Another town government volunteer opportunity is available in addition to those posted in News Acorns on January 8: a slot to fill a one-year vacancy on the Housing Commission, for a total of two openings on that panel. The original article has bene updated to reflect this addition.
Town’s hazard mitigation plan updated

A summary of Lincoln’s existing hazard mitigation measures (click to enlarge and click on resulting image).
The Lincoln Hazard Mitigation Plan is being updated to help the town to reduce its vulnerability to natural hazard events such as flooding, hurricanes, winter storms, extreme heat, fire and wind. The town held a series of public meetings and is about to submit the plan to the Massachusetts and federal emergency management agencies.
The draft of the plan includes current mitigation measures, primarily a combination of zoning, land use and environmental regulations as well as infrastructure maintenance and drainage infrastructure maintenance and improvement projects. Infrastructure maintenance. The plan was prepared for the town by the Metropolitan Area Planning Council under the direction of the Massachusetts Emergency Management Agency and the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation.
Any comments on the draft should be submitted ASAP to Jennifer Burney, Director of Planning and Land Use, at burneyj@lincolntown.org.
News acorns
Calling all public servants
Looking for a rewarding if occasionally vexing way to feel more connected? Willing to undertake new challenges? Unafraid to speak up? Then run for local office! The annual Town Election will take place on Monday, March 27. Nomination papers are available at the Town Clerk’s Office now, and must be returned by 5 p.m. on Tuesday, Feb. 7. The following offices will appear on the March ballot:
- Board of Selectmen (two seats, one for one year and one for three years)
- Board of Assessors (two seats, one for two years and one for three years)
- K-8 School Committee (two seats, both for three years)
- Water Commissioner (three years)
- Board of Health (three years)
- Cemetery Commission (three years)
- Planning Board (two seats for three years each)
- Commissioner of Trust Funds (three years)
- deCordova Museum and Sculpture Park Trustee (four years)
- Housing Commission (two seats, one for one year and one for three years)
- Parks and Recreation Committee (three years)
- Lincoln-Sudbury Regional District School Committee (two seats for three years each)
- Bemis Trustee (three years)
- Town Moderator (three years)
For more information, call the Town Clerk’s Office at 781-259-2607.
Museum trip with library
The Lincoln Public Library is offering a trip to the Peabody Essex Museum to see the “Shoes: Pleasure and Pain” exhibit on Saturday, Feb. 25, leaving the library at 10 a.m. and returning at 3 p.m. The museum admission and guided tour is $20, and the cost for the bus will depend on the number of riders. Lunch is not included. For more information or to sign up, contact Lisa Rothenberg at 781-259-8465 ext. 202 or email lrothenberg@minlib.net.
In conjunction with the trip, the library will host a talk on the history of shoes by fashion historian Karen Antonowicz on Thursday, Feb. 23 from 7-8:30 p.m.
Minuteman offers STEM camp for girls in February
Minuteman High School will host “Girls in STEM” (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) camp from February 21-24. from 8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. It is free for seventh- and eighth-grade girls from communities in the Minuteman school district (Acton, Arlington, Belmont, Bolton, Boxborough, Carlisle, Concord, Dover, Lancaster, Lexington, Lincoln, Needham, Stow, Sudbury, Wayland, and Weston), and bus transportation will be provided. There is a $149 fee (and no bus) for students who live outside the district. The class will be led by female students from Minuteman who are certified in mentoring and are enrolled in STEM majors, facilitated by are Minuteman teachers Becky Quay (engineering) and Sarah Ard (horticulture and landscape technology). For more information or to register, click here or contact Director of Career and Technical Education Michelle Roche at 781-861-6500 ext. 7326 or mroche@minuteman.org. Seats are limited, so register early.
News acorns
Accident victim returns home
Julie Payne Britton, who was seriously injured in an October 18 car accident on Route 117 in Lincoln, finally returned to her home in Greenfield, Mass., late last month after weeks of surgery and rehabilitation, according to this article in the Greenfield Recorder. Britton was on her way home from her employer’s headquarters in Waltham when her Subaru Forester was hit head-on by an alleged drunk driver at about 3 p.m. It took first responders 40 minutes to cut Britton out of her car using the Jaws of Life, Lincoln Police Lt. Sean Kennedy told the newspaper.
Program on peer violence prevention
The Sudbury-Wayland-Lincoln Domestic Violence Roundtable will kick off 2017 with a program entitled “Building Upstanders: What Violence Prevention Strategies are Working in Local High Schools” on Tuesday, Jan. 10. Led by a panel of student members of the Mentors in Violence Prevention programs at Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School and Wayland High School, the students will share their experiences in teaching their peers ways of identifying warning signs of abuse, preventing their peers from participating in abusive relationships, and promoting respectful interventions in their schools.
The program will be held at 3 p.m. in the Community Meeting Room of the Wayland Public Safety Building. It’s free and open to the public and is appropriate for students and adults interested in preventing abusive relationships among teens and young adults.
Mentors in Violence Prevention is a program of Northeastern University Center for Sport in Society. At L-S, the program has eight trained staff and 40 trained student leaders in grades 10-12. The members plan assemblies and programs for students, including an annual Courage to Care healthy relationship day and White Ribbon Day programming. Students also visit middle schools to talk about healthy relationships and being an upstander.
Talk on students and sleep
Dr. Judith Owens, MD, MPH, will give a talk on the importance of sleep for students on Thursday, Jan. 12 at 7 p.m. in the Ephraim Curtis School auditorium (40 Fairbank Road, Sudbury). The event, co-sponsored by the Lincoln-Sudbury Regional School Committee, is the first community forum for Sudbury’s School Start Time Committee (SSTC). Owens is the Director of Sleep Medicine at Boston Children’s Hospital and a faculty member in neurology at Harvard Medical School. She is an authority on the neurobehavioral and health consequences of sleep problems in children, sleep health education, and cultural and psychosocial issues impacting sleep.
The project is supported by a grant from the Sudbury Education Resource Fund (SERF), and the event is free and open to the public.For more information, visit the SSTC website or email sstc@sudbury.k12.ma.us.
Seal picture wins annual Mass Audubon photo contest
Alex Shure of Melrose was named 2016 Grand Prize Winner for his photograph of a harbor seal pup placidly regarding him underwater during a dive in Rockport. His photo was chosen from more than 4,000 images were entered this year in Mass Audubon’s annual statewide photo contest, Picture This: Your Great Outdoors. Click here for a complete list of winners and honorable mentions along with their photographs.
Letter to the editor: Robinson resigning from Board of Assessors
(Editor’s note: Robinson is married to Renel Fredriksen, who announce her resignation from the Board of Selectmen in December.)
To the editor:
I write to announce my resignation from the Lincoln Board of Assessors, effective as of the upcoming election on March 27.
I have been gratified that Lincolnites have seen fit to entrust me with this responsibility over the past 10+ years. We have built an effective and responsive Assessor’s Office, and I know I leave it in the capable hands of our contractors Regional Resource Group, our administrative assessor Dorothy Blakeley, and the other two board members, Ellen Meadors and Buffer Morgan.
I encourage all citizens of Lincoln to consider stepping up to fill this role, or any other volunteer position in Lincoln town offices. Answering the call to serve the town is a rewarding and fulfilling opportunity.
Sincerely,
John Robinson
76 Trapelo Road
Letters to the editor must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Letters will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Letters containing personal attacks, errors of fact or other inappropriate material will not be published.
Correction
In the January 4 article listing upcoming public hearings, the item about a January 10 Planning Board hearing about amending bylaws for solar installations was mistakenly followed by a link to an earlier Lincoln Squirrel story about a possible solar installation at the town landfill that was not related to this hearing. The link has been removed in the original article.
Service for Michael Lytton on Jan. 15
There will be a service on Sunday, Jan. 15 at 1:30 p.m. the First Parish in Lincoln for Michael Lytton, who died suddenly of an aortic dissection on December 5 at the age of 59. You can read his obituary here. There will be a short reception after the service at Bemis Hall.
Obituaries
Marc Onigman, 66 (December 14) — former magazine editor and marketing executive.
Mary “Muffin” Hester, 95 (December 1) — longtime volunteer at St. Anne’s Church, Emerson Hospital, Council on Aging.
Public hearings coming up
Zoning Board of Appeals
The Zoning Board of the Appeals will hold a public hearing on Thursday, Jan. 5 at 7:30 p.m. in the Town Office Building to hear and to act on the following petitions under the Zoning Bylaws:
- Seppo Rinne, 93 Tower Rd., for transfer and renewal of an accessory apartment special permit.
- Randal Briggs, 31 Morningside Lane, for changes to the original approved special permit for renovations to the existing home.
Historical Commission
The Lincoln Historical Commission will hold public hearings at the following times on Tuesday, Jan. 10 in the Town Office Building to consider the following applications:
- 7:30 p.m. — Joseph and Dana Robbat, to demolish more than 25 percent of the roof of an accessory structure at 151 Old Concord Road.
- 7:45 p.m. — St. Anne’s in-the-Fields Church, to demolish the dwelling at 149 Concord Road.
- 8 p.m. — Ventianni, LLC, to demolish the dwelling at 144 Sandy Pond Road.
- 8:30 p.m. — Birches School, to demolish a garage at 100 Bedford Road.
Planning Board
There will be public hearings at the following times on Tuesday, Jan. 10 in the Town Office Building to review the following proposed changes to the Lincoln Zoning Bylaw:
- 7:40 p.m. — to amend Section 13.6 to revise the requirements for solar energy installations.
- 8 p.m. — to amend Sections 6.1, 6.2, and 23 to allow certain commercial agricultural activities by right and commercial agricultural activities that generate annual sales greater than $5,000 per acre or more by special permit on parcels of 80,000 square feet or more. See “Small-scale agriculture expansion discussed at SOTT.”
- 8:20 p.m.— to amend Section 14.3 to clarify the process and procedure regarding accessory apartments and to add a process and procedure for an accessory apartment that is affordable to low and moderate income households, as defined by the Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development (“DHCD”), and that meets DHCD requirements for inclusion in the town’s subsidized housing inventory. See “Residents hear about affordable accessory apartment proposal.”
- 8:40 p.m. — to adopt an amendment to the Zoning Bylaw that would establish a temporary moratorium on the use of land or structures for recreational marijuana establishments through June 30, 2018 to allow time to study the issue and develop appropriate bylaws and ordinances.
Tree Warden
On Thursday, Jan. 19 at 7 p.m. at the Lincoln DPW Office, 30 Lewis St., a public hearing will be held by the tree warden, deputy tree warden and/or their designees to consider the removal of the below trees in the public right-of-way. This meeting is consistent with the requirements of the Shade Tree Act (MGL,c.87) and Scenic Road Act. The trees have been marked with a hearing notice and are being considered for removal because they are dead, in decline, or otherwise posing a safety or operational hazard. Anyone with questions may contact the Department of Public Works Department at 781-259-8999.
The year in review (part 2)
December
- State says no to Lincoln school funding for the third time
- ConsComm OKs approves ‘land swap’ for solar installation
- Letter to the editor: Vander Meulen throws hat in ring for selectman
- Letter to the editor: Fredriksen to resign from Board of Selectmen
- Letter to the editor: Glass running for Fredriksen’s seat
- Dwyer hopes to modernize town government’s outreach methods
- Braun reflects on his two terms on Board of Selectman
November
- McLean Hospital sues Lincoln over Bypass Road decision
- Sale closes on Wang property; town will be asked for $850,000+
- Benefits and hurdles for solar array at landfill discussed
- Small-scale agriculture expansion discussed at SOTT
- Traffic remedies discussed at State of the Town
- Final election results show Lincoln voted ‘yes’ On Question 2
- ZBA says no to McLean Hospital
- Officials discuss ways to tweak Town Meeting
- ZBA expected to vote on McLean proposal this week
October
- Groups proposed for economic development, south Lincoln
- Students apply engineering skills to solving school problems
- Car accident sends two to hospital
- Land purchase aims to help town and Birches School
- A pair of ground-breaking occasions
- Trails’s End Cafe opens its doors in Lincoln
September
- Drought playing havoc with plants and wildlife, speakers say
- Bouquillon looking forward to new chapter for Minuteman
- Minuteman school measure passes in district-wide vote
- McLean Hospital proposal goes to the ZBA
- Carroll School gets Wayland’s OK for Old Sudbury Rd. project
- State grant will help town look at options for street safety
- Images capture drought in Lincoln
- Agriculture Day blooms in Lincoln
- Winter Street hospice construction underway
August
- Trail’s End to open cafe, restaurant in two Lincoln Station locations
- Causes of bicycle fatalities still under investigation
- ‘Ghost bike’ removal stirs debate
- Outdoor water ban now in effect as drought drags on
- Four-legged wildflife caught on cameras
- McLean psychologist downplays risks of Bypass Road facility