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Community center group sees final sketches

March 14, 2024

(Editor’s note: this article was corrected on March 15 to correct the estimated construction start and completion dates.)

ICON Architects previewed its Town Meeting presentation on March 13 to the the Community Center Building Committee. Residents will vote on whether t0 approve spending $24 million for its construction at Town Meeting on March 23, where a two-thirds majority is required for passage, and again at the ballot box on March 25, which requires only a simple majority.

If voters approve, construction could begin in mid-2025 and be completed by fall 2026, ICON’s Mark McKevitz said.

Click on an image below for a larger version and arrows to advance and go back.

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Category: community center*

Police log for March 4 – 11, 2024

March 13, 2024

March 4

Wells Road (9:19 a.m.) — A caller reported seeing a sick raccoon near their home. Police responded, determined the animal was sick, and put the animal down. The Animal Control Officer was notified.

Lincoln Road (9:53 a.m.) — A caller reported hearing what they believed to be a gunshot. The gunshot came from the officer who had to put the raccoon down.

Weston Road (10:17 a.m.) — Animal Control was contacted after loose Great Dane was reported on the trails adjacent to Weston Road.

Lincoln Road (2:27 p.m.) — Individuals came to the station requesting assistance with a crash report.

Wells Road (4:34 p.m.) — A caller requested assistance from Animal Control regarding several cats and their future living situation.

March 5

Wells Road (11:08 a.m.) — A bench warrant was issued from Concord District Court for Nicole Mahoney, 49, of Lincoln. She was transported to Concord District Court.

Wells Road (12:58 p.m.) — An officer assisted a resident with a courtesy transport.

Lincoln Road (1:26 p.m.) — A two-vehicle crash occurred when a vehicle exiting Doherty’s struck a vehicle traveling north on Lincoln Road. There were no injuries.

Lincoln Road (1:45 p.m.) — Police and fire units responded to a one-vehicle crash on Lincoln Road. The operator struck a tree and was subsequently transported to Emerson Hospital. An investigation is ongoing.

Stonehedge Road (3:42 p.m.) — An individual filed a police report relating a possible fraud scheme.

Wells Road (6:07 p.m.) — A caller requested a well-being check on a relative. Police made contact with the individual.

March 6

Minuteman Technical High School (6:36 a.m.) — An individual reported an incident involving the high school.

Lincoln Road (12:44 p.m.) — Police responded to the commuter lot for a parking complaint.

South Great Road (6:24 p.m.) — Police were called to the railroad crossing at Route 117 for a vehicle disabled on the tracks. The vehicle was removed, the MBTA was notified, and the operator was transported from the scene.

Wells Road (8:50 p.m.) — A caller reported a vehicle parked and unoccupied but not in a parking spot. Police responded and checked the area but the vehicle was gone on arrival.

Old County Road (9:31 p.m.) —Police responded to a crash on Old County Road in the area of Route 2. The crash actually occurred in the town of Lexington; Massachusetts State Police handled the crash.

March 7

North Great Road (1:50 a.m.) — Police responded to Route 2A near Minuteman Technical high School for a single-vehicle crash. There was minimal damage to the vehicle and it was driven from the scene.

Wells Road (2:31 a.m.) — A caller requested assistance with their internet connection. The caller was advised to contact their service provider.

Lincoln Road (12:49 p.m.) — A parking ticket was issued to an illegally parked vehicle in the commuter lot.

Tower Road (7:07 p.m.) — Police performed a well-being check on an individual at a residence.

March 8

Old Sudbury Road (3:43 p.m.) — Dig Safe called to ask the Water Department to mark a service line for a gas main repair.

Cambridge Turnpike westbound (4:50 p.m.) — Massachusetts State Police responded to a single-vehicle crash. There were no injuries reported and the vehicle was towed from the scene.

Todd Pond Road (8:23 p.m.) — A caller asked the Water Department to check a leaking water main.

March 9

Old Sudbury Road (7:50 a.m.) — A caller reported the railroad gates on Route 117 were stuck in the down position. Keolis was notified. A short time later, the gates appeared to be operating in a normal fashion. The gates on Old Sudbury Road then appeared to be malfunctioning.

March 10

Trapelo Road (2:20 p.m.) — An officer spoke to an officer regarding a past incident.

Trapelo Road (4:18 p.m.) — A two-vehicle crash was reported on Trapelo Road at Winter Street when a vehicle traveling at a high rate of speed struck the rear of another vehicle. One occupant was transported to Emerson Hospital. A citation was issued to the operator of the first vehicle. Both vehicles were towed from the scene.

March 11

Cambridge Turnpike (3:01 a.m.) — An officer conducted a check of the cell tower site. A door appeared to be open but upon further inspection, it was secure.

Lincoln Road (6:37 a.m.) — A minor two-vehicle crash occurred when a vehicle failed to yield to South Great Road traffic and struck another vehicle. There were no injuries reported.

Lincoln Woods (11:20 a.m.0 — A caller observed a blue truck dumping what appeared to be a mattress by the railroad tracks. An officer checked the area but did not locate the vehicle.

Wells Road (5:32 p.m.) — An officer served paperwork from the Registry of Motor Vehicles.

Wells Road (8:33 p.m.) — An attempt to serve Registry of Motor Vehicles paperwork was unsuccessful.

Category: police

Q&A on Town Meeting and election

March 13, 2024

The Town Clerk’s office has supplied answers to questions they are commonly receiving about the upcoming Annual Town Meeting and town election. See below for accessibility information. Click here for all materials relating to the Town Meeting and click here for election information (sample ballot here).

Q:  I want to vote on the Housing Choice Act (HCA) zoning.

A:  The HCA zoning will be voted on at the Annual Town Meeting (ATM) on Saturday, March 23.  The HCA zoning is not part of the election on Monday, March 25; the issue will be decided solely by the voters who attend the ATM. To cast your vote, you MUST be present at the ATM on Saturday, March 23. The meeting starts at 9:30 a.m. The HCA warrant article is #3 on the ATM agenda.

Q:  I want to vote on the community center.

A:  The community center vote will be a two-part process.

  • Part One: the community center will be voted on at the Annual Town Meeting on Saturday, March 23. A two-thirds majority is required for approval. The community center warrant article is #4 on the ATM agenda.
  • Part Two: a ballot question at the annual town election on Monday, March 25. A simple majority is required for approval.
Q:  I want to vote for my preferred candidates running in the Lincoln town election.

A:  There are several ways to vote:

  • You can vote early in person — early voting in person will begin on Saturday, March 16 from 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. at Town Hall and continue from Monday, March 18 through Thursday, March 21 (also 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. at Town Hall).
  • You can vote by mail — If you have requested a vote-by-mail ballot, you can return it to the drop box behind Town Hall, bring it to the Town Clerk’s office, or mail it back in the envelope provided. Ballots must be returned by 8 p.m. on Monday, March 25 (Election Day).
  • You can vote on Election Day on Monday, March 25.  Polls are open from 7:30 a.m. – 8 p.m. at the Reed Gym on Ballfield Road.

Please call the Town Clerk’s office at 781-259-2507 if you have any questions.

Accessibility for Town Meeting

The Council on Aging & Human Services have some more information regarding accessibility accommodations for Annual Town Meeting for those with mobility impairments and for seniors who do not drive.

First, Public Safety is reserving the spaces adjacent to the build for those of any age who have difficulty walking long distances. Residents in need of a parking accommodation should simply approach Public Safety when arriving and they will guide the residents to a spot.

Second, the COA&HS is providing residents aged 60+ who do not drive with transportation to and from Annual Town Meeting again this year. Capacity for this Town Meeting transportation is limited and available on a first-come, first-served basis. 

Category: government

My Turn: Jennifer Glass for Select Board

March 13, 2024

By Jonathan Dwyer

Many times, I have witnessed Jennifer’s wisdom, skill, and thoughtfulness from the upper rows of the Harriett Todd Lecture Hall in Donaldson Auditorium, from the seat beside her at our board meetings, in the parlor room at Bemis Hall, and on the grass at Pierce Park. She is everywhere in town, and wherever she goes, she is taking care of business and bringing people together. 

I remember in 2012 when Jennifer was chair of the School Committee, she pursued the most fiscally responsible decision the town could make: a $49 million school project that would only cost the town $29 million after state funding. Her knack for designing inclusive processes that promote community input showed in the many forums and charettes ahead of the town vote for the project. That vote failed, but Jennifer immediately invested effort, resourcefulness, and persistence into restarting the process.

Incredibly dedicated, she volunteered for School Building Committee #2, that resulted in the recently finished school project. I remember watching Jennifer and her committee colleagues, over many cycles and numerous hours, debate options for reducing inflation-driven cost projections back in line with budget. 

Concurrently with SBC #2, she was on the Select Board where she led the town’s Property Tax Study Committee. Anticipating that school building costs might exceed the financial means of some residents, this committee researched ways to provide relief. The committee’s proposal was approved at Town Meeting and submitted to the state for approval. 

When the Water Commission needed a temporary member, she volunteered to serve as a commissioner and assist the commission in identifying financially responsible options for implementing essential upgrades to the filtration system, as required by regulators.

Jennifer wants you to be informed and works hard at it. She has been instrumental in connecting Select Board members to residents, with meetings in locations beyond Town Hall. There have been regular Ask a Select Board Member drop-ins at Bemis Hall, Lincoln Woods, Battle Road Farm, PTO meetings, Parks & Recreation concerts, and summer camp drop-off time. She is the editor-in-chief of the Select Board Newsletter you receive in the mail.

We saw her at Pierce Park commemorating Memorial Day, July 4th, Black Lives Matter, Pride Progress, and standing behind a table providing information on Lincoln’s committees.

In so many ways, she visibly demonstrates how much she cares about Lincoln, its schools, municipal services, infrastructure, and people. She has a long history of pursuing inclusive processes and long-term value for our tax dollars.

Jennifer cares about you, and our town. I respectfully ask that you join me in voting her back onto the Select Board on March 25.

Dwyer served two terms on the Select Board from 2017–2023.


“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: elections, My Turn, news

Over 200 residents urge town to vote yes on HCA article

March 12, 2024

Dear Lincoln friends and neighbors:

What vision of Lincoln do we share? Over the past several decades, our town has voted consistently for projects that preserve open space, increase access to housing, and protect our broader environment. With Lincoln Woods and the Ryan Estates, we have welcomed new residents in the village center giving them easy access to shopping, the train, our trails, and the schools.

The proposed zoning changes under the MBTA Communities Housing Choice Act (HCA) that we will vote on at Town Meeting invite us to continue sharing that spirit and vision of Lincoln. Can we trust our talented and proven leaders to balance concerns about the proposed level of development with the values we have consistently expressed? 

We, the undersigned, are confident that we can and that we will benefit by doing so, just as we have for decades. We ask that you join us in voting “yes” for the amendments to our zoning bylaws designed to implement Option C when we gather at Town Meeting on Saturday, March 23.

Briefly, here’s our reasoning:

  • Residents have voiced strong support for rezoning near transit – twice: Large majorities both in September (76.4% for Option C at the State of the Town Meeting) and in December 2023 (55% for C; 6.9% for various D options at the Special Town meeting) to concentrate re-zoning at the mall and village center. These decisions were an affirmation that transit-oriented development makes environmental and climate sense and that it is most likely to contribute to housing and a more vibrant and sustainable commercial center at the mall. They also reflect the goals of the town’s 2009 Comprehensive Plan.
  • The RLF-owned mall should remain in the HCA zoning plan. HCA-compliant rezoning will help the RLF to reinvest in the mall both to support our commercial center and contribute to transit-oriented housing for the town and the region. “By right” development makes any RLF mall reinvestment project less risky and therefore more attractive to investors.
  • Lincoln’s proposed bylaws and design guidelines provide stringent controls on “by right” zoning. The Planning Board has listened to and incorporated many comments provided by opponents and supporters of this bylaw. Margaret Olson, chair of the Planning Board, has stated that the board has taken a conservative approach to the bylaws to address concerns about their impact, while still honoring the larger democratic preference for options that are more likely to create additional housing under the HCA.
  • The proposal is ready for voting. Since the law was passed in 2021, an extraordinarily qualified group of Lincoln volunteers and staff have studied, invited active engagement, and listened carefully to comments from the community to bring us a sound proposal that not only complies with the HCA but also respects the values of the town. Community input has led to significant tightening of the bylaws, for example, by reducing the density of housing in the village center, and by imposing more stringent height restrictions and setback requirements.

Some Lincoln residents are asking us to vote down the proposed bylaws with the hope that some alternative, yet-to-be-articulated, consensus plan can be hammered out in the few short months before the looming HCA deadline. Our concern is that we already know what the alternatives are. These options disperse rezoning to parcels in town (Lincoln North, Battle Road Farm) that are likely to result in less housing and could take the RLF mall out of the HCA further restricting housing in that area and delaying revitalization of the mall.

The HCA will bring change. We have an opportunity to respond to these changes with generosity, creativity, and confidence as we have for decades.

Signed,

Abigail Adams
Dea Angiolillo
Chris Andrysiak
Sarah Andrysiak
Gina Arons
Ken Bassett
Emily Beekman
Alex Benik
Merrill Berkery
Laura Berland
Becky Bermont
Sarah Bishop
Rebecca Blanchfield
Paul Blanchfield
Pam Boardman
John Bordiuk
Rory Bordiuk
Janet Boynton
Stephen Brand
David Briggs
Elaine Briggs
Julie Brogan
Janet Boynton
Kim Buell
Larry Buell
Brian Burns
Annie Calhoun
Jess Callow
Karen Carlson
Alex Chatfield
Deb Choate
Lindsay Clemens
Buzz Constable
Cathy Corbin
Jason Curtin
Rosamond DeLori
Alice DeNormandie
Penny DeNormandie
Tom DeNormandie
Pilar Doherty
Jona Donaldson
Nancy Donaldson
Anne Doyle
Jon Drew
Rachel Drew
Nataly Dvash
Jeff Eaton
Dan England
Andy Falender
Shirin Farrahi
Jon Ferris
Kristen Ferris
Nancy Fincke
Randall Fincke
Caroline Fiore
Mike Fiore
Lorraine Fiore
Nancy Fleming
Jim Fleming
Ian Forman
Rainer Frost
Martha Frost
John F. Foley Jr.
Amy Funkenstein
Dwight Gertz
Cailin Gidlewski
Bryn Gingrich
Johanna Goodman
Trintje Gnazzo
Andy Gnazzo
Josh Grindley
Sandy Grindley
Gina Halsted
Chris Hamilton
Jennifer Hashley
Tom Haslett
Emily Haslett
Alan Hein
Lis Herbert
Zach Herbert
Ruth Hodges
Shira Horowitz
Sue Howland
Ken Hurd
Pam Hurd
Kimberly Jalet
Brian Jalet
Bryan Kelly
Elizabeth Kelly
Jon Kelman
Joan Kimball
John Kimball
Chris Klem
Sue Klem
John Koenig
Bob Kupperstein
Lauren Lane
Jesse Lefkowitz
Barbara Leggat
Jackie Lenth
David Levington
Karin Levy
David Levy
Paula Light
Jonathan Light
Mary Helen Lorenz
Gwyn Loud
Sara Lupkas
Scott Lupkas
Rick Mandelkorn
Rachel Mason
Mo Masterson
Lucy Maulsby
Ron McAdow
Chris McCarthy
Tricia McGean
John Mendelson
Maria Miara
DJ Mitchell
Matt Mitchell
Tara Mitchell
Kenny Mitchell
Richard Mollica
Nicholas Mollica
Christopher Mollica
Staci Montori
Buffer Morgan
Terri Morgan
Jennie Morris Gundy
Patty Mostue
Jayne Mundt
Chris Murphy
Susan Murphy
Rachel Neurath
Richard Nichols
Katie Nicholson
John Nolan
Trisha O’Hagan
Barbara O’Neil
David O’Neil
Jane O’Rourke
Tristram Oakley
David Onigman
Nannette Orr
Katherine Page
Jason Paige
Candace Pearson
Karen Prince
Ginger Reiner
Kurt Reiner
Dana Robbat
Joe Robbat
Cathy Rogers
Travis Roland
Allen Rossiter
Selina Rossiter
Katrin Roush
Aldis Russell
Lucy Sachs
Barbara Sampson
Roberto Santamaria
Joanna Schmergel
Ron Siegel
Kathleen Shepard
Ray Shepard
Ellen Shorb
Paul Shorb
Barbara Slayter
Vicky Slingerland
Tucker Smith
Jonathan Soo
Kara Soo
Nancy Soulette
Bill Stason
Sue Stason
Mary Stechschulte
Scott Stewart
MingYi Stewart
James Stock
Betsy Stokey
Jim Storer
Sandy Storer
Kathleen Sullivan
Surendra Shah
Susan Taylor
Tricia Thornton-Wells
Dilla Tingley
David Urion
Allen Vander Muelen
Peter Von Mertens
Tom Walker
Katy Walker
Anne Wang
Andy Wang
Irene Weigel
Ginny Welles
Ben Wells
Bryce Wells
Jeani Welsh
Susan Welsh
Blandyna Williams
Claire Winchell
Susan Winship
Bob Wolf
Bryce Wolf
Krystal Wood
Jen Zeis
 

“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: My Turn, South Lincoln/HCA*

Town Meeting and election information

March 12, 2024

Child care during Town Meeting

To ensure that Lincoln families are able to participate during Annual Town Meeting on Saturday, March 23, LEAP is providing child care that’s open to all families attending Town Meeting, even if they are not currently registered with LEAP. They will be open to kids age 4-12 starting at 8:30 a.m. for $40 per child (snack and pizza lunch included). Click here to sign up.

Magic Garden is also providing child care for children who are currently enrolled at Magic Garden. Drop-off starts at 9 a.m. and pick up is scheduled for 15 minutes after the completion of the community center vote. The cost is $25 per child, snacks included. Children must bring their own lunch.

In order for LEAP and Magic Garden to provide child care during Annual Town Meeting, both organizations need to schedule staff. The programs cannot run on March 23 if families do not sign up as soon as possible. 

Town Meeting logistics

Town Meeting Moderator Sarah Cannon Holden encourage residents to sign in early starting at 8 a.m. on Saturday, March 23 to avoid a backup. The meeting will be called to order promptly at 9:30 a.m. — don’t be late. Discussion and voting on two major issues will occur early in the meeting (Article 3, the HCA zoning amendment, and Article 4, the community center.)

When the right moment arrives, we will break for about half hour for lunch. Only snacks will be available for sale; bring your own sandwich if you like.

Residents will receive the warrant booklet in the mail soon. It includes all the warrant articles as well as rules and procedures for the meeting. For more information and links, go to the Town Meeting home page.

Voting in the town election

This year, there are three ways to vote in the annual town election on Monday, March 25:

  • Early voting in person
  • Vote by mail — please complete this application form in the link below and return it to the Town Clerk’s Office
  • Vote in person on Election Day

Click here to see a sample ballot.

Early voting in person starts on Saturday, March 16 from 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. and will continue from Monday, March 18 to Thursday, March 21 from 10 a.m.–3 p.m. at the Donaldson Room at Town Hall. Early voting in person means you can show up on those days and vote your ballot there and then.

If you have requested a vote-by-mail ballot, you can return it to the drop box behind Town Hall, bring it to the Town Clerk’s office, or mail it in. Election Day voting takes place on Monday, March 25 from 7:30 a.m.–8 p.m. in the Reed Gym on Ballfield Road.

If you are not already registered to vote, the last day to register in order to participate in the Annual Town Meeting and Annual Town Election is Wednesday, March 13. Click here to register online.

“My Turn” submissions to the Lincoln Squirrel

“My Turn” opinion pieces about any issue to be discussed at Town Meeting or the town election must be submitted no later than Tuesday, March 19 at 8 p.m. For quesrions and submissions, email lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com.

Category: kids

My Turn: Fiduciary behavior and debt burden

March 12, 2024

By Chris Burns

Of course, a community center would be nice to have, but…

The town debt service today is greater than what we spend for the Police Department or L-S High School or the entire town government. How high should it go?

In the warrant for the March 26, 2022 Town Meeting, page 18 reads: “The Finance Committee understands that the large increase in debt service resulting for the required [$88.5 million] bonding for this [school] project is a burden for residents, and we have made it a priority to minimize the likelihood of requesting residents to approve any additional debt or capital exclusions over the next couple of years.” Is this fiduciary behavior when asking for an additional $16 million in debt less than two years later? This is a 20% increase in our debt load.

Please pay close attention as Lincoln’s debt soars toward $104,000,000 or $17,000+ per citizen, not household.


“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: My Turn

My Turn: The real housing crisis is affordability

March 12, 2024

By Gail O’Keefe

The HCA zoning decision looming is based on an assumption that we have a housing crisis in Massachusetts. Politicians have linked development to diversity, claiming all towns must help the state in the housing struggle. However, in looking at recent building data from local cities and towns, it seems very likely that the housing crisis is really an affordability crisis, with housing being built that is too expensive for those needing affordable housing.

Earlier this month the Boston Globe reported on the housing boom in Everett — 1,600 new units under construction now, with a total increase of 16% added to their housing stock over the past few years. Only 5% of those units are “affordable” housing, leaving us to question how these units will offset the housing needs facing families.

On Zillow today, over 1,000 housing units are available for rent (and ~100 for sale) in Cambridge; Boston has over 8,000 available for rent, (~1,000 for sale). An additional 800 for rent in Somerville, with 75 for sale. In Waltham, many are available; a brand-new one bedroom will cost you only $2,700/month. In Lexington, 30 rentals, mostly one- and two-bedrooms available. Price range: $2,500- $5,000 per month. And here in Lincoln in mid-March, there are still five units available at Oriole Landing, as well as a few houses.

Clearly, supply is plentiful. Market-rate housing units are available, with hundreds more being built right now all around Boston.

The zoning changes under the HCA has buoyed developers, so the future will see a surge in housing stock. Why, then, are we rushing to jeopardize our grocery store and small retail area to build 100 units? Who are we really helping? Are there thousands of people to fill all these homes? Or is it the cost the real housing crisis? Will trickle-down really reduce housing costs?

HCA Option C simply adds to the volume of new units, 90% at market rate. What happens if we rush to build, alongside all the other MBTA-adjacent towns, and end up with vacant residential units while losing our retail in the deal? One of the state’s goals with the HCA is economic growth for developers. Is that a goal of Lincoln as well? If not, let’s make the zoning more attractive to townspeople rather than RLF’s “more attractive to developers.”

Lincoln’s planning board and the RLF have presented Option C as the only choice, yet other options were not fully presented to the town in the fall. We needn’t give up on affordability and diversity, and should not jeopardize our small but critical retail space. We only need to submit a plan by the end of 2024! There is plenty of time to come to a plan that aligns with the values and goals of our town.


“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: My Turn, South Lincoln/HCA*

A sappy art installation?

March 11, 2024

It’s early spring and that means it’s time to tap sugar maple trees for sap to make maple syrup. There’s a fairly standard procedure for doing this, but someone in Lincoln seems to be take a rather unconventional approach. Lincoln resident Jack Fultz spotted this setup near the intersection of Sandy Pond Road and Baker Bridge Road:

This is not the first time the mystery sap-tapper has struck in that area. Here’s a photo from 2018 taken by Lincoln Squirrel editor Alice Waugh:

No word yet on who’s responsible for these whimsical displays and how many gallons of sap (or creosote, or syrup) they’ve been able to collect.

Category: Lincoln through the lens

Connie Lewis, 1936–2024

March 11, 2024

Connie Lewis

Connie Lewis died peacefully March 2 in hospice care at Carleton-Willard Village in Bedford after a brief illness.

An only child, Connie was born on August 3, 1936, in DeKalb County, Ga. to Constance (Adams) Lewis and Albert Washington Lewis Jr. Both parents died young, so Connie was raised with love by her mother’s sister-in-law, Hortense (Horne) Adams — Aunt Horty.

Connie graduated from Sophie Newcomb College (then the sister school associated with all-male Tulane). She went on to earn M.S. degrees from Cornell University in English and from Harvard University in counseling and consulting psychology.

She held a variety of positions in pursuit of her two loves, writing and teaching. She worked at an Atlanta newspaper, taught at Beaver Country Day School in Chestnut Hill, and taught freshman writing at both the Drexel Institute of Technology (now Drexel University) and Simmons College (now Simmons University). A few years later, she realized there was no future in that job, so reinvented herself as a technical writer. She took a course in BASIC at UMass-Boston and joined the startup Interleaf as one of the first few employees. She worked until her retirement as a technical writer at several tech companies. Once retired, she continued to teach writing by running memoir-writing groups at both Bemis Hall and The Commons in Lincoln.

Connie moved to Battle Road Farm in Lincoln in 1997, where it is alleged that she grew amazing Christmas cacti, conjured hummingbirds from nowhere, and made the best Hoppin’ John ever experienced in New England. She also lent her talents to the condominium handbook and served on the garden committee for many years.

An antiwar activist, Connie protested both the Vietnam and Iraq wars, holding signs weekly on busy street corners. She was also a stalwart feminist, supporting female candidates financially and fighting sexism in the work place. Connie was also active at the local level, serving on Lincoln town boards including the Housing Commission, the Historical Society, and Friends of the Council on Aging. She was a fixture at the Lincoln Town Meeting, spoke out in the local paper, and wrote voter mobilization postcards by the hundreds. Connie was also a highly knowledgeable fan and supporter of music. She was a patron for many years of Symphony Nova, a training orchestra for young musicians.

Most of all, Connie was an exemplary friend. She built long-standing friendships with both her age peers and people decades younger than herself. Thus it was that during her final months, Connie was surrounded by and cared for by friends of long standing, a family not by blood but by heart. She will be widely missed.

There will be a memorial gathering in Lincoln this spring on a date yet to be determined.

Category: obits

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