• 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
  • Subscriptions
    • My Account
    • Log In
    • Log Out
  • Lincoln Review
    • About the Lincoln Review
    • Issues
    • Submit your work

Pierce House needs help with First Day 2019

December 9, 2018

Lincoln residents and their guests are invited to First Day 2019 on January 1, 2019 from 1–5 p.m. at the Pierce House—and organizers need help in making the annual event happen.

The drop-in event celebration, which is a great way to meet neighbors and fellow Lincolnites, features food, desserts, refreshments, children’s activities, and music by the Ancient Mariners. Last year’s event, initially threatened by a lack of funding, came together with the support of town organizations, private citizens, and volunteers; this year, more volunteers are needed for setup, serving, and cleanup. Though the actual event runs from 1–5 p.m., organizers need hands to help from 10 a.m–7 p.m. Please click this volunteer signup form to pick a task and time slot.

Financial contributions are also needed; if you can donate to the celebration, please contact Nancy Beach at nancy@piercehouse.com or 781-259-9757.

Category: charity/volunteer, food, kids, news Leave a Comment

Town nurse keeps her finger on the pulse of Lincolnites’ health

December 9, 2018

Public health nurse Tricia McGean in Bemis Hall.

Tricia McGean, R.N., has been in her Lincoln home for years, but now she’s getting into other residents’ homes as the town’s new public health nurse.

In this new part-time position, McGean wears many hats. A big part of the job is making home health visits to seniors as well as doing one-on-one consultations in Bemis Hall. She’ll also serve as a liaison with Elder Services and Lincoln emergency personnel in cases where a resident may be suffering abuse or neglect.

When a family member or Council on Aging staff member believes a Lincoln senior needs a home health visit, in steps McGean, who has done this sort of thing for more than 20 years as a home care nurse for Emerson Hospital Home Care (a role she will continue on a part-time basis).

“I’m very comfortable going into someone’s house, assessing their safety needs and their mental and physical status,” she said. “Often it’s people that are having falls or just not quite making it themselves any more and needing some support. I can call providers and patients, see how they’re doing, answer questions and just kind of close the loop. All the people I’ve seen have been very appreciative and happy about this new position.”

Many Lincoln seniors are already familiar with McGean, who for several years has supervised monthly blood pressure clinics and wellness clinics for all ages at Lincoln Woods. At both clinics, she’s answered questions about medications, offer caregiver support, provide nutritional counseling and obtain mental health support.

“The clinics have given me the opportunity to meet many Lincolnites and establish numerous personal and professional relationships, but they’ve also opened my eyes to the growing need of residents in Lincoln who may not be able to obtain the care they need,” she said. “From my five years on the COA board, I became acutely aware of the unmet physical and mental needs of our residents.”

Also on McGean’s plate is doing follow-up investigative work in Lincoln for the state Department of Public Health on issues such as contagious diseases and tick- and food-borne illnesses in conjunction with the town’s Board of Health (work she already does for Concord, Carlisle, and Maynard). In that role, she succeeds the recently retired Maureen Richichi, who was also the Lincoln School nurse.

McGean and her husband Geoff, executive director of the Rural Land Foundation and Lincoln Land Conservation Trust, have lived in Lincoln for 25 years. With her expanded health role in town, she revived the flu-shot clinic for seniors in October and will lead educational sessions for seniors on topics such as dementia and foot care. She also hopes to start “memory cafe” sessions for residents of The Commons early next year.

“This position has just been my dream,” she said. “I’ve always wanted to be the town nurse, and it sort of fell into my lap, and I couldn’t be more happy.”

Category: health and science, seniors 2 Comments

New climate justice program for teens at Drumlin Farm

December 6, 2018

A new Youth Leaders for Climate Justice program announced by Mass Audubon’s Drumlin Farm Wildlife Sanctuary aims to engage youth in grades 9-12 to create and implement local climate action projects.

This program, stressing commitment to community through a lens of climate action, begins with a Climate Learning Intensive Program on January 26, 2019 at Drumlin Farm for leadership and education workshops. Working alongside Mass Audubon’s climate professionals and local climate activists, each team of 3-12 students will create and implement a unique action project in their communities and will present the project at a Climate Summit on May 18, 2019.

To apply, student teams need not have determined what their project will be; all they need is an adult sponsor and an interest in climate justice. Click here for more information and an online application. The deadline for submissions is Friday, Dec. 21. Applications will be accepted on a rolling basis. The fee for accepted teams is $300. Mass Audubon will work with any team that needs assistance funding the participation fee.

This program is made possible by grants from the Foundation for MetroWest and the Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education.

Category: conservation, kids Leave a Comment

News acorns

December 5, 2018

Donate children’s clothing by Friday

The deadline to drop off donations of children’s gently used clothing at the Liepert home at 108 Trapelo Rd. in Lincoln (leave bags by garage door) for Cradles to Crayons has bene extended to Friday, Dec. 7. Sizes infant through adult small. Most-needed items include sweaters and sweatshirts, but children’s clothing/shoes for any season are welcome. For a full list of accepted items, visit Cradlestocrayons.org. Email sarahliepert@me.com with any questions.

Give L-S apparel for the holidays

For purchase of L-S apparel, the L-S store will have special evening hours on Thursday, Dec. 6 from 6–7:30 p.m. (regular store hours are Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday from 11 a.m.–12:30 p.m.). You can also order online here—holiday orders must be placed by Wednesday, Dec. 12.

Puzzle swap at this week’s book sale

On Saturday, Dec. 8 from 9 a.m.–noon in Bemis Hall, the monthly Friends of the Lincoln Library will offer a jigsaw puzzle swap during its monthly book sale. People can take a puzzle when exchanging it for another complete puzzle (no missing pieces). As usual, there will also be plenty of children’s, young adult and adult books, DVDs, and CDs. All purchases at the book sale support Lincoln Public Library programs for children and adults.

Workshops, artist talk at deCordova

The deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum will host a holiday ornament clay sculpture workshop on Saturday, Dec. 8 from 10 a.m.–12:30 p.m., and a mosaic jewelry workshop on Tuesday, Dec. 11 from 6:30–9 p.m. Working with a variety of materials, you will make a pendant or pair of earrings that tells a story through color. No experience necessary for either session. Sign up here for the ornament workshop and sign up here for the mosaic jewelry workshop.

Also coming up: Larry Fink, whose photographs are on view at deCordova in Larry Fink: Primal Empathy, will discuss his approach to photography and his decades-long interest in empathy in an artists’ talk on Wednesday, Dec. 12 from 6:30–7:30 p.m. Free admission; registration requested.

Category: arts, charity/volunteer Leave a Comment

McLean Hospital appeals court decision on Bypass Road property

December 5, 2018

McLean Hospital has filed a notice of intent to appeal a recent court decision regarding its Bypass Road property, and the town and a group of residents say they will continue to resist the hospital’s efforts to locate an inpatient program in a private home in the neighborhood

In October, the state Land Court denied McLean’s appeal of a 2016 decision by the Zoning Board of Appeals decision saying no to the hospital’s plan to use a single-family house for an outpatient facility for teenage boys and young adults with borderline personality disorder. The court sided with the ZBA, which said this did not constitute an educational use of the property, which would have been permitted under the state’s Dover amendment, although an earlier opinion by town counsel Joel Bard seemed to give McLean the go-ahead.

In response to McLean’s recent filing, selectmen voted to retain the services of attorney Jay Talerman “on an ongoing basis to continue the Town’s vigorous defense in this matter as necessary.” Talerman represented the town in McLean’s initial lawsuit.

“We in the neighborhood are unfortunately not surprised [by McLeans appeal]. And we are concerned about their goal,” said Steven Kanner, a leader of the group of residents who fought McLean’s proposal. The group retained an attorney and petitioned the court to intervene as co-defendants in McLean’s suit against the town.

“From the beginning, McLean has been disingenuous” in characterizing dialectical behavioral therapy or DBT (which McLean planned to use at the Bypass Road facility) as educational rather than medical or therapeutic, Kanner said. DBT “should take place in an acknowledged and legal medical setting (such as McLean Hospital) and not be camouflaged and wordsmithed into an ‘educational’ program to evade common and appropriate zoning restrictions.”

McLean was rebuffed by the ZBA and Land Court, “but they persist. Why?” Kanner said. “Their agenda is not publicly stated, but seeking to get psychiatric treatment facilities placed anywhere with no zoning restrictions would be a goal consistent with their actions. We believe that would be bad public policy, and certainly is not the current policy in the Commonwealth.”

Selectman “declared their intention to oppose any appeal by McLean, and the neighborhood group … will do the same in coordination with the town,” Kanner said.

Earlier this year, the group asked selectmen to add a funding measure based on a citizens’ petition to the Annual Town Meeting warrant to help defray their legal costs. But the board denied that request because the state’s anti-aid amendment prohibits public funding for private individuals and organizations that are not working under town control.

Dr. Philip Levendusky, senior vice president for business development and communications and director of McLean’s Psychology Department, and Diane Tillotson, McLean’s attorney in the case, did not return requests for comment.

Category: government, land use Leave a Comment

Church holiday events scheduled

December 4, 2018

St. Anne’s-in-the-Fields

The church’s annual Christmas Lessons and Carols service is Sunday, Dec. 16 at 5 p.m. This annual service features stories read by clergy and parishioners, anthems sung by the choir, and hymns sung by everyone. Bring a treat to share afterwards at the festive reception. Christmas Eve services on Monday, Dec. 24 will be at 3 p.m. (family service), 7:30 p.m., and 10 p.m.

First Parish in Lincoln

Karin Levy and Nancy Fleming, co-chairs of the First Parish in Lincoln’s Touch of Christmas Fair that takes place on December 8 from 10 a.m.– 1 p.m. in the parish house.

Touch of Christmas Fair (Saturday, Dec. 8 from 10 a.m.–1 p.m.)
Shop local for antiques, tableware, costume jewelry, crafts and baked goods. There will be many hands-on activities for children including Christmas cookie decorating, a fishing tree, a decorate-your-own-ornament activity, and a special children’s shopping room complete with holiday wrapping help. Santa will arrive at 11 a.m., and children can have photos taken on Santa’s lap. The fair will feature homemade holiday wreathes and centerpieces for sale made by dozens of volunteers the week of the fair. A lunch featuring Psalm soup, salad, and pita bread will be available for purchase at noon. Admission is free. 

Hand bell choir concert (Tuesday, Dec. 18 at 7 p.m.)
The First Parish hand bell choir presents its holiday concert in the Parish House auditorium. 

Handel’s “Messiah” (Saturday, Dec. 22 at 3 p.m.)
“Live in Lincoln Center” presents Handel’s Ian Watson and select members of the Handel and Haydn Society orchestra and chorus will perform this iconic and moving piece. Suggested donation: $30 per person.

Nativity pageant (Sunday, Dec. 23 at 10 a.m.)
A traditional nativity pageant, in a rendition that aspires to Cecil B. DeMille and hits a bit closer to Charlie Brown. There are parts for any child who wants one, even if you show up only on December 23.

Category: arts, kids, religious Leave a Comment

Correction

December 4, 2018

Two numbers in the table showing the December 3 election results were transposed, resulting in incorrect totals in the table and accompanying article. The correct total voting percentages were 68 percent voting yes and 32 percent voting no. The table and article have been updated to reflect this correction.

Category: news Leave a Comment

And the winner is…

December 4, 2018

Jal David Mehta won the Lincoln Squirrel’s Town Meeting “guess the vote percentage” contest. He submitted a guess of 84 percent “yes” and 16 percent “no.”

Perhaps due to the sometimes angsty debate on LincolnTalk, only 10 of the 18 guesses predicted the school project vote would even clear the required two-thirds threshold. No one was so pessimistic as to predict the measure would not win a simply majority, though the lowest “yes” guess came close (51 percent to 49 percent). The full list of submissions can be found below.

Jal is now the proud owner of a year’s subscription to the Lincoln Squirrel for himself or to give as a gift—a $48 value. Thanks to all who played!

"Yes""No"
84%16%
78%22%
78%21%
74%26%
72%28%
70%30%
68%32%
68%32%
67%33%
67%33%
65%35%
63.21%36.79%*
63%37%
60%40%
59%41%
56%44%
54%40%
51%49%

* (an inside engineering joke, we’re told)

Category: news Leave a Comment

School project bonding approved in ballot vote

December 3, 2018

In unofficial results for the December 3 ballot vote, a comfortable majority of Lincoln residents gave the go-ahead for the $92.9 million Lincoln School project—though the margin was not as large as the one at the December 1 Special Town Meeting.

Sixty-five percent of Lincoln voters who cast a ballot voted yes, clearing the way for the town to borrow $88.5 million to renovate and partially rebuild the Lincoln School. The 68%–32% margin easily cleared the required hurdle for a simple majority—though it was notably lower than the 89%–11% margin at Saturday’s vote, which required a two-thirds majority to pass.

The election saw a 35 percent turnout of Lincoln’s 4,797 registered voters.

Early next year, the Finance Committee will determine what amounts of the total to borrow and when. The final interest rate won’t be known until just before the first bond purchase. The panel has been using interest rates of 4% and 5% to estimate the range of property tax increases (currently 17.2%–19.4%), though the full impact of the increase will not occur right away.

Precinct 1Precinct 2Totals
Yes7453991,144
No341196537
1,0865951,681

Click here to see a map of Lincoln’s voting precincts.

 

Category: elections, news, school project* 2 Comments

Council on Aging activities in December

December 3, 2018

Noticing walk with John Calabria
December 4 at 1 p.m.
Come for a gently paced walk through nature guided by John Calabria on December 4 from 1–2:30 at a location posted at lincolnconservation.org. Bring walking sticks or walking poles if you like. If the weather is bad, call 781-259-9251 after 10 a.m. on the morning of the walk for an update. Co-sponsored by the COA and Lincoln Land Conservation Trust.

Coffee with artist Ellen Milan
December 4 at 2:15 p.m.
Join Ellen Milan for “coffee with the artist” on Tuesday, Dec. 4 at 2:15 p.m. at Bemis Hall to celebrate her exhibit in the Bemis Gallery through December. Ellen Milan is a Lincoln artist whose exploration in multiple media reflects her experience exhibiting and teaching internationally. Ellen has taught in Wisconsin, Israel, and in the Boston area. During a 10-year stay in Israel, she established regional art programs and a group studio/gallery in the Old City of Jerusalem.  Her work has appeared in juried competitions through the United States, Europe and Israel. This show at Bemis Hall includes pastels, paintings on silk, and watercolors. Many of the pieces were inspired by the gardens and landscape in Lincoln at Farrar Pond Village.

Stay safer from scams and ID theft
December 7 at 10 a.m.
The only way to protect yourself against becoming the victim of scams and ID theft is to find out what scammers are up to and how you can outsmart them. All are welcome to join Lincoln Police Chief Kevin Kennedy and Bongani Jeranyama, Program Manager in the Community Engagement Division of the Office of Attorney General Maura Healey, on Friday, Dec. 7 at 10a.m. at Bemis Hall to learn about some of the everyday scams you may run into. You will get an outline of and tips regarding rights when shopping and valuable information on how to avoid various mail, phone, and online scams.  You will also get resources to take home.

Tap your toes to trad jazz tunes
December 7 at 12:30 p.m.
Come join your fellow COA neighbors to tap your toes and bob your heads and sing to those tunes of yesteryear which we all know and love. Yes, the grandchildren can shake their heads and think we’re nuts, but we know where it’s at. Led by the Lincoln Traditional Jazz Band we’re gonna have a good time—you might even say a ball—around the old Steinway upstairs at Bemis Hall on Friday, Dec. 7 from 12:30–1:30 p.m. [Read more…] about Council on Aging activities in December

Category: arts, food, health and science, nature, seniors, sports & recreation Leave a Comment

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 221
  • Page 222
  • Page 223
  • Page 224
  • Page 225
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 438
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • News acorns May 18, 2025
  • Tack Room to get expanded outdoor patio May 15, 2025
  • Legal notice: Select Board public hearing (Cellco) May 15, 2025
  • Legal notice: Select Board public hearing (Goose Pond) May 14, 2025
  • News acorns May 13, 2025

Squirrel Archives

Categories

Secondary Sidebar

Search the Squirrel:

Privacy policy

© Copyright 2025 The Lincoln Squirrel · All Rights Reserved.