Citizen Portal
Sign In

Lifetime Citizen Portal Access — AI Briefings, Alerts & Unlimited Follows

Lakeville CPC holds public hearing on draft preservation plan; discusses signage and housing-trust language

Town of Lakeville Community Preservation Committee · February 21, 2026

Loading...

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

The Town of Lakeville Community Preservation Committee held a public hearing Feb. 19 on its draft Community Preservation Plan, discussed adding small signage costs to project applications and whether to seek a bylaw change to the affordable housing trust, and agreed to collect board feedback before a final vote.

The Town of Lakeville Community Preservation Committee opened a public informational hearing on Feb. 19, 2026, to solicit comment on its draft Community Preservation Plan. The meeting, held at the Lakeville Police Station, had no members of the public in attendance; the committee said the plan is available on the CPC web page and will be revised after outreach to town boards and committees.

Committee members discussed outreach and how the newspaper ran the legal notice, noting potential reduced visibility when the notice was run as part of the legal ads. Chair said the annual hearing is required and outlined the process: gather input, incorporate feedback from boards, and typically approve the draft while appending updates to the appendix later in the fiscal year when CP-3 filings are completed.

A recurring, practical item raised at the hearing was signage for historic sites. The Chair reported that the Thompson Hill Cemetery sign was missing or damaged and proposed adding a line item to the Step 1 project application (pages 26–28 of the draft plan) so small signage costs — roughly $30 each — are treated as project expenses rather than coming out of the CPC administrative 5% cap. Members agreed that including signage costs in project budgets would reduce pressure on the administrative fund.

On housing, members revisited a prior presentation by a consultant (Shelley) and discussed the affordable housing trust. The committee noted that the current trust bylaw designates a ZBA seat, which a consultant said can constitute a conflict of interest. Committee members proposed drafting language to replace the ZBA seat with a CPC member or a resident-at-large seat, and agreed to place the change on a future agenda and request Town Council review under Chapter 44B (the Community Preservation Act) if appropriate.

The committee closed the public hearing and said it will collect comments from respective boards to prepare a final draft to vote on at a subsequent meeting. The Chair emphasized that appendix entries typically are finalized after the fiscal year-close updates are available.