• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar

The Lincoln Squirrel – News, features and photos from Lincoln, Mass.

  • Home
  • About/Contact
  • Advertise
  • Legal Notices
    • Submitting legal notices
  • Lincoln Resources
    • Coming Up in Lincoln
    • Municipal Calendar
    • Lincoln Links
  • Merchandise
  • Subscription Info
    • My Account
    • Log In
    • Log Out
  • Lincoln Review
    • About the Lincoln Review
    • Previous Issues
    • Submit Your Work
    • Subscribe/Donate

Covid-19 closings and cancellations

March 13, 2020

Lincoln Public Library

The library will be closed through at least March 29. All items currently checked out will automatically have a new due date of April 6, and fines for items due during this closure will be waived. The library is always open online: contact a librarian, borrow books and movies, read the paper, and more. Check the library’s website at lincolnpl.org or call 781-259-8465 for further updates. The Friends of the Lincoln Library are also suspending collections and sales of used books and other materials. Please do not bring used books, CDs, or DVDs to Bemis Hall until further notice.

Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School

L-S is creating learning continuity plans in the event of extended school closure. The Learning Continuity Steering Committee began meeting this week and is researching what has been done already in other schools, particularly those in Asia during the SARS epidemic.

deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum

Effectively immediately, the deCordova is closing its indoor galleries and will remain closed until the planned late April opening of its spring exhibition, Visionary New England. Members and guests are welcome to the outdoor Sculpture Park, and the gates will now be open for free admission in order to minimize staff with the public in handling cash or credit cards. 

Real restaurant

Real is setting up an online ordering system with a reduced menu at www.keepitreallincoln.com as well as its regular takeout menu. Staff can take credit card numbers over the phone and deliver food to your car. The restaurant itself has also reduced the number of tables to allow more space between diners and is following CDC guidelines for cleaning and sanitizing.

Churches

The First Parish in Lincoln has decided to move its services online for March 15, 22, and 29. The church has also closed both of its buildings to all gatherings until April 1. This week’s worship on Sunday morning will be streamed using Facebook Live — click on this link to view.

St. Anne’s-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church is also live-streaming services at www.stanneslincoln.org/live.

Category: arts, Covid-19*, health and science, religious 1 Comment

Town meeting, election postponed for at least a month

March 13, 2020

The town meetings and election scheduled for the end of this month have been called off, with tentative new dates in late April, though town officials have the option of postponing again if the Covid-19 epidemic has not abated.

“The sentiment is very clear — everyone thinks we should postpone,” said Town Moderator Sarah Cannon Holden at an emergency meeting of the Board of Selectmen on Friday morning.

“We are very strongly against pulling people together at any public gathering at this point in time,” said Patricia Miller, a member of the Board of Health, which met on March 11.

Holden officially declared that the Town Meeting and Special Town Meeting will be postponed “to a time certain” — Saturday, April 25 a 9:30 a.m. in the Donaldson Auditorium. The actions came just hours before Gov. Baker issued an order banning public gatherings with more than 250 people, with some exceptions.

The most time-sensitive issue that was due for a vote on March 28 was the Special Town Meeting question about the school project. Last month, the School Building was forced to cut items totaling $3.5 million after construction bids came in higher than expected, so they’re hoping residents approve adding back up to $2 million for the items they consider most important. 

Architects and construction firms need to know by June 1 which items will be part of the project, and they would prefer that the town vote by mid-May. However, the project as a whole is not stalled. “The contracts are signed, the project is moving forward,” Selectman Jennifer Glass said. “The pieces in question are the items we’re thinking about adding back.”

Virtual meetings

In the coming weeks, town officials will be thinking about ways to make both the town meetings and town government function given the necessity of social distancing. Meetings of boards and commissions and their accompanying public hearings will be postponed when possible or held remotely. The state’s open Meeting Law requires members of town boards to meet in person in public, but an executive order issued by Gov. Baker on Thursday night relaxes that requirement, allowing meetings to be held remotely, without a quorum gathered at a single location, as long as the public has access in real time to the proceedings via the web or some other audio or videoconferencing method.

“We need to move on that now,” Miller said about the issue of getting access to the appropriate technology for board chairs. These methods could also be used to shorten the town meetings when they do take place, such as having televised presentations of the warrant articles. 

Unlike elections, residents may not vote early or by absentee ballot at Town Meeting. However, officials could survey residents ahead of time to shape a shortened agenda with just the most popular or important items. Votes on other matters such as the citizens’ petitions could  be postponed until later in the year or even 2021.

If necessary, the April 25 Town Meetings could be opened and the immediately postponed to another “time certain.”

Town election

Under state law, the only way to postpone town elections is via court injunction or special legislation by the state. Voters as well as poll workers at elections tend to skew toward the senior citizen population, who are more vulnerable to serious illness from Covid-19, and the idea of them interacting with hundreds of people on Election Day is “disconcerting,” Town Administrator Tim Higgins said.

The board voted to ask the governor to file emergency legislation on behalf of the town seeking authorization to postpone the election to a date on or before June 30. However, if the election is to be held the customary two days after Town Meeting (which is now scheduled for April 27), officials must nail down the election date by April 5 because 20 days’ notice is required. That period is to allow people who were not eligible to vote in March to register.

The rescheduled election will probably also allow “modified early voting by mail,” which is essentially the same as absentee ballot voting, but without the requirement for the voter to sign an affidavit saying they are unable to vote in person for religious or medical reasons or because they are out of town. Voters would still have to request ballots in advance.

Lincoln’s town election is normally held on the same day as Sudbury’s so the two towns can simultaneously elect members of the Lincoln-Sudbury Regional School Committee. However, that isn’t critical this year, since the seats for that board are uncontested.

Like everything else nowadays, these tentative plans are subject to change, depending on what happens with the pandemic and whether the state offers more rules or guidance on how town government should be conducted in the Covid-19 era.

Lincoln public health nurse Trish McGean, who was also at the selectmen’s meeting, said that as of Friday morning she did not know if and when the town’s preschools and private schools would close, though she assumed they would follow the lead of the Lincoln Public Schools.

There were no official cases as of Covid-19 on Friday, though experts agree that the virus is circulating widely. When someone does test positive or presumptively positive, the state Department of Public Health will inform McGean, who will publish that fact (minus patient-identifying information) on the town’s Covid-19 website at lincolnpublichealthnews.com.

Category: Covid-19*, elections, government, health and science Tagged: elections Leave a Comment

Schools close; Town Meeting and election postponement likely

March 12, 2020

Lincoln Public Schools will be closed for the rest of the month, and the Board of Selectmen has scheduled an emergency meeting on Friday morning to discuss postponing the town meetings and election scheduled for March 28 and March 30.

The latest development in the swiftly progressing Covid-9 pandemic events came late Thursday night, when Superintendent of School Becky McFall contacted parents to tell them there would be no school on Friday, March 13 and schools would not reopen until at least March 30. Earlier in the day, she said the state Commissioner of Education had scheduled a Friday morning conference call for school superintendents where we “anticipate we will be given some direct guidance about school closures.” 

These were just the latest in a rapid series of communications from McFall about the virus in the last two days, starting with a March 11 notice about limiting access to the schools to students and employees only, while canceling field trips and athletic events.

“Since my communication this afternoon, we have seen a significant shift in the coronavirus outbreak and we have decided to take proactive measures to slow the rapid spread of the virus,” McFall said in a email to parents sent Thursday night at 10:12 p.m. announcing the school closures through at least March 27.

This came after the School Committee met Thursday evening and reviewed the latest information about the spread of the virus as well as closures by other school districts. Sudbury schools and Minuteman High School are also closed as of Friday; Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School is open Friday but will close after that for at least two weeks. Six other districts including Bedford and Lexington jointly announced closings as of March 13.

“It is important for families to understand that this is an initial determination, and as we monitor the outbreak, it may lead to a longer closure,” McFall wrote. 

Lincoln made its announcement amid widespread measures nationwide to restrict gatherings of people, and McFall urged families to follow that guidance in coming weeks. “If students and families continue to meet together in groups outside of school, this initial closure will not have the desired impact. It is critical that everyone refrains from meeting in large groups and practices social distancing as recommended by the CDC,” she wrote.

School administrators, teachers and technology specialists are developing “curated resources” for families and students during the closure. “These resources are not intended as a ‘virtual school,’ but rather will provide a bank of ideas for learning activities that families may find useful,” McFall wrote.

Information on preschools in Lincoln was not available Thursday night.

There were 108 presumptive or confirmed cases of Covid-19 in Massachusetts as of March 12, according to the state Department of Public Health. Middlesex County had twice as many cases as any other county in the state with 49. It’s unclear if are any cases in Lincoln yet.

Town meeting and election

The Board of Selectmen has scheduled an emergency meeting on Friday, March 13 at 7:30 a.m. to discuss the possibility of postponing the town meetings scheduled for March 28 and the town election on March 30. The agenda can be found here.

The Lincoln Squirrel will report on actions that result from that meeting and will post a story on Friday. We’ll continue to post on weekends when breaking news warrants.

Other cancellations

As the Lincoln Squirrel learns about cancellations due to the Covid-19 epidemic, the affected events will be noted as postponed in the calendar. However, if an event is still listed, don’t assume it’s happening —  check with organizers before going.

  • The Council on Aging has canceled or postponed all COA classes and activities through Friday, March 27. At that point they will review the situation. COA staff will be in their offices during regular business hours and we will continue to offer social work and other social services as usual. For more information, call the COA at 781-259-8811.
  • The Lincoln Public library has canceled or postponed the Friday morning book group on March 13 and will probably cancel some other activities as well, once they’ve talked with the presenters. Please check the library website at lincolnpl.org for the latest news.
  • The library has also canceled all children’s programming through the month of March. Please contact the library with any questions or concerns: 781-259-8465 ext. 4 or dleopold@minlib.net.
  • The Lincoln Family Association has suspended its weekly Wednesday playgroups through the end of March. 
  • The March 13 WHDH videotaping at the Lincoln train station described in the March 11 article headlined “TV station to film Lincoln MBTA activists on Friday” has been canceled.
  • The Old Town Hall Exchange will close for the time being. Saturday, March 13 will be its last day open until further notice.
  • The deCordova Museum will remain open for now, with increased cleaning protocols. However, events in March where more than 100 people are expected have been canceled. For the immediate future, if programs or events that you are registered for are canceled, you will be notified via email and issued a full refund. If you’re unsure of the status of the event, check the deCordova website at decordova.org and social media channels.
More information:
  • Town of Lincoln COVID-19 page
  • Mass. Dept. of Public Health COVID-19 page
  • U.S. Centers for Disease Control COVID-19 page
    • Daily tracking of cases in the U.S.
    • CDC guidelines for those at higher risk of serious illness 

Category: Covid-19*, government, health and science, schools Leave a Comment

Covid-19 updates and cancellations

March 11, 2020

Restricted access to schools

Beginning March 12, access to the Lincoln Public Schools is being limited to students and employees only, with a few exceptions. Events that include invitations to parents, extended family members, and outside guests will be postponed, canceled or rescheduled, Superintendent of Schools Becky McFall said in a March 11 communication.

This means that events like plays and musicals (including the middle school performance of “Frozen Jr.” that was scheduled for the evenings of March 19 and 20) may be performed for a student audience during the school day but will not be open to parents and community members. “We will do our best to take steps to allow parents and family members to view the performances via video or other measures. Performances may also be rescheduled to later in the year,” McFall wrote.

Community events that are scheduled in school gyms and auditoriums or other large spaces will also be cancelled.

Other changes and cancellations
  • The Friends of the Library monthly used book sale (was Saturday, March 14 in Bemis Hall). Organizers hope to proceed with the next scheduled book sale on Saturday, April 11 but will keep LincolnTalk posted about plans. Donations are still welcome in the box at Bemis Hall.
  • “Coping & Understanding Hearing Loss” (was Saturday, March 14 at the library). Organizers hope to reschedule for later in the spring.
  • “Tough Guys and Gentle Men: Healthy Men in the Age of #MeToo” (was Saturday, March 14 at St. Anne’s Church). This was a half-day summit hosted by the Sudbury-Wayland-Lincoln Domestic Violence Roundtable. 
More information:
  • Town of Lincoln COVID-19 page
  • Mass. Dept. of Public Health COVID-19 page
    • Daily tracking of Mass. cases
  • U.S. Centers for Disease Control COVID-19 page
    • Daily tracking of cases in the U.S.
    • CDC guidelines for those at higher risk of serious illness 

 

Category: Covid-19*, government, health and science, news, schools Leave a Comment

Clarification

March 11, 2020

In the March 5 article headlined “Planning Board candidates have their say,” there were some minor editing errors in the section submitted by Lynn DeLisi, who also expanded on her comments about Minuteman Vocational technical School. The original post has been updated.

Category: news Leave a Comment

TV station to film Lincoln MBTA activists on Friday

March 11, 2020

WHDH-TV (Channel 7) is coming to the Lincoln train station on Friday, March 13 at 3 p.m. to shoot video for a piece about the difficulties that physically handicapped riders face when trying to board the commuter rail at the Lincoln stop, which is not ADA-compliant.

The piece will be hosted by Sam Smink for Solve It 7. Carol DiGianni, a Ryan Estate resident, has been working to draw attention to the issue for Lincoln riders, including residents of Ryan Estate and Lincoln Woods and hopes others with mobility issues will come on Friday.

The state legislature passed a bill in 2018 that would allocate $500,000 for designing improvements to Lincoln’s MBTA station and commuter lot, but has yet to release the money despite repeated requests from town officials. Residents and the Board of Selectmen pressed the issue with state legislators again at a December 2019 forum.

Category: news Leave a Comment

Some activities canceled as town girds for coronavirus

March 10, 2020

Some activities for seniors in Lincoln have been canceled, and town officials are beginning to make contingency plans in case the threat of the Covid-19 coronavirus makes it necessary to postpone the town meetings and election later this month.

In consultation with town public health nurse Tricia McGean, the Council on Aging canceled several non-health-related group events during the next few weeks, including Lincoln Academy talks and special educational presentations, senior dining, and foreign language conversation groups.

As of March 9, the COA’s Matter of Balance, Stretch and Flex, Active Aging, tai chi, and line dancing classes will continue, as will tax counseling, the wellness clinics for all ages, the senior legal clinic, and office hours with Jay Higgins of Rep. Katherine Clark’s office. All social services provided by the COA are still in place. To check on specific activities or for more information, call the Council on Aging at 781-259-8811 or consult their online calendar.

The town has convened a group of senior department staff and health officials including McGean and the Board of Health to plan local prevention and response measures during the epidemic.

“It’s not completely out of the realm of possibility” that the town would need to postpone the special and annual town meetings on March 28 and the town election on March 30, Town Administrator Tim Higgins told the Board of Selectmen on Monday. The virus seems to make older people the sickest, “and they turn out in big numbers for both.”

Postponing town-wide votes could have logistical repercussions, especially for the school project. At the Special Town Meeting that will start at 9:30 a.m. on March 28 immediately before the Annual Town Meeting, residents will be asked to vote on whether to fund some of the $3.5 million recently cut from the project. Bids have been received and contracts must be signed as soon as those decisions are made. 

Higgins told the selectmen he had asked construction managers how long they could postpone the Town Meeting vote and heard that “June 1 is an important deadline for them,” and they would have to have a final decision on the cuts at least a week or two before that. If the town election is postponed, Llincoln would also have to coordinate with Sudbury, which holds its election on the same day to have simultaneous votes of members of the Lincoln-Sudbury regional School Committee.

By state law, town boards and commissions must hold meetings in person and in public. Asked if that rule would be relaxed if meetings need to be held remotely, “the state has resisted that to this point, but a public health emergency might change their thinking,” Higgins said on Monday. 

Gov. Charlie Baker declared a state of emergency in Massachusetts today, which gives the governor some extra powers including ordering cancellation of large-scale events, but it was not immediately clear how this would affect requirements normally imposed on local governments.

Town Clerk Valerie Fox considered not ordering ballots for the town election but went ahead and did so this week, Higgins said. If Town Meeting were to be postponed, it would technically have to be convened and then adjourned, though a quorum of residents probably would not be required for that vote. Plans are being made for sanitation precautions regarding microphones at Town Meeting and pens at the election, but “there is no backup plan yet” if the town moderator or town clerk were unable to preside at the meetings, Higgins said.

“These are the practical things we’re having to think through” as the situation changes rapidly, Higgins added. Health officials “tell us it’s just a matter of time until everyone in the community experiences this on some level.” 

As of March 10, there are 92 confirmed and presumptive cases of COVID-19 in Massachusetts, according to the state’s Department of Public Health. Of those, 70 are employees or their contacts from Biogen, which held a conference from Feb. 24–27 at the Marriott Long Wharf in Boston. Forty-one of the 92 patients are from Middlesex County, and six have been hospitalized thus far.

The Centers for Disease Control have issued guidelines for older people and others at higher risk of serious illness should they become infected. Those measures include stocking up on prescription and over-the-counter medications, groceries, and other household items in case they need to stay at home for an extended period. Symptoms of COVID-19 include fever, cough, and/or shortness of breath that appear 2-14 days after exposure to the virus.

More information:
  • Town of Lincoln COVID-19 page
  • Mass. Dept. of Public Health COVID-19 page
    • Daily tracking of Mass. cases
  • U.S. Centers for Disease Control COVID-19 page
    • Daily tracking of cases in the U.S.
    • CDC guidelines for those at higher risk of serious illness 

Category: Covid-19*, government, health and science, seniors Leave a Comment

Police log for week of Feb. 28, 2020

March 9, 2020

February 28

Wheeler Road (6:25 a.m.) — Caller reported not having water at her house and wanted to see if there was a water main break in the area. No water main break; the caller had had plumbing work done the previous day.

Old Bedford Rd. (5:48 p.m.) — Report of vehicle pulled off to the side of the road. Officer checked on the person, who had pulled over to get directions.

February 29

Lincoln Road (12:46 p.m.) — Party came to the station to pick up court paperwork.

March 1

Lincoln Road (12:32 a.m.) — Officer checked on a bicyclist on Lincoln Rd. Party is a resident riding home; all is fine.

Cambridge Turnpike eastbound (2:38 a.m.) — Vehicle was stopped and Omar Hernandez, 35, 50 Day St. in Fitchburg was arrested for an outstanding traffic warrant out of Malden District Court.

South Great Road (4:07 p.m.) — Officer assisted a party just over the town line in Weston with dogs running in the roadway.

Ballfield Road (3:36 a.m.) — Officer stopped a vehicle in the parking lot of the school after it turned off its lights on Lincoln Road. Officer issued a summons to Daurey Moreta Garcia of Boston for operating without a license and failure to stop for police. Two other people in the car were identified. Personal checks were later found on school grounds that had been stolen out of a mailbox in Newton. A mailbox “fishing device” was also found in the Lincoln Post Office mailbox. Investigation is ongoing.

Lincoln Road (10:11 p.m.) — Officer checked on a party who was pulled over and was lost. Assistance given and party went on their way.

they’re on their way.

March 3

Lincoln Road (8:27 a.m.) — Road sign knocked over near Rte. 117. Officer retrieved the sign and contacted the DPW.

Lincoln School — Officers assisted with traffic and patrolling school during primary election.

Lincoln Road (3:03 p.m.) — Report of a suspicious white van. Area was checked; nothing found.

South Great Road (6:59 p.m.) — Concord Police Department reports an erratic operator entering Lincoln on Rte. 117. Lincoln officer located party and attempted to stop. Party failed to stop and continued into Weston. Subject was stopped and was transported to Lahey Clinic. Operator to be summonsed to court for operating under the influence of alcohol, failure to stop for police, drinking from an open container, and marked lane violation.

Codman Road (3:46 a.m.) — Officer checked on a package on the side of the road. Appears to be from a bread truck; all is fine.

March 4

Lincoln Road (8:48 a.m.) — Solicitor permit issued to a party to go door to door for Edward Jones Financial Advisors.

March 5

1 Harvest Circle (7:33 a.m.) — Elderly party fell victim to a sweepstakes scam, investigation ongoing.

Lincoln Police Department (1:16 a.m.) — Caller was looking for information regarding a probate order. He was advised to contact his attorney as it’s a civil matter.

Tower Road (7:04 p.m.) — Caller reported that both they and their dog were bitten by a dog while on the trails. Dog officer will follow up with the reporting party.

March 6

Wells Road (12:54 a.m.) — A confused party reported people at the residence. Officers spoke to the party and family and made referrals to Senior Services for assistance.

Wells Road (5:25 a.m.) — Well-being check on resident.

Hanscom Air Force Base Vandenberg Gate (7:05 a.m.) — Arthur Cardoso, 27, of Delmar Ave. in Providence, R.I. was arrested while trying to enter the base as he had an outstanding larceny warrant out of Taunton District Court.

Lincoln Road (10:58 a.m.) — Hit-and-run crash in the Donelan’s parking lot. Officer spoke to parties involved and took a report.

Main Street, Watertown (11:20 a.m.) — Det. Spencer assisted Watertown Police Department with a forensic sketch relating to an investigation in that town.

Tower Road (4:12 p.m.) — Caller reported being bitten by three dogs. Party received medical attention and was transported to a local hospital. The Animal Control Officer notified and is handling the matter, and the dog owners were contacted.

Main Street, Maynard (4:42 p.m.) — Det. Spencer assisted Maynard Police Department with a forensic sketch relating to an investigation in that town.

Category: news, police & fire Leave a Comment

First Parish offers August summer program for kids

March 8, 2020

The First Parish in Lincoln is introducing Summer Spirit, a full-day program running from August 10–21 for kids who’ve completed grades K-7, with counselor-in-training opportunities for eighth-graders.

“I’ve heard parents mention the lack of an in-town opportunity for ‘good’ (i.e., fun, interesting, safe, etc.) childcare in between the time Lincoln Summer Day Camp (and others) end, and the start of the school year,” said Margit Griffith, director of religious education at the First Parish in Lincoln. Many families have two working parents, “and they don’t all choose to vacation during the last two weeks of August, and not all have nannies, especially once children begin school. College-age summer caregivers start to head back to their schools. This all leaves a child care dilemma here in town.”

Summer Spirit will be headquartered at the church’s Parish House (the stone church) at 14 Bedford Rd., across from Bemis Hall), “and we’ll make use of the historic building, grounds, and abutting conservation lands,” Griffith said.

Each of the two weeks has a theme: “Spirit of Earth” and “Spirit of Lincoln.” Details on activities as well as the parent handbook, registration form, dates and rates, tuition assistance, and contact information can be found at www.fplincoln.org/summer-spirit.

“The program is quite secular in the sense that activities and themes are distinctly summer-day-camp-ish,” Griffith said. “However, our guiding principles in how we interact with each other and with the children focuses on kindness, caring, community service, and support We will relate everything we do to how we nurture each other, our neighbors, and the earth. We may practice moments of mindfulness, but religious practices and beliefs will not be part of Summer Spirit.

Funding for Summer Spirit operations is fronted from the church’s Religious Exploration budget for children and youth programs, with the hope that the program gets enough participants to cover costs, Griffith said. Tuition assistance is available. Any proceeds after all program operations costs are covered will be used to fund scholarships.

The program will run from from 9 a.m.–3 p.m. with optional early drop-off at 8 a.m. or late pickup until 5 p.m. for an additional charge. The cost per child is $290 for one week or $530 for both weeks, with discounts for multiple children.

“We also seek to form community partners through this and all church endeavors. Working together is the best way for local organizations to more fully meet the needs of all residents,” Griffith said. “First Parish in Lincoln has rededicated itself to reaching out to continue old tried-and-true traditions and find new, outside-the-box ways of serving with and for all our neighbors.”

Category: kids, news Leave a Comment

Water Commission candidates discuss the issues

March 8, 2020

Terms on town boards and committees are usually staggered so new members join others who have more experience on that board, but this year, all three seats on the Water Commission are open due to two resignations and a normally expiring term. Three candidates are running for those seats (down from six residents who initially expressed interest):

  1. Michelle Barnes was appointed as an interim member and is now running for a full three-year term.
  2. Incumbent Ruth Ann Hendrickson (chair of the commission) is up for reelection and is running for a two-year term. She has previously said in a letter to the editor to the Squirrel that, if reelected, this will be her last term.
  3. Jim Hutchinson is resigning from the Finance Committee a year before his term expires to run for a one-year term on the Water Commission.

Barnes and Selectman Jennifer Glass were both sworn in as emergency interim Water Commissioners in October after Bob Antia and Heather Ring resigned (in Ring’s case, because of dissatisfaction with management by Water Department Superintendent MaryBeth Wiser).

Below are Q&As and statements from the three candidates, lightly edited for length and clarity.


Michelle Barnes

South Great Road

Please tell us a bit about your background.

Most of my career I spent as a macrofinancial economist in the research department of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. Before that I was a tenured lecturer at the University of Adelaide teaching finance, international monetary economics, and macroeconomics. During graduate school, I worked as a consultant at both JP Morgan and the World Bank, and before going to graduate school, I managed Teamsters at Roadway Express in my hometown of Sacramento, Calif. I received my PhD in economics in 1998, and my last day on the job at the Fed was in December 2018.

I’ve lived in Lincoln since 2008, and feel super lucky to be able to fully enjoy Lincoln’s bucolic open spaces with my 10-year-old daughter and our border collie. During our time in Lincoln, I have had the opportunity and pleasure to serve on the Magic Garden board, the Lincoln METCO Coordinating Committee (as co-chair in 2015, secretary through 2019, and as president since then), and on the Lincoln Land Conservation Trust/Rural Land Foundation Board of Trustees (as chair since 2019).

Why are you running for the Water Commission?

I’ve chosen to run for Water Commissioner to continue the efforts our team has made since October 2019 to stabilize the Lincoln Water Department (LWD). I believe that at this important juncture, continuity, stability, and a strong measure of critical and analytical thinking are required to further stabilize the LWD and bring it to the point where it is successfully delivering safe and reliable water in a fiscally prudent and sustainable manner. Due to my recent tenure as a Water Commissioner and my background as a macrofinancial economist, I bring both attributes to the table.

Back in October 2019, when there was a call for the need to fill two Water Commissioner vacancies, I heeded that call (as did Jennifer Glass and Jim Hutchinson, who have been members of our team since then as well). I have thoroughly enjoyed climbing the steep learning curve of overseeing the Water Department’s operating and long-term planning process, getting to know all of the people involved in this organization and process, and being able to use my background in macro-financial policy analysis to help frame some of our debates about LWD fiscal management and long-term capital planning

In your opinion, what are the biggest problems or decisions facing the Water Commission, and how do you propose to tackle them?

The biggest problems facing the Water Department are personnel issues, chronic underinvestment in maintenance and infrastructure, and the long-standing leadership culture that brought the LWD to this critical point. It bears emphasizing, however, that I believe that a certain amount of continuity and stability in leadership are integral to moving the LWD forward in the most constructive possible way; the role of institutional knowledge in solving the LWD’s problems should not be underestimated.

I have confidence in the ability of the chair of the Water Commissioners, in conjunction with the team that has been assembled, to address and solve the critical issues facing the LWD for the benefit of the town and its water customers.  More personally, I am committed to facing head-on the multiple challenges I outlined above with candor, curiosity, clarity of vision, and a critical mind, and in a manner that simultaneously celebrates and preserves our positive contributions while having the courage to mitigate and reshape efforts that I believe are a detriment to the LWD’s mission.

Why should Lincolnites vote for you?

Lincoln voters should vote for me because I am deeply committed to ensuring the delivery of safe and reliable drinking water to the Town of Lincoln in a manner that is financially prudent and fair, both in the short- and long-term. Given my recent tenure on the Water Commission, I have been able to come up to speed in the areas that matter most for ensuring the current and future safety and stability of water treatment and delivery in Lincoln.  My skills as a macrofinancial economist focused for much of my career on policy analysis can continue to help the LWD chart a clear path to a more financially sustainable future.


Ruth Ann Hendrickson

Concord Road

Please tell us a bit about your background.

I’ve lived in Lincoln since 1967. While I was home raising my children, I served as president of the Recycling Committee for several years in the 1970s and as the Lincoln’s representative to the Regional Solid Waste Committee for several years after that. I was on the board of the Lincoln League of Women Voters, which was very active in town issues as well as state and national issues. I served as president for two years and vice president for several years.

I chaired studies on whether the town assessors were undervaluing older houses and on the per-pupil cost of our public schools, the latter leading me to run for School Committee, where I pushed for consolidation of all the grades into the Smith-Brooks complex. I also led the move to close the town’s polluting open dump and create the current transfer station. I went back to work in 1989 and retired in 2009.

In 2011, I ran for Water Commissioner after looking for a way to serve the town that would utilize my technical background and allow me to promote water conservation. For the past few years I have also served as the liaison to the School Building Committee (SBC), promoting both water and energy conservation. I recently withdrew from the SBC due to the demands on my time from chairing the Water Commission.

As I said in my letter to the editor, given the recent changes in Water Superintendent and Commissioners, I believe my continuing on the commission for another two years would lend a needed continuity. Moreover, since I am retired, I can devote a substantial amount of time to gathering and analyzing data to ensure knowledge-based decision-making. I bring to the position communication and creative problem-solving skills honed by my years in industry and an aptitude for electromechanical systems developed during my work on advanced gyroscopes and vacuum robotic systems.

In your opinion, what are the biggest problems or decisions facing the Water Commission, and how do you propose to tackle them?

Going forward, the issues are:

  • Successfully completing the projects needed to upgrade the water system infrastructure
  • Developing both short-term and long-term financial plans
  • Assessing whether to continue with the existing upgraded treatment plant, to build in new treatment plant, or to sign up for MWRA water
  • Attracting seasoned personnel to fully staff the Water Department

We are making significant progress on all four issues, especially in staffing, as we have hired a new and very experienced senior plant manager and several experienced part-time water operators, and we are about to add another full-time operator. We are in the midst of revamping our fee and rate structure to ensure we have the funds needed to provide clean, safe water. I’m confident that by the end of the next two years, the department will be back on an even keel with a solid plan for the future.


Jim Hutchinson

Stonehedge

Please tell us a bit about your background.

I hold a Ph.D. in computer science from MIT. Earlier in my career I developed novel machine learning and financial applications for supercomputers. I then co-founded a hedge fund with two partners, where as CEO I led the R&D for our quantitative, systematic trading strategies as well as managing all outside vendors and services for the firm, including legal, brokerage, fund administration, and hardware and software services. I am now retired.

My family and I have enjoyed living in Lincoln since 1999. I’ve always admired how so many good and capable residents have volunteered over the years to help keep our town running smoothly, and once I had the time I’ve tried to step up and do my part. I served as treasurer of Codman Community Farms from 2010–2013, and on the Finance Committee since March 2013, serving two years as chair and two years as vice chair. I’m resigning from FinCom as my seat has one more year on it. I’m not allowed to serve on FinCom and the Water Commission at the same time, and I feel like Water needs some attention.

While on FinCom, I’ve had the opportunity to act at times as liaison to various other groups including the Green Energy Committee, the Affordable Housing Trust, and most recently the Capital Planning Committee and the PPA Subcommittee, which is in charge of getting solar on our new school project. Since October 2019, I’ve also been invited to attend Water Commission meetings as an additional FinCom liaison.

Another relevant fact is that I own and maintain my own swimming pool, and am quite comfortable discussing water chemistry and sanitation. My setup is not as complex or sophisticated as our water treatment plant, of course, and I have plenty to learn if I am to become a Water Commissioner. But I find the water processes and equipment quite interesting and will be happy to dig in and learn more on the job.

In your opinion, what are the biggest problems or decisions facing the Water Commission, and how do you propose to tackle them?

The Water Department has been going through a very challenging period, with high staff turnover, difficulty hiring and retaining staff, and aging infrastructure to replace, all while trying to meet regulatory standards as the chemistry of Flint’s Pond changes over the years. Some of these challenges have already begun to be addressed starting last fall by a coalition of the Water Superintendent, town administration and finance staff, the elected and interim commissioners, and two liaisons from FinCom (including myself). However, much work remains to be done, including answering big-picture questions like whether the town would be better off switching to MWRA service.

Of course I don’t have all the answers to these questions yet. But in my opinion, the staffing issue is the most critical to resolve, for two reasons. First, the FY21 budget has risen sharply, in part due to the Water Department’s current need to engage outside consultants to get necessary tasks done. I’d like to see as much of the necessary work done in house as possible, since that would be more cost-effective.

Second, even if we decide to switch to MWRA, it will take years to do so, and in the interim we need to continue to operate our plant smoothly and safely. On the capital equipment issues, since October I have been advocating for deferring any capital investments that are not needed in the near term for safety or regulatory compliance reasons until we can make an informed decision about MWRA, although given the projects that have already been approved, it may be a foregone conclusion to stick with our own plant. In any case, I believe it is incumbent upon the Water Department and commission to make capital equipment decisions that get what value we can out of our existing investments and only replace or supplement that equipment when necessary to meet regulatory standards and provide clean drinking water to residents.

Why should Lincolnites vote for you?

I believe I have the management and team-building experience to help guide and oversee the staffing issues and rebuild a capable and stable team; the technical skills and interest to evaluate engineering trade-offs and make the correct capital equipment decisions; and the finance experience and orientation that will be needed to bring all of this together in a cost-effective manner.

Category: elections, government, Water Dept.* 1 Comment

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 218
  • Page 219
  • Page 220
  • Page 221
  • Page 222
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 476
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Clarification April 10, 2026
  • News acorns April 9, 2026
  • Public hearing for tree cutting and removal scheduled April 9, 2026
  • My Turn: McMackin highlights species interconnectedness in gardening talk April 9, 2026
  • My Turn: “Many Hands – One Family” SVdP fundraiser April 7, 2026

Squirrel Archives

Categories

Secondary Sidebar

Search the Squirrel:

Privacy policy

© Copyright 2026 The Lincoln Squirrel · All Rights Reserved.