Real estate projects in the Fenway are coming to rely increasingly on a single committee for community input, a strategy with dubious regulatory footing whose members say it falls short of the diverse array of individual committees that are supposed to give the neighborhood a voice.
The
Fenway CAC is a Community Advisory Committee (CAC) that has overseen a
series of real estate projects, even being tapped to review the Fenway’s
zoning update process. Its use has sparked increasing criticism from
residents and its own members, who say that it’s being used as a
regulatory shortcut that’s increasingly unable to deliver the
substantive feedback developers and government officials are supposed to
hear.
The CAC was
originally a standard committee to review a life sciences development at
109 Brookline Ave. The city expanded its oversight in June 2021 to
include the expansive Fenway Corners project, Landmark Center, and 1400
Boylston Street in response to community calls for greater coordination
across the neighborhood. It further stretched its reach in October when
it was used to review the neighborhood’s transportation and zoning
plans, which have drawn heavy criticism for their short timeframe and
lack of opportunities for resident input.
“The
original zoning document says any zoning change must go through the
original Interim Planning Overlay District group, the board of 23
representatives of developers, community groups, the Red Sox, MASCO…
That’s not being upheld,” said Tim Horn, a member of the Fenway CAC and
president of the Fenway Civic Association (FCA). “It’s the same CAC
that’s been sitting since the pandemic. Each project is supposed to have
its own unique CAC picked by a diversity of state representatives and
city councilors. Their argument is that the full process is too
stressful for the community, but honestly I think it’s just too
stressful on the BPDA and city council.”
It’s
not clear exactly how the city is justifying the increasing use of this
single CAC for so many projects. The committee was formed in a June
2021 memorandum from Brian Golden, the then director of the BPDA who
left in April 2022. That memo declares the CAC “may also assist the BPDA
with review of future Article 80 projects in the Fenway neighborhood.”
It also says the CAC may act as an Impact Advisory Group, another type
of review body which, according to the BPDA’s own website and the
October 2000 executive order establishing the community review process,
is supposed to be appointed by the mayor.
The mayor’s office declined to comment on the expanding purview of the Fenway CAC or the city’s legal justification for it.
“The
only way we train new people and get them into the community process is
to have them serve on these projects. I’m sitting on projects instead
of the people that actually live next to them, who would have intimate
details on how that neighborhood works. The people that are most
affected by projects should have the most input,” said Horn.
“It effectively limits civic participation.
Reading
a thousand-plus page filing is no cake walk, and many of the CAC
members who weren’t paid staff really dropped off in their
participation,” said Marie Fukuda, a Fenway resident involved in many
review processes. “The intent of citizen review, to be an engaged and
committed neighborhood representative, increasingly doesn’t happen
because these same members start to become fatigued. I think that’s
evidenced by the lack of comments on some recent filings.”
“There’s
just too much going on here, you need the abutters. I live on
Peterborough St. and I found out there were going to be meetings about
1400 Boylston that I, an abutter, wasn’t even aware of. It just kind of
blew my mind,” said Kathy McBride, FCA assistant secretary and Fenway
CAC member. “Nobody can survive all these meetings and work and life.
You’re an off-hours volunteer. If you have one group for one project,
they’ll give it proper attention, they’ll show up. You want people who
can build a proper history, who know what’s going on.”