Editor’s note: This is the first of three articles on candidates for the Lincoln Planning Board, which has three candidates running for two seats. Tomorrow will feature incumbent Margaret Olson and Saturday will feature Jennifer Morris Gundy. Next week we will have an article about Board of Selectman candidate James Craig, who is running unopposed for the seat of Noah Eckhouse, who is stepping down. The town election is Monday, March 28.
Steve Gladstone
To the editor:
I would like to announce my candidacy for one of the vacant seats on Lincoln’s Planning Board.
Having joined the Lincoln community nine years ago, my wife Susan and I are still relative newcomers to a town whose founding families still enrich our community. It has been a real pleasure to become ever more closely involved with townsfolk, governance, and of course the landscape.
Soon after our arrival, I was in a position to serve on the Facilities Coordinating Committee. Identifying usage patterns, availability, capabilities and limitations of our core meeting spaces led to deeper engagement in the town’s management and social processes. Most recently I was selected as one of the three at-large members of the Community Center Study Committee.
Professionally, I have applied two science master’s degrees as Director of Research Operations at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) for 22 years, where I was part of the management team responsible for an interdisciplinary academic/clinical research enterprise with a $325 million budget. As a director in BIDMC’s Office of Science and Technology, I was intimately involved in budgeting, strategic planning, space allocation, and implementation of diverse critical functions. I am now part of the management team at a pharmaceutical startup in Cambridge.
Lincoln enjoys a distinct rural character unique among towns so near Boston. It is a fundamental aspect of our special town spirit, one that deserves to be maintained, to “Keep Lincoln, Lincoln.” We must and will change as times change. This mindfully managed evolution is one of my core values. The Planning Board and Town should and must be open to new ideas and concepts as they blend with this guiding principle.
Volunteers are the backbone of Lincoln’s community spirit. It is exciting to continue my involvement in Town affairs by offering my candidacy for the Planning Board. It is my hope that this note gives the voters of Lincoln some familiarity with me personally, and with my professional background. Please call or email me with your thoughts, questions, or concerns—or join me for coffee at the Whistle Stop. And please DO vote, DO volunteer and DO get involved in this exceptional town!
Sincerely,
Steve Gladstone
67 Winter St.
steve.gladstone@gmail.com
Jennifer Morris Gundy says
I am also running for a Planning Board seat, and had the pleasure of meeting Steve this morning at the PTO candidates forum. I want to applaud his comments about volunteering and getting involved in town affairs. Political contests in Lincoln are usually pretty civil (not like some!) but having more candidates for any board prompts public dialog and strengthens our community. I’m really glad that residents will have some choices to make on this year’s ballot!
Best wishes,
Jennie