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My Turn: Food pantry thanks Boy Scouts

February 10, 2025

By Ursula Nowak

The Society of St. Vincent de Paul of Lincoln and Weston is grateful to Boy Scout Troop 127 for their generosity in supporting our food pantry. The troop was given a grant from a local charity to help families in need, and they voted to support the SVdP Food Pantry.

In the process of providing this thoughtful donation, they were able to experience the gift of helping others in need by providing foods essential to a balanced and healthy diet. They donated close to $1,000 towards our monthly dairy order, helped bring the food into the pantry and stocked it on our shelves. We are very grateful for their financial support as well as their help in the pantry. 

If you are interest in learning more about the Boys Scouts in Lincoln, you can find more information here.

Nowak is secretary of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul of Lincoln and Weston.


“My Turn” is a forum for readers to offer their letters to the editor or views on any subject of interest to other Lincolnites. Submissions must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Items will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Submissions containing personal attacks, errors of fact, or other inappropriate material will not be published.

Category: My Turn

Police log for January 27 – February 6, 2025

February 10, 2025

January 27

South Great Road (9:54am) — A caller asked to speak with an officer regarding threatening email.

Lincoln Road (7:49pm) — A caller reported seeing a fire behind the Masonic Hall. Police and fire units responded. The fire was contained and not an issue.

Lincoln School (9:01pm) — A caller spoke with an officer regarding an incoming email.

Wells Road (9:56pm) — An officer conducted a well-being check at the request of a family member.

January 28

Wells Road (11:40am) — An officer spoke with two people regarding a noise complaint.

North Commons (11:49pm) — An officer responded to a residence for an ongoing situation.

January 29

Lincoln Road (2:12pm) — An officer responded for a report of the railroad gates stuck in the down position. Keolis was notified and asked to respond.

Lincoln Gas and Auto (6:44pm) — An officer assisted a person with a civil matter.

January 30

Lincoln Road (12:50am) — An officer moved a deceased raccoon from the roadway.

North Commons (1:58am) — Officers responded to a residence for an ongoing disturbance.

South Great Road (8:43am) — A motorist reported striking a deer. There was no damage to the vehicle. Both the deer and the motorist were gone upon the officer’s arrival.

Concord Road (12:13pm) — A caller spoke with an officer regarding a possible phone scam.

Wells Road (4:20pm) — An officer spoke with a person regarding harassment.

Cottage Lane, Concord (11:26pm) — Lincoln firefighters helped knock down a house fire along with fire departments from Acton, Bedford, Lexington, Sudbury, and Wayland, More information here.

January 31

Nothing of note.

February 1

Concord Road (12:26am) — A vehicle drove off the road as a result of a flat tire. The operator made arrangements for a towing company to remove the vehicle.

North Commons (5:04am) — Officers responded to a residence for an ongoing disturbance.

South Great Road (7:30am) — A motorist slid off the roadway and struck the guardrail. There were no injuries reported. The vehicle was towed from the scene.

Wells Road (9:21am) — An officer spoke to a person regarding an ongoing situation.

Concord Road (1:19pm) — A caller reported striking a wooden pylon on the shoulder of the road and then continuing on their way.

Bypass Road (6:49pm) — Officers checked the area for a missing dog.

Ridge Road (7:13pm) — The Fire Department responded to a residence for a lockout.

Bedford Road (10:38pm) — A motorist flagged down an officer for engine issues. However, the vehicle seemed self-correct and the driver continued on their way.

February 2

Nothing of note.

February 3

Care Dimensions Hospice House (6:52am) — An officer performed a well-being check on a resident. Everything appeared normal.

Lexington Road (2:11pm) — An officer checked on a person who reportedly fell while walking their dog. The person reported no problems and continued on their way.

Indian Camp Lane (4:46pm) — An officer served an individual with court paperwork.

February 4

Tower Road (6:30am) — An officer performed a well-being check on an occupied vehicle stopped along the roadway. The operator, Selvin Garcia Rodezno, 29, of Arlington, was arrested on an active warrant out of Chelsea District Court. After being booked, he was transported to Concord District Court

Wells Road (11:57am) — Officers performed a well-being check on an individual. The person in question was transported to the hospital.

Lincoln Road (5:03pm) — An officer responded after a person asked about workers in the area.

February 5

Stone Church (2:14ppm) — An officer spoke to a person regarding possible email threats.

Sandy Pond Road (2:47pm) — A wallet found on a conservation trail was turned in.

February 6

Sandy Pond Road (11:07am) — An officer spoke to a person regarding possible email harassment.

Cambridge Turnpike westbound (12:40pm) — Lincoln police assisted Massachusetts State Police with a motor vehicle crash.

Cambridge Turnpike eastbound (1:59pm) — A call was transferred to the Massachusetts State Police for a road rage incident.

Walden Pond Boat Ramp (2:50pm) — A caller reported that a vehicle had driven off the road by Walden Pond. The operator was not injured but was cited for unlicensed operation and a marked lanes violation.

South Great Road (3:21pm) — The railroad gates were malfunctioning at the Route 117 and Old Sudbury Road crossings. Officers remained on scene until Keolis arrived to fix the problem.

South Great Road (6:40pm) — An officer removed a dead coyote from the roadway.

Category: police

News acorns

February 6, 2025

Hanscom anticipates increase in traffic

From a press release from Hanscom Air Force Base: As a result of a recent federal policy change, a significant number of base personnel currently teleworking will be required to return to in-person work no later than Thursday, Feb. 6, and all employees will return to work by Monday, Feb. 24. This change will increase the number of personnel commuting to and from the base during the work week, and likely result in delays and traffic congestion at the Sartain Gate at Hanscom Drive in Lincoln and the Ruiz Gate, at Hartwell Avenue in Lexington during peak commute times.

Hospice organization seeks volunteers

Care Dimensions, the nonprofit organization that operates the hospice house in Lincoln, will hold online training classes for those interested in volunteering. You can make a difference in a patient’s life by:

  • Engaging in a shared interest or hobby
  • Helping with letter-writing or life review
  • Visiting with your approved dog
  • Reading to the patient
  • Listening and by providing a supportive, comforting presence

Volunteers visit patients in their homes, in facilities, and at the hospice houses in Lincoln and Danvers. If patient visits are not the right fit, you can volunteer in other ways, such as providing administrative office support or making check-in phone calls to current patients or bereaved family members. The 16-hour training will be held via Zoom on Mondays and Wednesdays from 9:00–11:00am from March 3–26 (register by February 21). For more information or to register, click here or email volunteerinfo@CareDimensions.org.

First Parish in Lincoln welcomes atheist chaplain

On Sunday, March 2 at 10:00am, Greg Epstein will serve as guest preacher at the First Parish in Lincoln. In a forum following at 11:30am, he will talk about his new book, Tech Agnostic: How Technology Became the World’s Most Powerful Religion and Why It Desperately Needs a Reformation. Click here to order his book at a 50% discount off the cover price. Epstein serves as the Humanist Chaplain at Harvard University and also serves the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) as humanist chaplain and as Convener for Ethical Life at the MIT Office of Religious, Spiritual, and Ethical Life.

Also at the First Parish: “Women Mystics” on Tuesdays, February 25, March 11, March 25 at 7:30pm on Zoom. Click here for more information and email Sarah Klockowski for the Zoom link. Visit www.fplincoln.org/events to view more upcoming programming.

Category: acorns

News acorns

February 3, 2025

Six more week of winter, says Ms. G.

Ms. G, the official groundhog of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, saw her shadow on Sunday, Feb. 2 while venturing outside at the Drumlin Farm Wildlife Sanctuary, which means six more weeks of winter. This is the first time in five years that Ms. G saw her shadow, eliciting groans from more than 100 people who braved single-digit temperatures to celebrate at Drumlin Farm. Now in her eighteenth year of prognosticating, Ms. G has evenly split her predictions—nine times calling for an early spring and nine extended winters. She also agreed with her slightly more famous Pennsylvanian woodchuck colleague, Punxsutawney Phil, for the second year in a row. Click here for more details and photos of the event.

LLCT events on carbon sequestration, rodent control, trees

Learn how disturbances such as climate change, urbanization, and invasive insects impact forest ecosystems in the northeastern U.S. and their ability to grow and store carbon on Tuesday, Feb. 11 at 7:00pm on Zoom. Ph.D. candidate Emerson Conrad-Rooney will share highlights from their research on how climate change throughout the year — both warmer summers and less snowpack in winter — affects forest ecosystems. Register here to receive the meeting link.
 
Next month, the LLCT will host two more events: “A Forum for Safe Rodent Control” on March 10 at 7:00pm (Zoom, and in the Lincoln School Lincoln Learning Commons), and “Protecting Our Canopy: The Critical Role of Tree Preservation” (March 13 at 7:00pm, Zoom only).

Volunteers needed on historical boards

The Select Board is seeking a volunteer member and alternate member for the Historical Commission (LHC), Historic District Commission (HDC), and Brown’s Wood Historic District Commission (BWHDC). The LHC, HDC, and BWHDC meet monthly. The assesses whether a building or structure proposed for demolition has historical, cultural, and architectural significance to the town. The HDC and BWHDC assess whether proposed alterations to the exterior of buildings or structures in one of the town’s historic districts are appropriate based on the history and architecture of the building or structure. For more information, click here and contact Peggy Elder, administrative assistant in the Select Board’s Office, elderp@lincolntown.org or call 781-259-2601.

Apply for scholarships

High school seniors in Lincoln are invited to apply for merit-based and need-based scholarships and awards from the Lincoln Scholarship Committee. These include the Lincoln Community Scholarship ($1,000–$2,000), the Ogden Codman Scholarship ($7,500, renewable for four years), the Codman Opportunity Scholarship ($5,000, renewable for four years), the Harriet Todd Scholarship ($5,000 renewable for one year), as well as the Fanny Campbell Award for Academic Achievement and the Sumner Smith Award for Community Service ($500 each). Click here for more information and an application. The deadline is March 29. 

Coming up at the library

Click here for details about all events at the Lincoln Public Library.

Historical Fiction Book Recs with Author Jane Healey
Tuesday, Feb. 11 at 6:30pm, Zoom (click here for details and registration)
 
Thriller/Horror Book Recs with Bookstagrammer @redreadreviews
Tuesday, Feb. 11 at 7:30pm, Zoom (click here for details and registration)
 
Author Talk: Rich Higgins on Thoreau’s God
Thursday, Feb. 13 at 7:00pm, Tarbell Room (click here for details)
 
Pop-Up Art School for Ages 11-19: Felted Landscape
Saturday, Feb. 15, 2:00–3:30pm, Tarbell Room (click here for details and required registration)

COA&HS activities in February

Here are some of the February 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 newsletter page. Call 781-259-8811 or email gagnea@lincolntown.org for Zoom links and other information.

Classic Love Songs
Friday, Feb. 7 at 12:30pm, Bemis Hall
 
Fantastical Folklore of Flowers
Friday, Feb. 14 from 12:30–2:00pm, Bemis Hall (click here for details)
 
Film: “The Six Triple Eight”
Friday, Feb. 21 at 12:30pm, Bemis Hall
 
“Entangled Lives, Black and White” with Lincoln historian Don Hafner
Friday, Feb. 28 at 12:30pm, Bemis Hall

Category: acorns

My Turn: “Climate Minute” on Upfront Carbon Emissions

February 3, 2025

(Editor’s note: Click here to read previous Climate Minutes from CFREE. The article below will illustrations can be found here.)
 
By Collette Sizer for CFREE
 
Upfront carbon emissions account for a staggering 13% of global CO2 emissions and require urgent action to address them. But most people know very little about them. What are they?
 
Upfront (often called “embodied”) carbon emissions are those caused by making, transporting, and installing materials in a product, like steel and plastic in a car or concrete and glass in a house. Upfront carbon emissions happen just once, when a material is created and incorporated in a product.
 
Upfront carbon emissions — greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide (CO2) — are emitted for every object we buy. Those emissions are enormous for cars and houses (in the U.S., 10-20 tons of CO2 for the average car and 30-40 tons for the average house) and contribute strongly to the climate crisis. (10 tons is equivalent to burning five tons of coal.) But mostly we aren’t aware that they are being released.
 
We’re all familiar with operating emissions — greenhouse gases created when we burn fossil fuels to run our car or house. Operating emissions are released throughout the life of the car or house. We’re already working to reduce operating emissions from our homes by improving insulation and switching from gas or oil heat to heat pumps. And more and more of us are buying electric vehicles (EVs) or plug-in hybrids. These are great steps. We all must work to reduce operating emissions from every aspect of our life to help slow the rate of global warming.  But we must also reduce or prevent upfront emissions as much as possible, from now on.
 
Why? The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has defined a carbon budget for the planet — a fixed amount of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases that we can emit before 2050 and still stay within 1.5 or 2° C. of warming. If we emit more than the budgeted amount, the risk of catastrophic warming, which may not be reversible, greatly increases. So, we need to go all out towards reducing both operating and upfront carbon emissions, for the benefit of ourselves, our children and grandchildren.
 
How can I reduce upfront emissions?
 
To reduce or prevent upfront emissions, we should select as many of the following options as are applicable to a purchase we’re considering:

  1. Skip the purchase if it isn’t necessary! It has been said that the house/car with the lowest upfront emissions is the one that isn’t built/made. That applies to any purchase we’re considering, from a T-shirt to a townhouse, since everything we buy has upfront emissions associated with it.
  2. Purchase a used car or an existing house. (he upfront emissions are already out there!
  3. If building or renovating a house:
    • Select materials carefully, opting for those with low global warming impact but also high durability. There are enormous differences in this area between materials that perform the same function. Here’s a visual that illustrates some of the key materials in a home that need to be evaluated. Work with your architect on this, as contractors will likely not be educated in this area yet.
    • Choose used materials when possible. (e.g., doors from a used building supply store, polyisocyanurate rigid insulation from demolished commercial buildings – half the price of new)
  1. Decrease the quantity of materials involved by buying a smaller car or house.
  2. Buy durable products. Frequent replacement means higher long-term upfront emissions.

And, of course, as we weigh choices through the lens of upfront emissions, we also have to consider operating emissions. We have to work hard at reducing both! This is illustrated very clearly when buying a car. The Green Energy Consumers Alliance has these recommendations regarding the purchase of a car:

  • Ask “Do I really need to buy this car?” f you can avoid it, do so.
  • If you conclude that you do need to buy a car, get an EV or plug-in hybrid if at all possible. Lifetime emissions, including both upfront and operating, will be far lower than those of a gas-powered car. Charging issues and cost do sometimes make it difficult to own an EV, but long-distance charging is getting a lot easier for owners of non-Tesla EVs as more brands gain access to the extensive Tesla supercharger network. Most brands should have access this year. In addition, other charging networks are growing fast.
  • Get the smallest car that will work for you. This will minimize both upfront and operating emissions.

In addition:

  • If you absolutely must buy a gas-powered car, hybrids will have the lowest operating emissions. Buy the car used, if at all possible, to avoid new upfront carbon emissions. Same for an EV. There is a growing market for used EVs/plug-in hybrids.
  • Consider an e-bike as a second vehicle. Overall emissions are a fraction of those for a car.

Although they are not yet widely known, upfront carbon emissions are a real threat. We can make a difference to our world by considering their impact, along with that of operating emissions, in every purchase we make.
 
CFREE (Carbon Free Residential – Everything Electric) is a subcommittee of the Lincoln Green Energy Committee (GEC). CFREE provides guidance on how households can reduce use of fossil fuels and decrease greenhouse gas emissions to help Massachusetts meet statewide emissions limits set for 2030, 2040, and 2050. It also provides information about state and federal incentives that help reduce the cost of such changes. For more information, visit lincolngreenenergy.org.


“My Turn” is a forum for readers to offer their letters to the editor or views on any subject of interest to other Lincolnites. Submissions must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Items will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Submissions containing personal attacks, errors of fact, or other inappropriate material will not be published.

Category: conservation

Tree preservation group presents some early results

January 30, 2025

Lincoln certainly has a lot of trees, but what condition are they in? Should there be more rules about which ones can be cut down or preserved? The new Tree Preservation Study Group, which is gathering information to help answer these questions, presented some of its initial findings at the January 14 meeting of the Planning Board and an updated version of their State of the Town handout.

The group (which is not an official town board or committee) reported on the results of their recent survey about the town’s trees as well as tree regulations in other towns, findings from the Charles River Watershed Association, and information about diseases currently affecting some species of trees in Lincoln and elsewhere. Based on their ongoing research, they may or may not propose specific regulations for Lincoln.

Group chair Susan Hall Mygatt noted that other towns including Concord, Weston and Lexington have tree bylaws or management plans (see page 9 of this PDF, which also includes detailed results of the survey).

Lincoln does in fact have some rules around trees. According to the Conservation Commission’s Hazard Tree Removal Policy, property owners must get permission from the commission before work including tree or brush removal, lawn expansion, ground disturbance, and construction if the project lies in or within 100 feet of wetland resource areas (defined as wetlands, streams, ponds, and 100-year flood zones) as  well as riverfront areas (land within 200 feet of a year-round stream).

Threats to trees from both people and nature

The issue of trees was highlighted recently when a number of mature trees were cut down along roadsides in several locations. A number of old or ailing trees were removed by Eversource because they were seen as a potential threat to power lines in a project that was announced last spring. Those trees were identified in a list from the Department of Public Works, though some were spared after residents asked for specific exceptions during public hearings.

Lincoln Tree Warden Ken Bassett noted that “it’s our call” on which trees are taken down and Eversource is required to demonstrate to the Public Utilities Commission that it’s making efforts to protect services to customers, but the company will “absolutely honor any objection” (though the objector and the town then assume the risk of losing power if the tree in question does in fact fall on a power line, he said.

National Grid was planning to dig a trench alongside part of Codman Road for a gas line repair but was persuaded not to, because it would have fatally damaged the roots of a large tree. Another potential threat to roadside trees is installation of new water mains. Many of them are in need of replacement, work on a segment under Lincoln Road is scheduled to begin this spring.

A bigger issue facing Lincoln’s trees is not road work but natural pests that are killing off trees in Lincoln’s forested areas, particularly the emerald ash borer, “which has clearly made a dramatic impact now in most eastern Massachusetts towns, said Conservation Director Michele Grzenda. Many of the ailing roadside trees targeted by Eversource are ash trees, and the species is listed as “critically endangered” by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

Another threat is beech leaf disease, which is caused by an invasive nematode. The large beech on Route 117 in Weston next to Dairy Joy fell victim to this disease a year or two ago and had to be cut down.

Category: conservation

Two community center-related projects are about to begin

January 28, 2025

The first visible signs of the community center project are appearing in the form of two projects that are about to get underway before main construction starts this summer.
 
Workers have trimmed tree and put up fencing in Strat’s Place between Lincoln Road and the main Hartwell building in preparation for building a new playground. The former wooden playground dating from 1989 was taken down 10 years ago amid safety concerns. Work to trim or cut down ailing or old trees is complete, and the chain link fencing is temporary while workers perform soil remediation (removing soil containing nails and splinters as well as buried tarmac and playground supports). By this summer, the area will be grassed over.
 
“Our expectation is to have this work completed by June, so that the Magic Garden children have a play area during construction,” said Community Center Building Committee member Alison Taunton-Rigby. Magic Garden is responsible for funding and installing the play structures will eventually go there.
 
Bids are due on February 5 for the new school maintenance shop in the first floor in the southwest corner of the Hartwell building, replacing some small office and storage rooms. Work on the $185,000 project is expected to take place in the spring so that the shop can be relocated from Pod B by May or June.
 
The two projects will pave the way for construction of the community center, which is expected go out to bid in April, break ground in July, and finish by late fall 2026. A detailed budget update and other documents can be found on this CCBC web page.

Category: community center*

Police log for January 13-26, 2025

January 27, 2025

January 13
 
Bedford Road (6:34am) — A caller reported that they were involved in a minor traffic accident. The other involved vehicle fled the scene. An officer responded to the area.
 
Tabor Hill Road (8:27am) — A caller reported their dog was missing. The Animal Control Officer was notified.
 
Trapelo Road (8:31am) — A caller reported possible vandalism to their lawn. After speaking with other family members, it appears the damage was caused by one of them using an ATV.
 
January 14
 
Stratford Way (7:56am) — A resident spoke with an officer regarding fraudulent credit card purchases.
 
Old County Road (9:04am) — An officer spoke with a person regarding a Medicare scam.
 
Wells Road (1:36pm) — A person spoke with an officer regarding an ongoing civil matter.
 
January 15
 
Harvest Circle (10:05am) — An officer spoke with a person regarding a civil matter.
 
Harvest Circle (12:10pm) — A utility truck was struck while parked at The Commons. An officer checked the area but was unable to locate the vehicle that struck the truck.
 
Oriole Landing (4:06pm) — An officer checked the area for a dog that appeared to be wandering without its owner.
 
January 16
 
Winter Street (9:43am) — A person reported their dog missing. While speaking with Animal Control, another resident reported finding the lost dog.
 
South Great Road (2:30pm) — A caller reported seeing someone walking on the ice near an open section of water. The individual then walked toward the shore. The area was checked but no one was found.
 
Lincoln Road (4:15pm) — A caller reported observing vehicles not stopping for pedestrians in the crosswalk. An officer responded to the area to monitor.
 
Donelan’s Supermarket (4:34pm) — A child was located in the store and reunited a short time later with their parent.
 
Sunnyside Lane (7:32pm) — A student was located at the Lincoln School after not returning home at the expected time.
 
January 17
 
Tower Road (8:42am) — An officer performed a well-being check.
 
North Great Road (7:45pm) — A motorist struck a deer. The vehicle sustained significant damage and required towing, though there were no injuries.
 
January 18
 
Lincoln Police Department (1:36pm) — A person turned in an item to be destroyed.
 
Conant Road (4:41pm) — A caller reported a suspicious vehicle had pulled into their driveway. An officer checked the vehicle but was unable to locate it.
 
South Great Road (4:49pm) — An officer helped the DPW remove a sign stuck to a utility pole.
 
January 19
 
Lincoln Police Department (3:51pm) — A person turned in an item for destruction.
 
January 20
 
Scott Circle, Hanscom AFB (10:34am) — A person turned in an item for destruction.
 
South Great Road (10:45am) — Multiple calls were received for the railroad gates on Lincoln Road and Old Sudbury Road stuck in the down position. Officers responded to each crossing and Keolis was notified.
 
Lincoln Woods (5:29pm) — The Fire Department checked on an interior odor of gas. There were no measurable readings.
 
Codman Road (7:58pm) — A caller reported seeing a transformer fire on a utility pole. Police and fire units responded to the scene. Eversource was notified.
 
Patterson Road, Hanscom AFB (10:15pm) — Officers responded to assist Hanscom Air Force Security Forces and Action Ambulance.
 
January 21
 
Old Sudbury Road (1:28am) — An officer responded to railroad crossing gates for the report of the gate being stuck in the down position. Keolis was notified and responded a short time thereafter.
 
South Great Road (1:17pm) — A caller reported two dogs were missing. A short time later, they notified the police that the dogs had been located.
 
Tabor Hill Road (5:14pm) — A caller reported that their mailbox had been hit by a vehicle and there appeared to be debris from the crash still on the ground. An officer responded to the residence.
 
January 22
 
North Commons (12:10am) — An officer responded to a residence for an ongoing civil matter.
 
Red Rail Farm (9:12am) — A caller spoke with an officer regarding possible bank fraud.
 
Harvest Circle (1:38am) — A caller reported the possible theft of an electronic device. An investigation is ongoing.
 
Mary’s Way (2:15pm) — A caller reported an unleashed dog in the area. The Animal Control Officer was notified.
 
DeCordova Museum (2:34pm) — Several individuals were ice fishing on Sand Pond. The Environmental Police responded along with the Lincoln Police and cited the individuals.
 
January 23
 
Lexington Road (3:39pm) — Lincoln and Concord police searched the area for a report of a dog that appeared in distress but couldn’t find it.
 
Ridge Road (4:31pm) — A resident spoke with an officer regarding a possible theft from their residence.
 
Lincoln Gas and Auto (8:38pm) — An officer helped a large truck reverse direction in the parking lot.
 
Lexington Road (8:40pm) — The Fire Department responded to a residence for a broken water pipe. The Water Department was notified.
 
Wells Road (11:21pm) — An officer responded to a residence to address a noise complaint.
 
January 24
 
North Great Road (5:48pm) — A motorist reported striking a deer. The deer ran off into the woods and the vehicle was able to be driven from the scene.
 
North Commons (6:10am) — Officers responded to a residence for an ongoing civil matter.
 
Lincoln Public Library (3:43pm) — A caller reported seeing a dog wandering without their owner near the library. The Animal Control Officer was notified.
 
Lincoln Road (3:52pm) — An officer served court paperwork to a resident.
 
Old County Road (5:26pm) — Several calls were received about a two-vehicle crash on Old County Road at Trapelo Road. One of the vehicles failed to stop at the stop sign. There were no injuries reported and both vehicles were towed from the scene. The operator who failed to stop was cited.
 
Lincoln Woods (11:42pm) — Officers responded to a residence for a noise complaint.
 
January 25
 
Nothing of note.
 
January 26
 
Oriole Landing (4:26pm) — A caller spoke with an officer regarding possible threatening phone calls.
 
Silver Birch Lane (8:11pm) — An officer monitored an area for a complaint about a barking dog.

Category: police

Former Lincolnite Barbara Buchan passes away

December 2, 2024

Barbara Christina Buchan

Barbara Buchan died peacefully on November 10, 2024 in her 91st year.

Buchan — who was born in Cambridge England shortly after the forced emigration of her family from Germany prior to World War II due to their Jewish heritage — moved to the United States with her husband and young family of three in the mid-1960s, spending the first year in Concord and settling in Lincoln. In 2014, at age 80, she decided to swap out snow for sun and transition into The Terraces of Los Gatos community near her two California-based children and their families.

Barbara’s nature was to support causes that were meaningful to her and advocate for underserved communities, particularly children and families. To support this endeavor, she educated herself, earning a bachelor’s degree in medical/social work at the University of Edinburgh and a master’s and doctoral degree in early childhood education at Tufts University and Nova University, respectively.

She began her career as an almoner in London in the early 1960s (watch “Call the Midwife” for an idea of her work). She continued to support children and families throughout her career. In each community in which she lived, she was driven to originate educational and care resources. In Woodford, England, she started a cooperative nursery school with her good friend Dorothy Runnicles. Upon transitioning to Lincoln, she collaborated with Sally Mlavsky and other community parents to repurpose an old barn on Winter Street and establish the Barn Cooperative Nursery School (since moved to Concord).

Barbara continued to develop educational resources and curricula for elementary schools through the Educational Development Center. She then served as director of the Elm Park Early Education Center, located in Worcester, where amongst her many innovative accomplishments was the creation of a rooftop playground. She closed her career by supporting mothers recovering from addiction at The Institute for Health Recovery. While there she introduced an economical heating pad solution “Warm Socks” to ease the aches and pains of program participants. They were an imme

Barbara embraced many of the things that Lincoln and its environment offered — hosting horses, chickens, ducks, rabbits, and cats on her property, selling arts and crafts at the Old Town Hall Exchange, buying equipment at ski and skate sales, attending lectures at Bemis Hall and school productions at the Brooks School auditorium, ice skating by moonlight on Macone’s Pond and Pierce Pond, square dancing in the Smith School gym and Codman barn, swimming at the Codman pool and across Walden Pond into her 70s, and snowshoeing and tracking animals in the local woods.

Upon retirement in 2000, Barbara immersed herself in supporting environmental causes in Lincoln, including the Green Committee’s mission to lower energy consumption in homes and town, and the Lincoln Tick Task Force (read more here). She continued to support communities in need, including the Arghand Trust, for which she served as a board member supporting their founder Sarah Chayes. She also found immense satisfaction and joy participating in memoir-writing groups, first joining one in Lincoln and then, finding none in her new California community, starting one.

Barbara died peacefully on November 10, 2024 with a warm sock in her hand (see the description from one of her memoirs below). She is survived by her children Nick, Lindy and Lucy; their spouses Paola, Bob, and Steve; and five grandchildren (Cailin, Finian, Jason, Nicole and Isabella). Barbara was much loved by many, and will be greatly missed.


Using odd socks as covers for heating pads

By Barbara Buchan

The back story: Years ago, I worked with women in recovery from substance abuse who had lots of aches and pains but little money. It occurred to me that we needed to offer an alternative to the use of Motrin or other medications prescribed by their doctors. The women in our group happened to mention that there were lots of odd socks lying around at the laundromat where they washed their clothes.

Somewhere else, I had read about making warming pads using seeds as a filler. So how about filling odd socks (must contain at least 80% cotton) with flaxseed, knotting the tops, and then putting them in the microwave for 1–2 minutes before applying them to sore spots? As an alternative to using the microwave in class, I brought in a Crock-Pot along with a sack of flaxseed and a scoop, and the residents brought in assorted cotton socks. They were a big hit with the residents at work. From that day on, the Crock-Pot filled with sock pads was available at every meeting. Subsequently, flaxseed pads have become a household necessity in my family.

Recipe

Socks: Must be at least 80% cotton (to ensure fibers don’t melt in the microwave or burn).

Flaxseed or grains of rice: Quantity needed will vary with the size/number of socks to fill. Do not overfill to avoid bulkiness and/or uneven heat. You may wish to experiment. (Supposedly, the oil in flaxseed retains heat longer than non-oily grains. However, rice grains seem to work very well.)

Directions:

  1. (optional) Tie-dye socks.
  2. Fill the sock with flaxseed or rice.
  3. Tie a knot or stitch to close the end of the grain-filled sock.
  4. Microwave for 1–2 minutes.

Category: obits

My Turn: Many thanks from the SVdP food pantry

December 1, 2024

By Ursula Nowak

Happy Thanksgiving from St. Vincent de Paul of Lincoln and Weston! We wish to send a big thank- you to all who helped make last week so special at the food pantry. We are grateful to those of you who bought gift cards at Donelan’s or donated towards this year’s Thanksgiving drive. Your thoughtful generosity means that your neighbors in need will be able to purchase food for a special holiday meal.

We are grateful to Donelan’s for the many ways they continue to support us, and to Donelan’s shoppers who purchased Best Yet bags filled with stuffing, canned vegetables, canned fruit and cereal for the food pantry. Thank you also to Drumlin Farm and Joanne Dolan of Gold Bell Wholesale for a huge load of vegetable, to FELS and the Goddard School for beautiful pies, to Tost for sparking white tea, to the Weston United Methodist Church for a timely food drive, to Peter Stewart and the Doo-Wop Singers for another fundraising concert — and to our many volunteers for their time and great efforts! We are all neighbors helping neighbors and we are thankful for your support!

Nowak is secretary of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul of Lincoln and Weston.


“My Turn” is a forum for readers to offer their letters to the editor or views on any subject of interest to other Lincolnites. Submissions must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Items will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Submissions containing personal attacks, errors of fact, or other inappropriate material will not be published.

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