoring me. When are we going to meet?  June when we met it was just me and you.  I said I think we need to talk and learn about each other first.  You said there are issues on the sewer that we need to agree.  I said I am just learning about this.  We made it very nonchalant.  Then we left and left on great terms.  It was a good conversation.  Then you came down to the board to talk about the ambulance.  About a month later about September you came back to talk about ambulance and you said you would also like to talk about sewer.  I said that our schedule is tight but if you could make it short.  You said the contract is coming up we want to discuss it we can’t pay for it without an agreement.

 

Councilperson Maul – That’s by law.

 

Mayor Cramer – That’s not law.

 

Councilperson Maul – That is the law.

 

Mayor Cramer – Where is it?

 

Councilperson Maul – A municipality cannot make payments of public funds without a contract. Ask your attorney.

 

Trustee Kelly – Then we made up a temporary agreement so that we could get on with it which would have been very helpful.

 

Councilperson Maul - We had to withdraw our claims of ownership in order to accept that temporary contract.  We refuse to do that.  Since 1970 you spent $1.7 million on that plant.  Since 1989 we have spent $2.5 million on that plant.  We refuse to accept that that was for capacity only.  We demand that we own our fair share of that plant.

 

Trustee Kelly - Not to be argumental but why did we just put it on a 20 year agreement then?

 

Councilperson Maul – You weren’t there I wasn’t there.

 

Supervisor Hammond - I’m sure it was because of the bond payments.  It was in place while the bond payments were being made.  I can’t remember where I read it but I believe some of the bonds read that the probable life usefulness of the facility was 40 years.

 

Trustee Kelly – I don’t recall anything in there about that because we are obviously in need of clarifiers and all that.  I have been trying to progress as a business down there to get us back in shape where we need to be into.  Unfortunately with the lawsuit filed it doesn’t make it very healthy.  If there is a true ownership then we would be glad to probably honor that. That’s just me again speaking. This is Dave Kelly not the Village Board in mass.  Nobody is here to cheat anybody out of it.  There was a 20 year agreement.  When you talk about a vested interest I had to make a choice when I went down to Orlando between Westgate Lakes and Disneyland.  Disneyland will sell you a piece of property and give you a deed and 15 years you give it back.  They take it back.  They don’t care what you paid in.

 

Councilperson Kenyon – But you know that going in.

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Councilperson McEwen – The Intermunicipal Agreement between the Village and Town states:

Page 4

“B.  RESPECTIVE MUNICIPAL RESPONSIBILITIES

1.     Village and Town jointly own treatment facility as Co-Owners of the

     Sewage Treatment Plant”

 

Mayor Cramer – You have to talk about the first part that talks about vested interest.

 

Supervisor Hammond – This reinforces it.

 

Mayor Cramer – No

 

Councilperson Kenyon – Okay then we are done.

 

Supervisor Hammond – We can sit here and argue all night over vested interest.  Do you want us as a partner or do you want us to be a customer? 

 

Trustee Kelly – I would want to do what is honorable for the township of Macedon.  Unfortunately with what is going on I don’t feel this is working for the township of Macedon.  I’m going over these papers. You got us in litigation.

 

Supervisor Hammond - The Town has filed a notice of claim.  That is not a law suit.  A notice of claim says we have a right to sue you in the future within one year.  Gene am I wrong on that?

 

Gene   I thought you wanted me to keep my mouth shut.

 

Supervisor Hammond – Okay Gene I shouldn’t have asked.  I apologize.

 

Trustee Kelly – What does this mean to our taxpayers town in the Village town outside the Village? Okay they started a potential law suit.  This has cost us many dollars. 

 

Supervisor Hammond – We protected the rights of our taxpayers.

 

Trustee Kelly – Us too then.  In the Village.

 

Councilperson McEwen - Absolutely

 

Trustee Kelly – We are all town taxpayers. That means that not only did you bring this suit against us we are paying to have this suit be brought against us as town taxpayers.   And we are having to turn around and having to pay to defend ourselves.  If we would have sued you for breach of contract what would have happened there? The same thing.  What if we came out winning?  The only persons who lose here are the town taxpayers.  We are all town taxpayers.

 

Councilperson Maul – That’s an interesting point.  We spent $2.5 million of taxpayer’s money investing in a plant that then your position was we don’t own.  We don’t own any portion of it.  We have a duty to those people who already paid that $2.5 million to get the property that they paid for.  And in order to do that we have to spend more money.  That’s an unfortunate fact of life.  But if you don’t defend your rights you don’t get your rights and in this case defending your rights costs money.

 

Mayor Cramer – I actually talked to Mr. Sapienza who was the attorney.  He actually disagrees with what you are saying.  He said it was the intent of both

 

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boards that it was to provide a vested interest for capacity only to allow you to get that bond.  Yes they could have probably done other ways but they decided.  That came from him.  He was the attorney.  Our Village Engineer was part of that also.  Everybody knew there was no ownership.  It was to provide you capacity.  Then at the end of the twenty years when you paid off your bond you still had the capacity of the two-thirds capacity.

 

Councilperson Maul – I understand that you heard that.

 

Mayor Cramer - No I didn’t hear that I actually talked to him.

 

Councilperson Maul – Then you heard it. And he talked back to you and you heard it. Right?

 

Mayor Cramer – Ok whatever

 

Councilperson Maul – So that is hearsay to me.  We have an agreement right in front of us. 

 

Mayor Cramer – That’s not hearsay that’s a person that drafted that up.

 

Councilperson Maul – It’s a person that’s not here so its hearsay.  You are combating again what you heard from somebody with a document that says very clearly Village and Town jointly owned treatment facility as co-owners of the sewage treatment plant.  If the attorney and the board at that time did not believe that to be true they should not have signed the contract.

 

Mayor Cramer - He even said that they had to put some sort of ownership in there so you could get the bond.

 

Councilperson Maul – Alright so we are not getting anywhere.

 

Councilperson Kenyon – It’s okay. That’s your position and we are perfectly satisfied and completely understand that position.  As long as you are not willing to allow the Town to have partial ownership which is our position not 100% ownership.  We never asked for 100% ownership. We want property interest in that because we feel as a town that we have invested in that.  Your position is that you didn’t.  Your position is it was simply capacity.  We disagree and that’s why we are where we are at.

 

Mayor Cramer - Its not hearsay it’s a fact. And I do know that.

 

Councilperson Kenyon – It’s your position.  We have a different position based on the contract.

 

Mayor Cramer – It’s an interpretation of what you are reading on the contract.

 

Councilperson Maul - How can you interpret the sentence that we just read you?

 

Mayor Cramer - Okay but you have to read the beginning of that.

 

Councilperson Maul - Read the whole thing if you want right now aloud. 

 

Mayor Cramer - I don’t have it. 

 

Councilperson Maul - You will not find anything that contradicts that statement.

 

Trustee Sliney – Let’s get back to the initial question that I asked. We keep talking about vested interest. We keep talking about ownership. What is your

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position?  Do you want to go by this now expired contract that set the ground rules? Is that okay?

 

Councilperson Maul – That was our intent before the contract expired but we could not engage a conversation to make that happen.

 

Trustee Sliney – Are you still willing to do that?

 

Councilperson Maul – I believe we are.

 

Supervisor Hammond - Yes

 

Councilperson Pagano – As long as we have ownership.

 

Trustee Kelly – Define ownership. You have transmission lines we have transmission lines

 

Councilman Maul – Let me try another example of vested interest.  You have probably heard the term if you are employed by somebody that has retirement or pension plan you have heard the term that after three or five years or however long you worked there you are vested in that plan.  That means that if you sever from that company for whatever reason they let you go you decided to move on to another company that is yours.  They don’t say well you were only vested while you were an employee.  Now that you are not an employee anymore you do not own it.  That’s what vested means.  It means you own it.  And that’s what we expect it to mean in this contract as well.  And it is corroborated by the statement that David and I have both read to you.  It’s as clear as words can be.

 

Trustee Sliney - Who would run the plant?

 

Trustee Kelly – The way the contract read we would run it.

 

Mayor Cramer – But the contract is expired so therefore that is all null and void so you would have to have a new one.

 

Trustee Sliney – The point I am making is if we are going to have a good discussion about this and I think the residents of the Town of Macedon of which we are a part of deserve that.  I think we have to decide do you want to put employees down there do you want to have a committee that has equal votes.  We use to have a committee.  Do you remember that David?

 

Mayor Cramer – We still do.  We just don’t meet.

 

Trustee Sliney - I think part of this problem in my view is we are talking in generalities.  If you want to have a vested interest i.e. ownership I think we need to get down to the point of what do you want?  Are you satisfied with the way this was written?  I mean that calculation is easy David.  Then it would eventually get up no worst than 50/50. 

 

Councilperson Maul – My position is we weren’t trying to ask for more than what we agreed to.  We were just trying to ask for what we agreed to.

 

Trustee Kelly – You did ask for more.

 

Councilperson Maul – When did we ask for more?

 

Trustee Kelly – In the paperwork you asked for 50%.

 

 

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Councilperson Maul – It was my understanding that we were at 50%.  So if that’s in error then as I said earlier tonight whatever the number is that’s what I want.  If it’s 30 if its 35 if its 50 whatever the number is but I don’t expect more than 50  because that was the agreement we have been working under the whole time since 1989.

 

Supervisor Hammond – Can I ask a question back the other direction?  If you are going to own it completely and you are going to have a customer driven base for us what does that mean to my taxpayers?  What does that mean to the people outside the Village?  What’s their sewer rent going to be?  Are they going to rise? Are they going to double?  How is the Town going to receive units?  We are growing we are expanding.  What do we have to do to come and get units if a factory comes in and wants to open up and we need 100 units?  Are we going to be at the mercy of the Village Board to say no we are not going to give you those sewer units?  It could come down to where the Village Board could control the growth of the Town.

 

Trustee Kelly - If the sewer units are available.  Not after we put it in the agreement the way it is now.  Nobody ever denied you capacity and no one ever would.  The unfortunate part was you never reached capacity.

 

Supervisor Hammond – The agreement covered it.  But what I am telling you that if you are telling me we have no vested interest in that plant and that we are just a customer you are going to write a contract with us that says you are going to pay x amount are we going to negotiate that on a yearly basis? Are we going to do it on a 5 year agreement?  How are we going to treat units?  Do we have to give you a year’s notice of how many we might need? When we are in the moment with somebody coming in we need to move fairly quick.  It’s one of the reasons we have been fairly successful bringing business to town is the ability that we can move you through the process fairly quick.  I am sure that the Village sales tax has increased dramatically since Lowes and Wal-Mart and a lot of things have happened in the Town.  Those are all huge advantages to all of us.

 

Mayor Cramer – It was my interpretation that was one of the questions with all the growth that was coming would you even come to that 2/3 capacity.  We can’t even see where you would go beyond that. So that’s not even going to be an issue the capacity.  As you are putting units in then that is how we do it. And according to the Village sewer rent when it comes to that part of it  it stipulates that  the joint board meetings of representatives of both the Town and the Village will determine what the rates are going to be for increases. So you are having a participation in that.

 

Councilperson Maul – I need a clearer answer from you because then every time I have brought up the contract before you have been clear that contract doesn’t exist anymore.  So does it or not?  Can we go by the contract terms or can’t we?

 

Mayor Cramer – To me right now the 20 years up is done.  In December it was done. 

 

Councilperson Maul – You just used the contract as a means of assuring me us that we would still operate under the same terms.

 

Mayor Cramer – No because we said in the interim that we would still provide you with the same capacity.  We would still provide the service you’d still pay it we would still do the operations and maintenance.

 

Councilperson Maul – That was the sticking point that proposal you demanded that we withdraw our claim.  We can’t do that.  We spent $2.5 million of the town

 

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taxpayer’s money and we are not going to just say oh well they are not going to get anything for it.

 

Mayor Cramer – What happens like with Wayne County Water & Sewer Authority?  We are spending a lot of money towards them.  So should I own part of them?

 

Councilperson Maul – Do you have a contract that says you are a part owner? No.  Do you have a contract with us that is saying we are a part owner? Yes. That’s the difference.

 

Supervisor Hammond – How are you spending money with Wayne County Sewer & Water? 

 

Mayor Cramer - We buy water.

 

Trustee Sliney - On a wholesale level.

 

Supervisor Hammond – That was your decision to buy water so you could resell it. 

 

Councilperson Kenyon - You are a customer.

 

Mayor Cramer - We don’t have any choice when they are going to …

 

Councilperson Kenyon - You are a customer.

 

Councilperson Maul – Exactly and that’s the position we don’t want to be in.

 

Councilperson McEwen – We paid $2.5 million.  Matter a fact I’m a taxpayer outside the sewer districts.  I paid for that plant and I have virtually no benefit.

 

Trustee Kelly – Let’s just say can we go back to the question how do we move forward?

 

Mayor Cramer – That makes a good point do you contract with Walworth?  Walworth sewer?

 

Supervisor Hammond – Yes

 

Mayor Crammer – So do you have ownership with them?

 

Supervisor Hammond – That’s not how the contract was written.

 

Councilperson McEwen - We did not invest in their plant with a bond.

 

Councilperson Kenyon - We are a customer because we have no investment in their facilities.

 

Trustee Kelly – In their contract and all that it states that anything that you done on your side you would pay for and so forth and so on.  It kind of basically says what ours says also.  Because in this contract we say basically the same thing if your are doing something with your transmission lines and we are doing something with our transmission lines it’s on us.  That’s really where we are at.  We did have a contract it says ownership. To me it was very poor wording or it shouldn’t have been an intermunicipal agreement that expired. 

 

 

 

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Councilperson Kenyon – You have to under the position the board had at the time by virtue of comptroller decision and bond attorney decision was that we had to..

 

Trustee Kelly – Could I see that letter?

 

Councilperson Kenyon – You have it right?

 

Trustee Kelly – I don’t have it.  I’ve never seen it.

 

Mayor Cramer – How about you read it so the public understands.

 

Councilman Maul – I can do that.  Which letter do you want to hear?  There were a few letters from the bond council, letter from Mr. Sapienza to the State Comptroller and a response from the Comptroller. Which one would you like to hear.

 

Mayor Cramer – All of them then.

 

Councilman Maul – The first one is from the Mr. Galloway Bond Council to Maury Strobridge Attorney dated September 15, 1972.

“You have informed us that the Village of Macedon presently owns sewage treatment plant facilities situated on a parcel of real property owned by said Village, said parcel being located outside of the Village boundaries but within the boundaries of the Town of Macedon.

 

The present capacity of the plant is sufficient for the Village’s needs, both present and those projected for the foreseeable future.

 

The Town of Macedon, on behalf of one or more sewer districts in the Town, is considering the possibility of entering into some sort of arrangement whereby the Town would construct and finance an expansion of the Village’s treatment plant facilities to serve the Town water districts concerned.

 

In our opinion such an arrangement may be achieved pursuant to Article 5-G of the General Municipal Law.

 

The Town and Village would enter into a municipal cooperation agreement whereby the two entities would agree to provide sewage treatment facilities to both the Village and the Town on a joint basis.  As part of the agreement the Village must agree to convey an undivided real property interest in the treatment facilities to the Town in consideration of which the Town would agree to finance the expansion of such facilities.

 

This opinion has been written pursuant to your telephone request of September 14, 1972.”

 

Mayor Cramer – Now I need clarification because what expansion was that? Do you remember? The one that you had done would have been 89-90.

 

Supervisor Hammond – You need to understand if you really go back through the history of this it started years before the actual expansion.  It started in 1972 with that conversation.  That’s how long the two parties were discussing the fact that at some point in time that plant needed to be expanded to meet the needs of both communities.  It started in 1972 and it took quite some time.  The boards met numerous times to resolve the number of issues and go forth.

 

Councilman Maul – Read the 1/9/1973 letter from Village Attorney Jim Sapienza to the State Comptroller:

NO.    14                                                                                      Page 13

May 23, 2013

 

 

“Re:  Village of Macedon

 

Please be advised that I am the village attorney for the Village of Macedon, Wayne County, New York,

 

The Village of Macedon presently operates a sanitary sewer collection system and treatment plant which is financed through the Farmers Home Administration.

 

The Town of Macedon and the Village of Macedon have entered into preliminary discussions concerning the expansion of the existing plant so as to service certain proposed districts in the Town of Macedon.

 

It is proposed by bond counsel that the town could finance the expansion of the plant if they would enter into an intermunicipal contract with the village concerning the operation of the treatment plant site and main trunk sewer line.  This is predicated upon the Village of Macedon conveying to the town a vested interest in the treatment plant and site.

 

I enclose herewith a copy of the letter received by the Town of Macedon town attorney concerning this proposal.

 

Specifically I would respectfully request your opinion as to the following:

  1. May the Village of Macedon convey a vested interest in their treatment plant and site so as to enter into an intermunicipal contract with the town?
  2. If the village can divest itself of a portion of the ownership of the treatment plant side, is this subject to public hearing and mandatory referendum?

Very truly yours, James L. Sapienza”

 

and the 1/16/1973 response to Mr. Sapienza for the State Comptroller:

“Re:  Village of Macedon

 

Dear Sir:

 

This is in reply to your letter of January 9, 1973, concerning an expansion of the village treatment plant by the Town of Macedon, and a conveyance, by the village to the town, of an undivided interest in such treatment plant.

 

It appears that the Town of Macedon is contemplating the issuance of bonds to finance the cost of the sewer plant expansion work and that its bond counsel has suggested that, before the town issues bonds for such work, it should have an undivided ownership interest in the treatment plant facilities.

 

Please be advised that it is the opinion of this Department that the Village of Macedon could, pursuant to Article 5-G of the General Municipal Law, if it were so disposed, enter into an agreement with the Town of Macedon whereby the town would expand the village sewage treatment plant and the village would grant to the town an interest in the sewage treatment facilities.  This Department, of course, cannot pass on the desirability of such arrangement, since such a decision must rest with the village board of trustees.

 

This Department is also of the opinion that, if the village should transfer an interest to the town, pursuant to an Article 5-G agreement, such action would not be subject to either a public hearing or referendum requirements.  However, if such an agreement is entered into, it might be expedient for the village to include therein provisions setting forth the exact interest that the town is to have, in the event that the facilities or a portion of them is later sold or acquired through condemnation or appropriation.  Under such an agreement, serious difficulties might arise in the event that a portion of the real property, on which the facilities

NO.    14                                                                                      Page 14

May 23, 2013

 

are located, is sold or condemned, where the physical improvements are not taken or affected by such conveyance or taking.

 

A type of situation that we have in mind is where a strip of land might be appropriated by the State for highway purposes.  Without any agreement to the contrary, it would appear that the town might be entitled to share in the award solely because of its undivided real property interest in the facilities.

 

We trust that the above will be of assistance to you.

Very truly yours,

Arthur Levitt

State Comptroller”

 

Trustee Kelly – Where is the documentation of what part of interest you have in it?  I guess that’s where I’m at.  We have a building down there and nobody defined the interest.  I think if anything if we are going through a new contract that’s what needs to be defined.  I didn’t understand when the papers were drawn up while you were demanding documentation. My thing was how did you get the bond without document.  Do you have documentation with your bond papers?  In other words through what the interest you have in it.  I think that has been overlooked.  You asked us for documentation of what you had and I don’t have a clue but you should because when you went for the bond there ought to be something in the bond papers that has the interest that you were to make.  Is that not true or am I out of line.

 

Councilperson Maul – I think your comment is probably correct and I think it’s also true we don’t have such a document.  I think that is part of the urgency that in June when we started to approached the Mayor saying look this contract is about to expire we want the documentation explaining what our ownership percentage is.

 

Trustee Kelly – Apparently nobody has it.

 

Councilperson Maul – It would be a document that would be easy for you to generate and give to us because you at the time were the owner of record.  We wanted to make sure that our rights were preserved under this contract showing that we were also part owners.

 

Trustee Kelly – Well that’s what we need to discuss.

 

Councilperson Maul – That’s what we wanted to discuss.

 

Trustee Kelly – That’s not what it said.

 

Councilperson Maul – No I’m talking about originally Dave.  We ended up where we ended up because we couldn’t get a conversation.  Our original conversation was we need to sit down and talk about this and formalize the agreement in terms of whatever the legal document is saying you are an x percent owner.  And we couldn’t engage the conversation.  That’s why we ended up where we are.  We didn’t start with a notice of claim. We started with requests for a meeting. And we didn’t get a meeting.

 

Trustee Kelly – It just went on kind of randomly.

 

Councilperson Maul – But the contract ended in December.  We didn’t have a lot of time to dance around this.  We asked we got no answer.  We got the feeling that there was no interest in discussion.  We had to do what we had to do to protect our rights.

 

 

NO.    14                                                                                      Page 15

May 23, 2013

 

Supervisor Hammond – In September we received a call saying here’s the bond money we would like to pay it of early.  That was what threw up some red flags to say what are these guys doing?   They want us to pay this contract off early so what they can claim ownership sooner?

 

Mayor Cramer – No the reason why we had the money.

 

Supervisor Hammond – You had the money every year.  You want to pay it off early this one particular year when we are asking for a meeting to discuss the contract issue.

 

Mayor Cramer – Because I had been Mayor at that point.  So when we were talking about all this stuff. We happened to say in September we already have the money allocated why don’t we just pay it off and be done with it. 

 

Trustee Kelly – They aren’t paying a whole lot of interest now.

 

Mayor Cramer – Send it over to Kim and have her pay it off.  Kim said no we were going to wait until December when we are going to pay it all off.

 

Councilperson Maul – Fair enough if that was your motivation but you have to understand out perspective with the constant overtures for discussion that wouldn’t happen and then that happened.  It all just kind of played together as Bill said throw up a red flag.  If that’s not you intention then our bad.  We made a mistake.  But in the context of the kinds of relationship that was developing between your board and ours it wasn’t a good sign to us.  At least that’s my opinion.  It fit in with the we don’t want to play.

 

Councilperson McEwen – Particularly when the contract said once the bond is paid off then the contract is over.

 

Mayor Cramer – But you should have called too at that time.

 

Councilperson Kenyon – We did

 

Mayor Cramer – You guys can laugh but you have no idea how many times did they try to have that conversation.

 

Councilperson McEwen – How many times should we call?

 

Mayor Cramer – No you didn’t call there were e-mails.

 

Councilperson Maul – E-mails and visited your meetings twice.

 

Mayor Cramer – Yep and I didn’t say that about the sewer.  The sewer what I had said at that point we would look into it because at the time the attorney was looking at the ambulance contract because you had presented one a month earlier. And so I said he was still looking at it and making some changes which you had already known that they were going to make changes because when you presented it you had said there is probably going to be some changes. And I said yes.

 

Supervisor Hammond – We offered you an ambulance contract and said please review it and if you have any changes please make them. And that’s all we said.  We didn’t give you a contract and say here it is this is it.  If you have any changes please make them and we will meet later.

 

 

NO.    14                                                                                      Page 16

May 23, 2013

 

Mayor Cramer – Exactly and when we came back later and then you said you wanted to know what the position of the ambulance was the contract.  And I said we had looked into it and the attorney had it and it was fine.  And at that time you started talking about the sewer.

 

Councilperson Maul – It was fine in June, it’s not fine as we get into September October.

 

Mayor Cramer – It wasn’t June.  It was July and August. July I had the first contact.

 

Supervisor Hammond - You need to understand that we have to give you 90 days prior to any type of legal action taken.  So we had to file our notice of claim 90 days prior to the end of contract and that’s what we did to protect our taxpayers.

 

Councilperson Maul – So anyway Dave you are making the point that you would like to move forward to see if there is a way to resolve this.  Me too, I think we all feel that way.

 

Trustee Kelly – I would like to know where we are talking vested interest.  Are we talking clarifiers are we talking equipment inside the building what are we talking.  We certainly can’t be talking about property because we have our DPW on the property. We have a building on there.

 

Supervisor Hammond – Did you know that at one time the Town owned that land?   We cooperated quite a bit. 

 

Mayor Cramer – We also cooperated too.  For the taxpayers it was cheaper.  In the long run it was going to be cheaper.

 

Supervisor Hammond - It benefited all of us.  We want it to continue to benefit all of us.

 

Trustee Kelly - Everything we do should be a benefit to the Town of Macedon.  We are all the Town.  I would like to move forward with this.  I would like to answer your question as far as we have had this study done and we have entered the final review on it.  You have asked us were we thought we were going structure wise and what it is going to cost our customers.  What I am working around now we are looking at a slight increase and I’m not talking about anything major once it goes into effect.   Right now it looks like the first stand of what we need to get done is the clarifiers and that looks like it is going to be a $2.5 million project.  But I believe it is something that can be handled by customer base.  As far as what has happened over the course of the years our customer base ought to be really really happy with us because for the rates that we have we are at $240/year.  Now in order to even consider getting grant money we are supposed to be well over collecting $500.  Last paperwork I got if you weren’t collecting $600/year from your constituents then you wouldn’t even be considered for a grant.  So we are well underneath that and we will always be well underneath that.  We are trying to get this study done. I’m trying to get the expansion done and get us in the ten stage limits and run it like a business.  And I would like to do an agreement.  This time I would like our agreement to be worked on by the Town and the Village the way it should have been worked on and then we probably would never had been at this point.  And that was both boards’ faults as far as I’m concerned. And not necessarily you guys because you walked in it like we walked it in.  And there is no we are talking interest and there is nothing there that said what it was what the intention was.  This was like a good old boys club.

 

NO.    14                                                                                      Page 17

May 23, 2013

 

 

Councilperson Maul – When that became apparent toward the end of its term that’s when we said we had to formalize it.

 

Trustee Kelly – If you think you needed a long time to do the sewer use law we definitely need some time to work out the agreement that’s when we offered you the temporary agreement because Bill said he couldn’t pay us without an agreement.

 

Supervisor Hammond – If you hadn’t put the idea we had to drop all claims we couldn’t do that.

 

Trustee Kelly – You could have come back to us.  We had that discussion it can’t hurt to put it in there that’s all they can do is object to it. 

 

Councilperson Maul – Our attorney talked to your attorney.  Our attorney and your attorney can communicate very clearly what our objections were.  Whether or not that was shared with you or not I have no idea.  Our objection was very clear that we were not going to do anything that required us to withdraw our claim.

 

Councilperson Pagano – Of ownership

 

Trustee Kelly - Like I say that’s what we need to define ownership

 

Mayor Cramer – I am fact based.  When we are making big decisions like this I need the facts.  I’m wondering do we come back and obviously we have to discuss this more that one meeting.  We have to.

 

Councilperson Maul – The one meeting was do we even have a basis to go on.  If your position was you are not going to own anything then there is no reason for another meeting.

 

Mayor Cramer – I guess what I would like to entertain is to have at the next meeting Mr. Sapienza come so that we both boards understand.  You may have questions that we may not be thinking of.

 

Councilperson Maul – You can do that but it won’t change my mind.

 

Councilperson McEwen – The documentation tells the story.

 

Councilperson Maul - This is right here.  You signed a contract. We signed a contract. We want to go by the contract.  I don’t care what any attorney from 20 years ago or from 20 days ago tells me.  I know what we signed.  Not me but we the Town signed and the Village signed.

 

Mayor Cramer – But what was their intension?

 

Councilperson Kenyon – But that’s okay.  If you can’t come to terms with that.

 

Mayor Cramer – No what I am saying I would just like to get there are things you are asking that I can’t ask on some things.  Neither one of us were there.  I just want to be able to see what they were thinking.

 

Councilperson Kenyon – I was probably there.  I’ve been around forever.  Is the Village willing to convey ownership?  Haven’t I Judy?

 

Mayor Cramer – I guess we have to look at both ends.

 

NO.    14                                                                                      Page 18

May 23, 2013

 

 

Councilperson Kenyon – You can talk to Mr. Sapienza.  He is a fine upstanding man.  I have no doubt about his position or what he may have told you.  The question goes back to what we believe we had.  It is that simple.

 

Councilperson Maul – And having someone tell us 20 years later what we meant.  I don’t care.  What did you sign?  You can’t resolve disputes by what I meant to say 20 years ago.  You didn’t say it and we didn’t sign it.  So you can bring him if you want but it’s not going to change my position.  I’m only speaking for one person.

 

Councilperson Kenyon – Again it’s a position.  It may have been his position at the time.  That may have been Mr. Sapienza’s position at the time.

 

Mayor Cramer – Or both Board’s positions at the time.  Because I wasn’t there.  You weren’t there.

 

Councilperson Maul – Neither was I

 

Councilperson Kenyon - Our position is there is ownership.

 

Councilperson Maul – I can’t imagine any reasonable person if that was their intention signing this contract because it says completely different things than what you are saying their intentions were.  So either they did just general half track right what am I signing right?  If you read it and you signed it then you go by it.  You don’t get to come back later and say well that’s not what I meant.

 

Resident – You read letters but can you read the contract to us?

 

Councilperson Maul – It’s like 20 pages.

 

Councilperson Pagano – I think the thing we are looking for can the Village Trustees and the Mayor give us ownership of the sewer?  If you can say yes then we can move on and have another meeting. 

 

Councilperson Kenyon – Not all - a percentage.

 

 

Councilperson Pagano - But if they are not willing to give us a percentage of the ownership

 

Trustee Sliney – How many times do I have to say what do you want?  We are willing to talk about it.  You keep going back in history about why this happened why that happened.

 

Mayor Cramer – Do you want bullet points is that what you are saying?

 

Trustee Sliney – I think what we need to take this take the guts of it which is pretty good.  Take out what is stupid leave in what is good add what we need to add and get this over with.

 

Councilperson Maul – That sounds great to me.  That’s all we wanted from the beginning.

 

Trustee Sliney – I tried to say it.

 

Councilperson Maul – I mean from nine (9) months ago.

 

Trustee Sliney – So where do we go from here?

NO.    14                                                                                      Page 19

May 23, 2013

 

Councilperson Maul – I think I’m doing too much of the talking.  In my opinion this meeting was to find out whether you had any inclination to pursue us being a joint owner.  If you didn’t then there wouldn’t be any need for another meeting.  If you do if the majority of you do have that inclination then we have another meeting and start hammering out details.

 

Councilperson Kenyon – I think you made a point earlier Dave about usage.  If that conveyance of ownership is based on units or usage then that may be a good vehicle to get us down the road.

 

Trustee Sliney – That is what this one was.

 

Supervisor Hammond – Wouldn’t we direct each of our attorneys to meet and maybe describe to us what the interest that defines ownership?

 

Mayor Cramer – I don’t think we should.  Isn’t that the point we are trying to save our taxpayers money.  Every time we pull in our lawyers you know.  When it comes down

 

Supervisor Hammond – They are both going to advise us what we are signing is

 

Mayor Cramer – No before the signing.  I am saying while we are working on the agreement that we should be able to come to terms that we are both happy and before we agree to it have our attorneys review it.

 

Supervisor Hammond - There seems to be I don’t know I don’t think I can define interest.  I don’t know that you can David or David.  But I think if we ask our attorneys to suggest to both of us to come up with some language as to what interest is and how the Town can receive interest in that plant in some fashion.

 

Trustee Kelly – I think that is the big sticking point right there.  The part that came apart everybody works on triggers.  If everybody read the contract and my whole thing the whole time was they keep saying 50%.  There is no way shape or form they have ever reached 50%.  And that was my whole stance on that whole thing.

 

Councilperson Maul – That’s fine. We are not asking for more than we are due.

 

Trustee Sliney - We can write in the contract we will meet every year and review the sewer units.  This isn’t that hard.  It really isn’t.

 

Trustee Kelly – It worked for 20 years in spite of us.

 

Mayor Cramer – What is the process Kathy right now that is in place?  Is it that Kim goes once a year and she verifies it and sends it to you the sewer units?

 

Councilperson Pagano – You can ask Kim she is here.

 

Accountant Leonard – Basically if you read the contract the contract has a formula to establish enough of units commercial industrial and residential.  So what I submit to Kathy water usage exactly the formulas and how much each person is assessed for billing.  It is very clear cut that the units are in proportion of ownership everything.  Plus the users pay you and then they have to pay us over and above because they have to pay for the pump stations electric man time.  We have extra expenses.  Ours is $400/year and yours is $252 so there is a big different in aspects in who was controlling the plant.  Basically I was there 30 years ago.  The whole idea was percentages would go with the number of units not that the board wanted 50% it just would keep going how ever fast the Town

 

NO.    14                                                                                      Page 20

May 23, 2013

 

grew and not go above 50%.  I think right now we are going to be at 31%/70%.  I’m not sure.  It’s not 50/50.  I don’t think it was ever assumed to be 50/50. 

 

Supervisor Hammond - There was some expectations in that time frame that there was going to be a real need for this.  Unfortunately this district hasn’t grown that much.

 

Trustee Kelly – My hope would be that it starts growing and we all prosper from it and get the sewer plant recreated the way it needs to be off our customer base.  I asked you what plans you had at the time and apparently there wasn’t any at the time. The more customer base you have the happier

 

Councilperson Kenyon – The other piece of it is the idea of the sewer use law.  One of the reasons we would along with what Bill was talking about it could be incorporated in the agreement.  One of the things that Dave Kelly mentioned earlier is the sewer use law.


Trustee Kelly - I think we would have to have it directly implemented at the agreement time.  It didn’t happen after that.  It did cost us.

 

Councilperson Kenyon - That would be the advantage of having the attorneys doing it because they could incorporate the uniform code into the agreement that would affect both the Village and the Town.  It’s a Village/Town agreement and that way we resolve the code issue and the agreement issue all at the same time rather than have to go back and do it after the fact.  That is just a suggestion.

 

Mayor Cramer – Our calculations are based on the DEC calculations and that’s how we got the formula.  Our sewer use law is off that too.

 

Supervisor Hammond – Basically the same with what we have with Walworth.

 

Trustee Kelly – Actually theirs is pretty standard.  The only difference actually between theirs and ours was there was no talk about ownership.  The agreement is pretty standard.  We are not that far off.  We can actually probably use theirs.  That one apparently got adopted.  I don’t know why ours never got adopted by the Town.

 

Supervisor Hammond – Again we weren’t notified until this issue with Bakewise.  We thought we had the same agreement that you had.

 

Trustee Sliney – I’m thinking about what the next step is and how we could rewrite this.  A major step in the agreement which is very loosely covered is governance.  We have to decide how that plant is going to run.  That I think we can resolve also.

 

Supervisor Hammond – David could we I’ll throw this out could we take two members of your board and two members of your board and sit down and meet with the attorneys and draft something?  Let’s hammer a contract together.  That’s how we do it at the County level.  We sit down several of us from committee that has a connection with whatever we are discussing at the time and we pick a couple of the guys and hammer out a contract. 

 

Trustee Sliney – We can’t vote because we are not in session right now.

 

Supervisor Hammond – I think it’s just a general agreement that we will do that.  You tell us who you want.  We will get together and discuss that.  We will get some times and dates and speak with our attorneys and sit down.  You let us know how your board decides.  I think it has been a good discussion.  Anyone

 

NO.    14                                                                                      Page 21

May 23, 2013

 

else have any comments before we kind of dismiss and take a break before the board comes back into regular session.

 

Mayor Cramer – Are we going to talk about fire for just a little bit.

 

Supervisor Hammond – I really need to move into our regular agenda.

 

Councilperson Maul – Can you do it in 5 minutes Marie?

 

Mayor Cramer – I think so if not we will have to set up at time because it’s affecting us. 

 

Councilperson Maul – Why don’t you start with your position of how what we did   affects you?

 

Mayor Cramer - First of all I didn’t know anything until I just happened yesterday to see in your minutes the actual contract of the fire contract.  I had e-mailed the Supervisor when I found out that you had agreed and signed it as a board here on the 25th before Macedon Center.  I asked for a view of it and I didn’t receive anything so we don’t even know what we are really looking at.  We have no idea how we are going to be a part of it.

 

Councilperson Maul – You are not.  It’s a contract with Macedon Center.

 

Mayor Cramer – I know but how is it going to affect us.

 

Councilperson Maul – It’s not. 

 

Mayor Cramer – Really?

 

Councilperson Maul - Why would a contract with Party B affect Party A? 

 

Mayor Cramer - Because I have not idea.  You haven’t talked.

 

Councilperson Maul – First of all it is the same contract I believe you had a copy of it before the public hearing that was here that night where we had the place full of people yelling at us.  Remember that one?  It was the same contract.  We didn’t change a word.  The difference was the public hearing had attached to it that that would be instead of the singing an agreement with the Village.  We made it very clear when we went ahead of signed this with the Macedon Center Fire Department that it did not mean the severance of the relationship with the Village.  That’s the part that we changed. But the agreement with Macedon Center is the exact same one that we had a public hearing about whenever that was.  I don’t remember when that was but you remember it I’m sure.

 

Mayor Cramer – But the one in your minutes there are actually some different things added than the original.  The fees are the same number 7 was added the first annual payment was added.  So I am trying to see which one is the one.  Was this even different from the one Macedon Center has signed?  Is there a way we could get a copy of the one that is signed? 

 

Councilperson Maul – I would have to see it and compare it with yours.  It is my understanding it is the same one.  But again this doesn’t affect you. It’s that simple.  It’s not a contract with you.  It’s a contract with them.  And it falls along the spirit of  alternative 1 where we all walked away as Dave said singing kumbaya that night saying gee wouldn’t it be great to have some extra coverage perhaps someday having a facility down on the west end of town.  As Dave said we all sang kumbaya.  We sent you a letter saying we believe our

 

NO.    14                                                                                      Page 22

May 23, 2013

 

agreement in principal was that we were all around alternative 1 would you like us to make a draft to comment on and again we got crickets.

 

Mayor Cramer – That is not true, now stop. Supervisor Hammond sent me a letter stating thank you very much for a great meeting.  It was our understanding that the Board is interested in alternative 1.  If that is true please write that in writing.  I then e-mailed him and said let me get back to you we have a board meeting on the 24th.  The 25th you guys decided on it and signed a contract. So we didn’t even have anything.

 

Councilperson Maul – We decided on a contract with Macedon Center of the 25th.  That has nothing to do with our discussion in asking your response on alternative 1.

 

Mayor Cramer - Alternative 1 was part of Macedon Center incorporated it and we left that joint meeting originally saying that we were going to come back. Let’s look into it that is out of all the alternatives that were proposed that that was the one that if we were to do it we liked the one that we proposed originally and maybe we would add maybe 4 extra things or we would go with the alternative.  We would all come back and figure out which one would be the best.  But we didn’t say anything about a new fire hall like what is going to happen with the fire hall.  Is there going to be a new fire hall built?  Who’s going to put in there

 

Councilperson Maul – We haven’t made that decision. We haven’t made any decision like that without engaging you.  We haven’t decided to build anything.

 

Mayor Cramer - To be fair you guys have had the discussion. You understand your plan. We don’t.  We don’t know anything that is going on.

 

Councilperson Kenyon – You guys are going to have a contract with the Town.

 

Mayor Cramer – Thank you but that is the first I have heard of it.

 

Councilpersons Maul, Kenyon & McEwen – No it’s not.

 

Councilperson McEwen – We even put it in the public notice.

 

Councilperson Maul – We can find the paper where it says in the ad that we have every intension of signing an agreement with the Village of Macedon.

 

Trustee Kelly – I think it’s in your minutes too.

 

Mayor Cramer – Did you call me to say this is what we are thinking?

 

Councilperson Maul – You got a letter which you just agreed saying our joint intention was to go along with something like alternative 1.  Would you like us to make a draft that you could comment on and your only answer was I’ll get back to you?

 

Mayor Cramer – We did not know because we had not seen the Macedon Center contract if it affected us.

 

Councilperson Maul - Yes you had.  It was the subject of public hearing weeks before that that you attended. 

 

Mayor Cramer – I did not know. We did not know until I saw that contract in my hand.

 

 

NO.    14                                                                                      Page 23

May 23, 2013

 

Councilperson Kenyon – What does that contract have to do with the contract with Macedon?

 

Mayor Cramer – Because I didn’t know if you drafted another type of contract and that you included something different.  Dave how would I know?  How would I know?

 

Councilperson McEwen - What difference does it make?  We are going to sign a contract with the Village Fire Department.

 

Mayor Cramer - You could have added additional things that could have affected us.  We had no idea.

 

Councilperson Maul – We could not have done anything that affected you unless you were a signatory.  And you weren’t.  The contract is between Macedon Center and the Town of Macedon.  It has nothing to do with you.

 

Councilperson Kenyon - We can’t do anything to affect you.

 

Mayor Cramer – I did not know that.

 

Councilperson Pagano – Marie, you can’t control the Town. You may try to control your Village Trustees but you can’t control the Town because that is what you are trying to do right now. You are trying to control our signatures.  You have nothing to do with our Macedon Center Fire Department and our contract. And it is true that we didn’t hear from you. You always say let’s wait let’s wait let’s wait.  You are always too busy. 

 

Mayor Cramer – No I’m not. 

 

Councilperson Pagano - Really?  Okay

 

Mayor Cramer - What I am trying to say is what I did not know in the new contract if it had something that affected us. 

 

Councilperson Pagano - It doesn’t.

 

Mayor Cramer - Now I know.

 

Councilperson Pagano - We have the intent of signing with the Village.

 

Councilperson Kenyon - You could have found that out with a phone call.

 

Councilperson Maul - It never could.  I can’t sign a contract with Bill that affects something about Paul’s life.  I can’t do that and we can’t do that about you either.  The only thing affects you is the contract that ultimately you sign with us for 2014.  That’s the only thing that will affect the Village and that contract doesn’t exist yet.

 

Councilperson Kenyon - Your attorney could have told you that.

 

Councilperson Pagano - And you could have picked up the phone.

 

Mayor Cramer – I e-mailed.

 

Councilperson Pagano – You could have picked up the phone.  That’s what you just said.  You can spin it any way you want.  That’s the bottom line.

 

 

NO.    14                                                                                      Page 24

May 23, 2013

 

Councilperson Maul – I am glad that there was the groundwork that we can get together and perhaps solve this sewer thing without it going any further in litigation.  It wasn’t something we wanted to do either.  It was a position of last resort as far as I am concerned.  I’m glad that cooler heads are prevailing.

 

At 9:00 p.m. the Town Board went on break prior to beginning their regularly scheduled meeting.

 

The Town Attorney entered the board meeting.

 

RESOLUTION NO. 128 (13) APPROVAL OF MINUTES

RESOLVED the Board approves the minutes of May 9, 2013 as presented.

MOTION BY MAUL, SECONDED BY PAGANO

ROLL CALL VOTE:  KENYON AYE, MAUL AYE, MCEWEN AYE,

PAGANO AYE, HAMMOND AYE  MOTION CARRIED

 

REPORTS – Supervisor Hammond presented the following:

Historian April Report

Police April Report

 

RESOLUTION NO. 129 (12) APPROVAL OF REPORTS

RESOLVED the Board approves the reports as submitted.

MOTION BY HAMMOND, SECONDED BY KENYON

ROLL CALL VOTE:  KENYON AYE, MAUL AYE, MCEWEN AYE,

PAGANO AYE, HAMMOND AYE  MOTION CARRIED

 

Lawn Care Bids – Town Hall & Wayneport Road – 3 Treatments

TruGreen

$720   (3 treatments)

Country Green Lawn Care

$1300 (5 treatments)

Weed Man

$1540 (3 treatments)

 

 

RESOLUTION NO. 130 (12) TOWN COMPLEX LAWN CARE

RESOLVED the Town Board approves the contract with TruGreen as the lowest responsible bidder in the amount of $720 for the Public Safety Building and Town Hall and authorize the Supervisor to sign said contract.

MOTION BY MAUL, SECONDED BY MCEWEN

ROLL CALL VOTE:  KENYON AYE, MAUL AYE, MCEWEN AYE,

PAGANO AYE, HAMMOND AYE  MOTION CARRIED

 

RESOLUTION NO. 131 (12) SUMMER RECREATION APPOINTMENTS

RESOLVED the Town Board appoint the following individuals to the Summer Recreation Program as recommended by the Recreation Director:

 

Tennis

Marie Black                                                     $15.00/hr.

Assistant to be named (if needed)                              $11.00/hr.

 

Rec Camp

Christine Grier, Director                                   $16.50/hr.

Jennifer Copp, Assistant Director                     $13.00/hr.

Courtney Cobb                                                $  9.25/hr.

Andrea Colucci, Arts & Crafts Director              $11.00/hr.

Cameron Hood                                                $  9.50/hr.

Brian Vogan                                                    $  9.50/hr.

Kaleigh Vogan                                                 $10.50/hr.

Ruth Brown                                                     $  9.00/hr.

Cody Rogers                                                   $  9.25/hr.

 

NO.    14                                                                                      Page 25

May 23, 2013

 

 

Two (2) assistants to be named later, at minimum wage, if needed because of increased enrollment.

MOTION BY MAUL, SECONDED BY MCEWEN

ROLL CALL VOTE:  KENYON AYE, MAUL AYE, MCEWEN AYE,

PAGANO AYE, HAMMOND AYE  MOTION CARRIED

 

RESOLUTION NO. 132 (13) INTEGRATED SYSTEMS – IT SERVICE AGREEMENT

RESOLVED the Town Board approves the contract with Integrated Systems Contract D in the amount of $7,500.

MOTION BY PAGANO, SECONDED BY MCEWEN

ROLL CALL VOTE:  KENYON AYE, MAUL AYE, MCEWEN AYE,

PAGANO AYE, HAMMOND AYE  MOTION CARRIED

 

RESOLUTION NO. 133 (13) POLICE APPOINTMENT – D’AMATO

BE IT RESOLVED that Thomas G. D’Amato be appointed to the position of Probationary Full-Time Police Officer with the Town of Macedon Police Department at the rate of $19.13 per hour, from the attached Wayne County Civil Service Certification of Eligible effective May 24, 2013. The appointment is to fill an existing vacancy.

MOTION BY MAUL, SECONDED BY KENYON

ROLL CALL VOTE:  KENYON AYE, MAUL AYE, MCEWEN AYE,

PAGANO AYE, HAMMOND AYE  MOTION CARRIED

 

RESOLUTION ON. 134 (13) POLICE APPOINTMENT - DEMCHUK

BE IT RESOLVED that David Demchuk be appointed to the position of Probationary Full-Time Police Officer with the Town of Macedon Police Department at the rate of $19.13 per hour, from the attached Wayne County Civil Service Certification of Eligible effective May 24, 2013. The appointment is to fill an existing vacancy.

MOTION BY KENYON, SECONDED BY MCEWEN

ROLL CALL VOTE:  KENYON AYE, MAUL AYE, MCEWEN AYE,

PAGANO AYE, HAMMOND AYE  MOTION CARRIED

 

It was the consensus of the Board to establish the town office summer hours beginning June 3 through August 31.  The offices will be open Monday through Thursday from 8 AM – 5 PM and will resume regular hours September 3, 2013.

 

RESOLUTION NO. 135 (13) EXECUTIVE SESSION

RESOLVED the Town Board enter Executive Session at 9:35 p.m. to discuss a particular personnel matter.

MOTION BY HAMMOND, SECONDED BY MCEWEN

ROLL CALL VOTE:  KENYON AYE, MAUL AYE, MCEWEN AYE,

PAGANO AYE, HAMMOND AYE  MOTION CARRIED

 

RESOLUTION NO. 136 (13) OPEN SESSION

RESOLVED the Town Board return to Open Session at 9:55 p.m.

MOTION BY HAMMOND, SECONDED BY MCEWEN

ROLL CALL VOTE:  KENYON AYE, MAUL AYE, MCEWEN AYE,

PAGANO AYE, HAMMOND AYE  MOTION CARRIED

 

MOTION BY HAMMOND, SECONDED BY MCEWEN THAT THE MEETING BE ADJOURNED AT 10:38 PM.

 

 

__________________________

Judy W. Gravino

Macedon Town Clerk