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Police log for May 8–14, 2021

May 19, 2021

On May 8 and May 9, police stopped bicyclists who ran a stop sign at Five Corners (Weston Road/Sandy Pond Road) and issued verbal warnings. Police also asked people on Trapelo Road who were fishing illegally in the Cambridge Reservoir to move along on May 8, twice on May 9, and May 14.

May 8

Old Winter Street (1:11 a.m.) — Sudbury police requested a well-being check on a Sudbury resident who may be at the Lincoln residence. Officers located the party and followed up with Sudbury police.

Wells Road (10:52 a.m.) — Elderly caller reporting that someone may have been in her house some time the previous night. Officer spoke to the caller and family; the caller is confused.

The Commons (8:37 p.m.) — Caller reported that two people were expected back at 6 p.m. and were overdue. Area police departments were advised. Bedford police located the people a short time later; everything was fine.

May 9

North Commons (12:06 p.m.) — Caller reported a neighbor was trespassing on their property and being menacing. Officer went to speak to all parties. The neighbor was uncooperative. Incident documented.

Winter Street (5:52 p.m.) — Caller reported a baby carriage was left alone near the Waltham line, possibly with a baby inside. Officers checked the area but found no sign of the carriage. Officers later located a party walking a baby; they had left the stroller on the side of the road to look at the reservoir while holding the baby.

May 10

Harvest Circle (2:07 p.m.) — Paperwork from the RMV was delivered to a resident.

Lincoln Road (4:36 p.m.) — Two-car crash on Lincoln Road at Route 117. No injuries, one vehicle towed.

May 11

Lincoln Road (2:15 p.m.) — Officers assisted a party with a civil matter.

North Great Road (5:20 p.m.) — Lexington police reported a person running on Route 2A and appeared to be in some distress is now hitchhiking. Officer checked the area but was unable to locate.

Juniper Ridge Road (9:49p.m.) — Caller reported a vehicle was parked on the grass near Bedford Road. Officers checked on the parties but they had left the area.

May 12

Concord Road (10:53 a.m.) — A DPW crew was working on Route 126 south of Route 117 off the roadway and a vehicle sideswiped the truck. No injuries.

Wells Road (12:35 p.m.) — A delivery driver turned in a wallet they found. Police contacted the owner.

Donelan’s Supermarket (2:22 p.m.) — Minor two-car crash in the parking lot. No injuries, officer assisted parties with exchanging information.

Baker Bridge Road (4:10 p.m.) — Caller reported a man walking on the trail with a hunting rifle. Officers checked the area along with Concord police and spoke to several parties who did not see anyone matching the description received.

Lexington Road (6:19 p.m.) — A walk-in at the station reported he was being harassed by his neighbors. Report taken.

May 13

North Commons (9:11 p.m.) — Caller reported that their neighbor was banging on their wall. Officers report the banging had stopped, and they took a report.

May 14

Trapelo Road (8:21 am.) — Caller reported hitting a gas line while clearing brush. Fire Department and National Grid responded.

Conant Road (12:23 p.m.) — Caller reported finding a bullet in her garden while she was weeding. Officer responded and found it was a tip to a bow and arrow. The tip was discarded.

Cambridge Turnpike eastbound (12:41 p.m.) — Officer on a detail received a report of a person riding their bicycle on Route 2 at the Concord line. Concord and State Police notified. Officer checked the Lincoln side but couldn’t locate the cyclist.

Codman Road (2:30 p.m.) — Party reported an uncomfortable interaction with a party known to them. Officers spoke to the parties involved; no criminal activity.

Care Dimensions Hospice House (11:15 p.m.) — Officer assisted Concord police with an investigation involving a patient for something that occurred in Concord.

Category: news, police

Obituaries

May 19, 2021

Jean “Max” Brizard, 58

A visitation and service will be held in Brockton on May 20 for Brizard, a longtime METCO bus driver for the Lincoln School who died on May 9. Full obituary and guestbook.

Susan Burt, 80

Burt died on May 4 after a long battle with cancer. Full obituary and guest book.

Priscilla Hunt, 91

Hunt was active in the civil rights movement in the 1960s as well as the League of Women Voters. Full obituary and guest book.

Max Brizard

Susan Burt

Priscilla Hunt

Category: obits

Correction

May 19, 2021

In the May 16 article headlined “2021 Town Meeting roundup,” the section on the property tax circuit breaker program has been updated to reflect clarifications and  corrections, including the length of time residents must live in Lincoln to be eligible and the number of households that would initially qualify. 

Category: news

News acorns

May 18, 2021

Covid-19 vaccination clinic for kids age 12-18

The Lincoln Public Schools and the Town of Lincoln are offering a Covid-19 vaccination clinic for teens in the Hartwell multipurpose room on the Lincoln School campus on Friday, May 21 from 2–5 p.m. Students must be registered for an appointment in advance and must provide a signed consent form on the day of the clinic. Children age 12-18 who attend the Lincoln Public Schools in person or remotely, their teenage siblings, Lincoln residents attending private school, and children of town and school employees are eligible.

Click here to register for an appointment. This requires you to choose a time, upload health insurance information, and complete and print a consent form that includes screening questions to be answered on Friday morning. Students must bring the signed consent form or they cannot be vaccinated. Boston students who attend the Lincoln School and ride the bus will be scheduled for vaccination prior to school dismissal from 1–1:45 p.m. A signed consent form must be received before Friday. On the day of the clinic, parents will be called by school personnel to answer medical screening questions in order to clear children for vaccination that afternoon. Click here for more information about Covid-19 vaccines for children under 18.

Lovelane wins $100,000 grant

The Lincoln-based Lovelane Special Needs Horseback Riding Program will receive a grant of $25,000 a year for four years through Cummings Foundation’s $25 Million Grant Program. Lovelane is one of 140 Metro West nonprofits chosen from a total of 590 applicants. The grant will allow Lovelane to continue to provide high-quality, safe, mounted and unmounted programs for children with a wide variety of special needs with over 4,500 personalized sessions per year, as well as maintain and train a diverse herd of 12 horses.

L-S music group sets annual meeting in June

The Lincoln-Sudbury Friends of Music will hold its virtual annual meeting on Tuesday, June 15 at 7 p.m. All community members, especially parents of music students, are invited. Meet fellow music program supporters, get questions answered, and learn about opportunities to get involved. To attend the meeting email receive the Zoom link and password, email lsfriendsofmusic@gmail.com.

Category: news

New survey seeks input on the future of South Lincoln

May 18, 2021

The current zoning in South Lincoln (left) and the changes that were proposed in 2019. Click image for larger version.

Residents are invited to fill out a new survey asking for thoughts on development at Lincoln Station.

For the last two years, the Planning Board has been considering changes to the zoning in South Lincoln in the area around the Mall at Lincoln Station and the commuter rail station. The goal is to encourage more diversity in housing in that area (especially with the advent of the Housing Choice Act) as well as commercial activity, services, and amenities in and around the mall. Some residents have expressed concern about the size of the area proposed for rezoning, the density and scale of permitted buildings, and the impact of development on traffic and Lincoln’s finances.

To give officials a clearer sense of public sentiment on these topics, please take the survey at tinyurl.com/villagecentersurvey. To request a paper survey, call 781-259-2610. The deadline to participate is June 30.

Background in the Lincoln Squirrel:

  • Uncertainties surround new state multifamily housing law (March 18, 2021)
  • Septic treatment becoming an issue for mall and South Lincoln (October 12, 2020)
  • South Lincoln panel is now a five-member “SLPAC” (June 10, 2020)
  • Residents argue pros and cons of South Lincoln rezoning (February 10, 2020)
  • Group unveils proposals to boost South Lincoln development (May 15, 2019)

Category: land use, South Lincoln/HCA*

Correction

May 18, 2021

The article headlined “Accessory apartment issue results in razor-thin votes” incorrectly stated that the first amendment to the accessory apartment motion was made jointly by Sara Mattes and John Carr. The amendment was in fact submitted by Mattes alone. The article has been updated to reflect this correction.

Category: news

News acorns

May 17, 2021

Eighth-grade car wash on Saturday

To benefit their upcoming graduation, the Lincoln School’s eighth-graders will host a car wash on Saturday, May 22 from 11 a.m.–5 p.m. at Town Hall (rain date: May 23). Since the class can’t have dances or bake sales, this is an important end-of-year activity for them. Click here to prepay for a car wash ($20) and/or make a donation. You  may also pay in case on the day of the car wash. Names of those who preregister will be on a list that the students can check off when cars arrive.

“Kibbles and Nibbles” online cooking class

Lincoln-based nonprofit Phinney’s is launching “Kibbles and Nibbles,” an online cooking class, hosted by Cordon Bleu pastry chef Mika McDonald, on Sunday, May 23 from 7–8 p.m. on Google Meet. She will guide attendees in creating oat cake and Parmesan cheese crisps that can be both enjoyed by pets and people so those watching can follow and cook alongside her. A minimum donation of $10 secures a spot in the class, which has limited space and is designed for all ages and experience levels. To register, go to phinneys.org/kibbles-nibbles, where the ingredients and kitchen tools for the class are also listed. 

Diversity performance next week

Lincoln’s METCO Coordinating Committee presents “Living the Legacy of METCO” on Tuesday, May 25 at 6:30 p.m. This live performance on Zoom by Dialogues On Diversity, a social justice theater company, is aimed at Lincoln School students in grades 5-8 as well as their family members, as well as the broader community. The 45-minute performance gives the history and context for the country’s oldest racial educational integration program and examines the social activism of urban and suburban Boston families in the 1960s. Contains sensitive images and language that may not be suitable for younger audiences. Made possible by a grant from the Lincoln Cultural Council. Click here for the Zoom link (passcode: 050455).

Outdoor classes and events for seniors

The Council on Aging and Human Services is starting to host in-person events again. There are a host of outdoor exercise classes in the Pierce House tent in addition to those offered on Zoom, and the Knitter’s Group is on Tuesday, June 1 at 9:30 a.m. on the Bemis Hall lawn. See page 9 of the May COAHS newsletter for details, or call 781-259-8811 x102 to sign up.

Talk on philosophical basis for Modernist architecture

The Lincoln Historical Society, in collaboration with Friends of Modern Architecture, will host a presentation of “As the Twig Is Bent, So Goes the Tree… A Shared Philosophy: New England Transcendentalism and European Modernism” by Lincoln resident and FoMA President Dana Robbat. The meeting and talk are on Saturday, June 12 from 4:30–5:30 p.m. The Lincoln Historical Society will hold its brief annual meeting in advance of the presentation, which will highlight the age-old social ideals of New England’s Puritan and Transcendental philosophical heritage that provided fertile ground for the arrival of the philosophically aligned European Modernists who arrived at Harvard and MIT in the late 1930s and subsequently had a profound effect on Lincoln’s built and natural environments. Click here to register and get the Zoom link. For more information, email lincolnmahistoricalsociety@gmail.com.

Mandatory outdoor watering restrictions now in effect

Details of the Stage 2 watering restrictions now in effect (click image to enlarge).

Because Lincoln continues to draw more water from the Charles River Watershed than allowed by permit and continues to exceed the mandated residential use of 65 gallons per person per day, the Water Department is required to enforce Stage 2 outdoor water use restrictions from May 1 through September 30. Drought declarations by the state supersede the Lincoln restrictions. Higher restrictions may be imposed in response to state drought declarations.

During Stage 2 and above, Water Department staff will be monitoring all sprinkler use in town and will stop to remind residents of the new restriction policy. A first offense will result in a $100 fine, and subsequent violations will result in a $200 fine. Anyone with questions may contact the Water Department at 781-259-2669 or bolanda@lincolntown.org. For more information on water conservation and what residents and communities can do, visit the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs drought page and water conservation toolkit.

Category: arts, charity/volunteer, conservation, seniors

Correction

May 17, 2021

The May 16 article headlined “Accessory apartment issue results in razor-thin votes” incorrectly stated that the proposed accessory apartment bylaw changes included a requirement that “renters under the AAA program [must] occupy either the primary dwelling or the accessory apartment for at least 30 days.” The change under discussion at Town Meeting concerned accessory apartments in general and was not about the town’s Affordable Accessory Apartment program. Also, the word “proposition” in the third-to-last paragraph should have been “proportion.” The original article has been corrected.

Category: news

2021 Town Meeting roundup

May 16, 2021

Town moderator Sarah Cannon Holden (left, in teal jacket) addresses the crowd at Lincoln’s Annual Town Meeting on May 15, 2021.

(Editor’s note: the section on the property tax circuit breaker program was updated with corrections on May 19.)

Aside from the accessory apartment issue, the 2021 Annual Town Meeting was largely free of controversy. Here are highlights of some of the measures that were approved:

Town spending

The base budget for fiscal 2022 starting in July is $42.9 million, or $44.4 million when including other articles approved at the May 15 meeting. Of that amount, $23.3 million is for the Lincoln Public Schools and $3.9 million for the town’s share of Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School expenses.

Voters also approved $1.28 million for capital projects and $937,692 for Community Preservation Act items, as well as $1.82 million for a new public safety radio system. Those lists included two items for the school project ($410,557 for furniture and technology, and $161,200 for playgrounds) that the School Building Committee had been forced to cut from its construction budget earlier.

The Water Department budget also passed unanimously without discussion. Water Commission chair Jim Hutchinson praised new Water Department Superintendent Darin LaFalam’s “easy and calm manner with the staff and his careful and prudent handling of capital projects” and noted that there were no borrowing requests this year. The town has decided against applying to join the MWRA or building a new state-of-the-art water treatment plant, but it will revisit the issue before the next round of major capital requests in a few years, he said.


More information:

  • Town Meeting article list
  • Financial section and warrant
  • Motions

Property tax relief

Voters authorized the town to ask the state legislature for permission to allow Lincoln to implement a property tax circuit breaker program. The program would limit the property tax plus water bills to no more than 10% of the income of homeowners over 65 who have lived in town at least five years and who meet certain income and property value limits. It would be paid for by shifting up to 1% of the tax levy onto all the other property owners. Select Board member Jennifer Glass outlined the proposal to the board via Zoom on May 3.

Approximately 250 Lincoln properties could qualify for the program based on assessed value and length of ownership (the town does not have access to incomes). The Board of Assessors estimates that 30-40 households would benefit, and that the additional cost to other taxpayers could be up to about $73 in the first year, and up to about $145 in years two and three. Once approved, the local program must be reauthorized by town-wide vote every three years.

Glass noted on Saturday that a group of donors has contributed about $115,000 to a town property tax relief fund. That fund will likely be used over a five-year period to administer a circuit breaker program for homeowners under 65 who meet the other criteria. A resident asked whether the program being voted on could be funded with private funds. Glass noted the private funding does not replace the proposed circuit-breaker program. “For this to be sustained, it’s difficult to do with private funding,” she said.

Name changes

The Board of Selectmen is now the Select Board and the Council on Aging is now the Council on Aging and Human Services. Ten women have served on the board over the years, and “I’m proud to be the last Selectman elected,” board member Jennifer Glass said before the vote.

Environmental measures

Voters adopted a resolution in support of the country’s continuing participation in the Paris Climate Accord, and action by the state legislature to promote climate justice and expand the use of clean energy. “If you believe we should be bold and move fast on this climate crisis that affects everybody, I urge you to support this motion,” citizen’s petition sponsor Paul Shorb said. 

The vote in favor was not unanimous, however. Resident Mike Frankston argued that the Paris Climate Accord disadvantages the United States economically. Increasing the cost of domestic manufacturing and industrial activities will shift those activities to China and other countries that pollute more, thus actually worsening the problem. “There are many unintended consequences,” said Frankston, one of two “nay” votes on the resolution.

Measures that would ban the retail sale and use of polystyrene and some other single-use food-industry plastics also passed. Voters also approved a proposal to seek state permission to require retailers to charge 10 cents for single-use paper and plastic bags (though plastic grocery bags were already banned in 2018). The charge is intended to encourage use of reusable bags and does not impose a tax, since retailers can keep the money. 

Bright Light Award

Public health nurse Tricia McGean and Board of Health member Patricia Miller each received a Bright Light award for their “skillful, devoted and compassionate leadership of the town’s pandemic response efforts.” 

The two were recognized for their hard work in providing public health information, helping to organize vaccine clinics for seniors, and contact tracing and follow-ups for Lincoln residents who tested positive for Covid-19. They received a standing ovation for their efforts, as did the larger Public Health Team.

Community center

Residents voted to hear a brief report on the status of the proposed community center. Select Board member Jonathan Dwyer said the town has the ability to borrow up to $27 million for capital projects including a community center once the school project is complete in 2023.

Category: government

Accessory apartment issue results in razor-thin votes

May 16, 2021

For the second year in a row, Lincoln’s Annual Town Meeting in the Covid-19 era went off without a hitch under a tent in the Hartwell school parking lot. However, though as in any town meeting, there was some controversy — at one point resulting in 87-86 vote.

The subject of not one but two razor-thin votes was the town’s accessory apartment rules. The Planning Board asked residents on Saturday to approve several changes to the bylaw, which they outlined in video and Powerpoint presentations on April 27:

  1. Delete a section that requires the dwelling to be at least 10 years old, and remove the requirement that accessory apartments can increase the floor area of the original dwelling by no more than 10%.
  2. Add a cap on the number of accessory apartments equal to 5% of all residential units in town. This cap would not apply to affordable units, including those participating in the town’s Affordable Accessory Apartment program.
  3. Require accessory apartments leases to be for at least 30 days.

The Planning Board recommended the first change so that modestly sized homes could add a livable accessory apartment comprising more than 10% of the original floor area. The second change was intended to act as “insurance” to limit the impact on town services should the program prove highly popular. Board chair Margaret Olson noted that this can easily be revisited in the future.

But it was the third amendment that provoked the most discussion. The goal of the proposed 30-day rental minimum was to discourage homeowners from building accessory apartments for the sole purpose of renting them out to short-term tenants via Airbnb or similar services. Olson said she wasn’t aware of any cases in Lincoln that suggested the limit but “it has been an issue in other communities.”

Town Counsel Joel Bard pointed out that the 30-day rental minimum would apply only to accessory apartments and their associated principal dwellings, not to all rental units in Lincoln.

Sara Mattes proposed an amendment that would remove that proposed 30-day minimum. In the discussion that followed, John Carr said that fear of short-term rentals ”destroying the community” was moot. “This parade of one-day guests is the status quo… [the community] has already been destroyed and we didn’t notice.”

Eric Harris said the effective ban on Airbnb rentals was unfair to those who already hold permits for accessory apartments and favors those with single-family homes. Tom Sander also opposed the amendment, suggesting instead that the town limit the number of rentals per year for each accessory apartment owner.

The voice vote on the Mattes amendment was too close to call, and a standing vote resulted in a tally of 87 “no” votes vs. 86 “yes” votes. But the drama wasn’t over yet. Christoper Boit offered another amendment that would reduce the minimum rental period from 30 days to seven, which he said would allow more flexibility for short-term caregivers to come and go.

Speaking as a private citizen, Finance Committee chair Andy Payne noted that neither limit would apply to short-term accessory apartment occupants who are not paying rent. Additionally, “short-term rentals do give a number of our fellow residents an option to make Lincoln more affordable for them than it would be otherwise.”

Again, a voice vote was too close to call. In the standing vote, the Boit amendment was approved by a 89-82 margin.

Tim Christenfeld then proposed yet another amendment: removing the 5% cap on the number of accessory apartments. “This seems to run against a lot of what we’re trying to accomplish” in terms of encouraging economic diversity in town, he said. A cap signifies that “we support moderate-income families in Lincoln, but not too many.”

The current proportion of accessory apartments in town (64) is about 2–2.5% of the total number of units, Olson said. New ones are being created at the rate of two to three per year, meaning Lincoln would reach the 5% cap in about 20 years.

Christenfeld’s amendment was defeated in a voice vote where roughly two-thirds of residents voted no.

Eric Harris argued that “policy should not be based on one vote” (the margin for the first amendment) and the matter should be brought back at a future Town Meeting, but the vote on the original motion (as amended to reduce the rental period minimum from 30 days to seven) passed with only a handful of residents voting no, easily clearing the required two-thirds majority.

Category: government, land use

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