Mary Alice Boyce, 93 (January 17) — worked in Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson administrations; St. Joseph’s communicant
James Jhun (January 17) — 2012 alumnus of Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School
Mary Alice Boyce, 93 (January 17) — worked in Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson administrations; St. Joseph’s communicant
James Jhun (January 17) — 2012 alumnus of Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School
Residents are invited to learn about gun safety and a pending Lincoln Town Meeting resolution advocating a national gun safety law on Saturday, Jan. 23 starting with a reception at 9:30 a.m. in Bemis Hall.
Lincoln Police Chief Kevin Kennedy and Sgt. Paul Westlund will speak at 10 a.m. about gun law differences in neighboring states and how they impact Massachusetts residents. They will also discuss safe practices for handling guns in homes, particularly where children are present.
At 11 a.m., there will be a discussion of a draft Town Meeting resolution on “A Petition to the U.S. Congress to Adopt a Uniform National Gun Safety Law Applying Equally to All States.”
Light refreshments will be provided. The event is sponsored by the Lincoln Democratic Town Committee. For more information, email garyddavis04@gmail.com.
The newly installed solar array in Far Meadow.
A “solar farm” is nearing completion at Far Meadow on property owned by Lincoln Woods, and if the good weather holds, it should be producing non-polluting electricity by the end of February.
Four hundred solar panels have been installed and the electrical connections are currently being made. You can see the installation by walking out the dirt road parallel to the railroad tracks from the commuter parking lot. Once it’s on line, the project is expected produce 112 kW of electricity. The average Massachusetts home used about 615 kWh of electricity per month in 2014, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
Additional collectors are being installed on the flat-roofed Lincoln Woods units themselves. Their completion will depend on other work being done to bring Lincoln Woods in compliance with state refunding requirements.
The Far Meadow site is a relatively small installation and is expected to have minimal impact on the conservation land and meadow habitat which it abuts, according to Conservation Commission co-chair Peter von Mertens.
The town is looking into the idea of creating a larger solar site atop the old landfill tat could produce somewhere from 650 kW to 980 kW of electricity. Lincoln’s Green Energy Technology Committee presented information on this at the State of the Town meeting in November 2015.
Editor’s note: this letter is in response to a letter published on January 12.
To the editor:
Michael Coppock’s questions and complaints about the Leaf Blower Study Group’s activities answer themselves, by and large. He notes the cost of the flyers mentioned in his letter (January 12, 2016) came from the Selectmen’s printing budget. Simply put, this expenditure, authorized by elected officials and/or persons appointed by them, reflected the interest of the town’s governing bodies in a subject that addresses both quality of life and health issues affecting Lincoln residents. The extent to which leaf-blower emissions and noise are seen as a public health problem is reflected by the existence of hundreds of local laws, ordinances and regulations regarding use of these machines in counties, cities, towns, and villages across the land and around the world. To be sure, these measures have proved difficult to enforce, for a number of reasons—but that does not diminish the public’s interest or the nature of the problem or the Board of Health’s responsibility to address it.
[Read more…] about Letter to the editor: rebuttals on leaf blower issue
Lincoln’s Winter Carnival from January 28-31, 2016 features two original performances, snowshoe outings, skating, a celebration of Lincoln authors, and the traditional coffee house and snow sculpture contest. [Read more…] about Get ready for Winter Carnival
The Lincoln Squirrel story about Mary’s Way incorrectly described where the new road is located. It runs along the south side of Route 2 from Crosby’s Corner to Deerhaven Road, not Brooks Road to Rockwood Lane. The accompanying map also reversed the labels for Horses Crossing and Emerson Road. The article and map have been updated to reflect these corrections.
Editor’s note: This article and map were updated on January 18, 2016 to reflect corrections.
By Alice Waugh
The fourth and last of the new roads adjacent to Route 2 has been officially named, but not everyone is happy with the choice.
Mary’s Way, formerly known as Service Road 4, is on south side of Route 2 starting near Crosby’s Corner and ending at Deerhaven Lane. Normally, when a new road is built, it’s part of a subdivision and the builder gets to name it, but in this case the task fell to the Board of Selectmen, who approached the road’s residents to ask for their input.
“Consensus quickly emerged in case of other roadways, but unfortunately in the case of Service Road 4, there was some divided thinking,” Town Administrator Tim Higgins noted at the board’s December 21 meeting.
Several area residents had suggested the name “Mary’s Way” as a nod to several women named Mary who have lived in the area. Selectmen voted to adopt the name on October 5 and it became official on January 1.
But David Segal of 39 Cambridge Turnpike, one of the residents whose mailing address has changed to Mary’s Way, took issue with the process at the board’s December meeting.
“There was a list circulated by Tim, and the next thing I know, it’s already been decided,” Segal said. “We submitted names but were not consulted. Let’s not whitewash it. I think the whole process was wrong and we should rethink it. Why does it have to be personalized on my mail every day? Why do I have to live by Mary’s way or Mary’s rule? I just think it’s kind of ridiculous.”
Segal added that when he polled 31 residents on Deerhaven Road, Partridge Lane, Old Cambridge Turnpike, and Horseshoe Lane, 27 said they preferred Great Meadow Road and only four preferred Mary’s Way.
Kathy O’Brien of 27 Cambridge Turnpike was one of several residents who attended the December meeting, one of whom held a sign saying “Let Mary’s Way Be.” O’Brien’s father and month, Mary O’Brien, bought her house 45 years ago; next door was Mary Morrissey, and nearby were other Marys, including Mary Ledger and Girl Scout leader Mary Herman.
“It’s a tribute to the ladies of the neighborhood who moved out here and left the city,” O’Brien said.
Razia Shaikh of 33 Cambridge Turnpike said she and her family also preferred Mary’s Way but suggested a compromise of Marigold Way, noting that it incorporated the sound of Mary. “As second-generation Americans, we also would like some of our own culture, and marigolds are very important in Bengali culture,” she said.
Selectman Noah Eckhouse said the board picked the name because they liked it and was under no obligation to hold any sort of vote on the matter.
“We bent over backwards, got suggestions, debated them in a public forum, and delayed the discussion again. None of you attended any of this, and now three months after the fact, you’re not only questioning the outcome but you’re really casting some ugly sideways glances at the process, and I take offense at that,” Eckhouse said. “I’m kind of done with this topic. If we crack this thing back open, it’s just going to get worse.”
“I feel bad that not everyone is pleased with outcome, but there are many, many situations where we can’t please everyone, and we have to move on,” Selectman Renel Fredriksen said.
St. Anne’s in-the-Fields is hosting a Death Café on Sunday, Jan. 31 (rescheduled from October 2015) from 2:30-4:30 p.m. Death Café is an international movement started in Europe dedicated to taking death out of the closet and discussing it publicly. At a Death Café, people come together to eat cake, drink tea, and discuss death in a relaxed and non-threatening setting. The Café is where people share respectful, thought-provoking and life-affirming conversation. There are no agendas or objectives. It is not a bereavement or grief support group, nor is it a counseling session; it is simply conversation.
St. Anne’s held its first Death Cafe in 2014 (see the Lincoln Squirrel, Oct. 8, 2014). The Jan. 31 event is free, but space is limited and preregistration is required. Register online or call 781-259-8834.
HATS (Hanscom Area Town Selectmen) will meet on Thursday, Jan. 28 at 7:30 p.m. in the Town Office Building. Agenda items include a presentation by Minute Man National Historical Park Superintendent Nancy Nelson on the park’s upcoming centennial celebration, and updates on the Route 2 and Crosby’s Corner highway projects.
The Lincoln Police Department will be holding a public auction of unclaimed bicycles on Thursday, Feb. 4 at 6 p.m. at their headquarters. Any bicycles not auctioned will be donated to a children’s charity.
Editor’s note: Antia is Lincoln’s representative on the Minuteman School Committee.
To the editor:
On February 23, Lincoln will be holding a Special Town Meeting and we will be asked to take two votes. We will be asked to vote on amendments to the Minuteman High School district regional agreement, and we will also be asked to vote on whether we want to remain in the district. This is the second in a series of letters from me about Minuteman, the first of which was published on January 4.
[Read more…] about Letter to the editor: Minuteman building needs are driving debate
Editor’s note: See the Lincoln Squirrel posts from Dec. 23, 2015 and Jan. 4, 2016 for more information about the Minuteman regional agreement and the Vocational Education Options Working Group.
To the editor:
The Board of Selectmen urges the town to follow the work of its recently formed Vocational Education Options Working Group (VEOWG). The VEOWG was formed in response to a vote by the School Committee of the Minuteman Regional High School to approve certain amendments to the regional agreement that include the opportunity for seven specific member-towns, including Lincoln, to withdraw from the district unilaterally by a Town Meeting vote taken on or before March 1, 2016. The Lincoln Board of Selectmen has called a Special Town Meeting to be held on February 23, 2016 to consider whether to withdraw, as well as whether to accept the amendments.
The VEOWG is being formed to assist the town in determining whether its interests are best served by: (1) remaining a member of the Minuteman Regional High School district and enabling Lincoln students to attend Minuteman at Lincoln’s expense based on assessment under the regional agreement; or (2) withdrawing from the district and making arrangements to enable Lincoln students to enroll at Minuteman or another vocational high school at Lincoln’s expense on a non-member, tuition-paying basis.
The VEOWG shall prepare a report that describes the advantages of the various options. The report should include an analysis of the relevant educational, financial, practical, and legal considerations. The VEOWG shall conduct interviews and site visits and access data and resources as it deems appropriate.
We invite interested residents to attend the meetings of the Working Group, and/or to follow its activities via the Town’s web site. A dedicated VEOWG web page has been established where meeting agendas and minutes, key background materials and, eventually, the Working Group’s report will be posted.
Please join us for the February 23 Special Town Meeting at 7 p.m. in the Brooks Auditorium to help us make the best decision for the town.
Sincerely,
Lincoln Board of Selectmen:
Noah Eckhouse, Chairman
Peter Braun
Renel Fredriksen
Letters to the editor must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Letters must be about a Lincoln-specific topic, 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.