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TOWN OF WEYMOUTH
1916
LE F.
ANNUAL REPORT
OF THE
TOWN OF WEYMOUTH
Containing the Reports of the
SELECTMEN, TOWN TREASURER, TOWN ACCOUNTANT, TOWN CLERK, ASSESSORS, AND OTHER OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES
For the Year Ending December 31
1
1916
THE CRAWFORD PRESS, South Weymouth, Mass.
W.C Ref 352 96
Lower Stack
MAY 8 1939
INDEX
Town Officers
Town Meeting (Annual)
7
Precinct Officers
55
Presidential Primary
43
State Election
Special Town Meetings
73 49 89
Town By-Laws
Jury List
97 103
Deaths
118
Marriages
123
Report of Registrars of Voters
Report of Town Accountant
Schools
Street Department
156 174 175
Public Parks
Preservation of Shade Trees
Suppression of Gypsy and Brown Tail Moths
Surveying and Plotting Town
Fire Department
Police Department
Health Department
Miscellaneous Account
National, State, Town and Primary Election Expenses.
Town Officers
State and Military Aid
Soldiers' Relief
Printing and Advertising
Electric Lighting
Tufts Library
1
Memorial Day
203
Alewive Account
203 .204
Interest and Discount
205
Notes Payable
205
Taxes Paid to State and County
206
Tax Deed Account
206
Reserve Fund
206
Town Officers
206
Poor Department
210
Statement of Appropriations and Expenditures 220
Trial Balance 219
Report of Selectmen 234
200 200 200 203
Fogg Library Reading Room
Abatement and Remittance of Taxes
176 177 179 179 187 19] 192 195 198 199 199
Street Watering and Oiling
131
132 132
Births
Report of Overseers of the Poor
246
Report of Fire Engineers
Report of Superintendent of Fire Alarm
Report of Fire Warden
265 266 267 268
Report of Town Engineer
Report of Chief of Police
Report of Superintendent of Moth Work
Report of Tree Warden
Report of Board of Health
Report of Collector of Taxes
282
Report of Committee on Street Lighting
284
Report of Inspector of Animals
285 286
Report of Burial Agent
Report of Sealer of Weights and Measures
286
Report of Tufts Fund
296
Report of Water Commissioners
298
Report of Tufts Library
343
Report of School Committee 363
272 287 288 277
TOWN OFFICERS FOR THE YEAR 1916-1917
Town Clerk
JOHN A. RAYMOND . P. O. Address, East Weymouth
Town Treasurer JOHN H. STETSON. .P. O. Address, South Weymouth Selectmen
EDWARD W. HUNT, Chairman, P. O. Address, Weymouth
BRADFORD HAWES, Clerk, P. O. Address, East Weymouth GEORGE L. NEWTON RALPH P. BURRELL HENRY E. HANLEY
Overseers of the Poor
EDWARD W. HUNT BRADFORD HAWES
GEORGE L. NEWTON HENRY E. HANLEY RALPH P. BURRELL
Assessors
LEWIS W. CALLAHAN Term Expires 1917
CHARLES H. CLAPP. 1917
JOHN F. DWYER, Chairman.
1919
FRANK H. TORREY, Clerk.
1919
LEAVITT W. BATES
1918
Town Accountant CHARLES B. CUSHING
Collector of Taxes WINSLOW M. TIRRELL ... P. O. Address, East Weymouth
Auditors
FRANK N. BLANCHARD WILLIAM H. PRATT WINFIELD S. WELLS
Engineers of the Fire Department WALTER W. PRATT, Chief,
P. O. Address, East Weymouth
JOHN Q. HUNT, Clerk, P. O. Address, East Weymouth WILLIE B. LOUD HIRAM NADELL
RUSSELL B. WORSTER
School Committee
ARTHUR H. ALDEN Term Expires 1917
PRINCE H. TIRRELL
1918
THERON L. TIRRELL
1918
ELMER E. LEONARD
1919
SARAH S. HOWE.
"
1917
FREDERICK D. NICHOLS
1919
Board of Health
DR. GEORGE E. EMERSON
Term Expires 1919
JOHN S. WILLIAMS
1918
DR. FRED L. DOUCETT.
1917
Park Commissioners
LOUIS A. COOK .. . Term Expires 1917
J. HERBERT WALSH.
1918
NATHAN Q. CUSHING
1919
Tree Warden CHARLES L. MERRITT
Trustees of Tufts Library
WILLIAM A. DRAKE.
Term Expires 1917
FRANCIS M. DROWN
1917
JOSEPH E. GARDNER.
1918
LOUIS A. COOK.
1918
WILLIAM F. HATHAWAY
1918
JAMES H. FLINT.
1919
CLARENCE P. WHITTLE
1919
Registrars of Voters
PATRICK E. CORRIDAN. Term Expires 1917
BENJAMIN F. SMITH.
1918
MARSHALL P. SPRAGUE
1919
JOHN A. RAYMOND, Town Clerk (ex-officio).
Superintendent of Streets IRVING E. JOHNSON
Water Commissioners
GEORGE W. PERRY. . Term Expires 1919
GEORGE E. BICKNELL
1917
FRANK H. TORREY
1918
EDWARD W. HUNT, Chairman of Selectmen (ex-officio).
JOHN H. STETSON, Town Treasurer (ex-officio).
Sealer of Weights and Measures RUSSELL B. WORSTER Burial Agent for Indigent Soldiers WALDO TURNER
Chief of Police ARTHUR H. PRATT ... .. P. O. Address, East Weymouth
W. F. HALL GEORGE B. BAYLEY
ELBERT FORD
ARTHUR H. PRATT
GEO. W. NASH
CHARLES W. BAKER
Constables CHARLES W. BARROWS THOMAS FITZGERALD GEORGE W. CONANT
EDWARD F. BUTLER
1917
JOHN B. HOLLAND
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WARRANT FOR ANNUAL TOWN MEETING.
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS NORFOLK, ss.
To the Constables of the Town of Weymouth in said County.
Greeting :
In the name of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts you are hereby required to notify and warn the inhabitants of Weymouth aforesaid qualified to vote in elections therein and in town affairs, to meet at the Fogg Opera House, in said town, on
Monday, the Sixth Day of March, 1916,
at nine o'clock and fifteen minutes in the forenoon, then and there to act upon the following articles, namely :
ARTICLE 1.
To choose a Moderator for said meeting.
ARTICLE 2.
To choose all necessary town officers other than those elected by ballot, viz. : Public Weighers, Surveyors of Wood, Lumber and Bark, two or more Fence Viewers, two or more Field Drivers, one Pound Keeper and a Planning Board.
ARTICLE 3.
To hear and act upon the reports of the several boards of town officers and of any committee appointed at any former meeting, and to choose any committees the town may think proper.
ARTICLE 4.
To see if the town will vote to authorize the Treasurer, with the approval of the Selectmen, to borrow money in anticipation of the revenue of the current financial year.
ARTICLE 5.
To see if the town will vote to authorize the Treas-
8
urer with the approval of the Selectmen, on or after Jan- uary 1, 1917, to borrow money in anticipation of the rev- enue of the year 1917.
. ARTICLE 6.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for a reserve fund.
ARTICLE 7.
To see if the town will designate the First National Bank of South Weymouth, the First National Bank of Boston and the National Shawmut Bank of Boston as legal depositories for the funds of the town, and the First National Safe Deposit Company of Boston, Massachusetts, a legal deposi- tory for the securities of the town.
SCHOOLS AND SCHOOL PROPERTY. ARTICLE 8.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the support of public schools and for the transportation of pupils to and from school.
ARTICLE 9.
On petition : To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for purchasing a site for a new schoolhouse in South Weymouth.
ARTICLE 10.
On petition : To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the building of a new schoolhouse in South Weymouth.
ARTICLE 11.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate toward the sinking fund for the payment at. maturity of the James Humphrey Schoolhouse bonds.
PUBLIC PARKS AND PLAYGROUNDS.
ARTICLE 12.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and
9
appropriate for the care and maintenance of its parks and playgrounds.
ARTICLE 13.
On petition : To see what action the town will take toward acquiring playgrounds in East Weymouth and South Wey- mouth and to raise and appropriate money for the same.
ARTICLE 14.
On petition : To see what action the town will take toward acquiring an approach to Great Hill Park and to raise and appropriate money for the same.
ARTICLE 15.
On petition : To see if the town will vote to raise and appropriate the sum of $450.00 for the further improvement of Webb Park.
FIRE DEPARTMENT.
ARTICLE 16.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the support of the Fire Department.
ARTICLE 17.
On petition : To see if the town will vote to raise and appropriate a sum sufficient to install a fire alarm box near the Union Street Cemetery.
ARTICLE 18. .
On petition : To see if the town will vote to raise and appropriate $4,000.00 for the purchase of a piece of motor fire apparatus to be placed in Ward Three.
ARTICLE 19.
On petition : To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the suppression of forest fires, the same to be expended under the direction of the Forest Warden.
POLICE DEPARTMENT.
ARTICLE 20.
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To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for police service.
WATER DEPARTMENT. >
ARTICLE 21.
To see if the town will vote to appropriate from the revenue of the Water Works for the current year the sum of $39,915, to be expended for the following purposes, viz .: $15,000 for Superintendent's salary, maintenance and pump- ing station ; $2,500 for current expenses, Commissioners and Office expenses ; $5,000 for the installation of meters; $9,415 for interest on bonds, viz : $4,600 on Sinking fund bonds at 4 per cent. on $115,000, $4,185 on Serial bonds at 41/2 per cent. on $93,000, $450 on Serial bonds at 41/2 per cent. on $11,000, $180 on Serial bonds at 4 per cent. ; $8,000 for Serial bonds due this year, viz : $3,000 due May 1 and $5,000 due November 1.
ARTICLE 22.
To see if the town will, for the purpose of making new construction, authorize the issue of bonds to the amount of $10,000 under the authority of Chapter 276 of the Acts of 1913 entitled, "An Act to authorize the town of Weymouth to make an additional water loan."
ARTICLE 23.
To see if the town will vote to appropriate and direct to be paid to the Trustees of the Sinking Fund from the rev- enue of the Water Works for the current year the sum of $5,000 to be set apart and invested as a sinking fund for the payment at maturity of the Weymouth Water Loan Bonds.
ARTICLE 24.
On petition : To see if the town will authorize the Board of Water Commissioners to issue 4 per cent. serial notes or bonds to the amount of $40,000 to purchase the land former- ly occupied by the ice houses of the Boston Ice Company and to construct and maintain a filtering bed or beds in con- junction with the water supply of the town of Weymouth.
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HEALTH DEPARTMENT AND SEWERAGE.
ARTICLE 25.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the service and expenses of the Board . of Health.
BY REQUEST OF THE PLANNING BOARD. ARTICLE 26.
To see if the town will employ one or more competent engineers to make the necessary preliminary surveys for a sewerage system and prepare an estimate of the approximate cost of installing the same, or take any other action in relation thereto:
ARTICLE 27.
To see if the town will raise and appropriate $1,500, or any other amount, for the purposes specified in the fore- going article.
TOWN OFFICERS, ELECTIONS AND TOWN OFFICES. ARTICLE 28.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the payment of town officers.
ARTICLE 29.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for election expenses.
ARTICLE 30.
. To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for rent and expenses of town offices.
WAYS AND BRIDGES. ARTICLE 31.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the repairs of highways, town ways and bridges and for the removal of snow.
12
ARTICLE 32.
To see if the town will vote to raise and appropriate the sum of $530 as being the town's proportional part of the cost of working Washington Street as a state road and rebuilding bridges, above the first estimate.
ARTICLE 33.
To see if the town will vote, that the street from the angle of Tremont Street to Keith Street shall hereafter be known as a part of Tremont Street.
ARTICLE 34.
To see if the town will vote, that the street from the angle of Tremont Street to Prospect Street shall hereafter be known as a part of Norfolk Street.
ARTICLE 35.
On petition : To see if the town will vote to raise and ap- propriate $400 to regrade and drain Hawthorne Street be- tween Cedar and High Streets.
ARTICLE 36.
On petition : To see if the town will vote to raise and ap- propriate the sum of $75. to build a sidewalk on the north side of Richmond Street from the residence of Hugh P. Coyle to Webb Street.
ARTICLE 37.
On petition : To see if the town will appropriate from the tax levy the sum of $1,000 to reduce the grade on the Wey- mouth Heights end of Green Street; the filling to be used in putting said street, from the top of the hill to the residence of Edward Jordan, in a safe and passable condition.
ARTICLE 38.
On petition : To see if the town will vote to raise and ap- propriate the sum of $250 to finish the grading and to build a sidewalk on the north end of Torrey Street near Park Avenue.
ARTICLE 39.
On petition : To see if the town will vote to raise and
13
appropriate the sum of $500 to work out Pond Street to the town line from the depot toward Independence Square, or act in any way in relation to the same.
ARTICLE 40.
On petition : To see if the town will accept the provisions of Section 336, Chapter 11 of the Revised Laws of 1902; the effect of this section being to abolish the position of super- intendent of streets and substitute therefor a highway sur- veyor who shall be elected annually by the voters.
ARTICLE 41.
On petition : To see if the town will vote to raise and ap- propriate $400 for the completion of the work on Randall Avenue.
ARTICLE 42.
On petition : To see if the town will vote to raise and appropriate a sum of money sufficient to curb the grass plot in Columbian Square in the south part of the town.
ARTICLE 43.
On petition : To see if the town will vote for the extension of the sidewalk from its present terminal on West Street to the corner of West and Summer streets and from the corner of Summer and West streets to the house of Uno Kronman on Summer Street and that a sufficient sum of money be raised and appropriated for the same.
ARTICLE 44.
To see if the town will accept the report of the Selectmen upon the laying out of a town way over the private way known as Fore River Avenue.
ARTICLE 45.
On petition : To see if the town will vote to raise and appropriate the sum of $1200 to work a certain street known as Fore River Avenue, in Ward One, from Holbrook Road to Sachem Street.
ARTICLE 46.
To see if the town will accept the report of the Selectmen
14
upon the laying out of a town way over the private way known as Hillcrest Road.
ARTICLE 47.
On petition : To see if the town will vote to raise and appropriate $300 for the working of Hillcrest Road.
ARTICLE 48.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the purpose of street watering and oiling.
ARTICLE 49.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate or will appropriate for the building of per- manent sidewalks, the same to be expended under the pro- visions of the betterment act.
STATE AND MILITARY AID AND SOLDIERS' RELIEF. ARTICLE 50.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the payment of State and Military Aid and for burials under the provisions of Chapter 587, of the Acts of 1914 and to determine how much of the same shall be raised by taxation.
ARTICLE 51.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the relief of disabled soldiers and seamen and for the families of disabled or deceased soldiers and seamen under Chapter 79 of the Revised Laws.
PUBLIC CHARITY. ARTICLE 52.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the relief and support of the poor.
PUBLIC LIBRARY AND READING ROOM. ARTICLE 53.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the Tufts Library.
1
15
ARTICLE 54.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the maintenance of a public reading room at the Fogg Library.
STREET LIGHTING. ARTICLE 55.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the lighting of streets.
ARTICLE 56.
On petition : To see if the town will instruct the street lighting committee to place an electric light on the pole on Essex Street between Broad and Spring Streets.
ARTICLE 57.
On petition : To see if the town will vote to place an addi- tional light on Canterbury Street.
ARTICLE 58.
On petition : To see if the town will place an electric light at the junction of Essex and Commercial Streets.
TOWN SURVEY. ARTICLE 59.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the maintenance of the town survey system, or take any other action in relation thereto.
TAXES AND INTEREST. ARTICLE 60.
To determine in what manner taxes shall be collected the current year and to fix the rate of interest on all taxes re- maining unpaid after the time fixed for payment.
ARTICLE 61.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the abatement and remittance of taxes.
ARTICLE 62.
16
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the payment of interest which may come due the current year.
SHADE TREES AND SUPPRESSION OF MOTHS. ARTICLE 63.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the preservation of shade trees, the same to be expended under the direction of the Tree Warden.
ARTICLE 64.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for the suppression of gypsy and brown-tail moths.
PRINTING AND ADVERTISING. ARTICLE 65.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for printing and advertising.
ARTICLE 66.
To see if the town will instruct the Assessors to cause the valuations of real estate of the current year to be printed in the next annual town report.
MISCELLANEOUS. ARTICLE 67.
To see what action if any the town will take in relation to a revision of its by-laws.
ARTICLE 68.
To see if the town will accept the provisions of Chapter 48, Section 103, of the Revised Laws in relation to estab- lishing building lines upon the streets.
ARTICLE 69.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for Memorial Day.
ARTICLE 70.
17
To see if the town will authorize its Selectmen to com- mence suit for the recovery of any money or property due it or to prosecute a bill in equity or any other proceedings in court when in their judgment it is expedient in the in- terest of the town to do so.
ARTICLE 71.
To see if the town will instruct its Selectmen to in any way control, regulate or prohibit the taking of clams from the shores and flats of the town.
ARTICLE 72.
To see if the town will take any action in relation to the acquirement or protection of the Alewive fishery and to raise and appropriate money therefor.
ARTICLE 73.
To see what sum of money the town will vote to raise and appropriate for miscellaneous expenses.
ARTICLE 74.
To see if the town will authorize its Selectmen to sell any real estate of which it may be possessed and for which it has no further use.
ARTICLE 75.
To see if the town will instruct its Selectmen to appoint an inspector of wires in accordance with the provision of Chapter 122, Section 18, of the Revised Laws.
ARTICLE 76.
To see if the town will vote to raise and appropriate $2,000 or any other sum to be used in the working of Broad Street as a macadam road.
ARTICLE 77.
To see if the town will vote to raise and appropriate $200 for the working of Morrell Street.
You are further required to notify and warn said in- habitants of Weymouth, qualified to vote in elections, to meet at the polling places in their respective precincts, to wit : In precincts numbered One, Three, Five and Six, in the
18
Halls of the Fire Engine Houses located in those precincts respectively, in precinct numbered Two, at the Odd Fellows Opera House, and in precinct numbered Four, at the Hose House at Nash's Corner, on
Monday, the Thirteenth Day of March, 1916,
at five oclock and forty-five minutes in the forenoon, then and there to bring in to the wardens of their several pre- cincts their votes on one ballot for the following named public officers, to wit: Town Clerk, Town Treasurer, five Selectmen, five Overseers of the Poor, two Assessors for three years, Collector of Taxes, three Auditors, two School Committee for three years, one Park Commissioner for three years, one Water Commissioner for three years, one mem- ber of the Board of Health for three years, three Trustees of Tufts Library for three years, one Commissioner of the Sinking Fund of the James Humphrey School House for three years, one Tree Warden and ten Constables; and to vote on the same ballot, "Yes" or "No" upon the following question :
"Shall licenses be granted for the sale of intoxicating liquors in this town ?"
And you are directed to serve this warrant by posting a copy thereof attested by you in writing in each of two public places in each voting precinct in said town seven days at least before the time of holding the first meeting called for in this warrant.
Hereof fail not, and make due return of this warrant with your doings thereon to the Town Clerk on or before the first day of March, 1916.
Given under our hands at Weymouth, this thirteenth day of January, in the year of our Lord, nineteen hundred and sixteen.
EDWARD W. HUNT, BRADFORD HAWES, GEORGE L. NEWTON, HENRY E. HANLEY, RALPH P. BURRELL, Selectmen of Weymouth.
. .
19
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.
NORFOLK, ss.
Weymouth, February 10, 1916.
Pursuant to the within warrant I have notified and warned the inhabitants of Weymouth aforesaid to meet at the re- spective places and times for the purposes set forth in said warrant by posting true and attested copies of the same in each precinct in said town, as therein directed.
ARTHUR H. PRATT, Constable of Weymouth.
-
20
ANNUAL TOWN MEETING.
The annual meeting of the inhabitants of the town of Weymouth was held on Monday, March 6, 1916, at the Fogg Opera House in said Weymouth, the meeting was called to order at 9.15 o'clock in the forenoon and the war- rant (except the several articles) was read by the Town Clerk.
Voted: To dispense with the reading of the several arti- cles of the warrant.
ARTICLE 1.
Voted : To proceed to the election of a Moderator by ballot. The Town Clerk appointed the following tellers to check the names of persons voting on the Voting List, and administered the oath to them.
Russell H. Whiting, William H. Pratt, Melville Cate, Frank W. Rea, Ralph P. Burrell, Joseph A. Cushing.
The result of the ballot was as follows :
Hon. George L. Barnes had 86 votes ; Hon. Louis A. Cook had 46 votes ;
and as a result of the ballot Hon. George L. Barnes was elected, and the oath was administered to him by the Town Clerk.
On motion of Edward H. Kavanagh and seconded by Geo. L. Barnes it was
Voted: By a rising vote that a vote of thanks be tendered to Judge Louis A. Cook for long and faithful services as a Moderator.
ARTICLE 2.
Voted: That a committee of one from each Ward be ap- pointed by the Moderator to nominate all officers not re- quired to be elected by ballot, also the Planning Board.
The following were appointed on the above committee, Sidney G. Dunbar, Martin E. Hawes, Albert P. Worthen, William J. Holbrook, Warren T. Simpson.
21
ARTICLE 3.
Voted : To accept the reports of the several boards of Town Officers as printed.
Voted: To accept the following report of the Park Com- missioners-
SPECIAL REPORT OF THE PARK COMMISSIONERS UPON THE MATTER OF PARKS, PLAY-
GROUNDS AND BATHING PLACES.
Your Commissioners to whom the above subject was spe- cially referred have duly considered the matter and beg leave to make the following report. We are strongly convinced that all of the above resorts are desirable in each part of the town, and that our good old town of Weymouth will be left behind in the race with other cities and towns if we do not make provisions for locating and equipping such places for the accommodation of the children and of the public.
It is obvious, however, that financial reasons will prevent the instalment of these various attractive places in all parts of the town at one time.
We, therefore, recommend in the future developments that we first provide playgrounds in East Weymouth and South Weymouth.
Respectfully submitted,
LOUIS A. COOK, WILSON E. BEANE, J. HERBERT WALSH, Park Commissioners.
Voted: To accept the following Supplementary Report of the Selectmen.
SUPPLEMENTARY REPORT OF SELECTMEN.
The Board of Selectmen of Weymouth hereby report that since the Annual Report was prepared it has received from Mr. Laban Pratt of Dorchester a tender of a gift of Four Hundred Dollars to the town of Weymouth, the income from
22
which he asks to have devoted to the care of the two drink- ing fountains which he has before given to the town.
EDWARD W. HUNT,
BRADFORD HAWES,
HENRY E. HANLEY,
RALPH P. BURRELL, Selectmen of Weymouth.
Voted : That the ladies be admitted to the galleries. Voted: To take up Article 67.
Voted: To accept and adopt, subject to the approval of the Attorney-General the report of the committee on By- Laws.
Voted: That the report of the committee on changing of the number and terms of the Selectmen and other town offi- cers be laid on the table until the afternoon ..
Voted: That the committee appointed to nominate the Planning Board make a change of 20% to new members.
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