In the News

Mayor Sarno Commends State Rep. Carlos Gonzalez’s House Bill to Protect our Neighborhoods from the Dover Amendment

Monday, September 18, 2017

Mayor Domenic J. Sarno states that he is pleased that under lead sponsor and his State Representative Carlos Gonzalez and our local delegation have filed House Bill 3593 – An Act to Prevent Over Saturation of Clinical or Educational Programs in Low Income Neighborhoods Under the Dover Amendment without Local Approval. This pertains to relative to substance use and alcohol addiction centers and clinics. Rep. Gonzalez will bring the Joint Committee on Mental Health to our City Hall, Room 220 this Friday, September 22, 2017 for a hearing from 11:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Key to Rep. Gonzalez’s bill is that proper local approval must be given under land zoning use regulations and the legislative body of such city or town. Also, any person, organization, institution or corporation that purchases property within a city or town to be used for educational purposes pursuant to this section and who fails within two years to substantially improve such property shall be assessed at the property’s highest and best use at commercial rate for such property with no exemption.

Mayor Sarno states, “Rep. Gonzalez has heard my and our neighborhood’s cries that ‘enough is enough!’ Urban centers such as Springfield have done more than their fair share in dealing with these issues. As the Boston Federal Reserve Report of 2011 stated, ‘You cannot continue to concentrate poverty on top of poverty.’ This Dover Amendment has been a detriment to our Springfield neighborhoods many a times with not properly run programs, infringing on quality of life issues and ‘For Sale’ signs going up – it has to stop.”

"This  legislation  is  in no way  against  the  missions  held  by  substance  abuse  programs,  it  simply  aims  to  protect  community members  from  oversaturated  exposure  to  these  facilities  within  their residential  neighborhoods,” added Rep. Gonzalez.

Back
Page last updated:  Tuesday, March 1, 2022 01:32 pm