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Minuteman school building project hits another snag

May 12, 2016

The Minuteman High School building project hit yet another snag last week when voters in Belmont rejected a bond measure to help fund the new building—even as planning has begun for what to do with the land that will be freed up by the old building’s demolition.

Under the terms of the regional school district agreement, member towns must be unanimous in authorizing debt for the project. The district now includes 10 towns, down from 16 after several including Lincoln voted to withdraw from the district earlier this year to avoid having to pay a member’s share of the capital costs. In any case, the new building will be located on Lincoln land close to the current building, which is just over the Lexington town line.

Belmont, which has a representative town meeting form of government, voted against the bonding measure by a 141-81 margin on May 4. Acton, Bolton, Concord, Dover, Lancaster, Lexington and Stow have already approved the project by wide margins, some unanimously, and the last two towns, Arlington and Needham, voted yes on May 9.

Minuteman Superintendent/Director Ed Bouquillon attributed the Belmont defeat to “a lack of understanding and a lack of information.” He said he had asked selectmen back in 2015 to be part of the discussions but was not invited to make a presentation at the Board of Selectmen or Capital Planning Committee meetings about Minuteman funding.

The town also has a different process in terms of allowing people to speak at Town Meeting, and Bouquillon said he was not allowed to speak there, either. Instead, the town’s representative on the Minuteman School Committee made a presentation that was essentially neutral, though the School Committee member himself was in favor of the project, according to Bouquillon.

“It was a very difficult environment to get information out,” he said. “We did not have any kind of articulate, powerful advocates among elected officials and stakeholders in town government.”

Another factor may have been that Belmont High School was just accepted into the funding pipeline by the Massachusetts School Building Authority (MSBA), so voters were facing two possible school projects within a relatively short time span. However, this was also true for Arlington, which passed the Minuteman measure, Bouquillon said.

Minuteman is up against a May 27 deadline to secure funding approval from its member towns or lose a promised grant of about $45 million from the MSBA. Bouquillon said on Wednesday that he planned to write the MSBA and request a 120-day extension “to try to change the hearts and minds of 30 voters” in Belmont (the swing that would have made the difference at Town Meeting). “We’re going to try to do it more person to person and hopefully hold some information sessions in Belmont for Town Meeting members,” he said.

If Minuteman receives the 120-day extension but Belmont again votes down the funding measure at a Special Town Meeting, Bouquillon said he would recommend to the Minuteman School Committee that the the district hold a district-wide referendum, where a simple majority of total voters in the member towns could approve funding. However, getting a revote in Belmont is preferable for several reasons, he said. Among them: the district would have to pay for the referendum, which could cost $100,000; summer is not the best time for a vote like this; and the towns that have already approved funding may be “pretty annoyed,” he said.

“We want to avoid that pathway as an option,” Bouquillon said. “People could campaign against the new building and it could backfire on the whole eight-year process.”

Fate of the current building site

Meanwhile, Minuteman has begun exploring how to make the best use of the 13-plus acres of land in Lexington where the current school sits. The space could be the site of new construction for public or private educational organizations that could partner with the high school. One such candidate is Middlesex Community College (MCC), which recently reached an agreement for Minuteman to serve as a satellite campus where Minuteman students can double-enroll and take MCC classes for college credit.

Thus far, six classes thus far have been approved for qualified Minuteman students, though Bouqillon said he expected this number to grow. Minuteman students will pay $87 per credit—less than half of what other MCC students pay, according to a Minuteman release. The dual-enrollment classes will be taught by Minuteman teachers who have been approved by MCC as members of the its adjunct faculty.

Minuteman has been in talks with other schools including UMass-Lowell and the UMass-Stockbridge School of Agriculture for similar collaborations, Bouquillon said. Public-private partnerships for facilities that would be open to the entire community are also under consideration, he said, adding that he hoped any construction will be funded in full by those partners.

The land belongs to the Minuteman district and any future use must be compatible with its education mission, and he will not recommend that any of it be sold, Bouquillon said. However, “when you think about the location of this property and its potential, to do nothing would not be intelligent,” he said.

Category: government, Minuteman HS project*, news, schools Leave a Comment

News acorns

May 11, 2016

Anonymous-old-book-300pxTown Archives invite residents to help celebrate

The Town Archives Advisory Council is celebrating two important milestones—the acquisition of the Sophia Adams tapestry (a gift of Lincoln resident Cynthia Williams) and the appointment of Jack MacLean as town historian—on Wednesday, May 18 from 5-6 p.m. in the Donaldson Room at the Town Office Building. RSVPs are helpful but not required; call 781-259-2607.

music-notesAnnual jazz concert on May 29

Come to the annual Live Jazz Concert on Sunday, May 29 from 2-4 p.m. in Bemis Hall sponsored by the the Friends of the Lincoln Public Library, Inc. The show will feature Steve Taddeos and the Swing Senders with special guest Ken Peplowski bringing back the sounds of the 1930s and 1940s. Free and open to music lovers of all ages!

RESIST training for teens and young adults

The Lincoln Police Department, in collaboration with the Domestic Violence Services Network (DVSN), is offering a RESIST self-defense class for all female-identified high school and college-age students in Lincoln or Sudbury on Tuesday and Wednesday, June 7 and 8 from 3:30-6 p.m. at Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School. The goal of the two-day course is to learn how to escape from an attacker by using instinct-based moves. The course is free, but space is limited. Preregister by emailing Jena Salon at jenasalon@gmail.com.

Category: arts, history, news Leave a Comment

Pigs taking root near Old Sudbury Road

May 9, 2016

Lone Piggy

If you’re out taking a walk near the recently acquired Van Leer property on the south side Old Sudbury Road, be sure to stop by the and see how the Codman pigs are helping to improve Lincoln’s agricultural lands.

Pete Lowy, farm manager at Codman Community Farm and founder of Pete and Jen’s Backyard Birds, is raising more than 30 piglets on the back area of the land (the southernmost side). The heritage breed Berkshire, Large Black and Old Spot pigs have small huts for shelter, plenty of GMO-free grains for feed, and a ready supply of water.

The pigs’ natural instinct is to root up the grass and soil searching for edibles. When an area is thoroughly dug up, Pete will move the pigs to a new area, plant a cover crop, and rotate the pigs back on the land as the crop matures to consume the forage (known as “hogging off”). This rotation will help build soil organic matter and naturally improve the soil health and biologic activity while also eliminating invasive plants. This combination of turning over the soil, planting new grasses and the deposits of manure by both pigs and cattle enriches the soil in a completely organic fashion. After several seasons of this cycle, the fields will be ready once again for a more permanent pasture.

— Peter von Mertens (co-chair, Lincoln Conservation Commission)

The pig enclosures on the Van Leer land off Old Sudbury Road.

The pig enclosures on the Van Leer land off Old Sudbury Road.

Category: agriculture and flora, conservation, news Leave a Comment

News acorns

May 9, 2016

compost-big-fourComposting workshop presented by Gearticks

A survey conducted by the Lincoln Blue Gearticks Lego Robotics Team determined that 40 percent of the town does not compost—so the team designed a class about composting. The Blue Gearticks will present free composting workshop at the Lincoln transfer station on Saturday, May 14 from noon-1 p.m. and 1-2 p.m. (Each Lego robotics team has to do a research project as well as build a robot, and the Blue Gearticks’ Lincoln composting research and recommendations won second prize in their competition.) The free class is sponsored by the Lincoln Recycling Committee. For more information, call 617-763-4633.

Panel discussion looks at 50 years of METCO

Like several other town entities, the METCO program is celebrating its anniversary this year, so the Lincoln Historical Society’s meeting on Sunday, May 15 at 2 p.m. in Bemis Hall will feature a panel discussion about the program over the past 50 years.  Participants include:

  • Dr. Kahris Dianne White-McLaughlin, affirmative action officer for the Cambridge Public Schools and author of a dissertation on the METCO program in Lincoln. She served on both the Lincoln and L-S School Committees and is former board chairman of METCO, Inc.
  • Jane Kline, a former secretary to the METCO Director, academic adviser, and Social Worker for the Lincoln Public Schools.
  • Rena Wright, a manager at East Cambridge Savings Bank and graduate of the Lincoln and L-S METCO programs.
  • Rob Donaldson, who teaches history at Acton-Boxborough Regional High School and grew up in Lincoln. His mother served on the Coordinating Committee and his family hosted several METCO students.
  • Lateefah Franck, the METCO Director in Lincoln since 2011.  She is a former teacher and principal at the Boston Renaissance Charter Public School in Hyde Park.

Vietnam Gold Star Families sought

The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Moving Wall (a half-size replica of the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, D.C.) is coming to Waltham in August. They are looking for families of military personnel who were killed in action during the Vietnam War so they can receive special invitations and participate in honoring our local heroes. Call Lincoln Veterans Services Officer Priscilla Leach at 781-259-4472 or lincolnvetservices@gmail.com if you are a member of such a Gold Star Family or know anyone who is.

Kumiko Asada exhibits her paintings at Bemis

In May and June, the Bemis Hall Lincoln Artists Gallery will host an exhibit of paintings by Lincoln resident Kumiko Asada. Kumiko, who was born in Osaka, Japan, came to the United States in the 1980s and attended painting classes at the Museum of Fine Arts, The deCordova, and the Cambridge Art Association. Her favorite artist is Giorgio Morandi.

Category: arts, conservation, news Leave a Comment

McLean Hospital plans teen residential facility on Bypass Road

May 8, 2016

The house at 22 Bypass Rd. where McLean Hospital hopes to house clients age 15-21. The house on the adjacent 16 Bypass Road can be seen at far left.

The house at 22 Bypass Rd. where McLean Hospital hopes to house clients age 15-21. The house on the adjacent 16 Bypass Road can be seen at far left.

By Alice Waugh

Bypass Road residents, including a member of the town’s Board of Health, are furious about a proposal by McLean Hospital to open a residential facility for teens and young adults in their neighborhood, saying they were given no opportunity to comment before Lincoln’s town counsel issued an opinion saying that the facility was exempt from the town’s zoning regulations.

Senior officials from McLean Hospital, a Belmont-based psychiatric hospital, met with Director of Planning and Land Use Jennifer Burney and Building Inspector Daniel Walsh in mid-April to present the proposal for properties the hospital purchased at 16-22 Bypass Rd. The 6,700-square-foot house at 22 Bypass Road would be used to house up to 12 clients age 15-21 “who are participating in a program designed to enhance the development of their life skills through educational and therapeutic training,” according to a follow-up letter to the Lincoln officials.

In the April 22 letter, McLean attorney Diane Tillotson made the case that McLean was entitled to an exemption from zoning restrictions as provided under state law for educational and religious organizations. The Bypass Road facility would be a “transitional living program providing psychoeducational support for young adults struggling with mood disorders, anxiety and depression” with a “curriculum integrating behavioral and cognitive skill building experiences,” she wrote.

Town counsel Joel Bard wrote in a May 2 letter to Burney that be believed the McLean proposal met the standard for a use exemption under Lincoln’s zoning by-law under Chapter 40A of state statutes, also known as the Dover Amendment. But about a dozen Bypass Road families vehemently disagree and have formed a group to fight the proposal by various means, including possibly filing a lawsuit.

“We feel blindsided,” said Dr. Steven Kanner, a primary care physician and Lincoln Board of Health member whose property abuts the Bypass Road site. “This is a life-changing event that could affect the safety of our children and grandchildren and our property values, and we were not even alerted? What kind of town are we living in? The arrogance [of town officials] not thinking we needed to know is astounding.”

The lack of specific information about the nature of the facility’s clients is worrisome, said Kanner, who was chief of medical care for the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health during the Dukakis administration.

“I’m certainly not against mental health, but this is something where we don’t know who these people are,” Kanner said. “Are they male or female? How do we know they’re not dangerous? These are disturbed adolescents who have been highly depressed and may have been violent.” If one of them escaped, he added, “there’s nothing to stop them from being in someone else’s yard within 90 seconds.”

The neighborhood group is arguing that the facility is medical and not educational and thus does not qualify for a zoning exemption. “No one has explored why this qualifies as educational… this is medical treatment,” Kanner said. “Are they getting any education? I doubt it.”

On behalf of the neighborhood group, Kanner has been speaking with attorneys. “It appears the only way we can get a hearing we should have been accorded by right is to sue,” he said.

Also at issue is whether the current septic system is adequate for the proposed use, because local septic regulations must be followed even for educational and religious institutions. Burney noted on a town web page about the project that the Board of Health and the Water Department will be consulted about septic and water issues.

McLean Hospital already operates the Lincoln Residence, a transitional residence for adults in Lincoln at 5 Old Cambridge Turnpike. In addition, the Lexington-based Edinburg Center operates is a home for developmentally disabled adults at 15 Bypass Road across from where McLean hopes to locate.

In the April 22 letter, McLean officials said they would hold a neighborhood meeting in mid-June with an anticipated opening date in September 2016.

Category: government, health and science, land use, news 3 Comments

House allocates $1.72 million in state aid for Lincoln

May 6, 2016

The $39.5 billion state budget bill for fiscal 2017 unanimously passed by the state House of Representatives last month includes $1.72 million in state aid for Lincoln, according to Rep. Thomas Stanley (9th Middlesex).

“I’m thrilled with the state aid Lincoln received in the House budget, including my amendment that was adopted to assist the town’s financial burden for the preK-12 education of retired military families living at Hanscom,” Stanley said in a press release.

The House budget lines for Lincoln include $967,767 in Chapter 70 education aid, $654,570 in unrestricted general government aid, and $100,00 to help mitigate the costs of educating children of retired military families living at Hanscom Air Force Base.

Of the $86 million added to the budget in amendments by the House, the biggest chunk was $19.9 million for amendments related to education and local aid, according to MassLive.com. The budget now goes to the state Senate for consideration.

FY 2017
(passed by House)
FY 2016FY 2015
Education aid$967,767$857,038$841,588
Unrestricted general government aid$654,570$627,584$605,776
Hanscom education aid (special item)$100,000----
Totals$1,722,307$1,484,622$1,447,364

Category: government, news Leave a Comment

Residents moving into new areas at the Commons

May 4, 2016

A ribbon-cutting ceremony at The Commons on March 29 featured (left to right) Stephanie Handelson, president and COO of Benchmark Senior Living; Benchmark executive director Chris Golen, Dr. Laurie Tolman, a resident of The Commons; Tom Grape, founder and CEO of Benchmark; and Lt. Governor Karyn Polito. See more photos below.

A ribbon-cutting ceremony at The Commons on March 29 featured (left to right) Stephanie Handelson, president and COO of Benchmark Senior Living; Benchmark Executive Director Chris Golen, Dr. Laurie Tolman, a resident of The Commons; Tom Grape, founder and CEO of Benchmark; and Lt. Governor Karyn Polito. See more photos below.

The new assisted nursing, skilled nursing and memory care units at The Commons are open for business and accepting at least one new resident every day.

The units opened to residents on April 1. As of earlier this week, 27 residents had moved into assisted living, which has a capacity of 40, while eight of the 40 beds in skilled nursing were occupied, according to Executive Director Chris Golen. By the end of May, 32 of the 40 assisted-living units should be occupied, and the memory care section (which has a capacity of 32) should be full in about a year, Golen said.

A handful of residents in the newly opened areas came over from the independent living units at The Commons but the rest are from other facilities or homes, Golen said.

The ribbon-cutting ceremony in late March marked the completion of  changes instituted by Benchmark Senior Living, which purchased The Commons (formerly called The Groves) after the facility filed for bankruptcy in 2013. The Groves was never able to fill more than about half of its 168 independent living units, and many felt that this was because it did not offer a “continuum of care” for residents who eventually needed more help with things like mobility, memory care, and day-to-day activities such as cooking and dressing.

Construction on the new areas began in July 2014, “and things really started taking off at the end of that year” for purchases of independent-living units, Golen said. As of late April, the main Russell Building was 100 percent full, while the cottages and the Flint Building on the north side of the campus had a total of about 17 units left, he said.

Among the offerings in the new areas are lounges with large Roku-equipped flat-screen TVs; dining rooms serving three meals a day (though the assisted living units also have kitchenettes); hair salons with manicure/pedicure stations and spa tubs; and a physical therapy suite that operates seven days a week. Patients can receive outpatient therapy there even if they don’t live at The Commons. “I think that’s going to be a big attraction for us,” Golen said.

All caregivers in the new areas at The Commons now have iPhones connected to a wireless security system that allows them to see the location of all patients, who wear GPS-enabled emergency pendants. This is for increased safety as well as the convenience of visitors who arrive to find their relatives away from their rooms.

Residents who’ve purchased independent living units at The Commons can move into assisted living or skilled nursing at no extra cost. Others must pay a nonrefundable entrance fee plus rent starting at $5,500 a month, Golen said in December 2014. Skilled nursing beds are also available for short-term rehabilitation patients coming from hospitals or homes.

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Category: news 1 Comment

News acorns

May 4, 2016

Virtual tour of New England cemeteries on May 5

On Thursday, May 5 at 10 a.m. at the Lincoln Public Library, the Gravestone Girls present a program about New England cemetery art, history and symbolism, including graveyards in Lincoln.  The “virtual tour” will go from colonial burial grounds through the rural cemetery movement of the 19th century and into 21st-century locations, examining why we have cemeteries and gravestones, why they look like they do, and how styles and art have evolved over almost 400 years. This program is supported in part by a grant from the Lincoln Cultural Council, a local agency, which is supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency.

Toast Mom with a glass of wine at deCordova cafe

The cafe on the fourth floor of the deCordova Museum is now serving wine and beer, and mothers get in free on Mother’s Day (Sunday, May 8). The café will offer two red wines, two white wines and prosecco, along with several craft beers and Downeast cider. Hours are 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday and 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wednesday through Friday, expanding to seven days a week after Memorial Day. The Park Cafe in the courtyard behind the store will be open from Memorial Day through Labor Day from noon to 3 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays and serves cold drinks, snacks and ice cream.

Display of L-S student engineering and art work

Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School’s Technology and Engineering program and AP art class will hold an open house and show of student work on Tuesday, May 10 from 7-9 p.m. Student-designed rockets, solar-powered water heaters, woodworking projects, sculpture paintings and more will be on display. Visitors can also see 3D printing and a CNC routing machine in action, drive the 2016 Warrior Robotics robot and hear music from the L-S Select Jazz Combo. The shows will be on the B200s level near the cafeteria.

See Samba at L-S French Movie Night

sambaThe French Cinema classes at L-S will host a French Movie Night on Friday, May 13 with a showing of Samba, a dramatic comedy about a hard-working young man who, while facing the challenges of immigration in France, finds himself drawn towards a volunteer immigration employee trying to pull her life together. The Movie Night will start with a reception at 6:30 p.m. with refreshments and music from the L-S jazz bands. There will be a brief presentation about the film, followed by the movie at 7:30 in the L-S auditorium. The event is free but we will be collecting donations for 9 éléves, an organization that raises money for Haitian children’s education. Please RSVP on this Facebook page or this SignUp Genius page. Tickets will be available at the door, but signups are greatly appreciated. Please email MJ Galano at mj_galano@lsrhs.net with any questions.

Join the 2016 garlic mustard pull

Join your neighbors for a garlic mustard pull any time before May 31 and help the Lincoln Conservation Department eradicate this invasive plant. Free paper leaf bags for garlic mustard will be distributed to residents at the transfer station on Saturday, May 7 from 9 a.m. to noon. After that, bags will be available at the Conservation office, courtesy of the Lincoln Garden Club. Drop off filled bags at the DPW on Lewis Street Monday through Friday (plus Saturday, May 7) from 7:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. (no wall lettuce or yard clippings, please). The Conservation Department will also pick up full bags of garlic mustard through May 31 if you contact them at 781-259-2612 or trails@lincolntown.org; please allow a few days for pickup.

Category: news Leave a Comment

Public hearings on May 10

May 4, 2016

House-1The Lincoln Historical Commission will hold two public hearings on Tuesday, May 10:

  • 7:40 p.m. — to consider the application of Peter and Hytho Pantazelos for a Demolition Plan Review to demolish more than 25 percent of the roof structure and an attached greenhouse at 12 Woodcock Lane.
  • 7:50 p.m. —  to consider the application of Seth and Lynne Miller for a decision on a Demolition Plan Review to demolish the dwelling and detached garage at 15 Stonehedge Road.

The Lincoln Planning Board will also hold two public hearings on May 10:

  • 7 p.m. — to review an application from Laurie Wardell, 20 Farrar Road, for replacement of a fence under Section 18.5 of the Zoning Bylaw.
  • 7:15 p.m. — to review an application for Site Plan Review under Section 17 of the Zoning Bylaw. The applicant, Zeis Lincoln One LLC, 0 Lexington Road, proposes to construct a new home.

Category: land use Leave a Comment

AKA Bistro to close Sunday; Blazes may take its place

May 3, 2016

Aka Bistro, part of the Mall at Lincoln Station.

Aka Bistro may soon be replaced by Blazes.

By Alice Waugh

Mother’s Day will be the last day of business for AKA Bistro, which garnered widespread praise for its innovative French and Japanese cuisine but was a victim of not one but two natural disasters.

Meanwhile, Richard Card, the Lincoln resident behind the proposed Blazes bookstore/coffee shop/cocktail bar, has made an offer to lease the space currently occupied by AKA Bistro and has launched a website detailing what Blazes plans to offer.

Rumors have swirled for some time that Aka Bistro might be closing. “AKA is a tenant at will and has been struggling to pay the rent for the space,” Geoff McGean, executive director of the Rural Land Foundation (which owns the Mall at Lincoln Station), said in an email last week. “We have talked with several new potential restaurant tenants about the space. Richard Card/Blazes is one of the potential tenants that has expressed interest in the space, and we have had discussions with them.”

Card confirmed that he has made an offer on a five-year lease for the AKA Bistro space for Blazes, which he hopes to open as soon as this fall if all goes well, but said on Tuesday he had not gotten a response.

“This is very sad because I like the town very much. It reminds me of the village in France where I grew up, a small community where everyone knows everyone. This is something I’ll miss a lot,” Christian Touche, co-owner and general manager of AKA Bistro, said in an interview Tuesday night. “It would have been easier if there was something bad” such as substandard food or poor service, but such was not the case, he said.

AKA Bistro was was never able to recover from a pair of unfortunate events: the lengthy closure of nearby Donelan’s after its roof collapsed in a snowstorm in February 2011, significantly reducing business traffic for the entire mall, and the closure of AKA itself for several months starting in December 2013 after a burst ceiling pipe caused extensive interior water damage. “I learned a lot about insurance,” Touche said ruefully.

The plan for Blazes had its first public airing at Town Meeting in 2015 when Card applied for a liquor license. He told the Lincoln Squirrel beforehand that his business would aim for a “salon atmosphere” with a breakfast, lunch and light dinner menu, and a small bookstore that would stock “only high-minded and literary works.”

At that time, Card said he did not have a specific site identified, though he later said he was looking at space on 10 Lewis St. That later turned out not to be workable due to a shortage of parking space.

Even though nothing has been signed, Blazes now has its own website noting that the establishment will be a “cultural cafe” with “an inviting chic and urban edge.” Offerings will include crafted coffees, loose-leaf teas, fresh fruit drinks, and food including “meticulously prepared soups, local cheeses and charcuteries.” The website includes a sample menu and an undated list of events Card hopes to hold there.

Asked about pricing, Card said that Blazes would be somewhere in between Concord’s Woods Hill Table and the Whistle Stop in Lincoln “so people can come here once or twice a week and not feel it’s going to be a big expense. We definitely do not want to be a ‘special occasion’ place.”

Card has assembled a committee of about a dozen Lincoln residents who are investing and/or lending their expertise in the design and planning process. He’s also planning to launch a Kickstarter online fundraising campaign featuring a promo video and a song. Among the committee members is Wendy Harrington, who said she and other Lincolnites are excited about what Blazes could offer beyond just its menu and merchandise.

“Italy and France have cafes in town squares, England has the pubs and Iceland has the baths,” Harrington said. “The problem with a small town like Lincoln is that it doesn’t have a town center” where people can run into each other and socialize with a cup of gourmet coffee or a cocktail.

“I’ll still go to Concord or Waltham or Lexington” to eat out for dinner, “but I would much rather have a casual meal [at a place] where I can throw on a coat and and go downtown [in Lincoln] with my daughter, or drop in during the day,” Harrington said. “I think Richard has really hit on it. I think he’s got a very holistic approach to the culture [of Lincoln] and the food part of it that was really missing.”

The impending closure of the well-regarded AKA Bistro came as a surprise to gourmets outside Lincoln as well. The restaurant was featured on April 22 in Boston Magazine’s “Best Food Instagrams of the Week” and was reviewed in detail on April 15 in The Passionate Foodie, a blog by Richard Auffrey, who said he had no idea about the upcoming change when he wrote his blog post.

Touche said he had considered “downgrading” the AKA Bistro menu a bit to get more local customers, but decided it was too risky. “I may or may not gain people from Lincoln, but I’d certainly lose the people who drive half an hour” for AKA’s fare, he said.

Touche isn’t certain what’s next for him, but said there will definitely be another restaurant in his future, and the AKA Bistro experience has taught him a lot. “I wish the best for the new people who are coming. It’s a great spot and maybe they’ll get a better sense of the needs of the residents,” he said.

Category: food, land use, news 12 Comments

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