November 5, 2025 Meeting Minutes
MONTELLO BUSINESS ASSOCIATION MEETING MINUTES FOR Nov. 5, 2025
IN ATTENDANCE: Scott Dwyer President, Greg Belcher Treasurer, Lisa Waitt Belcher Secretary, Fran Fistori, Richard Gowell, David Lynch, Derek Salamone BPD, BPD, Mayor Elect Moises Rodrigues, Peter Reardon BFD, Jay McLaughlin, Dave LaChance, Jeff Smith, Chief Brenda Perez BPD, Lt. Victor Perez BPD, Gale Lutz-Henrickson and Lee Henrickson, George DePina, Inspectional Services, 2 Pires brothers, Councilor Win Farwell, Sam Bassam, Bob Martin.
Scott opened with Old Business. Greg announced Treasurer report.
George Montilio said MBTA has installed cameras at the Montello station and things are better. Greg announced Snow Clock proposals, history of stolen shield and spear stolen, found metal sculpturer in Canton reputable, between Waitt Funeral Home paying donation towards spear portion and Tim Carpenter finding parks funds and Ross Hochstrasser donating his clock expertise time and talent this looks like a plan. City can file for grants to reimburse historical restoration objectives.
Peter Reardon spoke about the training and fire prevention aspects of the Brockton Fire Department which he now runs. Monthly continuing education for firefighters in this city 36 classes during their shifts. EMS also continues training. 5 new hires, soon 2 and 1 after the new year. Eight towns are also being trained and we believe this is the best training plan in the state. State grants cover school students and senior citizen lessons. Third-graders are trained and tested and have improved from 30 to 70% and his goal is 100%. West Middle School students were a test group for lessons and drills and will expand to other middle schools. This experience also shows young students new fields and real life experiences. There will be new ideas explored with older students creating projects in a contest format with rewards/awards. Council on Aging classes slow start so Brockton Housing Authority residences invited. Education on fire prevention and falls in elder groups very important.
George dePina said skip “see click fix” and call the office to have issues addressed. 756 North Main illegal car sales is in the process of being cited. Overtime shifts of 4 hours per budget on weekends is catching up with illegal businesses working off-hours.
Chief Perez: Governor Healy had meeting she attended with other chiefs and state police regarding illegal meetups. Derek Salamone trying to fine entities but court reduces the fines. Hundreds of tickets written. Hiring prospects 8 graduating in January, hopefully over time up to 30 is the goal. Chief Brenda Perez said to call police for any issues that they can legally address, doing their best with the staff they have.
Dave Lynch informing about mattress and trash disposal contruction debris costs regarding Trojan and Raynham.
Win Farwell shared a fake bomb against mayor in parking space by disgruntled person. He spoke of the new administration and expressed goals and responsibilities need to be shared among the public servants for new mayor and council to improve Brockton. This won’t happen overnight. Union contracts should be written smarter to address operational needs: be creative and thoughtful such as Wednesday through Sunday schedules. Police out in the city need to be on constant alert and cite illegal driving and behavior to improve public safety. Example: 1448 citations in one year is only a few per day. Buildings hits and pedestrians hurt or killed are serious examples as well as multiple accidents are all affecting our sky-high insurance premiums.
Per Moises Rodrigues: We need more code enforcers in Brockton. Businesses and residents should be cited for their dumping and not maintaining properties. Work Express type programs should be brought back to help clean up the city. Vo-tech options for education in the city brought up by Dave Lynch. Moises said Porter-Chester School not operating well here and will be available for sale. We can get higher reimbursements for vo-tech programs in the $20,000 plus per student. We need more trained tradespeople, Jay McLaughlin said average MA plumbers age is 58! Howard School brought up by Greg Belcher as serving no purpose at this time and should have some interest brought up for the property. We depend heavily on state funds and our property taxes are leaning heavily on residential rather than commercial. Mainspring property looking terrible, old police station future questioned, examples of properties that should look good and serve purposes. Businesses that look good and operate properly such as Modern Auto and Pires Brothers are great examples. Auto repair places way over limits we should put moratorium on new licenses. Ordinance proposed and better enforcement.
New administration…we shall see…meeting adjourned at 7:06 p.m.








