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news

Criminal justice speaker, film draw dozens to Bemis

July 1, 2017

Ex-con Clarence Bevins speaks to the crowd in the Bemis Hall basement.

By Laura Berland

Clarence Blevins gave face and voice to the prison population, sharing his experience of spending almost 25 years in Massachusetts’ prisons (including significant time in solitary confinement) at a presentation and film on criminal justice attended by about 70 people in Bemis Hall.

After being incarcerated at a young age, Blevins described prison as a place where no one cares, rehabilitation efforts are virtually nonexistent, and waiting lists for counseling and work programs can be up to three years. But while in prison, he began to read and study and ”help himself because there is no other help offered,” he said at the June 11 event. Today he is a motivational speaker who addresses students, at-risk youth, community-based organizations, and others about his experiences and criminal justice reform and is passionate about helping young people avoid bad decisions that result in incarceration.

The documentary 13th (the title refers to the 13th amendment which forbade involuntary servitude—thus ending slavery—except as a punishment for crimes) was also shown. Through interviews, photos, music and video clips, director Ava DuVernay’s film looked at the effects of convict leasing, lynching, Jim Crow laws, and the war on drugs on minority communities which, by the late 20th century, resulted in a disproportionate incarceration of people of color.

Afterwards, State Senator Mike Barrett opened the floor to responses and questions from the audience. One participant sharing feelings of “shame;” others talked of the need to do something and asked Barrett and Blevins for suggestions.

Barrett discussed the bill he’s sponsoring that aims to restrict “fine-time” sentences—numerous fees that burden low-income defendants and may result in incarceration for failure to pay. He also advocated ending mandatory minimum sentences for all but murder, along with other legislative proposals regarding bail reform and solitary confinement.

Blevins spoke about the Massachusetts Bail Fund which assists those who can’t afford to post bail by paying up to $500, and a number of organizations including Span, Inc., which assists former prisoners to achieve healthy, productive and meaningful lives.

A follow-up session is planned for the fall.

Category: news Leave a Comment

Police, CRANE warn about Snapchat feature

June 29, 2017

Sudbury Police Chief Scott Nix, Lincoln Police Lt. Sean Kennedy and Sudbury Lincoln CRANE wish to inform parents and guardians of a new feature on the Snapchat social networking tool that allows users, including children, to share their exact location with others on the mobile phone app.

The Snap Map feature is automatically included in the latest update of Snapchat, and it allows users to view the locations of their “friends” while they’re active on the app. The feature also includes the ability for users to share their photos and videos publicly, even if their profiles are otherwise private.

“The community should be aware of the potential dangers associated with this update to the Snapchat app,” Nix said. “The ability for other users to track a person’s exact location is a big concern for us, and we highly recommend that parents disable this feature on their children’s phones.”

The Snap Map’s tracking capability can be disabled by activating “Ghost Mode.” Here is how to enable “Ghost Mode” and disable pinpoint GPS tracking:

  • Pinch the screen on the main camera portion of the app
  • Once the map is activated, click on the icon in the upper right-hand corner of the screen
  • Press the slider next to the “Ghost Mode” label at the top of the menu
  • If left active, the Snap Map will pinpoint and display a user’s location whenever they are actively using the app, and will also display a person’s most recent known location.

“This new Snapchat feature is extremely concerning as it allows anyone, including strangers, to access an individual’s location,” Kennedy said. “Parents are strongly encouraged to deactivate this feature if their children use the social media app to ensure they aren’t putting them in any danger.”

“This recent update is obviously worrisome, as Snapchat is extremely popular among students and young people,” said Dan Pereira, president of Sudbury Lincoln CRANE and director of the Lincoln Parks and Recreation Department. “We are encouraging parents and guardians to talk to their children about the importance of privacy and never sharing personal information with strangers, especially your location.”

Category: kids, news Leave a Comment

Ribbon-cutting marks completion of Route 2 project

June 20, 2017

Local and state officials at the Router 2 ribbon-cutting at The Commons on June 16, 2017. Left to right: Oak Knoll Road resident Patrick Murphy, Town Administrator Tim Higgins, former Selectman Peter Braun, Acting MassDOT Highway Administrator Jonathan Gulliver, State Rep. Cory Atkins, Selectman James Craig, State Senator Michael Barrett, MassDOT Chief Engineer Patricia Leavenworth, Bassem Bandar (senior highway engineer for MassDOT Design Consultant Louis Berger), and Paul Stedman, MassDOT District 4 Highway Director.

After three decades of debate, planning, and finally construction, the Route 2 project was officially completed last week with a ribbon-cutting at The Commons, where cars whizzing by on the new flyover provided a backdrop for speakers.

For decades, Crosby’s Corner at the intersection of Route 2A was the scene of sometimes deadly accidents when cars and trucks going over the hill heading toward Concord at highway speeds encountered a stoplight with little warning. The project, which broke ground in spring 2013, resulted in the highway flyover that opened to traffic in fall 2016 as well as a widened highway, improved drainage and landscaping, and new access roads to remove direct intersections with driveways between Bedford Road and Route 126.

“The process from problem recognition to project completion was like a relay race, with different people taking the baton at key milestones,” said Selectman James Craig.

There were years of discussion on how to balance the needs of drivers and local property owners. Several houses were eventually taken by eminent domain and several new roads were created (Emerson Road, Red Maple Lane, Horses Crossing, Mary’s Way, Tracey’s Corner, and the Oak Knoll Road extension). Even naming those new roads was not without controversy, as residents were divided on the final name for what is now Mary’s Way.

“We now have neighborhoods where before we only had individual streets and homes,” said Murphy, who lives on Oak Knoll Road.

Although there were complaints at the start of work in 2013 about how many trees were taken down, the town won concessions from the Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) on more landscaping, and the rest of the work went smoothly, aside from a three-month delay due to unusually harsh winter weather.

At the ceremony, former Selectman Peter Braun praised the MassDOT team (many of whom attended the ribbon-cutting) for “seeking solutions, not drawing lines in the sand.” He and others also acknowledged the hard work over the years of town officials and residents including Dan Boynton, Rosamund Delori, Tom DeNormandie, Bill Kanzer, Sara Mattes, Patrick Murphy, Bruce Repko, Dan Snell, and Ken Bassett, Dilla Tingley, and Ruth Williams.

“The fulfilling part for me was the relationships and working with other people who wanted the best for their neighbors living in their town, as well as the commuters, to find a solution to the safety problem at Crosby’s Corner in a way that worked for Lincoln. For that I’m so grateful,” Delori said in remarks she forwarded to Braun. Delori served on the Board of Selectmen from 1995–2000. (Scroll down to see the full text of her remarks.)

“Things are not supposed to go so well in government,” State Senator Michael Barrett joked. “The neighbors let us know how they felt things should go [and eventually] pronounced themselves satisfied, and that’s a real accomplishment.”

“The success of this project is a wonderful story about what can be accomplished when state and local officials come together in a genuine partnership, and when citizens are involved at the grassroots level to help shape the solution,” said Lincoln Town Administrator Tim Higgins.

The project, which received a Bronze Award from the American Council of Engineering Companies, was designed by MassDOT consultant Louis Berger. Construction was headed by D.W. White Construction.


Remarks forwarded by former Selectman Rosamund Delori:

“My thoughts about Route 2 as the Crosby’s Corner project is celebrated… 

“More than 30 years of planning and relationships went into this particular project. What stands out for me today, looking back, are the relationships. Yes, it took a lot of time, years, years, and years, and persistence, but what I see is not just roads, but friendships and respect for everyone involved.

“It’s not easy to think of this project in isolation. The consensus needed even to get to the project came about after years of “go/no go” decisions for Route 2; discord between Lincoln and Concord about what should or should not happen to Route 2; tremendous discord in Lincoln between people on the road, north of the road and south of the road about its future; discord at the state planning level and the federal level; and even a town-wide conference on the question of Route 2 that was led by Susan Fargo entitled ‘Route to Tomorrow.’

“I’ll never forget presenting with Doug Adams at an Annual Town Meeting arguing that Route 2 should go north and against the preservation of the farmland opposite the entrance to Hanscom Field so that the option of going north would be preserved, and being shut down by the town. From my view, Lincoln had to get beyond the whole issue of relocating Route 2 to the north on that famous Northern Alignment and recognize that Route 2 was going to stay where it was, whether we liked it or not. We had a real responsibility to the people living on Route 2, as well as the people who traveled it as commuters each day, to make their lives safer and more bearable.

“Creating a multitown consensus was not easy. The genesis of that consensus was HATS, where Selectwomen from Lincoln, Lexington, Concord and Bedford demonstrated that they could work together on a multitown issues. The foundation created by that group was one of trust and willingness to try to find a solution to other problems. People like Beth Ries were really instrumental in getting that off the ground. Her contemporaries in Lexington, Bedford, and Concord joined her and she invited me to participate from my seat on the planning board.

“HATS’s work allowed Lincoln and Concord to find common ground and align with Acton to form the Route 2 Corridor Advisory Committee (CAC) under a memorandum of understanding with the support of the Metropolitan Area Planning Council.

“The Route 2 CAC formed the nucleus of people who would see the project through based on a vision for the improving safety but also protecting the environment and historic character of the road. Key to the project area getting off the ground was maintaining the consensus of all three towns that this was the highest priority, it was a necessary project, and we would continue to advocate for and stand behind it.

“From signing the memorandum of understanding in 1994 to hosting meetings and commenting on an environmental notification in 1995, together we provided input and demanded alternatives that addressed the local needs, in addition to engineering solutions. I think we were really fortunate that the people at the state level were willing to work with us as constructively as they did, and that we found reasonable people at the federal level as well. It took three years to move from the environmental notification form to a scope of work that satisfied people’s interests. Key at that time was developing sufficient options that would actually address concerns. In Lincoln that meant back-door alternatives so that people who lived on Route 2 could be safe.

“The voice of the people and their elected officials seemed to be important this project. Yes, the town administrators and managers and planners must’ve been involved, but my memory is that what really impressed the state were all the people who showed up at all the meetings with their elected officials, not the paid employees. Of course, the paid employees have been crucial to keeping the process going through successive sets of elected officials, and without them we wouldn’t have gotten to the end. But the fulfilling part for me was the relationships and working with other people who wanted the best for their neighbors living in their town, as well as the commuters, to find a solution to the safety problem at Crosby’s Corner in a way that worked for Lincoln. For that I’m so grateful.

“In Lincoln, the process really became intense during the late ’90s as we looked for solutions that would work for Lincoln. That was the time of neighborhood meetings and wonderful leadership from people like Patrick Murphy, Dan Boynton, Ruth Williams and Bill Kanzer. That group was amazing! It was an intense time and I have nothing but fond memories of it.

“There were two keys to solving the puzzle. One was the selfless consensus of people who lived on the north side of the road that they would be better off having their properties taken, allowing the road to swing north. The other was the incredibly generous agreement with Mrs. Wang that a portion of her property could be used to create back-door access for Oak Knoll, Orchard Lane and even Rockwood Lane if necessary. Those examples of selfless community spirit have always been inspiring to me and make me feel proud of the town.

“Another source of warm feelings for me is the relationships that we developed over so many meetings: monthly meetings, quarterly meetings, weekly meetings with people to get to the right answer. People like Tom Hession who was the state highway department person in charge of this project and Dan Beagan on the planning side, plus colleagues on the boards of selectmen, Sally Schnitzer and D’Ore Hunter. Long after I left office, the consistent voices of Dilla Tingley, Tom DeNormandie, John Snell, Dan Boynton and Sara Mattes carried a heavy load for many years.

“There are other people that I think of now with great fondness. One is Adel Foz, who from the first gave us an inside view of the politics and bureaucracy of transportation planning. Another is Ken Bassett, who was willing to look at the plans when they began to be developed and remind us nonprofessionals how important it was to keep on top of the project because no matter how beautiful the plans look on paper, once the road was built, it was going to be different.

“No one can say that we haven’t lost trees and that the overpass is taking some getting used to. On the other hand, I think the state did the best they could under the circumstances to accomplish the goals. Two other people come to mind: Nancy Nelson of the National Park and Kathy Anderson of the Thoreau Institute. I’m grateful for their generosity and their willingness to get behind project when they could have stopped it.

“The fact that Concord and Acton were willing to say Crosby’s Corner was the most important thing allowed this project to go through. People in Concord are still working on what to do about the rotary, and people in Action have waited patiently for more than 25 years to have some of their problems addressed. I hope we are supporting them now.”

Category: land use, news Leave a Comment

Drumlin Farm debuts summer music series starting June 23

June 18, 2017

Katrin Roush

The Drumlin Farm Wildlife Sanctuary will host an outdoor summer music series starting with Katrin Roush on Friday, June 23. All three concerts run from 5:30–8 p.m.

This community event, co-presented by climate action group Mothers Out Front, invites people from across the state to celebrate local music, local food, and local action in an effort to provide a hopeful future for the planet.

“We’re excited to bring music to Drumlin Farm as a way to celebrate nature and the arts in an outdoor setting,” said Drumlin Farm Sanctuary Director Renata Pomponi. “Partnering with Mothers Out Front to incorporate a hopeful message of how our community can work together to fight climate change adds a great dimension to this concert series, turning it from a scary topic to one that can bring us together in new and positive ways.”

In addition to having live music and farm-fresh food, the concert series will feature climate-related activities for kids and adults to make pledges and learn how they can make a difference in their own communities.

“Together, we can mobilize to create a livable climate for our children and for generations to come,” said Emily Haslett, Mothers Out Front–Lincoln. “We invite families to join our grassroots movement of mothers, grandmothers, and caregivers who are working for the swift and just transition from fossil fuels to clean, renewable energy.”

All ages are welcome and concert-goers are encouraged to bring a picnic dinner. Farm-fresh snacks and non-alcoholic beverages will be on sale. Please note: no alcohol allowed on the property. Tickets are $10 for adults, $5 for seniors 65+ and children ages 5–12, and free for children under 2. Purchase tickets online here. Other concerts in the series:

  • July 14 – Damn Tall Buildings
  • August 18 – Lula Wiles

Category: arts, conservation, news Leave a Comment

Clarification

June 18, 2017

The June 15 article headlined “Permanent ‘ghost bike’ memorial to be installed” incorrectly stated that bicyclist Eugene Thornberg died after being hit by a car in 2016 at the intersection of Routes 117 and 126. According to town officials, what happened was that Thornberg encountered a stopped line of traffic well back from the traffic light and rode as far as he could to pull up in the line on the right side of the traffic and road. He fell off his bike under the back right wheel of a heavy truck that was waiting in the line; when the traffic started to move immediately thereafter, he was crushed under the wheel. The original story has been updated to reflect this correction.

Category: news Leave a Comment

Committee to study future of DPW site on Lewis St.

June 15, 2017

As part of its work to revitalize Lincoln’s commercial downtown, the South Lincoln Planning Implementation Committee is seeking funds to hire a consultant to do a feasibility study of relocating the Department of Public Works site on Lewis Street.

“Every time we peel that onion back and look at South Lincoln, the subject of that site comes up,” Town Administrator Tim Higgins commented at the June 12 Board of Selectmen meeting. “They feel it’s a due-diligence item to either rule possibilities in or rule them out, because it may bear on the rest of the South Lincoln area. If you think the DPW site is in play, it takes our thinking in a certain direction.”

About 10 years ago, DPW officials were asked to evaluate other possible locations for their trucks and other equipment, and they determined that the transfer station was the only other feasible site on town-owned property. The new study will seek to “expand the aperture” and look at other options such as co-locating some DPW functions on land owned privately or by MassPort near Hanscom Field, for example.

There’s quite a bit of town-owned land in Lincoln, but most of it is under conservation restriction. However, it’s theoretically possible to “swap out” other land “if there’s an appetite in town for freeing up the DPW site for a different kind of development,” Higgins said.

But resident Robert Domnitz, a former Planning Board member and co-founder of the Northside News, indicated there might be resistance to moving the DPW to the north side of town. “This needs to not be a dollars-and-cents, square-footage exercise, but a sense of what the folks up there would like to see happen or not happen,” he said at the selectmen’s meeting.

One idea that’s come up is moving the transfer station to the Lewis Street site instead of vice versa. “The transfer station is probably the most social place in town,” Domnitz said, and having it in South Lincoln “would bring hundreds of customers to the area.”

Other topics discussed at this week’s Board of Selectmen meeting (summary courtesy of former Selectman Peter Braun):

  • The board interviewed four of the eight candidates who asked to be considered to be appointed as at-large members of the Community Center Planning and Preliminary Design Committee. Selectmen plan to appoint four at-large members at its next meeting after interviewing the other candidates.
  • The board voted to appoint ­­Lawrence Buell to the open seat on the Conservation Commission.
  • The board interviewed Evan Gorman and Bijoy Misra for the two vacant elected seats on the Housing Commission. In accordance with statutory procedures, the board and the Housing Commission jointly make the appointments for the remainder of the vacant terms.
  • The board discussed with school officials how and when to coordinate the hiring and interaction of the architectural consultants who will advise the School Building Committee and the Community Center Planning and Preliminary Design Committee.
  • Town Administrator Tim Higgins noted that the public event to celebrate completion of the Rt. 2/Crosby’s Corner project will take place at the lower parking lot of The Commons In Lincoln at 10 a.m. on Friday, June 16.

 

Category: land use, news, South Lincoln/HCA* Leave a Comment

Permanent “ghost bike” memorial to be installed

June 15, 2017

A sketch of the ghost bike to be installed in memory of Eugene Thornberg outside the Public Safety Building (The plantings are pictured only for illustration; a landscape architect will choose the actual plantings.)

To memorialize accident victim Eugene Thornberg and call attention to road safety for bicyclists and motorists, his family will give the town a permanent “ghost bike” to be installed outside the town’s Public Safety Building.

Thornburg, a 61-year-old Wayland resident, was one of two bicyclists killed on Lincoln roads last summer when he was involved in an accident near the intersection of Routes 117 and 126. A memorial service with a temporary ghost bike was held at the scene in September 2016, but keeping it permanently at that site wouldn’t be safe because of traffic concerns, Police Chief Kevin Kennedy said at the June 12 Board of Selectmen meeting.

After an investigation, no criminal or civil motor vehicle charges were filed filed as a result of the accident. However, the town established a seven-member Cycling Safety Advisory Committee earlier this year to develop recommendations for improving cycling safety in Lincoln.

“Ghost bikes” are old bicycles that are stripped down, spray-painted white, and locked to a sign or parking meter close to the site of a fatal bike accident. The bikes are usually installed anonymously by a fellow cyclist, though members of the bicycling community sometimes hold ceremonies at ghost bike sites to commemorate the dead cyclist.. The first ghost bike appeared in St. Louis in 2003 and the movement has spread internationally as a way to raise awareness about bicycle safety and sharing the road.

A member of Thornberg’s family is fabricating the ghost bike, which will be installed along with plantings in the fall. It will also bear a plaque saying “Wherever you go, go with all your heart.”

“When he rode his bike, that’s kind of how he went. Any chance he had to go out there on his bike, that’s where he was, said Thornberg’s widow, Patrice Thornberg.

Selectman James Craig thanked family members for “working with town to turn this tragedy into something we hope can educate.”

Category: news Leave a Comment

Groundbreaking caps decade-long drive for new Minuteman school

June 14, 2017

Some of the many officials who took turns with the ceremonial shovels at the Minuteman High School groundbreaking were (left to right) Minuteman School Committee chair Jeffrey Stulin, State Rep. Jay Kaufman (D-Lexington), MSBA Executive Director Jack McCarthy, Minuteman School Building Committee chair Ford Spalding, and Superintendent Edward Bouquillon (click to enlarge).

Almost a decade in the planning, a new Minuteman High School finally got underway at a well-attended groundbreaking ceremony on June 14. The event took place where the front door of the new building will go, at the western edge of the district-owned property in Lincoln, a few hundred yards from the existing school in Lexington.

The $145 million project cleared its last hurdle last September with a district-wide vote. The new school is expected to open in September 2019, after which the old building will be demolished and new athletic fields will be built.

“An investment in education pays the best interest,” said Jack McCarthy, executive director of the Massachusetts School Building Authority (MSBA), quoting Benjamin Franklin. The project has been in the MSBA planning process longer than almost any other project in the state, spanning the tenure of several state treasurers, he noted.

“This project is like Job—it went through every trial imaginable… and we were spit out of the whale on September 20″ when the project was approved last year in the district-wide vote, McCarthy remarked. The MSBA is contributing more than $44 million of the school’s cost. To secure project approval, the district also had to revise its governance structure and membership, scale back student enrollment, and change state regulations so non-members contribute to capital costs.

“This project nearly failed several times,” said Minuteman School Committee chair Jeffrey Stulin of Needham. Speaking directly to Minuteman students in reference to how he felt at the project’s beginnings, he said, ” I expect that some time in the future, you too will become involved in an idea of importance where you’re overwhelmed and in over your head… but you have no chance of success if you don’t even try. You have to have courage to accept that you may fail.”

Minuteman Superintendent Edward Bouquillon, a Lincoln resident, said he first realized that the existing building needed significant repair or replacement soon after he accepted the job as superintendent in 2007, thus starting the decade-long journey to win voter approval and state funding. At times emotional, he thanked an array of people and organization, including his wife Diana.

Bouquillon urged officials not to tinker with the existing model for career vocational-technical education. “Now is not the time to shave off the best aspects of high-quality career and vocational technical education and try to graft it onto a traditional high school schedule,” he said. “All that will do is weaken our system in Massachusetts.”

He also urged the state legislature to increase funding for similar projects. “MSBA needs another penny of the sales tax to get all the vocational technical schools rebuilt and to build new ones to fill the skills gap,” he said. Currently, MSBA is funded by 16 percent (one penny) of the state’s 6.25 percent sales tax.

Guests at the groundbreaking included a host of officials from the state and district towns as well as education officials, members of Minuteman’s business-led program advisory committees, and a representative from the Massachusetts Life Sciences Center.

There were no Lincoln officials in attendance, however. The town’s residents voted to withdraw from the Minuteman district in early 2016, a move that takes effect on July 1. At that point, the district will go from 16 towns to 10: Acton, Arlington, Belmont, Bolton, Concord, Dover, Lancaster, Lexington, Needham, and Stow.

The new school is designed for 628 students who will spend their Minuteman “careers” in one of two “career academies”: a Life Sciences and Services Academy, and an Engineering, Construction and Trades Academy. The curriculum’s 16 career and technical education programs will include two new ones: Multimedia Engineering (Technical Theatre) and Advanced Manufacturing.

Gilbane Building Co. is the construction manager for the project and Kaestle Boos Associates is the architect. Skanska USA Building serves as Minuteman’s project manager.

Category: Minuteman HS project*, news, schools Leave a Comment

Route 2 ribbon-cutting this Friday

June 13, 2017

Lincolnites are invited to a ribbon-cutting ceremony to mark the completion of the Route 2/Crosby’s Corner highway improvement project on Friday, June 16 at 10 a.m. at The Commons (lower parking area) on the hillside overlooking the flyover bridge.

Scheduled speakers include:

  • James Craig, chair of the Lincoln Board of Selectmen
  • Mike Barrett, state senator for Lincoln and Concord
  • Cory Atkins, Concord state representative
  • Jonathan Gulliver, acting MassDOT highway administrator
  • Peter Braun, former Lincoln selectman
  • Patrick Murphy, project abutter and neighborhood organizer

Many Lincolnites participated in the project over a period of 30 years—explaining the need, lobbying for the funds, participating at every step in the design, and helping to make sure the project was constructed in accordance with the plans. Organizers hope the event will be a great way of telling the story and thanking those who participated along the way.

Category: news Leave a Comment

Two projects under way at Hanscom

June 13, 2017

Starting in August, residents who live near Hanscom Field may notice more noise than usual as air traffic is temporarily rerouted during two separate runway reconstruction projects. However, another unrelated project—construction of a new hangar for Boston MedFlight—will not result in any increase in noise or air traffic in the area

Logan Airport is now resurfacing its most heavily used runway, meaning it will be closed entirely until late June and open for arrivals only until about November 1. What this means for the Lincoln/Bedford area is that some smaller business-type flights will use Hanscom instead of Logan, according to Amber Goodspeed, MassPort’s manager for airport administration at Hanscom Field.

Beginning in August, one of Hanscom’s runways will also be resurfaced, Goodspeed added. As a result, some of Hanscom’s traffic will be rerouted so their flight paths go more over Bedford and Lincoln rather than Concord and Lexington, Goodspeed said.

Boston MedFlight project

Boston MedFlight is also moving its local base from Hanscom Air Force Base to Hanscom Field. The company is building a new hangar on the site of an older one that’s been demolished. This new facility will allow easier access for training, education, community outreach as well as helicopter maintenance, since visitors will no longer need to go through Air Force base security.

“Nothing is going to change as far as our operations go” in terms of the number of aircraft or staff on site, said Boston MedFlight General Manager of Aviation Rick Kenin.

Boston MedFlight’s fleet (click to enlarge).

Among those who will benefit from the easier access are Lincoln Fire Department paramedics, who get their first-responder training from Boston MedFlight. The company already hosts some visits from community members and groups such as Boy Scouts, “but we plan to greatly expand that once we’re on the civilian side” of the air field, Kenin said. “This will work out much better as far as community activity and outreach.”

The $17 million project is expected to be complete in about a year.

Boston MedFlight currently has two local offices, one on Hanscom Air Force Base and another in the nearby Lincoln North office building, as well as facilities in Plymouth and Lawrence. The nonprofit firm transports about 4,000 patients per year, about half of them via ground transportation and the rest by helicopter and fixed-wing aircraft, Kenin said. Most of the flights take critically ill or injured patients from community hospitals (including Emerson Hospital in Concord) to Massachusetts General Hospital and other advanced-care Boston hospitals, but the company also picks up some patients directly from accident scenes.

Boston MedFlight is not taxpayer-funded, relying instead on donations and insurance reimbursements, Kenin noted.

Category: health and science, land use, news Leave a Comment

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