We're getting close to the anniversary of our first blog post on March 7, 2012. (We actually created the blog in February of last year.) The fact that we've had 17,000 pageviews since then leads me to believe that we're reaching quite a few residents at Farmington Woods with our little blog.
As long as you keep reading, we'll keep writing.
Saturday, February 16, 2013
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
STORM RESPONSE: NEGLIGENCE OR MISPLACED PRIORITIES?
We all know this storm was a bad one. It caused us all some inconvenience and for many, a healthy dose of anxiety. But this woman's experience, shared with others in her four-plex, is downright scary and inexcusable.
This is what happens when Farmington Woods uses funds that should be available for the safety and security of residents to shore up two losing operations at a cost of hundreds of thousands of dollars per year. It's really a sad, scary tale.
I am
very grateful to our grounds crews and road crews for working long, hard hours
with insufficient equipment and too small a staff. I am grateful to staff
members who took calls from residents and worked hard to keep residents
informed and to coordinate snow removal.
I am grateful for their efforts to free doctors, nurses, first
responders, and residents who had important medical appointments.
Let’s
thank them as soon as we can and, then, start to honestly look at the risks we
faced during the February 8-9 snowstorm.
Although this was record-breaking storm, we were warned of it several
days in advance. While weather reports forecast 30 or more inches of snow and
hurricane force winds, which they warned would cause serious problems with
drifting snow, governors and mayors all around New England
put their emergency plans into action.
We
should have been prepared. We should not have had at least 2 snow blowers
broken and one truck out of commission. Rather than plowing a parking area
around an empty Club House, we should have been clearing the walkways to the
homes of people. Instead of subsidizing
the golf course, and continuing to make plans to re-design/re-decorate the Club
House, we should be fixing equipment when it breaks down and purchasing or
leasing whatever is needed to keep residents safe.
I live
in a 4-plex, and those of us who were at home on the night of the storm were
literally trapped inside our building.
The two doors to the building were blocked by more than 30 inches of
snow and could not be opened more than two inches. Had there been a fire, or
had one of us suffered a medical emergency, we could not have gotten out of the
building, and any emergency response crew would probably have taken 30 - 60
minutes to get into our building. Those are precious minutes in the event of a
stroke, a heart attack, a fall which breaks a major bone.
In my
courtyard there are two 4-plexes, and two buildings with 2 side by side units
in each. Not all units are occupied at
this time, but I know that 4 of the 11 occupied units are home to people who
are physically compromised and who might require considerable assistance in an
evacuation. In any case, our homes were
firetraps --- deathtraps.
On the
second night of our confinement, using a Loctite penetrating oil and some
tools, I was able to detach the screen window on the building’s front door,
move the Plexiglas windows, and stick my hand through the door to scoop away
enough snow that I could push the door about 7 inches and squeeze through. Once outside, I was able to shovel off our
front doorstep, so that in case of an emergency, we could escape the building,
or open the door to a rescue crew. On
the third day of being so confined, my neighbor dug a 60 foot path away from
the building and another path to a neighbor’s home, while I dug the path to a
second neighbor’s home. On the third
night, working well into the dark of night, our road crew came to dig out our
garages. We can return to work now. Hopefully the rest of our community will be
freed soon.
Now it
is time to ask, “What can we learn from this experience? Do we prefer subsidizing an expensive
irrigation system, cart paths, and other golf course improvements to keeping
ourselves and our neighbors safe? Do we
prefer a fancy Clubhouse entrance or even an elevator, or would we rather feel
we have provided for the safety of everyone? What are the prudent decisions we
need to make to protect our community?”
Lucinda
Hannon
Sunday, February 10, 2013
THE REAL DISASTER? THE RESPONSE TO IT!
Seems like the storms keep getting bigger and the disastrous ones more common.The last disaster to devastate Farmington Woods was Alfred, the Halloween Storm of 2011. It was an experience so dreadful that I hope to never repeat it again. We were without power for 10 days, those that stayed the course were tired and irritable, especially when they learned that the clubhouse had a generator but wasn't available for
residents. In years past, the clubhouse has been a "refuge from the storm" for residents without power but not so much anymore.
By noon today, myself and the many residents I spoke to had the sinking feeling that no plows were coming to free us from the grip of Storm Nemo. So a group of neighbors, mostly women, started shoveling the driveway and clearing two feet of snow from in front of garages so that we could get our
cars out. Five women and one man shoveled out a total of 6 garages
and the driveway. And, as happened during the Alfred disaster, one neighbor took issue with our communal efforts; this time, however, we kept our heads down and continued working. We hoped this would send a strong message. By 2 :00 pm we were all out of our garages and offering assistance to
others who needed it.
At 3:00 pm I decided to walk the neighborhood to see what other residents were doing and what
they had to say about the storm. Everyone I encountered was "pissed", as one man said, with
the plowing, or lack of it. Some talked about times in the past when the plow woke us at 4:00 am scraping a mere dusting off the driveway between our units. At one point a resident confirmed our previous fears of being stranded when she told me she received an email blast stating we would not be plowed out until
Tuesday. She was concerned because she had to work on Monday. I later received an email blast that said the clubhouse would be closed and that “all snow
removal efforts were on resident units.”
My walk ended at the Clubhouse and I was flabbergasted to see that all the parking lots had been cleared, for a restaurant that was closed until Tuesday at 6:00pm, while residents were digging themselves out in order to get to work on Monday.
My walk ended at the Clubhouse and I was flabbergasted to see that all the parking lots had been cleared, for a restaurant that was closed until Tuesday at 6:00pm, while residents were digging themselves out in order to get to work on Monday.
The clubhouse was closed and not scheduled to open until Tuesday but when I spoke with the plow driver he told me that he was told to clear the
clubhouse parking lots. So he did. All of them, lower and upper. Then I saw three trucks on Heritage with their
plows up. There was only room for one car at a time and yet clearing snow from the closed Clubhouse parking lot took precedence over widening the road. I saw two plows parked on
Mallard with no driver in sight, but garages and driveways blocked by deep snow. I saw snow blowers running but no operators. Below is a a picture of the units on
Heritage two driveway’s down from the clubhouse taken on the same walk.
The contrast is striking, isn't it?
Farmington Woods needs to be accountable to unit owners, especially
during disasters. Not every resident is retired; some of us are professionals who have to work nights and weekends. We don’t have 9-5 , Monday through Friday jobs. Plowing should
have taken place all through the night of the storm. If there are power outages,
the clubhouse should be made available to residents without electricity. When will the
board wake up to the real needs of residents?
BTW: Matthew’s is OPEN!
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