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McLean psychologist downplays risks of Bypass Road facility

August 3, 2016

mcleanBy Alice Waugh

In an August 2 interview with the Lincoln Squirrel, a senior medical executive at McLean Hospital refuted the notion that the occupants of a proposed residential facility on Bypass Road would be violent or pose a risk to neighbors, contrary to fears of neighbors who have spoken out against the plan in a controversy that has spilled onto the pages of the Boston Globe.

McLean is proposing a 12-bed facility in a former private home at 22 Bypass Rd. that will offer dialectical behavioral therapy as part of a psychoeducational program to young men aged 15-21, who will live there for periods of weeks to months.

In a July 8 letter, Building Inspector Daniel Walsh acknowledged that “the issue is murky,” noting that both sides cited the same court case to support their arguments. However, McLean’s proposed use has “multiple objectives which include residential along with therapeutic and educational functions,” he noted. Case law as well as federal and state anti-discrimination laws indicate that McLean’s proposal qualifies for the Dover Amendment zoning exemption for religious and educational uses of a residential property, he concluded.

Walsh’s opinion concurs with an earlier statement by Town Counsel Joel Bard. However, neighbors disagree and are expected to file an appeal with the Zoning Board of Appeals and perhaps a court challenge if necessary.

On July 26, the Planning Board closed the public hearing on the site plan review, which is looking only at parking, traffic and visual screening and cannot pass judgment on the use of the property. The board will vote at its September 13 meeting.

Also at issue is the allowable number of beds, which is limited by the capacity of the property’s septic system. At the moment it is rated for seven beds plus staff. To accommodate 12 live-in residents plus staff, McLean would have to apply to the town’s Board of Health and/or the state Department of Environmental Protection to enlarge the septic system.

Boston Globe face-off

The battle made its way into the Boston Globe last week in a feature called “The Argument” that presents both sides of a current controversy. Lincoln residents Jennifer Morris, who favors the Lincoln proposal, and Dr. Steven Kanner, an abutter and Lincoln Board of Health member who opposes it, made their cases for and against the facility in the July 29 article.

“I’m quite certain the program will serve an educational purpose. As a parent, I felt highly unqualified to teach a disturbed adolescent how to cope, how to interact, how to study and progress,” Morris said. For his part, Kanner argued that a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder or BPD, which many residents of the proposed facility will have, is “a medical treatment unit reimbursable by medical insurance,” and that what McLean wants to offer is “patently a medical program and no more uniquely educational than other psychiatric treatment.”

A poll at the end of the Globe article asks readers which side they’re on. As of the evening of August 2, the votes in favor of the proposal were ahead by an almost two-to-one margin (62% to 38%).

Levandusky explains BPD and DBT

The Bypass Road facility will house “young men with a variety of issues that could be partially related to BPD, or less BPD and more mood or anxiety disorders. It’s not a one-diagnosis program,” said Dr. Philip Levandusky, senior vice president for business development and communications and director of McLean’s Psychology Department.

People with BPD have problems regulating emotions and thoughts; they exhibit impulsive and reckless behavior and have unstable relationships with other people, according to the National Institutes of Mental Health. Many also have co-occurring disorders such as depression, anxiety, substance abuse and eating disorders, along with self-harm and suicidal behaviors.

Those with BPD are “much more likely to have co-occurring depressions and anxieties and are not overtly assaultive or aggressive, “ Levandusky said. Violent behavior “is not a hallmark characteristic of people with BPD; if anything, self-harm may be more of a risk.”

Residents will be housed at the Bypass Road facility on a voluntary basis. While they will face locked doors and be forbidden from leaving the building without supervision, “it is not a secure setting in terms of having bars on the windows,” Levandusky said. However, McLean Hospital has more than 100 voluntary beds of this type, and it is “extraordinarily rare that we have people leave the program against our expectations,” he added.

McLean also operates another residential facility on Old Cambridge Turnpike in Lincoln for adult men and women, some of whom “have been stepped down from McLean Hospital” and periodically return there as part of their treatment, though no problems in Lincoln have ever been reported, Levandusky said. It was “within the realm of possibility” that the Bypass Road facility could include McLean Hospital “step-down” residents at times, he added.

Dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT) “is very clearly an educational experience,” Levandusky said. “It is teaching skills and doing homework assignments, and there is an expectation that the skills will be practiced.” Medical insurance will pay for a limited amount of outpatient DBT, but the Lincoln facility and others like it are for “a person likely to have had other types of experiences that were not as effective as hoped, and this can offer a more intensive kind of setting to engage in the psychoeducational process.”

“Fear of the unknown”

Is Levandusky surprised at the negative reaction to the Bypass Road proposal? “No,” he said. “It’s human nature; people don’t understand psychiatric conditions and psychological problems, or don’t necessarily understand the nature of psychoeducational programs in this day and age.” People are also subject to “fear of the unknown and [making]  catastrophizing assumptions,” he added.

Asked specifically about the concerns expressed by Kanner, a primary care physician and a former chief of medical services for the state Department of Mental Health, Levandusky said, “We all have our things… obviously Dr. Kanner has certain perceptions of what we’re going to be doing there that are radically different from what we are going to be doing there.”

Category: land use, news

COA activities in August

July 31, 2016

bemisAugust 3 at 11 a.m.
Codman Estate tour, garden visits and luncheon
You are invited to spend a delightful summer day at the Codman Estate on Wednesday, Aug. 3, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. presented by Jai Kaur Annamaria San Antonio, the Lincoln Council on Aging, and Historic New England. Enjoy a house tour, a visit to the Italian Garden, and a picnic under the arbor in the Italian Garden. After lunch, visit with Jai Kaur Annamaria to view her newly established garden and explore adjacent Lincoln conservation land and visit with the alpacas. $5 per person for lunch (Lincoln residents), $10 per person for lunch and tour (non-Lincoln residents). Call the COA at 781-259-8811 to sign up.

August 4 at 12:30 p.m.
Share the joy of jazz with the Lincoln Traditional Jazz Sextet
Jazz up your summer at Bemis Hall on Thursday, Aug. 4 at 12:30 p.m. when the Lincoln Traditional Jazz Sextet will share with you their love of traditional jazz music in a delightfully spontaneous jam! They’ll have you stomping your feet and cheering as they belt out favorites such as Honeysuckle Rose, Sweet Georgia Brown, Sunny Side of the Street and When the Saints Go Marching In. The group are all retirees, amateur musicians who give expression to their love of the jazz of the 1920s–1940s at Bemis Hall once a month and also join the larger group of jammers who meet on the third Saturdays of each month, alternating between the library and Bemis Hall.

August 8 at 2 p.m.
Got a question about a legal issue? Come to our free legal clinic!
Got a question about a legal issue? The Council on Aging is pleased to provide a legal clinic with elder law attorney and Lincoln resident Sasha Golden on Monday, Aug. 8 from 2-4 p.m. There is no charge for the 30-minute consultation, but advance registration is required. Walk-ins will be accommodated if space is available. Register in advance by calling the Council on Aging at 9781) 259-8811.

August 10 at noon
Savor summer with a special luncheon for veterans and their spouses
Veterans and spouses are invited to a special lunch on Wednesday, Aug. 10 at noon at Bemis Hall featuring Hebrew National all beef hot dogs, coleslaw, and vegetarian beans. Widows and widowers of veterans are most welcome to join us. The COA is hoping to create a dynamic veterans community here in Lincoln and would love to see all veterans and spouses at the luncheon. Sign up by calling the COA at 781-259-8811 by Aug. 3.

August 17 at 1 p.m.
Nature walk with Conservation Director Tom Gumbart
Summer is the perfect time to get to know Lincoln’s highways and byways in all their natural glory. Come on a nature walk with Conservation Director Tom Gumbart on Wednesday, Aug. 17 at 1 p.m., starting from Bemis Hall. Tom will lead you on one of Lincoln’s many conservation trails while pointing out some of the native flora and fauna that you might otherwise miss. The walk will be on relatively level ground and no more than one mile. No need to sign up, just be at Bemis Hall a few minutes before 1 p.m.

August 18 at 10 a.m.
We honor veterans: end-of-life and survivor benefits
Veterans and their families have special needs when it comes to end-of-life care, whether related to the unique life and health care experiences of veterans or to the benefits of the Veterans Administration for end-of-life health care, burial benefits, or survivor benefits. We Honor Veterans is an initiative of the Veterans Administration and local hospices and other care providers to make sure that veterans receive sensitive and compassionate care and know about all their benefits. Come find out more when Mary Beth Kawalek of Brookhaven Hospice comes to Bemis Hall on Thursday, Aug 18 at 10:00 a.m.

August 22 and 24 at 10 a.m.
Enjoy historic Lincoln cemetery walks
Lincoln’s cemeteries are both historic and beautiful, telling the stories of Minute Men and soldiers from many wars, town luminaries, and ordinary people while also being extraordinary works of art. Gather at Bemis Hall for a walk through the Meeting House Cemetery (1756) with Valerie Fox, Deputy Town Clerk, on Monday, Aug. 22 at 10 a.m. Then on Wednesday, Aug 24 at 10 a.m. meet at the entrance to the Arborvitae Cemetery (1837) for a walk with Cemetery Commission member Susan Harding. In both walks you’ll hear about the history of the cemeteries, stories of some of the people buried, and about the artistry of the monuments and landscapes. No need to sign up.

August 24 at 1 p.m.
Give calligraphy a try
Calligraphy is a beautiful way to express yourself while making elegant and lovely invitations, notes, cards, certificates, and more. Come give calligraphy a try on Wednesday, Aug. 24 at 1 p.m. when Beth Anderson, client liaison with Caring Companion Home Care, comes to Bemis Hall. She’ll demonstrate how to do calligraphy, explain what you’ll need to take it up, and let you try your hand at it. Please sign up by calling the COA at 781-259-8811. 


 
Whaling museum in September
Save September 21 for a trip to the New Bedford Whaling Museum! This renowned museum of the history of whaling and its impact on New England, the nation, and the world offers interactive exhibits, including the world’s largest whaling ship model; displays of fine and decorative arts; collections of cultural artifacts, rare antiquities, scrimshaw and logbooks; and five whale skeletons including the rare blue and northern right. For more information, see the COA’s September newsletter!

Improve your life with Positive Psychology
Positive Psychology is a new and innovative way of building on strengths to lead a meaningful and fulfilling life, cultivate what is best within ourselves, and enhance love, work, and play. Sign up by calling the COA at 781-259-8811 now for a free eight-session course, beginning Friday, September 16 at 9:30, in which you will hear presentations, view videos and engage in discussions to learn strategies for being happier, realizing dreams, bringing about personal change, using mindfulness, exercise, sleep, and nutrition to enhance quality of life, and improving relationships. The course is taught by Alyson Lee, who is a social worker and life coach and certified to teach Positive Psychology. It is funded by the Ogden Codman Trust.

Music appreciation: Unwrapping the Music—Special Topics
Develop your musical listening skills and music appreciation with Music Appreciation: Unwrapping the Music—Special Topics presented at the COA by the Concord Conservatory of Music. This year the course will cover special topics like world music, American music, opera, and symphonies. 12 Tuesday mornings from 9:30-11 a.m. beginning September 13. $117. Taught by Ela Brandys, DMA. Sign up by calling the COA at 781-259-8811 now!

 
Take charge with aging mastery
This fall, forge your own path to better physical and emotional health, financial well-being, and life enrichment through actionable goals, small but impactful life changes, and peer support! Lincoln seniors are invited to join others from Weston and Wayland at the Weston COA in this free 10-week program meeting on Wednesday afternoons from 1:30 to 3:00 p.m. beginning on September 14. Please sign up by calling the COA at 781-259-8811 now as space is limited. Supported by the National Council on Aging, the Massachusetts Councils on Aging, and the Massachusetts Executive Office of Elder Affairs.

Memoir group
Without any obligation, please come to the first meeting of the Memoir Group on Wednesday, September 7 from 10 a.m. to noon at Bemis Hall and find out what we do. If you like what you hear and you want to continue, the cost of the eight-session term is $75. The dates for the term are Sept. 7 and 21; Oct. 5 and 19; Nov. 2, 16, and 30; and Dec. 14. If you want more information, call Connie Lewis 781-259-9415 or email her at conlewis1000@gmail.com.

Beginning and refresher bridge
Depending on interest, the COA may offer a beginning and refresher bridge class in the fall. Look for more details in the September newsletter! If you are interested in bridge lessons, please call Carolyn at the COA at 781-259-8811!

Category: arts, food, health and science, history, nature, seniors

Letter to the editor: sale of rabbits not due to welfare concerns

July 31, 2016

letter

Editor’s note: This letter refers to an exchange among many residents on the LincolnTalk email list about rabbits being raised for food at Codman Community Farms.

To the editor:

In response to the passionate dialogue about the sale of the Codman Farm rabbits, we want to set the record straight. The decision to sell our rabbits had nothing to do with the welfare of our rabbits or any concerns over how they were treated. It is unrelated to whether we grow vegetables or not. It was made with the best long-term interests of the farm in mind and was not taken lightly. We are proud of our ongoing effort to humanely raise animals for food in line with the highest-quality animal welfare and land stewardship practices. We raise and offer high-quality food products to meet the desires of the local community and the willingness of the marketplace.

As has been noted, running a small farm today is not easy, but it is an effort worth making. We welcome you to come visit the farm, shop in the store, and speak with the farm staff and the board of directors to learn more about what we do every day.

Sincerely,

Pete Lowy (Farm Manager, Codman Community Farms)
The Codman Community Farms Board of Directors


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.

Category: agriculture and flora, letters to the editor

Public hearings coming up

July 28, 2016

House-1Planning Board

Public hearing on Tuesday, Aug. 9 at 7 p.m. in the Town Office Building to review an application for Site Plan Review. The applicant, Seth Miller, 15 Stonehedge, proposes to construct a new home.

Zoning Board of Appeals

Public hearing on Thursday, Aug. 4 at 7:30 p.m. in the Town Office Building to hear and to act on the following petitions under the Zoning Bylaws:

  • Nancy Riemer and Lawrence Peltz, 10 Morningside Lane, to construct a vestibule at the front door.
  • Robert Fallon and Jennifer Monaghan, 23 Boyce Farm Rd., to convert an existing pool house into an accessary apartment by adding approximately 667 square feet.
  • Environmental Stewardship Associates and St. Anne’s-in-the-Field Church, 149 Concord Rd., to install solar panels on the garage at the rectory.

Historical Commission

Public hearing at 7:45 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 9 in the Town Office Building to consider the application of Rob and Elizabeth Orgel for a demolition plan review to demolish the dwelling and detached carport at 237 Old Concord Road.

Public hearing at 8 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 9 in the Town Office Building to consider the application of Joseph and Andronica Wheelock to demolish the dwelling at 6 Millstone Lane.

Historic District Commission

Public hearing at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 9 in the Town Office Building to consider the application of Jonathan Ferris for the demolition of an existing addition and a new addition to be built with a one-story glass breezeway to connect the main house with the existing garage at 38 Lincoln Road.

 

Category: land use

Police chief talks about progress and challenges

July 28, 2016

Lincoln Police Chief A. Kevin Kennedy.

Lincoln Police Chief A. Kevin Kennedy.

A new “Coffee with a Cop” program, video recording of police encounters, the opioid crisis and the possible legalization of marijuana in Massachusetts are just some of the topics Chief of Police A. Kevin Kennedy  touched on in a wide-ranging interview with the Lincoln Squirrel.

Staring on September 15, Kennedy will host the Lincoln Police Department’s inaugural Coffee with a Cop program in which police will meet with residents on the third Thursday of every month at Bemis Hall from 1-2 p.m. A different officer will be on hand each month to answer questions in either  small groups or one on one.

“There’s no agenda. People can come in and talk about whatever questions or concerns they have,” Kennedy said. “It’s just a way for us to be more involved with the community and answer question residents may have, when they’re maybe not as comfortable coming into the station.”

Questions and issues that may arise range from traffic concerns, handling disputes with neighbors, difficulties with a child, or concerns about driving by an older adult, said Kennedy, adding that he was open to holding an evening session in there was enough interest.

“We mediate and arbitrate things all the time. We’re more of a community-oriented police department offering social services—how can we help people in crisis? How can we point them [victims, suspects and family members] in the right direction?”

Jail diversion coordinator

Calls involving people with mental health issues are fairly common in police work, and Lincoln has another tool to help in those situations. Eight Middlesex County towns including Lincoln got a three-year grant to fund a clinical coordinator for the Regional Jail Diversion Program.

“We know that assaults, larcenies and property crimes are often committed by those with mental health or substance abuse issues,” Acton Police Chief Francis Widmayer said in a statement when clinical coordinator Alia Toran-Burrell was hired in December. “Our goal when we began this coalition was to put residents into treatment instead of behind bars. With the assistance of our clinical coordinator, who will train officers in all our communities on how best to respond to mental health or substance abuse related incidents, we can reduce crimes and change lives.”

The opioid crisis

While Lincoln is not a hub of drug-dealing activity, some criminal activity such as house break-ins can be traced to the opioid epidemic, Kennedy said. Lincoln fire and police personnel carry Narcan, a drug that can quickly reverse an opioid overdose at the scene; the Fire Department has used Narcan on at least one call in Lincoln, though police have not, he said.

“It’s here, it’s everywhere, and no community is immune from it,” Kennedy said.

Video recording of police encounters

Millions of people in recent months have seen the videos of police shootings recorded on bystanders’ cell phones. It’s perfectly legal to film a police encounter as long as it doesn’t interfere with officers’ work, and since cell phones are everywhere, “police are always under the assumption that they’re being filmed,” Kennedy said. At the police station, interrogations and bookings in police stations are also recorded on audio and video.

Some have suggested that police wear body cameras to record encounters, something that could protect both police and civilians when a situation turns violent or the facts are in dispute. But there are legal and privacy concerns as well as possible reluctance on the part of victims and others to speak candidly to police if they know they’re being filmed, Kennedy said. Still, “it’s something we’re definitely looking into… There’s a balance there somewhere, and law enforcement is trying to work out that balance now.”

In the end, police training and preparation are the biggest factors in keeping situations from getting out of control. “You never know who you’re going to be in contact with, or their prior experiences with law enforcement, or whether they have a mental health issue, so officers rely on their training,” Kennedy said. “I can’t emphasize enough the amount of training we’ve done.”

Asked about his take on some of the recent well-publicized shootings involving police officers, Kennedy, replied, “Being on the sidelines without knowing about everything is not fair to make a comment on. Only grand juries hear all the evidence; not everything is released to the public. The public wants [a judgment] immediately, but they have to maintain the integrity of the investigation.

“It all reverts back to officer training, their involvement in the community, and officers treating people with respect and dignity no matter who they are, whether they’re victims of a crime or a suspect,” Kennedy continued.

RESIST training

RESIST, Lincoln’s self-defense class for women, has been very successful since its inception in 2013. The program, which is coordinated by Lincoln resident Jena Salon, was developed by Lincoln police officers who have undergone the more comprehensive 40-hour RAD (Rape Aggression Defense) program, and one of the officers is also a former defensive tactics police instructor. The program teaches situational awareness, confidence-building and escape from attackers rather than fighting back.

RESIST has been so successful that the Domestic Violence Services Network (DVSN) has applied for a grant to offer it, and Lincoln police have trained officers in other communities how to teach it as well. “We’ve had nothing but tremendous feedback,” Kennedy said.

Marijuana

Massachusetts is one of five states that will have a ballot question in November asking voters whether to legalize recreational marijuana (the Commonwealth has allowed medical use of the drug since 2012). But marijuana laws have been evolving for years, Kennedy noted. The drug was decriminalized in 2008, meaning that possession of less than one ounce does not result in arrest but incurs only a civil fine of $100.

“Case law has really dictated over the last couple of years what cops can or can’t do when they come in contact” with the drug, either visually or by smelling burnt or raw marijuana, Kennedy said. Odor alone does not entitle police to perform a search, and if an officer sees the drug, “it has to be immediately apparent to you that’s a criminal amount of marijuana” with an intent to distribute before they can take action, he said.

Police concerns over legalization of recreational marijuana revolve around possible increases in use by juveniles and traffic accidents resulting from driving while impaired, Kennedy said. Right now there is no legal limit for the amount of THC (marijuana’s active ingredient) in the bloodstream for driving and no quick test anyway, so officers have to rely on drug recognition training. If an officer believes a driver is impaired by a drug but is not driving to endanger, they can take the keys away but can’t make an arrest or issue a ticket, Kennedy said.

Security is already an issue for medical dispensaries because marijuana distribution is “a cash-and-carry business,” Kennedy noted. Because marijuana is still illegal at the federal level where interstate financial transactions occur, dispensaries can’t accept credit cards or checks.

“It’s very challenging for law enforcement… but we’ll enforce the law whatever it is, and whatever changes in our policies and procedures are needed, we will cert comply and get trained.”

Category: features, news

News acorns

July 26, 2016

acornHATS meeting on Thursday

The next meeting of HATS (Hanscom Area Towns Committee) on Thursday, July 28 will host a round-table discussion of regional transportation issues. Click here for the agenda and expected guests. The meeting starts at 7:30 p.m. in the Lincoln Town Offices.

Middle-school girls’ soccer clinic scheduled

The Warriors Soccer Clinic for girls entering grades 5-8 clinic will take place on August 22-24 from 9-11:30 a.m. on the Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School turf field. The clinic, which is the primary fundraising event for the L-S girls’ soccer program, will be run by returning members of the L-S varsity girls’ soccer team supervised by at least one of the L-S girls’ soccer coaches. The cost is $90. The first 25 players to sign up will have an opportunity to enter a free raffle. Register online and mail a check for $90 made out to “LSRHS Girls Soccer” to LSRHS Girls Soccer c/o Hayley Barnes, 42 Mary Catherine Lane, Sudbury, MA 01776. E-mail lsgirlssoccer@gmail.com with any questions.

Category: government, kids, news, sports & recreation

Trail’s End vies with Blazes for Aka Bistro space

July 25, 2016

Aka BistroThe identity of the future tenant of the AKA Bistro restaurant space is very much up in the air, as Trail’s End Cafe in Concord is also hoping to lease it, even as Richard Card of Blazes said he can’t wait much longer for an answer from the Rural Land Foundation, which owns the Mall at Lincoln Station.

“We’re still in discussions with a few potential tenants for the AKA space and we hope to have more to report in the next couple of weeks,” Geoff McGean, executive director of the RLF, in an email on July 20. Asked if Trail’s End was in the mix, he said “they are one of several who have expressed interest.”

Trail’s End Cafe has a full dinner menu and catering service as well as serving breakfast and lunch.

Bree Showalter, general manager of Trail’s End, confirmed in a July 21 email that “we are having ongoing discussions with RLF about the former AKA Bistro space” but would not comment further.

Meanwhile, Card is still waiting for an answer on his proposal for leasing the Aka Bistro space for Blazes, a combination bookstore that would also service food and cocktails as well as host events.

“We’re put in a very, very good offer,” he said in an interview on July 22. “I was told by the RLF there would be an answer a month ago and I’ve heard nothing… It’s been so frustrating to have the support of the town and the people who have come on board with this thing.”

Card said he was looking into other locations for the Blazes venture, including Sudbury, Maynard and even in Maine where he has a summer home. “I can’t continue to wait and wait,” he said. “If I found something tomorrow, the situation in Lincoln would be dead for me… but I haven’t found anything yet.”

Card was not entirely unsympathetic to the RLF, saying that “negotiations have been more protracted than either party would have liked” and that “they want to do something for the town too… they’re in a tough situation.” Emphasizing that he did not know what was going on behind the scenes, Card speculated that the holdup may be due to negotiations or legal proceedings involving Aka Bistro, which closed on May 8.

The sudden closure of the Whistle Stop last week is also concerning for Card. “I start to look at these serial failure and it makes me nervous, too,” he said.

The closures would seem to emphasize that market in Lincoln is not sufficient to support two restaurants, so if Trail’s End wins the bidding for the AKA Bistro space, putting Blazes in another Lincoln location (even if one were available) would not be an option.

“The short answer is, it just doesn’t seem possible to me” for both establishments succeed in Lincoln. Card said. “We would essentially serve the same type of fare as Trail’s End does. Two places like that? No.”

Card has another idea for a Lincoln establishment that might coexist with a place like Trail’s End—a combination bike shop and tap room—but it’s not something he would pursue any time soon, he said. Card’s long-term goal is to have about 10 versions of Blazes in different locations around the country, though they would look different from what Card envisioned for the business in Lincoln, such as not having the bookstore.

But Card is still hoping to open the first Blazes in his home town. “For me to start in Lincoln would be ideal because it represents everything I believe in and cherish. I think we could really make it work here,” he said. “Blazes is a big concept; it’s not just a restaurant, which in some ways is only incidental. It’s coming together for a social experience, cocktails and coffee—really making an an effort to be a community center.”

Category: news

Open Space and Recreation Plan being updated

July 20, 2016

openspaceThe Conservation Commission is spearheading the effort to update the Open Space and Recreation Plan (OSRP) and is planning a pair of public forums and an upcoming online survey.

The commission is working with a residents’ advisory group and a environmental consultant on the OSRP, which was last updated in March 2008. AS explained in the introduction, the document “re-affirms Lincoln’s core natural resource, agricultural and recreational values. It provides a guiding framework that can be used to maintain and enhance the ‘green infrastructure’ of the community, and it identifies pressures and opportunities that may influence the future character of Lincoln.”

The OSRP includes an environmental and open-space inventory and outlines how the Conservation Commission and Lincoln Land Conservation Trust (LLCT) work together to manage Lincoln’s 2,000+ acres of conservation land, as well as the community’s vision and statement of needs.

The community survey and public forums aim to gather input on residents’ priorities for open space and recreation in town. They are also an opportunity to share maps and information on Lincoln’s history of creative land development and protection. The forums will be on the following dates:

  • September 14 at 7:30 p.m. — Recreation Department
  • November 16 at 7:30 p.m. — Town Office Building

The survey is being developed and will be distributed online and at various locations around town from August 1 to September 30.

Advisory Group meetings take place in the Conservation Department in the Town Office Building on Thursday mornings at 7:30 a.m. See the Conservation Department web page for dates (under the heading “Open Space Planning”). Also on that page is a link to the Advisory Group’s timeline and tasks. Members (all of whom are Lincoln residents except Pomponi) are:

  • James Craig (Board of Selectmen)
  • Jordan McCarron, Richard Selden (Conservation Commission)
  • Patty Donahue (Parks and Recreation Commission)
  • Lynne Bower (Agricultural Commission)
  • Ellen Meadors (Board of Accessors, LLCT)
  • Buzz Constable, Gwyn Loud (LLCT/Rural Land Foundation)
  • Renata Pomponi (Mass. Audubon Society)
  • Jennifer Hashley (Codman Community Farms)
  • Michele Grzenda (Weston Conservation Agent

Category: conservation, government, land use

Property sales for June

July 20, 2016

  • House-1343 Hemlock Circle — Cynthia Williams, trustee to Michael Jordoff Trust and Nancy Jordoff, trustees for $534,100 (June 1)
  • 16 Bypass Rd. — Zachary Burnett to McLean Hospital Corp. for $1,024,500 (June 1)
  • 22 Bypass Rd. — Burnett Remodeling LLC to McLean Hiospital Corp. for $1,700,000 (June 1)
  • 35 Deerhaven Rd. — Mary Rurth Trubiano, trustee to David J. Jensen, trustee for $810,000 (June 2)
  • 25 Tabor Hill Rd. — Steven Wardell to Marc Czapczynski and Coren Milbury for $1,100,000 (June 7)
  • 332 Hemlock Circle, unit 332 — John Konvalinka to Steven Emmerich and Eve Horwitz for $545,000 (June 9)
  • 82 Virginia Rd., unit 205 — Judith Dolan to Andrew and Emily Pollack for $347,000 (June 9)
  • 12 Sunnyside Lane — Frederic Eppling, trustee to Robert Peattie and Adeline Kim for $675,000 (June 9)
  • 3 Blueberry Lane — Walter Ehrlich to George and Sonya Najarian for $1,487,000 (June 10)
  • 9 Hiddenwood Path — Susan Decapo to Andrew Frisch for $780,000 (June 16)
  • 85 Lexington Rd. — Cathryn Long, trustee to Jeremy Wilbur and Elaine Shapland for $1,345,000 (June 17)
  • 11 Boyce Farm Rd. — Mark Deck to Kurt MacLaurin for $1,395,000 (June 17)
  • 237 Old Concord Rd. — Henry Morgan, trustee to Robert and Elizabeth Orgel, trustees for $1,050,000 (June 17)
  • 113 South Great Rd. — Rebecca Hussey to Reyza Marouf for $999,000 (June 20)
  • 109 Old Sudbury Rd. — John Shupe to Sandys Bureau, trustee for $1,215,000 (June 27)
  • 49 Bedford Rd. — Brian Flaherty to Lara and John MacLachlan for $957,000 (June 29)

 

Category: land use

News acorns

July 19, 2016

Residents invited to forum/brunch on accessory apartments

The Lincoln Housing Commission invites all residents to a forum and brunch at Bemis Hall on Thursday, July 28 at 11 a.m. to participate in a discussion about developing accessory apartments in Lincoln.

The purpose of the meeting is to gather opinions about various ways to provide small or smaller units for current residents who want to stay in Lincoln. Some have houses in which they would like to remain but are larger than they need, and/or require more work than they want to continue to do.  To accomplish that goal, they would provide a small unit in their existing home at regular or subsidized rates. On the other hand, there are folks whose resources, for various reasons, are limited but who also want to remain in Lincoln and only need or can only afford smaller units.

The meeting will provide an opportunity to hear how to deal with town regulations, guidance on design and construction  issues.  Those with limited resources will hear discussions about the information they need to provide to be eligible to live in these units.

DeCordova summer activities

The deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum has several activities slated for the rest of the summer. For details, click on one of the events below.

  • Movies in the Park: The Secret Garden (July 22) and Wall-E (August 5)
  • Growth Continuum: Ambient Sounds in the Park – July 23
  • Play in the Park – July 27, August 10 and 24
  • MAKEmobile – July 31, August 14 and 28
  • Yoga in the Park (separate sessions for kids and adults) – August 14 and September 11

Category: arts, government, news

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