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Lincoln School does security audit; parents’ views sought

June 19, 2016

schoolThe school district has hired a consultant to evaluate the Lincoln School’s security and is asking parents and staff for their views on current and potential future security measures.

The Lincoln Public Schools’ Safety and Security Committee, which meets monthly, recommended the security audit, the first in Superintendent of Schools Becky McFall’s four-year tenure in Lincoln, although the graffiti incident outside the Brooks entrance in March was a contributing factor. “This is a good time for us to have an independent audit to give us some feedback beyond our own inspections,” she said.

David Cullen of Intelligence Security International was on campus last week looking at the buildings, interviewing staff members, and reviewing security procedures, including Internet access.

School doors are now locked during school hours between morning drop-off and afternoon pick-up, and all visitors must push a buzzer to be allowed inside. Security cameras outside the Smith and Brooks entrances allow secretaries to see visitors on a monitor and speak with them through an intercom to determine whether to allow entry, though the cameras do not make recordings.

An online poll, which is open until June 30, asks parents and staff for their opinions on locking school doors, surveillance cameras, and visitor check-in and monitoring.

The consultant’s report will be presented to the administration and School Committee in the fall, although McFall said the committee would probably go to executive session for its discussion. The inspection, which cost about $7,500, was funded as part of an earlier Town Meeting appropriation that paid for the current cameras and security buzzers.

Category: schools

LSF awards grants for school projects

June 16, 2016

teacherThe Lincoln School Foundation has awarded five grants totaling $11,662 for educational projects proposed by teachers at the Lincoln and Hanscom Schools:

  • Differentiation — Jason Peledge, Hanscom Middle School ($1,400). The curriculum grant will support the pilot of a stations-based model for 7th- and 8th-grade social studies students.
  • Library maker space — Alice Sajdera, Lincoln School ($800). The grant will pay for materials and equipment for a maker space where students and teachers have the opportunity to explore their own interests,
    learn to use tools and materials and develop creative projects to foster independence, problem-solving,
    collaboration and creativity.
  • Lucy Calkins conference  — Joseph Columbo, Debbie Carpenito, Jennifer Mastrullo and Laura English (Lincoln School), $4,208. The grant will allow four teachers to attend the weeklong Lucy Calkins June Reading Institute in New York for educators who are committed to turning classrooms into richly literate reading workshops.
  • Hanscom Maker Space — Becca Fasciano, Hanscom Middle School ($3,854). The grant will fund materials needed for designing, building and creating in the electronics and textile
    area of the new middle school. The school district and area businesses are also expected to contribute funds for the project.
  • Mindfulness and yoga  — Brian Garside, Lincoln School ($1,400). Curriculum development and resources to encourage use of yoga, mindfulness and relaxation by students and faculty in grades K-2. Depending on space logistics, an area may be created that would serve as a yoga/mindfulness studio for classes or small groups.

The organization expects to award additional funds for out-of-cycle grant applications in 2016-17. In addition, the school district will fully fund two other projects that were initially LSF grant requests:

  • Anyone Can Read Music — Blake Siskavich and Ryan Ruiz (Lincoln School and Hanscom Primary School), $3,470
  • Staff Book Club — Sarah Collmer (Lincoln School), $616.

“In fitting with our mission to advance education through innovation, we are focused on supporting our schools push towards more creativity, collaboration, risk taking and authenticity,” LSF Co-chair D.J. Mitchell said in a letter to the Lincoln School Committee.

The LSF awarded a total of more than $50,000 in grants in 2015-16.

Category: schools

News acorns

June 16, 2016

firstparish-sm

Special service to honor Orlando victims on Sunday

On Sunday, June 19 at 10 a.m., come to the First Parish in Lincoln for a special musical “coffee house-style” worship service to honor Orlando through music, reflection and prayer to help attendees tend to their spiritual selves in the midst of the Orlando tragedy. Rev. Manish and ministerial intern Mandy Beal will lead the service alongside special guest musicians from First Parish and beyond. All are welcome.

The First Parish will hold one service per month in July and August. On Sunday, July 24 at 10 a.m., Sandra Summers will lead the congregation in worship. Mandy Beal, FPL’s current ministerial intern, will lead a service on Sunday, August 21 at 10 a.m.

“Telling Our Stories” on two days next week

Share your story and listen to other Lincolnites’ stories at one of two Fireside Chat events: Monday, June 20 from 7-8:30 p.m. at the Lincoln Public Library or Wednesday, June 22 from 10-11 a.m. at Bemis Hall. We all have a story to tell. It may be a story we’ve told many times or one we’ve never told anyone. It may be funny or sad, poignant or light. When we tell each other our stories and listen to the stories of other people, we not only learn more about each other but also about ourselves as individuals and as a community. Too often, we are just too busy to truly listen to the stories of our neighbors. Facilitated by Sharon Antia.

Farmer’s market starts June 25

Starting Saturday, June 25 and continuing through the summer, the Rural Land Foundation will host the Farmer’s Market at Lincoln Station every Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. in the front parking area along Lincoln Road. The event is an opportunity to support local farms and businesses and to buy some of the best local produce available. Lincoln farms including Blue Heron Organic Farm, Codman Farm, Lindentree Farm and Matlock Farm will be present to sell a wide variety of their farm fresh produce and wares. In addition, Houtzeel’s Breadoven will be returning with their oven-fresh breads and a variety of other vendors to share their specialties.

Minute Man National Historical Park needs votes for grant

The Friends of Minute Man National Park (FMMNP) have a chance to win $250,000 to preserve the 1775 Parker’s Revenge battle site and to transform the adjacent historic Hargrove Barn for classroom use. Twenty national park units out of more than 400 have been selected to compete for funding in a nationwide online voting campaign. “Partners in Preservation: National Parks” is a partnership between the National Trust for Historic Preservation and American Express. The FMMNP is asking supporters to register and vote by going to this National Geographic voting portal and casting their votes every day between now and July 5. Voters will be able to enter a sweepstakes to win a trip to Yellowstone National Park courtesy of National Geographic.

Category: history, news

Public hearing scheduled on McLean proposal

June 15, 2016

meetingThe Planning Board has scheduled a June 28 public hearing for a site plan review relating to parking for a McLean Hospital proposal to locate a residential educational/therapeutic residence on Bypass Road. The hearing starts at 7 p.m. in the Town Office Building’s Donaldson Rom.

Dozens of residents appeared at a May 24 Planning Board meeting to protest the proposal, which would house up to 12 young men aged 15-21 plus two overnight staff at a large single-family house McLean recently purchased at 22 Bypass Road. Neighbors at the meeting worried about added traffic, headlights late at night, and neighborhood security in the event that one of the patients left the property unattended.

Septic regulations seem to prohibit the property from having more than six bedrooms or being occupied by more than 12 people (including staff), according to a May 12 letter from Assistant Public Health Director Stanley Sosnicki. However, he added in a June 14 email to the Lincoln Squirrel that this was “an opinion based on limited information provided at the time… and does not adequately address the nature of staff members and instructors at the property.” McLean will make a formal submission with more information so he can more accurately assess the projected septic flows for the new use, Sosnicki said.

Representatives from McLean did not immediately reply to an email requesting comment.

Category: land use, news

Property sales in May

June 15, 2016

House-1

  • 26 Longmeadow Rd. — Abbey Rd. Properties LLC to Robert and Karla Talanian for $1,420,000 (May 31)
  • 96 Page Rd. — Dana Coombs to David Kahn and Annelise Parham for $875,000 (May 27)
  • 141 Weston Rd. — Joanne Armstrong to Keith Gilbert and Stacy Osur $1,795,000 (May 26)
  • 12 Brooks Hill Rd. — Mark Leonardi to David Goodman and Johanna Stark Goodman for $1,067,000 (May 24)
  • 20 Oak Meadow Rd. — John Tierney to Samuel Pearson and Julie Button for $995,000 (May 13)
  • 116 Trapelo Rd. — John Stovall to Peter and Bethany Creath for $1,775,000 (May 11)
  • 15 Old Sudbury Rd. — Mark Golden to Benjamin and Cynthia Ward for $1,322,500 (May 2)

Category: government, land use, news

New co-ed softball league is fielding teams

June 14, 2016

softballThe brand-new Lincoln Co-ed Softball League will get going later this month with dozens of players already eager to step into the batter’s box.

The league was founded by Richard Card (who is also hoping to open the Blazes bookstore/cafe at Lincoln Station) along with Amy Skenderian, Sabra Alden and Rob Fallon. Adults age 18 and over are invited to join the low-key games at the Codman Pool field starting on June 26 and running through late August.

The three teams already on board are the Trail Blazers (Card’s former team in a different league, with the name inspired by his nascent business venture), Noah’s Chief Executives (headed by former Selectmen Noah Eckhouse) and the Rte. 2 Transcendentalist Cross-Walkers. The league can accommodate up to six teams, so organizers invites residents to form and coach their own teams.

Adults of all ages and abilities are welcome. “It’s a great tradition to have intergenerational play,” Card said. “We’re looking forward to just having a fun time. This enhances social aspect of an already social town.”

The league will provide bases, balls, fields and insurance; teams provide their own bats and uniforms. A website where people can sign up, pay the $40 registration fee, complete waiver forms, see the schedule and standings, etc., is in the works and will be announced when it launches, he added. In the meantime, anyone interested in playing or coaching may contact Card (richard@blazescafe.com) or one of the other organizers.

Category: sports & recreation

Letter to the editor: Harper Lee, Orlando and ‘where reason ends’

June 14, 2016

letter

To the editor:

On Saturday, June 11, I went to the Intergenerational Book Group at the library to discuss To Kill a Mockingbird and Go Set A Watchman by Harper Lee. While I had seen the movie a number of times, prior to this event being announced I had not read either book. The book group was a great excuse to read them both. I was not expecting to like Go Set a Watchman and I was pretty sure I would not like Atticus after reading it, but on both counts I proved myself wrong.

Atticus was revealed to be a complex and flawed character, but like most flawed people, he was a good man. The setting is again in Alabama, this time in the 1950s, right after the Brown v. the Board of Education decision in which the Supreme Court informed the country that “separate but equal” facilities are inherently unequal. In this book, Atticus continues to be a law-abiding, kind and generous man, but this is the Deep South and the reader knows he is not as enlightened as we liked to think he is when he says to Scout, “Do you want Negroes by the carload in our schools and churches and theaters? Do you want them in our world?… Do you want your children going to a school that’s been dragged down to accommodate Negro children?”

To be sure, there are many lines in both books that are capable of provoking an endless stream of conversation, but one of the lines that struck me in a particular way was by Uncle Jack when he said to Scout, “Prejudice, a dirty word, and faith, a clean one, have something in common: they both begin where reason ends.”

“They both begin where reason ends.” That is not something that had occurred to m, but it smacked me right upside the head when I read it. “When reason ends”—when we have no evidence, no facts, we must fall back on faith or prejudice. I was excited to have a conversation with my neighbors about how this applies to our country, to our state, to our town. What do we do when reason ends—what do we rely on?  Who do we want to keep out of our country, our state, or our schools, churches and neighborhood?

Sadly, the only other person that came on Saturday was the Assistant Director Lisa Acker Rothenberg. We were both sorely disappointed; she too had been looking forward to a spirited dialogue with our neighbors. Harper Lee had a brilliant grasp on the morals and conventions of society and was a clever storyteller to boot. It is our loss that we were not able to discuss her work here in Lincoln. It is society’s loss that she was not able to produce more works of literature.

And then on Sunday morning, when all reason had ended, the tragedy of fear and bigotry escalated into tragedy in Orlando.

Sincerely,

Sharon Antia
165 S. Great Rd.


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: letters to the editor

News acorns

June 14, 2016

Codman BBQ and campout coming up

campoutCodman Community Farm’s annual BBQ and Campout is Saturday to Sunday, June 18-19. Residents are invited to pitch their tents starting at 4 p.m. on Saturday, followed by dinner catered by Blue Ribbon Barbecue and a campfire with singalong and s’mores. For those who stay the night, there will be breakfast on Sunday with coffee, orange juice and bagels. Tickets for dinner only are $25 for adults and $15 for children under 12. Tent sites for overnight campers (who must also join Codman Community Farm if they aren’t already members) are $35. Click here for details and online reservations.

Volunteers needed for July 4th festivities

The Lincoln Parks and Recreation Department is looking for volunteers to help make the Fourth of July festivities a success. Jobs throughout the day include general setup and cleanup for the events. The majority of help is needed for the fireworks in the afternoon and evening. Volunteers for the fireworks will be provided with a BBQ dinner. Students can also earn community service hours. Please email salon.abbey@gmail.com for more information if you are interested.

Sign up for a home energy assessment

Homeowners can sign up for a free home energy assessment at LincolnEnergyChallenge.org. The assessment includes recommendations that can save money on home energy costs, an evaluation of your house for rooftop solar panels, and a safety inspection of your heating system. Lincoln’s Green Energy Committee and Co-op Power will also answer your question in person at the following times and locations:

  • Wednesday, June 15 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. — transfer station
  • Saturday, June 18 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. — in front of Donelan’s
  • Wednesday, June 22 from 3-6 p.m. — in front of Donelan’s
  • Saturday, June 25 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.  — transfer station

Anyone with questions may contact Sue Klem at Susan.M.Klem@gmail.com or call Co-op Power at 617-752- 1259.

Category: charity/volunteer, conservation, news

Bemis Hall unveils new space

June 13, 2016

Renel Fredriksen (center) speaks at the ribbon-cutting for the renovated Bemis Hall basement while Carolyn Bottum (left) and Dot Taylor (right) look on.

Selectman Renel Fredriksen (center) speaks at the ribbon-cutting for the renovated Bemis Hall basement while Carolyn Bottum (left) and Dot Taylor (right) look on.

By Alice Waugh

Don’t call it the basement any more—call it Bemis Down Under, or maybe just Bemis Lower Level.

At an official ribbon-cutting on June 10, visitors sipped coffee and toured the spiffy new spaces in the previously dank and crowded subterranean portion Bemis Hall centering on a carpeted, well-lit meeting room with a large flat-screen TV, a floral loveseat and artwork donated by residents.

“It doesn’t look like anybody’s basement,” said Selectman Renel Fredriksen, who shared the ribbon-cutting duties with Dot Taylor, chair of the COA’s board of directors.

The meeting room will also serve as an expanded space for the weekly Friends of the Lincoln Library used book sale, because carts of books can now be wheeled in from the nearby storage area for easier access. Other new amenities include two handicapped-accessible bathrooms, a storage area for medical equipment such as walkers that are loaned out by the Council on Aging (COA), and a private office for the COA’s volunteer counselors. There’s also storage for the Historical Society are a large walk-in closet for the Lincoln Minute Men for muskets and uniforms.

“My office used to be in my flash drive,” said COA volunteer Marilyn Lewis, who previously had to talk to clients wherever she could find two chairs. “it was a huge privacy issue if people were talking about personal finances or health issues.”

The timing for the opening is good with summer just around the corner. Bemis Hall is not air-conditioned, so the first and second floors can get uncomfortably hot, but groups and activities can now simply move to the cool basement space, which also has a new ventilation system.

The renovation will improve things a bit for the COA, but it’s not a long-term solution. “This not the end of the story; it’s the beginning of the story,” Fredriksen said, noting that the town hopes to build a community center. “This relieves some of the pressure in the meantime.”

Years ago, creating this much more space in the Bemis basement wouldn’t have been possible, since the main area was taken up by two large steam boilers. A space-efficient gas heating system was installed several years ago, and in the latest project, more space was freed up when workers removed a piece of Lincoln history: the huge air tanks that fed the air horn in the building’s cupola. The tanks, which stored air from a compressor elsewhere in the building and weighed several hundred pounds, had to be cut apart.

In bygone days, whenever there was a fire in town, the horn sent out a series of coded blasts that helped residents identify the location of the fire using a cheat sheet supplied by the town. The horn also honked at the same time each day so people could synchronize their clocks and watches.

The construction took about 10 weeks altogether, though the project had a bumpy beginning when officials opened the bids and found that they all exceeded the amount budgeted by the town. Fortunately, Lincoln Facilities Manager Michael Haines stepped in to act as general contractor, which saved enough money to avoid having to go back to Town Meeting for more funds and delaying the project significantly. As work proceeded, some details such storage configurations were changed with the input of those who’ll be using the space.

“Everyone had good suggestions here. It was really a team effort,” said Town Administrator Tim Higgins.

Category: government, seniors

News acorns

June 12, 2016

Clark Gallery showcases Pochesci works, prison photos

"The Blue Chest" (2014) by Linda Pochesci.

“The Blue Chest” (2014) by Linda Pochesci.

During the month of June, see paintings at the Clark Gallery by Linda Pochesci showing interior images of her Truro, Mass., studio and living quarters that open onto dunes that are fabricated from the artist’s imagination, as are the studio interiors containing mirrors reflecting spaces outside the visible space. Until Friday, June 18, the Clark Galley is also exhibiting “Danny Lyon: Conversations with the Dead” and “Richard Ross: Juvenile in Justice,” which were reviewed by the Boston Globe in May. The gallery is open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 6 p.n, and by appointment.

Lincoln kids’ triathlon is June 18

Kick off the summer at the Lincoln Kids Triathlon (also known as Splash, Mash and Dash) on Saturday, June 18 at 8:30 a.m. at the Codman Pool in Lincoln.  The event is open to all kids ages 5-14. Register before race day and save $10. Event information, including race distances and an online registration link, can be found at www.kidstri.net. To volunteer, email Ginger Reiner at ginger.reiner@gmail.com. There are T-shirts, goody bags, and medals for every participant plus great awards and raffle prizes.

Kids’ summer kickoff at library

Come to a summer kickoff party at the Lincoln Public Library on Wednesday, June 22 from 3:30-5 p.m. Children of all ages are invited to the library for balloon sculpting, crafts, a raffle, make-your-own sundaes and a magic show by Ed Popielarczyk at 4 p.m. Kids can pick up their summer reading challenge forms. Sponsored by the Friends of the Lincoln Public Library.

Event looks at Gropius jewelry

Discover the jewelry collection and stylistic trendsetting of Mrs. Ise Gropius during this special evening talk and tour, “Small but Perfect Things: The Style and Jewelry Collection of Ise Gropius,” on Thursday, June 23 from 7-9 p.m. at the Gropius House (68 Baker Bridge Rd.). Historic New England Associate Curator Laura Johnson shows you Mrs. Gropius’s collection of unique designs using intriguing modern materials, with original examples of jewelry on view. $10 for Historic New England members, $15 for nonmembers. Space is limited and registration required; call 781-259-8098 or buy online.

Mass Audubon invites photo contest submissions

“Picture This: Your Great Outdoors Photo Contest,” the annual competition sponsored by Mass Audubon in Lincoln, is now underway, with hundreds of participants expected to submit images of the Bay State’s natural beauty and wildlife diversity before the competition ends on September 30. Photographers of all abilities, ages and backgrounds are encouraged to fan out across the state to take their best shots of birds and other animals, friends and family members enjoying the outdoors, and more. For the 2016 contest, photographers will be able to submit up to 10 entries—double the number allowed previously. Categories include People in Nature, Birds, Mammals, and Other Animals, as well as a single category for Landscapes, Plants, and Fungi. For complete contest rules and submission guidelines as well as a gallery of the winning photos from 2015, visit the “Picture This” website.

Category: arts, kids, nature, sports & recreation

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