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Letter to the editor: thanks from Chris Reilly

November 24, 2015

letter

To the editor:

After spending the last five years as Lincoln’s Director of Planning and Land Use Permitting, I recently took a parallel position in a nearby community. Leaving Lincoln after five years was not something I anticipated considering when I took the job, but I feel I certainly made the best effort I could as I bring with me many positive memories of the considerable time, energy and spirit spent trying to serve Lincoln’s true, interests. To that end, I would like to thank those who supported my position and made the experience worthwhile.

[Read more…] about Letter to the editor: thanks from Chris Reilly

Category: government, letters to the editor

News acorns

November 23, 2015

gobbleGobble Wobble is on for Thanksgiving

Join your neighbors on Thanksgiving morning for the annual Thanksgiving Gobble Wobble, a family fun run/walk for all ages. No timing and no bibs—just a very casual way to burn some calories, hang with friends and neighbors, and do some good for people. There are two routes of approximately 2.5 miles and 3.5 miles. The entry fee is a bag of nonperishable groceries per runner/walker, which will be donated to Open Table in Concord. Please, no turkeys—they cannot be donated.

Organizer Jen Flanagan will be at the Donelan’s/Whistle Stop parking lot at 8 a.m. to start collecting groceries, and the Gobble Wobble will start at 8:30. We’ll start the Wobble at 8:30. Please note that roads will not be closed for this event, so younger kids must be accompanied by a parent or older sibling. Email jen@flanagans.us if you have questions.

Boy Scout Christmas tree sale starts Saturday

Lincoln Boy Scout Troop 127 is selling trees, wreaths, and garland at the corner of Codman and Lincoln Roads starting Saturday, Nov. 28. Hours of operation are 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on weekends and on select weeknights from 5-7 p.m. Look for the lot lights to be on! Sales benefit Lincoln Boy Scout troop activities, and additional funds are donated to local charities.

See “The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe” performed

The Hampstead Stage Company presents The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, a stage adaptation of the beloved children’s book, on Wednesday, Dec. 2 at 4 p.m. at the Lincoln Public Library. Step with us through the door of an old wardrobe and enter a snowy world laced with fantasy and wonder. For all ages. No registration necessary.

Mike Tannert

Mike Tannert

Tannert to speak on memoir of the Alps

The Lincoln Public Library and the Lincoln Council on Aging are pleased to present Lincoln resident Mike Tannert discussing his new memoir, For the Love of Mountains, on Sunday, Dec. 13 from 2-3 p.m. in the library’s Tarbell Room. Tannert will sign copies of his memoir recalling his love of the Alps and the life lessons he learned while climbing.

 

Category: arts

Petition aims to sway MBTA over commuter rail schedule

November 22, 2015

MBTA copyLincoln residents who are unhappy with the planned elimination of rush-hour train stops in Lincoln are circulating an online petition to try to avert the schedule change.

[Read more…] about Petition aims to sway MBTA over commuter rail schedule

Category: news

Minuteman school project in a political and financial tangle

November 22, 2015

mm1By Alice Waugh

Although the topic of school building projects in Lincoln has focused on the K-8 Lincoln School in recent years, Minuteman High School is moving ahead with plans to construct a new building of its own on town land—a project that may cost towns more than they thought and is now tangled in a political web.

[Read more…] about Minuteman school project in a political and financial tangle

Category: Minuteman HS project*, news

Residents unhappy with new commuter rail schedule

November 20, 2015

MBTA copyBy Alice Waugh

A number of Lincoln residents have lodged complaints about MBTA’s plan to about eliminate rush-hour express commuter rail stops in Lincoln starting next month, but MBTA spokesman Joe Pesaturo says the new schedule will go into effect as planned.

[Read more…] about Residents unhappy with new commuter rail schedule

Category: news

Consultant presents ideas for campus configuration

November 17, 2015

By Alice Waugh

A Campus Master Planning Committee consultant offered some scenarios for configuring the school campus while affirming that there are no septic or regulatory issues that would prevent putting a community center on the Hartwell side.

Speaking at the November 14 State of the Town Meeting, Greg Smolley of LLB Architects also repeated what he said at an October 17 public forum—that a second Lincoln Road entrance to the campus east of Ballfield Road to accommodate a community center is not needed or advisable.

[Read more…] about Consultant presents ideas for campus configuration

Category: community center*, government, schools

News acorns

November 16, 2015

acornTwo sessions on what to do when a family member dies

The first days after a family member dies can be heart-breaking, but knowing what you need to do can help ease the stress. Residents of all ages are invited to come to Bemis Hall on Friday, Nov. 20 at 1 p.m. or the Town Office Building’s Donaldson Room at 7 p.m. to hear elder law attorney and Lincoln resident Sasha Golden and Town Clerk Susan Brooks give information and advice about what needs to be done and how to do it when someone passes away.  Find out what you need to do about notifying Social Security, pension providers and financial institutions; finding an attorney and taking care of probate, estate administration and taxes; the dos and don’ts of transferring money and assets; letting the town know and arranging for burial, and more. Bring your questions and concerns.

Give thanks for nature at Drumlin Farm

On the day after Thanksgiving, join Massachusetts artists at Drumlin Farm for “Giving Thanks for Nature and Our Senses,” a family outdoor art experience on Friday, Nov. 27 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Welcome back your senses on a nature walk with interactive artist demonstrations, and take a moment to share your own expression of thanks­—be it visual, musical, or simply an internal sense of gratitude. Cohosted by Mass Audubon and Musketaquid Arts & Environment. Highlights include:

  • The Grey Whisker Pickers
  • Wildlife sketching with Musketaquid artists
  • Natural sculpture by William Turville
  • Installations and demonstrations by Geoff Nelson, Yvette Monstad, Steve Cohen, and Reno Baci
  • Storytelling with Ron McAdow
  • Sudbury Seniors Center
LEAP to host musical fundraiser

The Lincoln Extended-day Activities Program (LEAP) will host an evening of a capella singing on Friday, Dec. 11 from 7-10 p.m. in Bemis Hall to benefit LEAP and the Recreation Department. Featured performers will include Redline Boston, Harvard University’s Voice Lab and more. There will also be a cash bar and silent auction. Tickets are $25 in advance and $30 at the door, and can be purchased at the LEAP or Recreation Department offices in the Hartwell pods.

Support families in shelter from domestic violence this holiday season

mangotreeOn Sunday, Dec. 6 from 1-5 p.m., Mango Tree Artisans at 410 Boston Post Road in Sudbury will host a special shopping event to benefit the Sudbury-Wayland-Lincoln Domestic Violence Roundtable. Enjoy light refreshments while you shop, and mention the Roundtable to have a portion of your purchase donated to the organization.

Each year, the Roundtable sponsors a family from one of three local agencies for the holidays. Those agencies need help to provide happy holidays for families in shelter and to meet the ongoing needs of additional families who have been victims of domestic violence.

You’re also invited to sponsor a family by making a donation to one of these agencies. Sponsored families are anonymous, though the agency will share the number of family members and their ages. Match yourself with a smaller family to sponsor, or invite relatives, friends, and colleagues to join you in sponsoring a larger family. For those who can’t sponsor a family, gift cards for food, clothing and other necessities to stores such as Marshall’s, TJ Maxx, CVS, Target, and Stop & Shop are welcome. Wrapping paper, ribbon and tape are also needed.

To learn more about how you can help, contact:

  • REACH Beyond Domestic Violence (Waltham) — Deborah Heimel, 781-891-0724 ext. 108, deb@reachma.org
  • The Second Step (Newtonville) — Cindy Laughrea, 617-467-5334, claughrea@thesecondstep.org.
  • Voices Against Violence (Framingham) — Simone Williams, 508-820-0834 ext. 2114, swilliams@smoc.org

Category: arts, charity/volunteer, nature

Outdoor lighting less contentious this time around

November 16, 2015

Olson showed this illustration of acceptable and unacceptable outdoor light fixture designs under the proposed regulations.

Olson showed this illustration of acceptable and unacceptable outdoor light fixture designs (new or replacement) under the proposed regulations (click to enlarge).

By Alice Waugh

In contrast to the mood at Town Meeting discussion last spring, residents at the State of the Town meeting were mostly supportive of a proposal to have new residential outdoor lighting meet certain “dark skies” requirements, with a few tweaks.

Voters rejected proposed zoning amendments in March that would have required permanent outdoor lighting fixtures to be shielded so as not to direct light above the horizontal, and imposed limits on their brightness and color temperature. At Saturday’s State of the Town meeting, Planning Board member Margaret Olson explained the reasoning behind those proposed rules and why they should not be difficult to follow.

When used at night, lights that are on the bluer end of the color spectrum (including computer screens) can disrupt the circadian rhythms of mammals because they are too much like sunlight, Olson said. Excessively bright lights are bad because “as you move from a well-lit to a dark space, the greater the contrast and the harder it is to adjust, and it gets worse as you get older,” she said. The solution is to have a larger number of less powerful lights in a warmer color spectrum, so the Planning Board is seeking limits of 3,000 degrees K. for color temperature and 900 lumens for brightness.

Another advantage of changing the zoning regulations is that it would make the site plan review process simpler and fairer, because the Planning Board would no longer have to examine and debate the lighting in each individual applicant’s plan, Olson said.

If approved, the new rules would apply only to new permanent outdoor lighting fixtures; existing light fixtures would be grandfathered, she emphasized. However, when replacing light bulbs, she encouraged homeowners to voluntarily buy bulbs with a color temperature that meets the new guidelines.

The board’s goals with the proposed rules, which will come before voters at Town Meeting again (though perhaps not in this exact form) in March, are fourfold:

  • to protect the night sky by shining light only downward where it is needed, rather than skyward
  • to protect wildlife by phasing out lights that mimic daylight
  • having rules that are simple and easy for homeowners to understand
  • being practical by encouraging residents to use lighting fixtures that are readily available and affordable while also being in compliance

Some residents, while generally supportive of the the proposed lighting restrictions, noted that the new rules would mean homeowners would need to install a large number of fixtures to compensate for the diminished brightness of each, compared to lights commonly in use now.

“A 60-watt bulb [the equivalent of 900 lumens] is not a lot. Driveway lights are about 250 watts, so you would need 10 to 20 fixtures,” said Steven Kanner, a member of the Board of Health. He suggested that the Planning Board create a mockup to give homeowners an idea of how an outdoor lighting plan should be designed to offer enough light while also complying with the rules.

Outdoor lighting fixtures come with a label like this to help homeowners see the brightness and color temperature when purchasing.

Outdoor light bulbs come with a label like this to help homeowners see the brightness and color temperature when shopping (click to enlarge).

Kanner also suggested changing the color temperature limit to 3,300 degrees K. and Olson was receptive, acknowledging that the 3,000 degree figure was arbitrary and that “perhaps that level of simplicity is unnecessary.”

Buzz Constable asked that the amended zoning regulations should allow the Zoning Board of Appeals to grant exceptions, which would allow some flexibility to accommodate new lighting technology and research in the future. “We don’t want to come back and argue about color every three years,” he said.

“I can assure you that the lighting being proposed is fully adequate,” said resident Frank Clark, an astrophysicist. “We’ve become accustomed to bright lights, most of which are going up into the sky and doing nothing.”

Olson urged residents to attend Planning Board hearings this winter to learn more about these and other proposed zoning amendments and offer their input before Town Meeting.

Category: conservation, government

Correction

November 16, 2015

correction-smThe Lincoln Squirrel article on the November 14 Special Town Meeting incorrectly stated the date for the town election in 2016. It will be on March 28, not March 21. Residents voted to alter the date of the Annual Town Meeting, but the date for the election is specified in the Lincoln-Sudbury school district regional agreement. Changing the election would require reopening that agreement and subsequent Town Meeting approval from both towns. The article has been updated to reflect this correction and clarification.

 

 

Category: government

Differing opinions on marijuana dispensary in Lincoln

November 15, 2015

cannabisBy Alice Waugh

Pot or not? That was one of the questions on the State of the Town Meeting agenda after a company inquired about opening a medical marijuana dispensary in Lincoln, and the opinions were far from unanimous.

[Read more…] about Differing opinions on marijuana dispensary in Lincoln

Category: government

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