Council members spent substantial time discussing whether the borough should adopt written rules for pavilion fee waivers and how to apply them. AARP representatives said nonprofits historically expected exemptions: "We are a nonprofit, and we had ... under the theory that the nonprofits were exempt from paying the fees in the past," Florence Settlement said, asking the borough to consider an exemption for the chapter.
Council members raised concerns about outside nonprofits using a public resource and the burden on borough public-works staff to prepare parks for events. One council member cautioned that if waivers are open to nonresidents, "we're gonna have a lot of people asking for our pavilions," and another emphasized that fee waivers do not remove insurance requirements: "It's only a fee waiver," a staff member said.
After discussion the council held the requested date for AARP's June 10 event but voted to table the fee-waiver decision so staff and council could draft clear criteria and consider options such as limiting waivers to Northampton-based organizations, weekday-only waivers, or case-by-case decisions. The motion to table was made by Mister Glassig and seconded by Miss Haldeman; the chair announced the motion passed by voice vote and asked staff to follow up promptly with the applicants.