North Smithfield
North Smithfield planner moving to Smithfield
01:00 AM EST on Tuesday, November 18, 2008
NORTH SMITHFIELD — Town planner Michael Phillips is leaving his post to take a similar job in Smithfield, Phillips said today.
His last day in North Smithfield will be Nov. 26 and he will assume his duties in Smithfield on Dec. 1.
In North Smithfield, Phillips was pretty much a one-man shop. He said the Smithfield job was attractive because the town has an assistant planner, a town engineer and a larger building inspection staff.
“The fact that they have a professional town manager is a plus,” Phillips said. “There is an extra layer of protection with that.”
Phillips said the coming change of administrations in North Smithfield — Town Administrator Robert B. Lowe was defeated in his re-election bid by Paulette Hamilton earlier this month — was a factor. He said he had not heard from Hamilton about her plans for the department and thought it best to look around.
“There was some uncertainty about what was going to happen,” he said. “And in uncertain times, you like to have a job.”
Hamilton and Smithfield Town Manager Dennis G. Finlay could not be reached for comment.
Phillips, 49, has been the town planner in North Smithfield for 12 years in during two stints, the first form 1993 to 1997 and then again from 2000 to 2008. He was town planner in Cumberland from 1997 to 2000. Before joining North Smithfield he had worked as town planner in Glocester. He is a University of Rhode Island graduate with a master’s degree in planning.
Looking back on his last eight years, Phillips said he was most proud of the renovation of the Slater Mill complex in Slatersville and the conversion of the old mills, some 200 years old, into apartments. The mill-to-apartment conversion of the Tupperware complex was another high point of his second tour with the town. He said.
In Smithfield, Phillips said he was looking forward to getting more involved in economic development. With Interstate 295 and state Routes 116 and 7, Smithfield has a lot of places it can locate different types of development, he said.
“It’s a bigger part of the job,” he said of economic development planning. “I’m looking forward to learning more about that, getting more involved in that.”
| H1N1 and Pets: Felines, Ferrets and Flu | |
| Barrington's affordable housing puts opportunities within reach for mother, daughter | |
| Police seize large quantity of marijuana in Woonsocket |
More North Smithfield stories
Most Viewed Yesterday
No driver’s license? For many, no problem
Some immigrants in Central Falls are afraid to give info to the government
PC 91, Stonehill 55: Peterson gets a lot done
Most active surveys
What's your favorite breakfast/lunch place?
Are the Yankees on the brink of another dynasty?
Will you allow your children to be vaccinated against swine flu? Why or why not?
Is it a bad thing or a good thing that prostitution is legal in Rhode Island, indoors?
Most e-mailed in the last 24 hours
Reader Reaction









You must be logged in to contribute. Log in | Register Now!
You are logged in as screenname | Log Out
You are logged in, but do not have a "screen" name. Create a Screen Name