Patrick aims to speed building projects

KentXie

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I'm not exactly sure where to put this thread since it's technically not a new development news but here are some good (but not really great) news.

Patrick aims to speed building projects
Goal is to lure firms and foster expansion
By Robert Weisman, Globe Staff | January 24, 2007


Governor Deval Patrick yesterday said he is moving forward with a plan to enable "one-stop shopping" for businesses seeking permits and regulatory approvals to expand in Massachusetts, as the state's first permitting ombudsman prepares to take up his office next week.

The goal of permitting ombudsman Gregory P. Bialecki , 46, will be to reduce approval time to six months. It now takes between two and three years from the time businesses apply for their permits to the time they break ground on new buildings, said Bialecki, a real estate lawyer who is leaving the firm of DLA Piper for the post.

The job was created by the Legislature last summer as part of a law to speed review of development projects. Accelerating that process, a frequent theme of Patrick's campaign for governor, is seen as a competitive issue, especially in the state's efforts to retain and attract leading-edge technology and life sciences companies.

"Massachusetts wants you," the governor told about 400 people at the annual meeting of the Massachusetts Technology Leadership Council in Boston's Copley Marriott hotel yesterday. "We want your companies, we want your expansion, we want your growth."

In his keynote address to the council, Patrick said he recognizes that Massachusetts high-tech executives looking to expand their operations are being wooed by other states that have worked to streamline their own permitting processes. To counter these overtures, "we will move at the speed of business," the governor promised.

Patrick also said he would "model" on Beacon Hill best practices from the state's technology industry. On the state government website, www.mass.gov, he said, he will begin weekly podcasts to address issues of the week, and eventually set up a weblog to allow Massachusetts residents to weigh in on public policies. He said he is also considering legislation, backed by technology leaders, to make it easier to prosecute the senders of computer viruses in the state.

But in the early weeks of the Patrick administration, the focus is on the permitting and approval process. "Right now there's a feeling that, for businesses or developers who are proposing projects, there's nowhere they can go to find someone who can help them understand the process and work their way through it," Bialecki lamented.

Bialecki will report to Dan O'Connell , the secretary of housing and economic development.

In his new job, Bialecki said he would coordinate or assist companies in securing up to eight to 10 permits from state and municipal agencies. These include, among others, environmental, sewer connector, air quality, traffic, and brownfield permits from the state, along with building permits, site plans, subdivision approvals, and conservation permits from cities or towns. Other states, like North Carolina and Texas, already have streamlined their permitting.

"We're catching up, there's no question," Bialecki said.

He said the state will start keeping track of how much time elapses once companies file for permits, and may post monthly updates on the state website. "When you come in seeking your permit, we start the clock," Bialecki said.

He said he'll also work to help cities and towns accelerate their permitting, using state funds in some cases to upgrade infrastructure or provide technical assistance in handling permits.

Bialecki said he'll make recommendations to Patrick and O'Connell on how to break bottlenecks in the process.

And he'll benchmark Massachusetts against other states that compete for technology and life sciences businesses. "As far as I'm concerned, we will borrow and copy other people's good ideas shamelessly," he said.

The new permitting push was welcomed yesterday by David I. Begelfer , the chief executive of the Massachusetts chapter of the National Association of Industrial and Office Properties.

"This is critical," he said. "Many local companies have had great difficulty figuring out if the state is even with them on this. We clearly need someone at the governor's office who understands the problem of time being a killer."

But Kristina Egan , the director of the Massachusetts Smart Growth Alliance, a coalition of housing, environmental, and economic development groups, said it is important that streamlining the permitting process not compromise the environment.

"We don't want to see wetlands regulations or other regulations bulldozed over," she said.

Meeting with reporters after speaking to the council, Patrick said he will seek to attract out-of-state companies to expand in Massachusetts. But he said his priority will be to ensure that companies already based here feel comfortable expanding in the state.

"One thing I learned in the course of the campaign is there's too little love companies here feel from the government," he said.
 
Patrick vows speedier reviews
By Scott Van Voorhis
Boston Herald Business Reporter
Friday, March 2, 2007 - Updated: 12:04 AM EST


Massachusetts can be a tough place to get things built, developers have long complained.

And Gov. Deval Patrick yesterday took aim at what some real estate executives contend has been a prime stumbling block - complex and time-consuming environmental regulations.

Patrick?s proposals include:

Cutting by 20 percent the time the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection takes to award developers the environmental approvals needed to build, officials said yesterday. The MassDEP is pledging to issue 90 percent of its permit decisions within 180 days.

Forming a commission of top environmental lawyers to study reforms in the wetlands appeals process. The aim would be to speed up state decisions in cases where project opponents have filed objections to developers building in wetlands areas.

?This is regulation at the speed of business,? Patrick said.



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Patrick to speed environmental OK's for projects
By Peter J. Howe, Globe Staff | March 2, 2007


CAMBRIDGE -- After a week of being excoriated by Massachusetts business leaders for proposed tax increases, Governor Deval L. Patrick yesterday changed the subject to a corporate crowd pleaser: Speeding up environmental regulatory approvals.

Patrick said he is ordering the Department of Environmental Protection to approve or reject 90 percent of all permit applications within 180 days, all but the most complex, up from 75 percent to 80 percent now. Also, Patrick directed Environmental and Energy Affairs Secretary Ian A. Bowles to have lawyers develop a plan by May 1 to unsnarl a logjam of cases at the obscure state Division of Administrative Law Appeals , where environmentalists and proponents of rejected projects can appeal DEP rulings.

During a public appearance at Genzyme Corp. headquarters, Patrick said there is no conflict between strong environmental protection and efficient decision-making.

"This government will move at the speed of business," Patrick said, predicting that "it will translate into tens of millions of dollars in savings, and more importantly, I think it will lead to hundreds of millions of dollars in new investment" in job-creating projects.

Patrick said among more than 60 cases stuck at the appeals division, the best example of the kind of project he wants to rescue from regulatory limbo is the proposed 20-tower Hoosac Wind electric generation project in Florida and Monroe. Wetlands issues related to a proposed access road have been under review for two years, Patrick said.

For the last week, Patrick has been hammered by business groups for proposing to close what he calls corporate tax loopholes. The business groups call the proposal a job-killing $500 million tax increase. Yesterday, though, many of those same groups -- including Associated Industries of Massachusetts , the state's biggest business lobby, and the National Association of Industrial and Office Properties , a landlords' and developers' association -- effusively praised the environmental plans.

"We heard a lot of talk throughout the campaign about streamlining permitting, and this is the first substantial step to move in that direction," said David I. Begelfer, chief executive of the Massachusetts chapter of NAIOP. "We're very, very excited about it."

R. Jeffrey Lyman , a Goodwin Procter LLP real estate attorney and former assistant state environmental secretary, said, "I'll give the governor credit: The hullabaloo about taxes from the business community is at least somewhat about the importance of predictability in state policymaking, and this is the same issue" in the environmental realm for businesses that need to know if they can build something.

Some environmentalists, however, were wary. Referring to Patrick's four Republican predecessors, Jim Gomes , president of the Environmental League of Massachusetts , said, "We've had 16 years of pretty business-friendly administrations, so I am watching with interest to see what additional efficiencies can be squeezed out of these processes that are consistent with the governor's pledge that development will still be environmentally friendly."

Margaret Van Deusen , general counsel and deputy director of the Charles River Watershed Association in Waltham, said it is alarming to her to hear Patrick praise the pro business regulatory efficiency of sprawl-plagued North Carolina and Texas. "Do we want to look like North Carolina or Texas?" Van Deusen said.

Legislators last year approved extra funding to move old cases through the appeals division, part of the state's administration and finance secretariat, and ordered that most new cases get acted on within 90 days. But Arleen O'Donnell , acting commissioner of the DEP, said "it's not a dollars problem per se, it's a problem with the way the appeals process works," including new issues being litigated during appeals that never came up in permit reviews.



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Mike said:
Margaret Van Deusen , general counsel and deputy director of the Charles River Watershed Association in Waltham, said it is alarming to her to hear Patrick praise the pro business regulatory efficiency of sprawl-plagued North Carolina and Texas. "Do we want to look like North Carolina or Texas?"
Perish the thought, Margaret, you sure polished off that straw man in a twinkling. Always good to see thoughtfulness coming together with rhetorical skills.

Now let's all get together and block the next project.

(Oh ... I just did it myself!)
 

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