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Police log for November 4–14, 2025

November 17, 2025

November 4

Woodcock Lane (3:38pm) — Officers received a report of a missing child. The child was located a short time later.

Lincoln Road (8:44am) — A motorist reported that the operators of two other vehicles were arguing in the five-way intersection. An officer checked the area but it was clear upon arrival.

Page Road (11:47am) — After a tree fell through the roof of a residence, the home was evacuated. The building inspector was contacted and deemed the home to be safe.

Cambridge Turnpike westbound (3:27pm) — A person reported being the possible victim of a scam.

Old Lexington Road (11:19am) — A person reported being the possible victim of bank fraud.

Lincoln Road (2:57pm) — An officer stopped and cited a motorist for a crosswalk violation.

November 5

Donelan’s Supermarket (8:59am) — A person spoke to an officer regarding a possible assault and battery occurring in the supermarket.

Windingwood Lane (3:45pm) — A caller reported seeing two people start a fire on a small island on Farrar Pond. Officers were able to locate the youths and transfer them to their parents. The Fire Department found the fire but it had been extinguished prior to their arrival.

Lincoln Road (12:52pm) —A caller reported a possible issue with the railroad gates. An officer arrived on scene and confirmed the gates were functioning properly.

Tower Road (10:55pm) — A caller reported a branch had fallen into the roadway, blocking both directions of travel. Officers cordoned off the area and asked the DPW to remove it.

November 6

Tower Road (8:48am) — An officer assisted with traffic at the intersection of Tower Road and Route 117.

Bedford Road (10:15am) — A caller reported seeing two branches resting on wires. An officer checked the area and determined there was no hazard.

Wells Road (1:38pm) — A person requested documents from the police department.

November 7

Bedford Lane (12:57pm) — A caller reported seeing a vehicle enter their driveway and a man leaving the vehicle. An officer checked the area but was unable to locate anyone matching the description.

Lincoln School (7:06pm) — A caller reported the detour signs in place from earlier were still in the roadway. An officer removed the signs.

November 8

Indian Camp Lane (11:47am) — An officer spoke to a resident regarding a civil matter.

Rockwood Lane (3:44pm) — A person spoke to an officer regarding a past incident.

November 9

Tower Road (2:18pm) — A caller reported a dispute with a food delivery driver. An officer arrived on scene and spoke with both parties.

Concord Road (4:06pm) — A lost item was turned in to the police station and reunited with its owner a short time later.

November 10

Lincoln Road (4:34pm) — An officer facilitated the transfer of property that had been held for safekeeping.

November 11

Tower Road (1:03am) — An officer came upon several youths walking along Tower Road. The officer contacted several parents and made sure the youths made it home.

Fox Run Road (6:56am) — An officer responded to the area after the report of several mailboxes that had been damaged.

November 12

North Great Road (7:43am) — An officer helped with a disabled vehicle until a tow truck arrived.

Farrar Road (10:26am) — A caller reported that a utility service vehicle had the roadway entirely blocked. An officer checked the area and traffic could pass, one direction at a time.

Tower Road (6:44pm) — A caller reported wires down in the area. An officer checked the area and found no issue with the electrical or utility wires.

Virginia Road (6:57pm) — A caller reported a downed wire don that the utility company had been made aware of several times already. An additional call was made to Verizon.

November 13

Hanscom Drive (10:36am) — A caller reported a hit-and-run that occurred the previous evening.

Bedford Road (2:51pm) — An officer passed a notification to one resident at the request of another.

North Great Road (2:52pm) — A caller reported a minor two-vehicle crash. Officers responded and helped the drivers exchange information.

Lincoln Road (3:16pm) — A vehicle crashed into a utility pole. Wires were reported on the vehicle and in the roadway. Eversource arrived on scene and shut off the power. The operator was not injured and was cited for a marked lanes violation. The vehicle was towed from the scene and power was restored to the area.

November 14

St. Anne’s Church (1:51pm) — A caller reported smoke inside the building. The Fire Department determined that the cause was an overloaded circuit and an electrician was summoned.

Category: police & fire Leave a Comment

Town seeks input on how to spend opioid settlement money

November 16, 2025

Residents of Lincoln and six other towns are being asked to take surveys that will shape how the towns will spend their shares of the legal settlements with opioid companies and Johnson & Johnson.

Massachusetts is receiving more than $900 million from the 2021 settlements, all of which is intended for substance use prevention and treatment efforts. Local municipalities are receiving 40% of the funds, or about $360 million. Annual payments vary and are determine by the state, and Lincoln averages about $20,000–$25,000 annually, according to Assistant Town Administrator Dan Pereira.

Lincoln is part of the Great Meadows Regional Public Health Collaborative with Wayland, Sudbury, Weston, Concord, Bedford, and Carlisle. Within that group, the SAFE Initiative (Substance Awareness for Everyone) intends to look at regional responses to the opioid problem. Surveys are being conducted in all of the towns and the data will be used to develop both regional and local programs.

The anonymous survey for Lincoln, which takes about 10 minutes to complete, will help the town understand community priorities for spending opioid settlement funds. Public Health Nurse Tricia McGean, the Health Department, and Pereira represent Lincoln on the collaborative and will work with other Lincoln officials and SAFE to guide investments in prevention, treatment, recovery, and related services.

The SAFE team expects to close the survey before the end of 2025 and will publish results sometime in 2026 once they’ve had time to analyze the data.

Category: health and science Leave a Comment

The Lincoln Review is here!

November 13, 2025

Check out the new Fall 2025 issue of the Lincoln Review, Lincoln’s arts periodical. And stay tuned for the chance to buy a printed edition of all four issues of the Lincoln Review since 2024.

Category: arts 4 Comments

Community center gets going from the ground up

November 13, 2025

The driver and washed stone are in place for creating the rammed aggregate piers.

During the last few weeks, general contractor Hutter Construction has made significant progress on the beginnings of Lincoln’s community center. Demolition is complete and Hutter is moving forward with site work and ground improvements using rammed aggregate piers.

In thus technique, a driver pounds washed stone down 6–12 feet and then compacts it into a pier. There will be 279 of these piers along the outline of the building and under the interior about every 8–10 feet.  This will create a stiffened mass of soil and a solid foundation for the building.

The subcontractor has begun compaction testing and mobilization to identify the rammed aggregate pier sites. As piers are installed, the contractor will begin preparing for footings in sequence. Excavation will continue into the week of November 17, with footing installation beginning shortly thereafter, marking the beginning of foundation work for the new community center. By late November, the foundation work will progress as footings are set, and the first walls begin to rise. Moving into early December, crews will continue building out the foundation with additional footings and walls, further shaping the structure.

Installation of the rammed aggregate piers will generate vibrations and noise on the project site, so these operations only occur during the times allowed by the Town of Lincoln and the Building Department.

The next Community Center Building Committee meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, Nov. 19 in the Donaldson Roon and on Zoom. See the CCBC website for more information and images.

Category: community center* Leave a Comment

My Turn: supporting our neighbors this Thanksgiving

November 13, 2025

By Ursula Nowak for the SVdP Food Pantry

At our SVdP Food Pantry of Lincoln and Weston, we’ve seen how the delayed payments and recent cuts of SNAP benefits and the lingering effects of the government shutdown have affected our neighbors. Many of our pantry clients — families, seniors, and individuals who were already stretching every dollar — are now facing even tougher choices about how to put food on the table.

Reductions to SNAP funding and, in some cases job loss, have left many with smaller benefits and greater food insecurity. For families who already rely on every bit of support, that translates into skipped meals and less nutritious options. Even though our pantry faces higher demand and fewer resources, we are making every effort to meet the growing need.

That’s why our Thanksgiving gift card drive is more important than ever this year. Every November, we invite community members to purchase grocery gift cards that we distribute to local families. These cards give our clients the dignity of choosing their own Thanksgiving meal — fresh produce, a turkey, or a favorite family recipe ingredient — and help restore a sense of normalcy during difficult times.

Please help us make these holiday meals possible by donating a $35 Donelan’s gift card before Friday, Nov. 21. You may buy a gift card at Donelan’s in Lincoln and leave it at the register or donate here. To donate by check, please make it payable to ST. VINCENT DE PAUL and mail it to P.O. Box 324, Lincoln MA 01773. Remember to write “Thanksgiving Gift Cards” on the check.

This year, as SNAP benefits shrink and costs rise, that simple gesture means even more. We’re asking our community to come together once again to help make the season a little brighter for our neighbors. Together, we can ensure that everyone in our community has a reason to give thanks this year.

With gratitude,

The Society of St Vincent de Paul Food Pantry of Lincoln and Weston

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“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: charity/volunteer, My Turn 1 Comment

Legal notice: Historic District Commission (79 Lincoln)

November 13, 2025

PUBLIC HEARING — HISTORIC DISTRICT COMMISSION

The Historic District Commission will hold a virtual online public hearing at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, December 2, 2025, to consider the following application:

  • Winthrop Estates, LLC, 79 Lincoln Rd., M/P 153-15-0, to demolish the existing barn.

Anyone wishing to be heard on this matter should be present at the designated time and place.

Note that legal notices often must be posted twice by law. For previous legal notices and details on how to submit a legal notice to the Lincoln Squirrel, click here.

Category: legal notices Leave a Comment

Legal notice: Historic District Commission (241 Old Concord)

November 13, 2025

PUBLIC HEARING — HISTORIC DISTRICT COMMISSION

The Historic District Commission will hold a virtual online public hearing at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, December 2, 2025, to consider the following application:

  • Joanne Wise, 241 Old Concord Rd., M/P 156-7-0, to demolish the shed/lean-to.

Anyone wishing to be heard on this matter should be present at the designated time and place.

Note that legal notices often must be posted twice by law. For previous legal notices and details on how to submit a legal notice to the Lincoln Squirrel, click here.

Category: legal notices Leave a Comment

News acorns

November 12, 2025

LincFam gift card drive, meetup

LincFam is organizing an urgent grocery gift card drive to help bridge the next few weeks for local families while SNAP benefits are disrupted by the government shutdown. Drop off new or partially used cards (please note remaining balance) at Erin Rist’s House (10 Hawk Hill Road, Lincoln), email e-gift cards to lincnhn@gmail.com, Venmo a donation to @erinrist (LincFam will purchase grocery cards), or give directly to the St. Vincent de Paul food pantry — drop gift cards in the locked box in garage at 10 Hawk Hill Road or email e-gift cards to lincnhn@gmail.com.

LincFam offers new and expecting parents a chance to meet for a walk on Saturday, Nov. 15 at 10:00am outside the deCordova Museum and Sculpture Park’s Twisted Tree  Cafe. Free beverage after the walk. Anyone with babies under age 2 are welcome. Questions? Contact Emily at 207-712-7363.

Craft & Chill: watercolor pumpkin cards

Give yourself a mental break and have some fun with other adults on Wednesday, Nov. 19 from 1:00–2:00pm in the Lincoln Public Library’s Tarbell Room. All supplies are provided by the library. For ages 16+. Register here.

Lincoln resident photo exhibition in R.I.

Lincoln resident Linda Hammett Ory’s is included in the Rhode Island Center for Photographic Arts upcoming exhibition, “Landscapes: Real or Imagined,” juried by photographer and gallery director Cara Weston (granddaughter of Edward). This show celebrates contemporary landscape photography, offering a wider lens to provide a more expansive presentation of landscape photography today. The exhibition runs from November 20 through December 12, and the opening reception is on Thursday, Nov. 20 from 5:00–8:00pm. More information can be found on RICPA’s website.

Talk by Lincoln’s Dobrow on her new book

Julie Dobrow will discuss her new book, Love and Loss After Wounded Knee: A Biography of an Extraordinary Interracial Marriage on Sunday, Nov. 30 at 3:00pm in Bemis Hall. See her Medium post on how she learned about her subjects.

“Nothing Solid” film screening and Q&A

“Nothing Solid,” a semi-autobiographical, medical dark comedy based on Sharisse Zeroonian’s real-life experience with cyclic vomiting syndrome (a rare neurological brain-gut disorder), will be screened on Thursday, Dec. 4 at 6:00pm at the Lincoln Public Library. Zeroonian will be on hand to answer questions. Open to ages 16+.

Coming up at the deCordova

Talismans:  Pysanky Gift Making
Saturday, Dec. 6, 10:00am–noon

Holiday Wreath Making with Derby Farms
Saturday, Dec.6, 2:30–4:00pm

Category: acorns Leave a Comment

My Turn: Thanksgiving pies and pantries

November 11, 2025

By Tara Mitchell

Right now, our local food pantries need assistance more than ever before.  With government aid slowing to a trickle, every little bit can help.  Please consider a donation to St. Vincent de Paul Food Pantry or the Sudbury Food Pantry.

Additionally, FELS (the Foundation for Educators at Lincoln-Sudbury) is in the final week of its annual Thanksgiving pie sale. You can order a pie as a donation for a family to pick up from the food pantries in Lincoln or Sudbury, to gift to teachers and staff at LSRHS, or for your own Thanksgiving table. Orders must be in by Monday, Nov. 17. 

Either means of donation to our food pantries will allow local families to have a better opportunity to celebrate Thanksgiving together. Thanks to both our towns for your ongoing support of our food pantries and FELS, and best wishes for a safe and festive Thanksgiving!

Mitchell, a Sandy Pond Road resident, is co-president of FELS.


“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: charity/volunteer, My Turn Leave a Comment

Doherty’s project to accommodate new electric school buses

November 10, 2025

A map showing where the electric school buses (light blue) will be parked. The red line is the trench for the charging stations. Click image to enlarge.

Workers have begun digging a trench at the east side of the Doherty’s Garage property to install charging stations for a new fleet of electric school buses.

As part of the project, the grassy area now occupied by cars awaiting repair will be paved, expanded, and moved 21 feet closer to the tree line, though only one tree will be taken down. The EV transformer will supply electricity on two different meters for Doherty’s and the public, which will have access to two new charging stations in the adjacent dirt commuter lot. 

The Lincoln Garden Club’s plants in the area were removed but will be replaced, and there will be new plantings on the Lincoln Road side of the property to partially screen the school buses from view. The Planning Board approved the addition on October 28.

 “It’s going to be a huge improvement. Right now it looks like a junkyard. The site needs to be cleaned up,” said Paula Vaughn-Mackenzie, director of planning and land use.

Board members asked why the buses need to be charged and parked full-time at that location rather than at the Lincoln School or the DPW on nearby Lewis Street where they’re now stored. Scott Rodman of the Green Energy Committee, who has been working with property owner Mike Callender and Highland Electric Fleets, replied that the school had neither access to enough power nor space to park the buses with sufficient turnaround room — “much to my chagrin, because I thought was perfect place for them, too,” Rodman said. “I tried everything humanly possible.”

The buses also can’t be parked behind the garage building because it’s too close to wetlands. As for the DPW, the town expects to rebuild the site at some point, and when that happens, there won’t be room for the buses there either. It wouldn’t make fiscal sense to install the EV chargers there and then later tear them out and reinstall them elsewhere, Rodman said. “These chargers are very expensive — you can’t do it as a sort of temporary thing.”

A 2019 town study said that the DPW would have to be replaced at what was then an estimated cost of $15 million. Consultants looked at several alternate sites in town and concluded that the current Lewis Street was the most suitable.

For now, Doherty’s will keep some of its diesel buses as backups and for use on  field trips and longer athletic trips; eventually they will be phased out, Callender said. He asked the board to approve the plan right away to qualify for grant funding. The project needs to be up and running by January 1, 2026; “otherwise, several million dollars in federal and state funds may go elsewhere, and given the political climate, may not return,” he added.

Doherty’s and the school agreed earlier this year to amend their contract to allow introduction of the new buses, and the change will not cost the schools or town any additional money.

Though everyone agreed that electric school buses are a good idea though not without some grumbling about the fact that the application was submitted as a “minor change” to the property’s site plan.This meant that a public hearing was not required and some board members found out about the proposal rather late in the game, though Reid McIntire, project manager at Highland Electric Fleets, said they’d been working on the plan since April.

“I’m shocked that we just found out about this — you’re putting a gun to our head,” said board member Rob Ahlert. “I feel like it came out of nowhere, though maybe it’s all good.”

“On principle, I believe this is a major modification, but I also believe that this project needs to move forward,” said board member Susan Hall Mygatt, who urged the board to have a future discussion of what exactly constitutes “major” and “minor” changes to site plans. Ultimately, though, members unanimously approved the “minor change” designation and the project itself.

“This is a real chance to do something that would be unusual for a town as small as Lincoln,” board member Gary Taylor said.

Doherty’s Garage, a three-generation business in Lincoln since 1905, was sold in 2023 to 161 Lincoln Rd. LLC. The property and business activities were split up; Cindy Murphy (granddaughter of founder Matthew Doherty) and her husband Dennis still manage the school bus transportation and rubbish collection services, while Johnny Frangieh of Lincoln Petroleum runs the gas station and auto repair shop. 

Category: conservation, land use 1 Comment

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