The March 29 story headlined “Town Meeting 2022 roundup” has been updated to correct errors in the section about Water Department appropriations. This includes correcting the figure for an asset management plan appropriation for the Water Department ($22,500, not $2,200), and a corrected explanation of how federal ARPA money rather than town funds will be used to pay for some items.
The latest Lincoln Chipmunk is here!
The latest issue of the Lincoln Chipmunk, the quarterly arts e-zine companion to the Lincoln Squirrel, has just been published. See what your friends and neighbors have created, and start working on your own submissions — the next deadline is May 20, 2022. Questions? Call editor Alice Waugh at 617-710-5542 or email lincolnsquirelnews@gmail.com.
News acorns
Session on no-till gardening
The Lincoln Agricultural Commission and the Lincoln Garden Club will host a Zoom presentation on “No-Till Gardening and Cover Crops” on Tuesday, April 5 at 7 p.m. Register here or on the Garden Club website. Using no-till and cover-crop methods ;on our farms and in our gardens not only helps sequester carbon but leads to healthier soils and more abundant crops and flowers. Douglas Wolcik and Kayleigh Boyle (formerly of Gaining Ground Farm in Concord) will discuss how to incorporate no-till. Learn how to set up permanent beds using only hand tools, take and interpret soil tests, amend soils for optimum soil health, manage pests and disease with best practices, and how to cover-crop in a no-till system.
Events at the Council on Aging & Human Services
Here are some upcoming activities hosted by the Lincoln Council on Aging and Human Services. Most events are open to Lincoln residents of all ages. For a full list — including clinics, exercise classes, regular meetings of interest groups, and online chats with town officials — see the COAHS’s calendar page. Call 781-259-8811 or email gagnea@lincolntown.org for Zoom links and other information.
Senior Salon Day
Tuesdays starting April 5
The COA&HS is now offering a monthly half-price Senior Salon Day in collaboration with the salon at Minuteman Tech. Appointments are available between 9 a.m. and noon; call 781-259-8811 to book. Click here for a full list of salon services. The Salon is located at 758 Marrett Rd. in Lexington. Call Carlee at 781-259-8811 if you need transportation. You can also eat lunch or get takeout at the school’s Café after your appointment.
Life Safety: Information to Help Us Stay Safer in Our Homes
Friday, April 8 at 1 p.m.
Lt. Ben Juhola of the Lincoln Fire Department will discuss life safety information to help people stay safer in our homes. Learn how to minimize risk and increase awareness surrounding fall prevention, emergency Knox boxes, home safety evaluations and more.
Current Law Enforcement Events: National and Local
Friday, April 15 at 1 p.m.
Police Chief Kevin Kennedy will offer updates on all the current news pertaining law enforcement, both in Lincoln and beyond. Bring your questions about Lincoln policing and senior-related topics.
Film: “The Lives of Others”
The Lincoln Library Film Society will host an in-person screening of “The Lives of Others” on Thursday, April 21 at 6 p.m. in the library’s Tarbell Room. Click here for a synopsis. Rated R. Academy Award Winner for Best Foreign Film in 2007.
Wanted: Outdoor volunteers
The Conservation Department and the Lincoln Land Conservation Trust are looking for volunteers, with opportunities that vary by type and time commitment level.
Fieldwork Fridays & Stewardship Saturdays — Join staff to help maintain trails and open space. Build bridges, learn invasive species management, and enjoy the great outdoors. Initial dates re below; more will be announced later in the season. Those interested in volunteering should contact the Conservation Department at conservation@lincolntown.org or fill out and submit this volunteer application form.
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- Saturday, May 7 (10 a.m.–noon) — Wheeler Farm garlic mustard pull and invasives clearing
- Friday, June 3 (10 a.m.–noon) — Beaver Pond invasives pulling
Adopt-a-Trail Program — For volunteers who already enjoy walking on the trails regularly. Volunteers may choose one or two conservation areas to “adopt.” Responsibilities include keeping trails clear of twigs and branches, picking up trash, light vegetation management, and reporting on downed trees, erosion, missing signage, and other trail issues. Ideally, Adopt-a-Trail volunteers will check and report on their chosen trail systems at least monthly.
Volunteer Rangers — Volunteer rangers walk the trails and provide friendly education to trail users about overall trail rules. This position requires being outgoing and willing to engage with trail users. It’s meant to provide a welcoming presence on the trails, so we’re looking for rangers who act as friendly ambassadors to the Lincoln trail system. We are currently prioritizing rangers at Mt. Misery and Flint’s Pond. Ideally, volunteer rangers will be out on the trails once a week but we can accommodate some schedule flexibility.
Lincoln Green-Up Day — a town-wide event.
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- Week of April 18–22 — Individuals and groups are encouraged to self-organize cleanups. Trash bags will be available for pickup in advance, as well as drop-off locations.
- Friday, April 22 — Conservation staff will lead two group cleanups from 10 a.m.–noon. At 1 p.m., we’ll gather at Lincoln Station for a celebration with local groups, including Farrington Nature Linc. Enjoy family-friendly activities, treats, information about Earth Day, climate change, and more. Each participating group/household will receive a free Earth Day Serviceberry Seedling at the celebration while supplies last. Our hope is to have community members sharing their cleanup efforts and Earth Day messages on the OuterSpatial app. Please complete this form if you’d like to participate so we can provide support, supplies, and more details as the event approaches.
Police log for March 18–26, 2022
March 18
Lincoln Road (10:47 a.m.) — Officer conducting traffic enforcement stopped a vehicle. During the interaction, the operator asked the officer for assistance from social services in their community. The officer met the operator at the station and provided assistance and information.
Page Road (12:28 p.m.) — Well-being check was requested on the resident. Officers went to the home. All appeared fine and the resident was reaching out to the caller.
Ridge Road (2:18 p.m.) — Caller reported someone was screaming somewhere in the area. officers checked the area and spoke to several people in the area who heard nothing.
Tower Road (4:07 p.m.) — Resident received an email requesting funds from an email address they thought they recognized. The resident sent money to the party which was found to be a scam email address. Report taken.
March 19
Harvest Circle (1:00 p.m.) — Resident reported money being transferred from their bank account into a fraudulent account in a relative’s name. Officers followed up with the bank and they were able to seize the money, and the bank refunded the resident. Belmont police were notified regarding the fraudulent bank account that was opened up in a Belmont resident’s name.
March 20
Lincoln Gas & Auto, South Great Road (9:04 a.m.) — Caller reported there was no attendant when they pulled in to get gas. While en route, the caller reported the attendant was in the rear of the building and everything was fine.
Concord Road (9:08 a.m.) — Caller reported that a tractor trailer struck the traffic sign at the intersection of Routes 126 and 117. Officers checked the area and also notified Wayland was the tractor trailer was heading south on Route 126. Unable to locate; DPW notified.
South Great Road (7:08 p.m.) — Caller reported they had a water leak going into an electrical outlet. Fire Department responded and reported that the homeowner was able to fix the problem.
March 21
Bank of America parking lot (10:29 a.m.) — Caller reported a minor two-car crash in the parking lot. No injuries.
March 22
Codman Road (3:32 p.m.) — Caller report that some trees on the conservation trails had been spray painted. Officer located the trees and took a report.
March 23
Wells Road (12:26 a.m.) — Party requested a well-being check on a resident. It is believed that the caller was harassing the resident. An officer spoke to the caller and no call for service was completed.
Winter Street (9:38 a.m.) — Caller reported finding a dog near Old County Road and said they took the dog home to Maynard. Animal Control was contacted and will pick up the dog.
Wells Road (10:31 a.m.) — Resident reported an odor of natural gas. Fire Department checked the area but found no gas readings.
South Great Road (2:21 p.m.) — Caller reported a minor crash near Old Sudbury Road, saying the parties appear to be arguing. Officer responded; crash was very minor and he assisted the parties with a paper exchange.
Birchwood Lane (3:23 p.m.) — Caller requested information/advice from an officer regarding an ongoing matter with an acquaintance. An officer spoke to the party and provided assistance.
Tower Road (5:35 p.m.) — Caller requested assistance after locking themselves in a chicken coop. An officer responded and assisted the party.
March 24
DeCordova Museum (12:02 p.m.) — Caller reported three children got separated from their parents on the trails near the museum. Police and fire units checked the trails with the assistance of civilians. The kids were later found unharmed and reunited with their parents about 90 minutes after the initial call.
Concord Road (2:40 p.m.) — Resident lodged a complaint about vehicles parked along the roadway. An officer responded and spoke to car owners, who said they would no longer park there.
March 25
Hanscom Air Force Base (12:06 p.m.) — Hanscom Security Forces reported that a party with an active traffic warrant out of the Lowell District Court was attempting to get on the base. Stephane Garcia, 20, of Lowell was arrested and later brought to the Concord District Court after being booked at the police station.
Cambridge Turnpike eastbound (7:41 p.m.) — Concord police requested assistance after a person suffering a mental health emergency fled from them. Officers checked the area but were unable to locate the person.
Minebrook Road (8:01 p.m.) — Caller requested a well-being check after missing an appointment. Officers checked the residence and no one was home.
March 26
Cambridge Turnpike westbound (2:36 a.m.) — Officer checked on a vehicle pulled to the side of the road. The driver was having a problem with the vehicle but able to fix it.
Old Concord Road (1:20 p.m.) — Caller reported that someone was using a leaf blower at the residence. Officer noted that a tree service is on scene and spoke to the workers and the reported caller.
Tower Road (4:04 p.m.) — Caller requested assistance after locking themselves in a chicken coop. An officer responded and assisted the party.
Cambridge Water Department (4:27 p.m.) — Caller reported people fishing at the reservoir. Two people were found and advised to move along.
Brooks Road (11:19 p.m.) — Caller asked to speak with an officer regarding a scam. An officer spoke to the party and took a report.
Correction
In the March 29 story headlined “Flint tops voting for Planning Board; Hutchinson, Rajdev elected,” the Lincoln/Sudbury vote breakdown for L-S School Committee challenger Maura Carty was reversed. Of the three candidates in that race, she got the most votes in Sudbury but the fewest in Lincoln.
Town Meeting 2022 roundup
Here are highlights of some of the measures that were approved at the March 26 Annual Town Meeting. See previous Lincoln Squirrel stories about the fossil-fuel restriction proposal and the community center votes.
IDEA Committee
A report from Lincoln’s Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, & Anti-Racism Committee, which was created in the wake of George Floyd’s murder, noted that the group is focusing on town government, public policy, and civic engagement as it moves from planning to action. It will apply federal Covid-19 relief funds allocated to the town (see below) to hire a consultant for one year to begin building Lincoln’s diversity program. Those federal funds will also be used to create an AIDE (antiracism, inclusion, diversity, and equity) faculty residency for the schools to develop teacher training, help teachers develop materials and methods that address those goals.
ARPA funds
Town Administrator Tim Higgins reported on how the town will spend $2.06 million in Covid-19 relief funds from the federal American Rescue Plan Act. Those funds can by law be used to defray costs incurred by the public health emergency, premium pay for affected workers, loss of town revenue, and some narrowly defined infrastructure purposes. A working group studied the regulations and requirements and recommended a slate of projects totaling $1.68 million. Of that total, $1.3 million will go towards Water Department projects (see below). The $386,420 remainder will be set aside for any future public health needs.
Water Department
Voters approved $142,500 for three Water Department capital spending items: $80,000 for a replacement roof for the water treatment plant, $40,000 for an electric truck to replace a 12-year-old vehicle, and $22,500 for an asset management plan, which will include a risk-based capital plan and funding analysis. The last two expenses will be paid from the department’s retained earnings while the roof will be funded by bonding.
Last year, voters approved spending $480,000 to replace the Tower Road well and $39,000 to study options for the Bedford Road storage tank, whose cover had deteriorated. Those appropriations will be rescinded at next year’s Town Meeting, because the new federal ARPA funds will cover both the well (now $600,000) and $500,000 to repair the tank cover. ARPA will also cover $200,000 in distribution system repairs.
Miscellaneous spending
Seventeen appropriations totaling $621,094 by the Capital Planning Committee included $60,000 for roof repairs to two of the Hartwell pods to keep them structurally sound until the fate of the pods is determined by a soon-to-be-named community center building committee, and $20,000 for a new rug at the Pierce House.
A late-breaking expense that was not in the published warrant was $200,000 for a new lighting control system for the recently refurbished Brooks portion of the Lincoln School. The company that installed the brand-new system was sold and the new owner is not supporting the system, said CPC Chair Audrey Kalmus. The company is providing a new system free of charge but Lincoln is liable for labor costs amounting to $200,000.
The original plans called for the same lighting systems to be used in the Smith and Brooks school sections, but the problem was caught early enough to specify the change now rather than having to make it later.
The town also approved spending $350,000 to remove the modular classrooms and restore the ballfield after the school project is finished this summer. That cost as well as the ballfield restoration will be offset by proceeds from the sale of the modular classrooms.
Among the items approved for Community Preservation Fund spending:
- $310,000 to improve the drainage at the athletic field behind Town Hall
- $205,000 for the third and final phase of a project to repair the library parapet
- $15,000 for a bathymetric survey of Pierce Pond as a first step in restoring the pond from its current cattail marsh condition. The study will determine how much dredging is needed and whether the sediments are contaminated to the point that disposal would become cost-prohibitive.
Tables showing line items for the town budget, CPC, and CPF can be found here.
Right-to-farm bylaw
Voters approved a new requirement that property buyers must be notified by sellers or their agents about Lincoln’s right-to-farm bylaw. Agricultural Commission member Louise Bergeron explained that the commission would discuss the requirement with real estate agents “to avoid surprises” among potential buyers, but that agents would not be forced to disclose the bylaw. “It’s not an obligation per se — it’s a promotion,” she said.
Among those who voted against the measure were Select Board members James Craig and Jonathan Dwyer. “While I fully support the fact that we are a right-to-farm town, my objection to this article was based on the fact that as a real estate lawyer, I am not in favor of imposing additional obligations on people selling their homes above and beyond what is legally required,” Craig said in an email after Town Meeting. “I believe the Agricultural Commission could get the word out in a manner other than imposing an obligation on a homeowner to do so.”
Dwyer said the Select Board didn’t take a position on the issue before Town Meeting. ”I was thinking this sounds pretty straight-ahead and was a small change to improve the bylaw, so we didn’t bother scheduling an interview” at which the Agricultural Commission would have presented their proposal to the board, he said. “We just assumed this was relatively inconsequential.”
At Town Meeting, however, a real estate agent questioned how the requirement would be enforced and at what stage of the property sale process. Dwyer said he voted no (though without discussing it ahead of time with fellow board members) due to that “uncertainty in the process” and the fact that “I didn’t get a sense there was a problem.”
The third Select Board member, Jennifer Glass, said, “I voted yes as I saw this as an effort to be transparent about the bylaw so that there are fewer surprises for new and current residents.”
Bright Light award
Jim Cunningham was recognized for single-handedly launching and maintaining Lincoln’s local cable TV program, as well as filming and producing hundreds of meetings of towns boards and committees for viewing online — all without pay. He’s been on the Cable TV Committee for 20 years (most of that as chair). “He’s saved the town thousands and thousands of dollars,” Select Board member Jonathan Dwyer said.
Historic districts
The home at 26 Winter Street will be added to one of the town’s existing historic districts, while 7 and 10 Twin Pond Lane will be the first homes in the newly created Twin Pond Lane Historic District.
Property tax relief
The town had hoped to enact a Property Tax Circuit Breaker program that residents approved a year ago pending action on a home-rule petition to the state legislature, but the legislature has not yet acted on that petition, so the item was passed over at Town Meeting.
Flint tops voting for Planning Board; Hutchinson, Rajdev elected
Challenger Ephraim Flint won one of two seats on the Planning Board with the highest tally of the three candidates, winning 713 votes in the March 28 town election. Incumbent Chair Margaret Olson narrowly retained her seat over fellow board member Steve Gladstone by a margin of 561–544.
Flint, a Lincoln native who served on the board from 2003–2008, was seen by some as a candidate who was more cautious about allowing more development in town, particularly in South Lincoln.
In the Select Board races, Jim Hutchinson will replace outgoing board member James Craig, beating School Committee member Adam Hogue by a tally of 914–215. Hutchinson previously served on the Finance Committee, Water Commission and Green Energy Committee. In the March 16 candidate forum, Hogue advocated for more housing in town to alleviate the statewide housing crisis and increase socioeconomic diversity in town.
“I just wanted to send a quick note and congratulate Jim on his victory,” Hogue said in an email to LincolnTalk on Tuesday morning. “I wish Jim and the rest of the Select Board nothing but the best during the next term and look forward to my continued work on the School Committee. I am proud of the campaign me and my team ran and plan to continue the fight for affordable housing, economic development, and responsible budgets.”
In the Lincoln School Committee race, Kim Rajdev beat Joseph Dwyer by a 901-211 margin. “The voters of Lincoln have spoken,” Dwyer wrote to LincolnTalk on Tuesday. “Kim, you won fair and square. I wish you the best of luck in your term. I appreciate the issue-oriented campaign and that it did not devolve into personality squabbles. The voters of Lincoln deserved that. I want to thank the moderators of LincolnTalk and Lincoln Squirrel for providing a quick and fair method of communicating positions on the issues. We should all thank Valerie Fox and her team for doing a great job operating a smooth election and providing quick results.”
L-S School Committee incumbents Cara Endyke Doran and Kevin Matthews retained their seats, winning 1,853 and 1,650 votes respectively in the combined Lincoln and Sudbury town elections.
The vote in Sudbury was close: 1,307 for Carty, 1,207 for Matthews, and 1,046 for Endyke Doran, the incumbent chair. Challenger Maura Carty got the most votes in Sudbury but the fewest in Lincoln. In Lincoln, the biggest vote-getter for that race was “blank” with 882 votes, undoubtedly because none of the candidates were Lincoln residents.
Prec. 1 | Prec. 2 | Total | |
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SELECT BOARD | |||
ADAM M. HOGUE | 110 | 105 | 215 |
JAMES M. HUTCHINSON | 595 | 319 | 914 |
WRITE INS | 2 | 2 | 4 |
BLANK | 38 | 24 | 62 |
BOARD OF ASSESSORS | |||
BRUCE D. CAMPBELL | 534 | 322 | 856 |
WRITE INS | 4 | 1 | 5 |
BLANK | 207 | 127 | 334 |
BOARD OF HEALTH | |||
STEVEN R. KANNER | 547 | 334 | 881 |
WRITE INS | 5 | 0 | 5 |
BLANK | 193 | 116 | 309 |
CEMETERY COMMISSIONER | |||
CONRAD H. TODD | 574 | 333 | 907 |
WRITE INS | 4 | 0 | 4 |
BLANK | 167 | 117 | 284 |
COMMISSIONER OF TRUST FUNDS | |||
DOUGLAS B. HARDING | 557 | 327 | 884 |
WRITE INS | 3 | 1 | 4 |
BLANK | 185 | 122 | 307 |
HOUSING COMMISSION | |||
RAKESH KARMACHARYA | 547 | 323 | 870 |
WRITE INS | 4 | 0 | 4 |
BLANK | 194 | 127 | 321 |
L-S REGIONAL SCHOOL DISTRICT COMMITTEE | |||
CARA EILEEN ENDYKE-DORAN | 506 | 301 | 807 |
KEVIN J. MATTHEWS | 284 | 159 | 443 |
MAURA F. CARTY | 145 | 110 | 255 |
WRITE INS | 3 | 0 | 3 |
BLANK | 552 | 330 | 882 |
PARKS and RECREATION COMMITTEE | |||
THORNTON D. RING, JR | 552 | 314 | 866 |
WRITE INS | 3 | 2 | 5 |
BLANK | 190 | 134 | 324 |
PLANNING BOARD | |||
STEPHEN R. GLADSTONE | 341 | 203 | 544 |
SETHA MARGARET OLSON | 359 | 202 | 561 |
EPHRAIM BEMIS FLINT | 419 | 294 | 713 |
WRITE INS | 0 | 1 | 1 |
BLANK | 371 | 200 | 571 |
SCHOOL COMMITTEE | |||
JOSEPH J. DWYER, JR | 125 | 86 | 211 |
KIMBERLY RAJDEV | 562 | 339 | 901 |
WRITE INS | 0 | 2 | 2 |
BLANK | 58 | 23 | 81 |
TOWN CLERK | |||
VALERIE FOX | 653 | 390 | 1043 |
WRITE INS | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BLANK | 92 | 60 | 152 |
TRUSTEES OF BEMIS | |||
SARA A. MATTES | 590 | 350 | 940 |
WRITE INS | 2 | 2 | 4 |
BLANK | 153 | 98 | 251 |
TRUSTEE OF LINCOLN LIBRARY | |||
RAY A. SHEPARD | 583 | 351 | 934 |
WRITE INS | 2 | 0 | 2 |
BLANK | 160 | 99 | 259 |
WATER COMMISSIONER (3-Year Term) | |||
JASON S. LEE | 546 | 318 | 864 |
WRITE INS | 0 | 0 | 0 |
BLANK | 199 | 132 | 331 |
WATER COMMISSIONER (2-Year Term) | |||
RUTH ANN HENDRICKSON | 589 | 342 | 931 |
WRITE INS | 4 | 0 | 4 |
BLANK | 152 | 108 | 260 |
Corrections
In the March 27 story headlined “Fossil fuel measure stirs debate at Town Meeting,” a speaker was misidentified. It was Fred Hopengarten, not Mike Frankston, who attempted to submit an amendment to the fossil fuel motion.
- In the March 27 story headlined “Town to move ahead on community center, which could open in 2026,” Select Board member Jonathan Dwyer’s first name was written incorrectly as James. Both stories have been corrected.
Town to move ahead on community center, which could open in 2026
With the $93 million school project drawing to a close this summer, the next big-ticket item on the horizon is a community center. All but two voters at the March 26 Town Meeting approved a measure to authorize the Select Board to appoint a building committee, with the goal of voting on a community center design and budget at a Special Town Meeting in fall 2023.
The facility is now estimated to cost $23 million to $25.4 million in 2025 dollars, according to information presented at the November 2021 State of the Town meeting and again on Saturday. That would result in an annual property tax increase of about $600 on a home assessed at $1.13 million (the median in Lincoln) whose owner now pays $16,866 per year. Construction could start in June 2025 and finish 18 months later.
“We’re not voting to fund a project today,” Select Board member Jonathan Dwyer said. “There will be three more [town-wide] votes before any shovel moves dirt. We’re voting today for the pursuit of more information, more dialogue, and updates along the way.”
The building committee will review previous studies and discussions on the community center proposal, building on earlier decisions to locate it on the Hartwell school campus and choose from one of two design directions (slides 5–10 in the presentation).
As of 2020, the town had another $29 million in borrowing capacity before reaching a debt level that would endanger its AAA bond rating. However, the project will require postponing some other large capital projects such as a seven-figure sum for acquiring more land for the town cemetery and $5 million to $7 million for roadway improvements.
Dwyer noted that even if the community center is not built, the town will have to spend millions of dollars to upgrade the three Hartwell pods, which are in “dire need” of renovation, he said. In a separate Town Meeting action, voters approved spending $60,000 to repair the leaking roofs of two of the pods to maintain their structural integrity and extend their life by about three years. Actually replacing the roofs would cost substantially more, but town officials were reluctant to invest that money in buildings that may be torn down or upgraded as part of a community center.
The pods currently house the Parks and Recreation Department and the Lincoln After-school Activities program, which will remain in one of the renovated pods once the community center is in place. The facility will house the PRD and the Council on Aging and Human Services, which currently operates in Bemis Hall but suffers from a lack of space and sufficient parking.
In answer to any concerns that Bemis Hall will go unused, “there are many organizations and activities in town that are desperate for space,” said Dilla Tingley, chair of the COA&HS and a member of the most recent community center planning design committee. “That beautiful building will always be there and always used.”
As for the specter of more tax increases, Tingley said there would be “aggressive local fundraising” to help defray the cost. “We’re excited about sharing the space with the whole community, providing space for all of us to come together and appreciate what we have.”
Fossil fuel measure stirs debate at Town Meeting
(Editor’s note: this story was updated on March 28 with a correction in the last paragraph.)
Although the measure passed with only a handful of “no” votes, a first step toward limiting fossil fuels in new construction attracted the most attention and debate out of the 40 warrant articles at the Annual Town Meeting on March 26.
The “yes” vote on Article 31 directs the Select Board to seek a home-rule petition from the state legislature that would (if granted) allow Lincoln to craft a new bylaw that would prohibit using fossil-fuel technology in new or substantially renovated homes. As originally proposed several weeks ago, the warrant article also included some suggested language for that bylaw, but the Green Energy Committee removed that part after pushback from the Select Board.
Any new bylaw will be written from scratch and must be passed by a two-thirds vote at a future Town Meeting. A home-rule request is required to allow that step because towns are not allowed to pass building codes that are more restrictive than the state’s. Brookline, Acton, Arlington, Lexington, and Concord have filed similar home rule petitions but the legislature has not acted on any of them yet.
Gov. Baker signed a bill last year that aims to fight climate change by making state buildings net-zero in energy use by 2050, and Lincoln has a similar measure with a 2030 deadline for town-owned buildings. “The window to act is closing fast,” said Trish O’Hagen of Mothers out Front.
GEC Chair Paul Shorb noted that, if Lincoln is permitted to write its own bylaw, that bylaw can include exceptions for things like generators, gas fireplaces and other equipment. Wood pellet stoves would also be permitted since wood is not a fossil fuel. “That’ll be sorted out in round 3” after action by residents on Saturday and then the state legislature.
In contrast to the Select Board’s earlier objection, Barbara Low said she would be more comfortable voting yes if the specific bylaw language was discussed ahead of time. “There’s too much unknown to be going to the state for permission to do something,” she said.
Lincoln ultimately didn’t do that “mainly because of urgency” in starting the process now, Shorb said. “We didn’t think of it sooner and we’re sorry.”
Mike Frankston noted that because countries including China and Indonesia are responsible for much of today’s growing greenhouse gas generation, “why would this help in the least? It puts an expensive burden on the people of Lincoln but does nothing measurable to what greenhouse gases do.”
“I’ll turn the question back to you: how will we make any progress if no one takes a first step?” Shorb replied.
“We can blame other countries that are developing, but we should look at ourselves first,” said Alex Chatfield.
Frankston and others at Town Meeting also objected to the “coercive” nature of the proposal. “Why is this not voluntary if so many people want to do this?” he said.
“It’s not fair to depend on volunteers to cure this worldwide problem,” Shorb said. There are already many other requirements and restrictions in place to keep people safe, including drinking-water regulations and seat belt laws, he added.
“This is a one-size-fits-all solution that is short-sighted,” another resident said. “To demonize fossil fuels is really not addressing the problem” when the electric grid has vulnerabilities of its own.
Shorb agreed that the electricity generation and supply system, which itself relies heavily on fossil fuels, also needs to change. “We have to work these paths in parallel; we can’t pursue one and not the other,” he said.
Although climate change is happening more slowly than sudden emergencies such as a house fire, “We need to deal with it immediately as an emergency… we need to make this as a first step of many others.”
Jackie Lenth described the substantial investment she recently made to improve her older home’s energy efficiency. Prohibiting fossil fuel heating systems for new houses “would be doing a huge favor for people building in the future, since it costs so much to make these changes after the fact,” she said. “If you make changes in the code from the beginning, they don’t have to go through the headache that some of us are going to have to go through if we really want a greener climate.”
Fred Hopengarten tried to submit an amendment to the motion but the question was called before he could submit it. Residents voted to cut off further debate, though Hopengarten protested that he was trying not to interrupt Town Moderator Sarah Cannon Holden. “Am I to be punished for my courtesy?” he asked.