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March 17, 2006

Does Ward Two want a school?

On Tuesday, March 14, Ward Two School Committee Member told the Finance Committee, "there is no school now and there needs to be one. ... I know I didn’t have to bring parents here to explain it to you." Cardosa was quoted in a story in the Somerville Journal about the construction of a new school on the site of the former Lincoln Park Community School.

Somerville's School Department has seven elementary schools: Brown School (Ward 6), Cummings School (Ward 3), East Somerville Community School (Ward 1), Healey School (Ward 4), Kennedy School (Ward 5), West Somerville Neighborhood School (Ward 7), and Winter Hill Community School (Ward 4). With the demolition of the Lincoln Park Community School there is no elementary school in Ward Two. There are schools just over the border in Ward Three (the Cummings School on Prescott Street) and Ward Five (the Kennedy School on Cherry Street), but there are no public elementary schools in Ward Two.

According to a press release from Anthony Pierantozzi, Superintendent of Schools,

Currently the students of the former Lincoln Park Community School are attending school at (a) Lincoln Park at Thurston Street, formerly the St. Anne’s School adjacent to the Winter [Hill] Community School [Ward 4] and (b) the Lincoln Park at Edgerly, located in the Edgerly Education Center at the intersection of Cross Street and Bonair Street [Ward 1].

Construction of the proposed Dr. Albert F. Argenziano School at Lincoln Park will not proceed until the Board of Aldermen approves a bond for an additional $14.5 million. For reasons of lack of information and lack of public input, the Finance Committee—comprising Alderman at Large William White, Ward Seven Alderman Robert Trane, Alderman at Large Denise Provost, Ward Two Alderman Maryann Heuston, and Alderman at Large Dennis Sullivan—voted on Tuesday to postpone discussion. The Journal quotes the reasons Finance Committee Chair, William Roche, gave for not being ready to vote on whether or not to approve the $14.5 million debt needed to construct the new school:

"I’m not ready to vote for this tomorrow night, I’ll tell you that. I’m really disappointed with the amount of information."

"I look around and see one or two parents in the room. This place should be jam-packed. There should be 300 parents here. I don’t know if the people of Ward 2 want this project."

The Finance Committee and the Board of Aldermen will meet in City Hall, Tuesday, March 21, at 7 p.m. to discuss funding for and possible alternatives to the Albert F. Argenziano School at Lincoln Park. The public is welcome to attend.

March 15, 2006

Employment Opportunity

The City of Somerville is hiring an Animal Control Officer. The application deadline is March 17, 2006.

Title: Animal Control Officer

Apply Dates:
02/27/2006 - 03/17/2006

Department:
Police Department

Description/Duties:
CITY OF SOMERVILLE ANIMAL CONTROL OFFICER The Animal Control Officer reports to the Police Department and is responsible for: investigating complaints and enforcing state and municipal laws; acting as liaison between the City and K-9 academy; and keeping department records. The Animal Control Officer serves as a clearinghouse for related questions, problems, etc. Somerville residents encouraged to apply.

Requirements:
Minimum qualifications: knowledge of laws relative to animal control/treatment; ability to communicate clearly and concisely.

Salary:
$30,500 - $32,400

Hours per Week:
40 hours per week

Job Location:
Somerville MA 02143

Application Procedure:
Submit cover letter and resume by Friday, March 17, 2006, to:
Personnel Department
City Hall
93 Highland Avenue
Somerville, MA 02143
Fax: 617-666-4426
EOE/AA/M/F/D/V


Best wishes to Somerville's previous ACO, David Renna, who has taken a job as a prison chaplain.

March 6, 2006

Make Maxine a Somerville Dog!

030122Maxine.jpgvia e-mail

"Maxine is an incredibly sweet and elegant 8 year old, 60-pound purebred German Shepherd. She is a very healthy and young-at-heart lady. She loves squeaky toys and tennis balls. She will play fetch for hours if you let her. She also loves going for walks and riding in the car. Maxine has had a bit of a hard time recently and is looking for a loving human to call her own. She is well loved by those who get to know her. Maxine was previously in a home until last summer, when her humans no longer wanted to make time for her. She spent the summer and the fall in the shelter and was on a list to be euthanized. A shelter worker and and a volunteer who both loved Maxine, teamed up to find her a safe place. Maxine is now in an All Dog Rescue foster home in Somerville, MA. Maxine will do best in a home where she can get the love and attention she so deserves! She is well mannered and knows some basic obedience. Maxine is okay with most dogs, but she is not good with cats. She would love to be an only child, so she can make up for lost time and have her human to herself! Maxine will make a loving and devoted companion. Maxine is spayed, up-to-date on shots, crate trained, and house trained."

You can apply to adopt Maxine using the All Dog Rescue online application form.

March 5, 2006

Poop Power

via e-mail

In Duboce Park, in San Francisco, Norcal Waste Systems, a solid waste management company, will be implementing a recycling program to collect dog feces in biodegradable baggies and convert it into methane gas. "The methane can be piped directly to a gas stove, heater, turbine or anything else powered by natural gas," as reported by Carolyn Jones, Staff Writer for the San Francisco Chronicle ("Powered by Pooches," February 21, 2006 ).


POWERED BY POOCHES
Rather than let pet dung go to waste, experts explore its energy potential

- Carolyn Jones, Chronicle Staff Writer

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

In the future, we might be heating our houses with dog poop.

As San Francisco, Oakland and other Bay Area cities strive to reach self-imposed goals of keeping every bit of trash out of landfills by 2020, even animal waste is being scrutinized to see how it might be reused or recycled.

And so San Francisco has become the first city in the country to consider turning Fido's droppings into methane, which can heat homes, cook meals and generate electricity.

"Poop power? Yes, it's possible to produce electricity, natural gas and even fuel from Rover's poop and other waste material," said Robert Reed, a spokesman for Norcal Waste, which carts away the waste San Francisco, San Jose and a dozen other Northern California cities generate. "There are a lot of bugs to work out, steps to figure out, costs to be considered, but we are beginning to talk to the city about it and look into this area more actively."

Animal feces make up nearly 4 percent of San Francisco's residential waste—nearly as much as disposable diapers—so it is a significant stumbling block to cities reaching their landfill goal.

"American dogs and cats produce 10 million tons of waste a year, and no one knows where it's going," said Will Brinton, a scientist in Mount Vernon, Maine, and one of the world's leading authorities on waste reduction and composting. "That's really beginning to be looked at as a nightmare."

Dog and cat waste usually ends up in a landfill, where it's mummified for generations in plastic bags. If it's not tossed out, it's left where it falls and dissolves into the ground, where it flows untreated into the water table or the bay. Or it's scooped up with yard waste and tossed into the compost bin—which is a no-no, because animal waste is full of pathogens.

So San Francisco has asked Sunset Scavenger, a subsidiary of Norcal, to find a use for it.

In the next few months, Norcal hopes to place biodegradable bags and dog-waste carts in Duboce Park, one of the city's busiest dog parks.

The waste will be collected and tossed into a contraption called a methane digester, which is little more than a tank in which bacteria chew on poo for about two weeks to create methane.

The methane can be piped directly to a gas stove, heater, turbine or anything else powered by natural gas.

The idea isn't so far-fetched. Several European countries, developing nations elsewhere in the world and a smattering of American dairy farms already convert animal waste into energy.

Straus Family Creamery in Marin County installed a methane digester in 2000, and it's working great, company officials said.

In a 2004 report prepared for the California Energy Commission, the creamery's manure-to-energy process met or exceeded expectations. The dairy uses the methane to power the plant, saving Straus thousands of dollars a month in energy bills.

There are a few potential glitches, however.

Most households don't produce enough food scraps, animal waste and other organic matter to power an entire home. And most households don't produce waste at a rate consistent enough to be a reliable energy source.

Another problem is that the gas in the methane digester will probably contain small amounts of other gases, which will diminish the methane's efficiency.

But with a few technological tweaks, methane digesters could be used in individual homes within the next few years, said Fernando Berton of the state Integrated Waste Management Board.

"You've got solar panels on homes. Why not home-based anaerobic digestion processes?" he said.

But it's more likely that cities, not individuals, will use methane digestion to produce energy that would be piped to homes, he said.

The state's Integrated Waste Management Board is also eager to explore methane digestion. The board is working with a UC Davis biogas lab to study further uses for methane digestion, and the state is giving out methane
digestion grants to dairies and farms.

"California sends 40 million tons annually to landfill, and over half of it is organic in nature. It makes sense to look at the alternatives," Berton said. "If we can turn something from a waste into a resource, we should be
doing that."

Dog owners seem to be open to recycling their pets' waste. At Bernal Heights dog park in San Francisco, trash cans can overflow with plastic dog-poop bags on a busy weekend.

"It bugs me that I'm sending a plastic-wrapped time capsule of my dogs' stool samples to the landfill every day," said Robert Picciotto, a high school English teacher who regularly walks his setter, Jesse, at the park. "Apparently, that's going to be my shout-out to future generations."

In Oakland, the problem isn't animal waste in landfills, but in the water supply. It seeps into creeks, down rain gutters and flows untreated into the bay.

"It's a big water-quality thing. Dog poop gets into the water, and sometimes we have to close beaches because of it," said Becky Dowdakin, solid waste and recycling supervisor for the city of Oakland. "That's a really important reason to clean up dog poop."

Until turning all those droppings into methane is feasible, the most ecologically sound way to dispose of it is to flush it down the toilet, where it can be treated in the sewage system, waste experts said.

There is some debate among pet owners and environmental groups about tossing pet waste into backyard compost bins. Most scientists warn against it because the compost does not heat up enough to kill the pathogens such as E.
coli—which could then be transmitted to people if the compost is used in a vegetable garden.

Industrial composters, used by some cities to dispose of green waste and kitchen scraps, are a better option. They can reach temperatures of about 160 degrees, hot enough to kill even the most stubborn pathogen.

High-heat techniques also are an effective way of converting animal waste to methane, but it's less appealing than methane digestion because it produces significant air pollution, experts said.

So that leaves methane digestion as the most promising solution. But it won't take off until it makes sense economically.

Landfills remain relatively cheap—it costs only $40 per ton to dump garbage into a landfill—so although each Californian sends more than 5 pounds of trash to a landfill daily, it's still among the cheapest options in the short run.

What's more, natural gas and electricity remain fairly inexpensive. So although Bay Area residents may someday heat their homes with dog droppings, the rest of the state isn't about to jump on that bandwagon, Berton said.

"We're very supportive of what San Francisco is looking to do," he said. "Maybe it'll be a test case. But as far as the rest of the state goes, I think we're still a ways off."

E-mail Carolyn Jones at carolynjones at sfchronicle.com.