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My Turn: former Farrington trustees urge “yes” vote

June 22, 2025

As Lincoln residents who have served over the years as trustees of Farrington Nature Linc, we five fully support the proposed Nature Link project, and we ask you to join us in voting “yes” on both Articles 3 and 4 at Special Town Meeting this Wednesday evening. 

The access road included in the overlay zoning in Article 3 provides Farrington a unique and long-sought-after safety alternative to Route 2 for on-site nature programs for children.

The conservation plan in Article 4 will ensure that Farrington Nature Linc can afford to stay in Lincoln for decades to come and continue to serve children from low-income communities.

This public and private collaboration that each of us has seen develop over the years gives Farrington value for the property it has stewarded here since 1909, enhances safety of its extraordinary programs in service of children and community, and maintains a surrounding of the natural world so important for all children to experience.

Many of you know at least one of us personally, and you know we ask for your support responsibly and respectfully. Please join us at Special Town Meeting (beginning 6:30pm June 25) and, with us, vote “yes” on both Nature Link Articles 3 and 4.

Sincerely,

Sandra Bradlee, Hemlock Circle
Sue Klem, Trapelo Road
Brooks Mostue, Lexington Road
Susan Taylor, Beaver Pond Road
Susan Winship, Meadowdam Road


“My Turn” is a forum for readers to offer their letters to the editor or views on any subject of interest to other Lincolnites. Submissions must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Items will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Submissions containing personal attacks, errors of fact, or other inappropriate material will not be published.

Category: Farrington/Nature Link project*, land use, My Turn Leave a Comment

Corrections

June 22, 2025

  • The June 20 legal notice that was originally headlined “Legal notice: Historic District Commission (23 Beaver Pond Rd.)” had a typographical error in the headline. The correct address is 24 Beaver Pond Rd. The notice has been republished with a corrected address and new URL: lincolnsquirrel.com/2025/06/legal-notice-hdc-24bpr/.
  • Due to incomplete information supplied to the Squirrel, one of the items in the June 15 article headlined “Police log for June 1–11, 2025” has been updated. The corrected item now reads:
June 10

Upland Field Road (8:10pm) – A caller reported the odor of natural gas inside the residence. The Fire Department and National Grid were able to locate the source of the odor emanating from an exterior leak. The gas service to the residence was temporarily disabled until a faulty valve could be replaced.

Category: Uncategorized Leave a Comment

Legal notice: Historic District Commission (24 Beaver Pond Rd.)

June 20, 2025

(Editor’s note: This is a republication of a June 19 legal notice that had a typo in the headline and URL.)

The Historic District Commission will hold a virtual online public hearing at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, July 1, 2025, to consider the application of 24 Beaver Pond Rd., M/P 152-12-0 to determine the significance of the garage. Anyone wishing to be heard on this matter should be present at the designated time and place.

Note that legal notices often must be posted twice by law. For previous legal notices and details on how to submit a legal notice to the Lincoln Squirrel, click here.

Category: legal notices Leave a Comment

Hanscom developers seek to renovate just one hangar for now

June 19, 2025

The Hanscom Field expansion area is outlined in red. Lincoln’s approximate town border to the south is indicated by the green dashed line.

Faced with a possible shorter-term revenue opportunity, the developers of the proposed Hanscom expansion are seeking to renovate the old Navy hangar and lease it, though their larger hangar space expansion proposal is not off the table.

North Airfield Ventures LLC and Runway Realty Ventures LLC recently filed a Notice of Project Change with a Phase One Waiver Request to allow them to renovate the historic hangar. According to the Bedford Citizen on June 19, 2025, they are in negotiations with Merlin Labs to renovate the historic hangar and sign a long-term deal to lease 70-80% of the space for research and development space for autonomous flight control systems. Specialty medical and pharmaceutical delivery companies have also shown interest and are in negotiations for the remaining space, the Citizen reported.

The Mass. Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs issued a ruling in June 2024 saying that the developers’ Draft Environmental Impact Report (DEIR) for the Hanscom Field expansion project first proposed in 2023 “does not adequately and properly comply” with Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act Office (MEPA) regulations. The Supplemental DEIR (sDEIR) for the single hangar renovation says that work does not meet the threshold for requiring MEPA approval. 

The original plan — which has engendered significant opposition from hundreds of residents, officials, scientists, and others — called for adding almost 500,000 square feet of new hangar space on a 47-acre parcel on the north side of Hanscom Field in Bedford. The developers are expected to file a DEIR for an amended version of that project later this year.

“They are not really pulling back, they are splitting the project into parts,” said Christopher Eliot of Lincoln, until recently the chair of the Hanscom Field Advisory Commission. “I think the Merlin project may be OK, or at least good enough that it is not worth asking for a major community effort to oppose it. We need to keep our powder dry and prepare for the expected sDEIR instead.”

Category: Hanscom Air Field 1 Comment

Corrections

June 19, 2025

  • In the June 18 article headlined “Property sales in May 2025,” two transactions were inadvertently conflated. The correct transactions:
    • 140 Lincoln Rd. #313 — Zahra Shahrokh to Charles Zimmerman Trust and Cornelia Zimmerman Trust for $685,000 (May 28)
    • 45 Winter St. — Jonathan Rapaport to Joshua and Pataphone Lamstein for $2,705,000 (May 27)
  • The June 18 article headlined “My Turn: Nature Link rezoning is impermissible” by Elmer Green was published without the writer’s street address, which raised doubts as to their identity. The article has since been removed from the Lincoln Squirrel website. All future “My Turn” pieces must include the writer’s full street address to be included with publication.

Category: Uncategorized Leave a Comment

Legal notice: Historic District Commission (150 Lincoln Rd.)

June 19, 2025

The Historic District Commission will hold a virtual online public hearing at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, July 1, 2025, to consider the application of 150 Lincoln Rd., M/P 168-30-0 to determine the significance of the building. Anyone wishing to be heard on this matter should be present at the designated time and place. 

Note that legal notices often must be posted twice by law. For previous legal notices and details on how to submit a legal notice to the Lincoln Squirrel, click here.

Category: legal notices Leave a Comment

Legal notice: Historic District Commission (25 Lincoln Rd.)

June 19, 2025

The Historic District Commission will hold a virtual online public hearing at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, July 1, 2025, to consider the application of 25 Lincoln Rd., M/P 143-5-0 to install a U style bike rack and update and add street signage. Anyone wishing to be heard on this matter should be present at the designated time and place. 

Note that legal notices often must be posted twice by law. For previous legal notices and details on how to submit a legal notice to the Lincoln Squirrel, click here.

Category: legal notices Leave a Comment

Property sales in May 2025

June 18, 2025

(Editor’s note: This post was corrected on June 19.)

18 Moccasin Hill — Neil Rajdev Trust to Heather Boesch for $2,520,000 (May 29)

140 Lincoln Rd. #313 — Zahra Shahrokh to Charles Zimmerman Trust and Cornelia Zimmerman Trust for $685,000 (May 28)

45 Winter St. — Jonathan Rapaport to Joshua and Pataphone Lamstein for $2,705,000 (May 27)

23 Deerhaven Rd. — 23 Deerhaven Road LLC to Tomer Shani and Sami Zeitoun for $2,475,000 (May 16)

221 Tower Rd. — Robert Lupo to Elizabeth Rupo and Colin  Hand for $1,050,000 (May 16)

39 Sandy Pond Rd. — Marcus Gleysteen to Tine and Steven Baert for $3,500,000 (May 1)

Category: land use Leave a Comment

Selects vote not to endorse FinCom appointment proposal

June 17, 2025

The Select Board voted not to endorse a move to change how Finance Committee members are appointed, saying the method proposed in a citizens’ petition would constitute a possible conflict of interest.

More than 130 residents signed the petition calling for a vote at the upcoming Special Town Meeting to have FinCom members appointed by the Select Board rather than the Town Moderator. Bob Domnitz, representing the signatories at the board’s June 16 meeting, said “there’s very little connection between residents and their priorities and the people on FinCom.” 

When openings arise on the committee, they are not advertised, nor are candidates publicly interviewed, Domnitz said. Also, as an individual, the Town Moderator’s deliberations are not subject to the open meeting law. Further, the doings of the FinCom itself are often obscure because that body does not hold hybrid meetings that residents can view from home, he said.

“There’s very little engagement with the FinCom,” Domnitz said, though he added, “that’s on us as residents” and acknowledged that the town routinely follows the committee’s budget advice.

But his allegations provoked a sharp response from board member Jim Hutchinson. “If residents have problems with the budget, they need to come to FinCom meetings or at least the annual budget hearing,” he said. “You can’t say they’re disconnected from residents — that’s not fair. I bristle and object to the notion that they’re disconnected.” 

He and the other two board members agreed that the biggest issue with the proposal is that, under the petition’s proposal, the Select Board would be in charge of naming the people who would then have the power to approve or disapprove the town budget submitted by the board. 

“I struggle with this idea that we could be perceived as having a conflict of interest for determining their budgets,” board chair Jennifer Glass said. 

“I do find our arms-length relationship with the Finance Committee is helpful,” said board member Kim Bodnar, who then asked Domnitz if the petitioners had given any thought to improving FinCom transparency without changing the town bylaw.

“What’s the problem we’re trying to solve? I feel like we’re in good financial shape as a town,” Glass said. 

The problem, Domnitz replied, is that what the FinCom recommends is “so weakly linked to what residents want [that] it feels not really democratic.”

In what may or may not be a coincidence, some of the first people to sign the citizens’ petition are among those who have also been outspoken on LincolnTalk in opposition to spending more money on the community center, or in opposition to the Nature Link project.

“We begged for an open process [of FinCom appointments] but it was flat-out denied,” said Karla Gravis. “It feels like a little clique is choosing each other for this committee.”

Sarah Postlethwait went even further, accusing Town Moderator Sarah Cannon Holden of “gaslighting” about requests to offer input that were “completely ignored.” She emphasized that she was not attacking FinCom members per se but rather the “closed-door process” by which people are named to “what is now basically a self-appointed committee” because “the current moderator has almost entirely given up the role” of recruiting and vetting candidates.

Domnitz also implied that there isn’t sufficient “liberal vs. conservative” diversity on the FinCom, but the board and Holden pushed back, saying there has always been an effort to recruit FinCom candidates with a diversity of views.

“I’ve always felt like every FinCom I’ve been in front of has had a variety of viewpoints and different takes on approaches to finances and asked really probing and difficult questions, as they should,” said Glass, who has also served on the School Committee and the Property Tax Study Committee.

Holden said that in fact, one person she tried to recruit for the FinCom was explicitly against one of the recent town-endorsed proposals, but they said no. This points to a bigger issue, which is that regardless of who appoints FinCom members, it’s hard to find qualified people who are willing to serve, she and board members noted. 

“There are some very valid suggestions for how things could be done differently,” such as publicly announcing FinCom vacancies and having public interviews of candidates, Holden said. 

When discussing what formal stance the board should take on the issue, Hutchinson said he was not in favor of the proposed change, though “there may be some process pieces that could be worked on and improved.” The other Selects agreed, voting not to endorse and saying they would issue a formal statement as to their reasons immediately before the Special Town Meeting on June 25. 

Also on June 16, the Select Board voted unanimously to support Article 1 — the transfer of money from the stabilization fund to the community center building project to close the gap that appeared when bids came in $2.3 million over budget.

Category: government 2 Comments

Correction

June 17, 2025

The June 16 article headlined “Planning Board is latest to endorse Nature Link project” incorrectly stated that Joseph Kolchinsky is a non-abutter to the Farrington Memorial land that’s part of the proposed Nature Link project. His property at 83 Page Road does in fact abut both the Farrington property and that of the Paul Panetta Trust. The articlE has been updated.

Category: Uncategorized Leave a Comment

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