Holden adopts naming policy

HOLDEN — After extensive discussion and many revisions, the town has a building naming policy.

Adopted at the Aug. 21 Board of Selectmen’s meeting, the policy details the criteria for honoring a person by naming a town building after them.

The effort began after a proposal to name the senior center was brought forward by the Council on Aging, which sought to name the building after a former director.

Selectmen at that time wanted to develop a process that would ensure a name applied to a building would be one worthy of recognition over time.

The board members agreed that anyone honored should meet at least one of several criteria, but must meet a key one: “The honoree must meet compelling and exceptional facts that justify permanent recognition and at least one other,” Chair Stephanie Mulroy said.

The board also added an eighth criterion that requires a three-year wait before a person can be reconsidered for such an honor if they are proposed and fail.

Selectman Anthony Renzoni noted that that way, a person could not be nominated repeatedly for different buildings.

The board members agreed on the policy, noting that the process should be difficult.

“The purpose is to keep a building name that is almost sacred,” Mulroy said. “The vetting will be important.”

“It should be almost impossible; you have to do a lot to get a building named after you,” Renzoni said. “It should come up infrequently.”

“I know all the folks on the COA will be happy to hear there’s a policy,” Mulroy said.

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