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First Parish hopes to clear final hurdle tonight

February 24, 2015

firstparish-sm(Editor’s note: This article has been updated to reflect corrections made on February 28.)

By Alice Waugh

The First Parish Church is going before the Planning Board tonight in hopes of getting a final go-ahead for the controversial Stearns Room replacement, but some are worried that the process could drag on even longer.

Discussion among church officials about expanding the Stearns Room, which dates from 1963,  began in 2001 when the Flint family donated a parcel of abutting land to the church. The current proposal calls for a covered, handicapped-accessible entranceway from the sanctuary as well as handicapped restrooms, a sitting area with a fireplace, and a space on the south side of the addition for robing, private phone conversation, and gatherings at various times including after Sunday services when the Stearns Room is full. The room would open to a small patio and a view of the field to the west.

To carry out its plan, the church needed several zoning exemptions, and the process of trying to obtain town approvals began about two years ago. At several hearings, residents objected to how the proposed addition would look and argued that the church should not be exempted from zoning regulations. In response, the church has argued that, given the constraints of the property, it cannot fulfill the goals of a Stearns Room expansion without the exemptions.

In a victory for the church, Planning Board approved most of the site plan in February 2014 and granted relief from zoning limits on lot size, lot width and parking—but it denied the requested four-foot setback on the north side of the property. Based on that decision, building commissioner Daniel Walsh denied a building permit in March 2014.

The church subsequently appealed to the Zoning Board of Appeals, saying applying the setback requirement to the property’s north side was not reasonable in this circumstance, pursuant to the Dover Amendment, and should not be enforced, according to minutes of the ZBA’s meeting on June 19, 2014. The Dover Amendment is a state statute that exempts agricultural, religious and educational corporations from certain zoning restrictions.

At that June meeting, the ZBA granted permission for the north side setback by a 4-0 vote (member Megan Stride abstained). However, the board noted that the church would have to go back to the Planning Board to finish the site plan review process. Tonight the Planning Board will consider those elements of the site plan it hasn’t already reviewed, such as landscaping, lighting and drainage—”things they didn’t get around to before,” said Director of Planning and Land Use Chris Reilly. The Planning Board can’t revisit the building itself, which has already won the necessary approvals; “they have to be disciplined and look just at the remainder of the site plan review process, unless someone brings forth new information,” he said.

But Lincoln resident Ken Hurd, an architect who has been working for the church, was not reassured. “There have been hints that they want to look at more things,” he said. “They have changed their minds before, so we just don’t know.” Asked for specifics, Hurd said the board approved minutes of a September 2013 meeting in November of that year but later rewrote them shortly before its vote in February 2014.

“There’s a little lack of trust about what they say and what gets posted,” Hurd said on Tuesday afternoon.

On behalf of the First Parish Building Committee, Hurd this week wrote a letter to the Planning Commission to reiterate the benefits of the new addition, saying it would “affirm the dignity of everyone who might be part of this community institution… It is not our intent to simply build real estate, but to create an experience that is spiritually uplifting and satisfying to the soul as well as true to the values of Lincoln and an entire spiritual community.”

Meanwhile, the church also needed approvals from the Historic District Commission to demolish the old Stearns Room and build a new one. After a contentious hearing in November 2014, the commission voted to grant a certificate of appropriateness for the new construction by a vote of 5-2, with members Ruth Wales and Bryce Wolf voting no. The commission also voted 6-0 (with Wolf abstaining) to grant a demolition permit.

Previous coverage in the Lincoln Squirrel:

  • Letter to the editor: First Parish design elements not appropriate (November 12, 2014)
  • Letter to the editor: Uphold First Parish decision (June 18, 2014)
  • First Parish Church goes before ZBA tonight (May 15, 2014)
  • Letter to the editor: First Parish vote “a matter of principle and integrity” (February 26, 2014)
  • Letter to the editor: Flint responds to First Parish letter (February 10, 2014)
  • Letter to the editor: First Parish expansion (February 6, 2014)

Category: government, news, Stearns Room* Leave a Comment

Snow use complaining (Lincoln through the lens, 2/24/15)

February 24, 2015

"I guess we'll have to live with it," these birds seem to be saying. — Photo by Harold McAleer

“I guess we’ll have to live with it,” these birds seem to be saying. —Photo by Harold McAleer

Readers may submit photos for consideration for Lincoln Through the Lens by emailing them to news@lincolnsquirrrel.com. If your photo is published, you’ll receive credit in the Squirrel. Photos must be taken in Lincoln and include the date, location, and names of any people who are identifiable in the photo. Previously published photos can be viewed on the Lincoln Through the Lens page of the Lincoln Squirrel.

Category: Lincoln through the lens, nature Leave a Comment

Letter to the editor: proposed changes to outdoor lighting rules

February 23, 2015

letter

Editor’s note: This letter concerns one of the warrant articles to be voted on at Lincoln’s Annual Town Meeting on March 28. A preliminary list of warrant articles can be found on this Town of Lincoln webpage. The Board of Selectmen is scheduled to sign the warrant on February 25.

To the editor:

The Planning Board has long considered issues of exterior lighting and light pollution, primarily through the site plan review process. Although the widespread availability and affordability of energy-efficient LED and compact fluorescent lighting benefits the global environment, these new technologies may also be potentially detrimental to our immediate environment here in Lincoln. The Planning Board is proposing changes to the Lighting Section of the Zoning Bylaw to insure that we preserve the rural character and sensitivity to conservation values that are Lincoln’s tradition, while still allowing for illumination that maintains or improves safety and energy efficiency. Please note that our proposal only regulates newly installed lighting. Existing lighting is grandfathered.

If you look up into the sky on a moonless night, you will see thousands and thousands of stars, stars that have inspired wonder and beauty through the millennia of human history—or you would see thousands of stars if they were not drowned out by light pollution. It is not only our ability to see the night sky that is lost with excess outdoor lighting. Insects, nocturnal animals and migrating birds are all confused or disoriented by artificial light. The emergence of LEDs and their blue-rich white outdoor lighting has aggravated these issues. Blue-rich white light mimics the spectrum of daylight disrupting circadian rhythms in both people and animals.

The eye has limited ability to rapidly adjust between one lighting level and another, and the adjustment period becomes even longer as we age. As we move from the interior to the exterior after dark we need light for safety that is minimally disruptive to the environment and wildlife that Lincoln has spent so much time and treasure protecting.

The proposed zoning changes apply only to newly installed light fixtures and are summarized below:

  • All exterior light fixtures must be fully shielded so they neither project nor leak light upwards towards the sky.
  • All lights shall have Color Corrected Temperature (CCT) of 3000K or below. The CCT describes the color of the light. A CCT of 3000K or below is a “warm white” light, typical of traditional incandescent bulbs. The CCT is typically specified on the package for LED and compact fluorescent bulbs.
  • Each fixture shall be limited to a maximum of 900 lumens, comparable to the output of a traditional 60-watt incandescent bulb. Lumens are a measure of the intensity of light output. A consistent level of lighting with multiple fixtures at a lower intensity is more effective for human vision and creates less light pollution.

We hope you will support Article 44 at Town Meeting and welcome your input.

Sincerely,

Margaret Olson for the Lincoln Planning Board


Letters to the editor must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to news@lincolnsquirrrel.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.

Category: government, letters to the editor 3 Comments

News acorns – 2/23/15

February 23, 2015

acornMassPort to present Hanscom plans at HATS meeting

On Thursday, Feb. 26 at 7:30 p.m., the Hanscom Area Towns Committee (“HATS”), an alliance of the Selectmen of Lincoln, Concord, Lexington and Bedford will host officials from MassPort as they present the agency’s recently adopted strategic plan, including plans for Hanscom Air Field. The presentation will be made by MassPort’s chief executive officer, Tom Glynn, and other senior staff. The meeting will be held at the Lincoln Town Offices and the public is welcome. A video of the meeting will be available several days later on the HATS web site.

Second leaf blower forum scheduled

On Wednesday, Feb. 25 at 7 p.m., Lincoln’s Leaf Blower Study Committee will host a second public forum to discuss the status of leaf blower regulations and alternative approaches and seek feedback. The forum will be held in the upstairs conference room at the Town Office Building (16 Lincoln Rd.). Previous coverage and letters to the editor in the Lincoln Squirrel:

  • Letter to the editor: leaf blowers can be used year-round appropriately (Jan. 12, 2015)
  • Letter to the editor: leaf blower committee responds (Jan. 12, 2015)
  • Board of Health: residential areas don’t need leaf blower regulations (Jan. 9, 2015)
  • Tuesday forum to discuss proposed leaf-blower rules (Jan. 6, 2015)
  • Group to propose limits on use of leaf blowers in Lincoln (Nov. 14, 2014)
  • Board of Health endorses leaf blower study (March 12, 2014)
Group presents documentary on social rejection

On Tuesday, March 10, the Sudbury-Wayland-Lincoln Domestic Violence Roundtable will present the new documentary film Reject at 7 p.m. in the Lincoln-Sudbury High School Auditorium ( 390 Lincoln Road, Sudbury). Admission is free.

Reject offers a powerful look at the cost of social rejection at a young age and a timely analysis of real-life educational techniques to nurture positive social development from preschool age up. The film highlights some of the devastating consequences for victims of chronic, repeated rejection over time. Not only is rejection hurtful, but it has the potential for erupting as violence. A study of the backgrounds of school shooters found that the majority were victims of ostracism.

Reject is a “must see” for any adult who parents, teaches, coaches, leads or is otherwise engaged with preschool through high school children. The film can be used in workshops or training programs to raise awareness about ostracism and provide facts for discussion. Information about how to acquire the film will be distributed at the March 10 showing. The film is in limited release but later in 2015 it will be available for purchase at a modest cost.

Category: government, health and science Leave a Comment

Remember this in July… (Lincoln through the lens, 2/22/15)

February 22, 2015

Window Icicles looking into the kettle hole at The Village at Farrar Pond in Lincoln on February 15. Photo by Jim Wojno

Window icicles looking into the kettle hole at The Village at Farrar Pond in Lincoln on February 15. —Photo by Jim Wojno

Readers may submit photos for consideration for Lincoln Through the Lens by emailing them to news@lincolnsquirrrel.com. If your photo is published, you’ll receive credit in the Squirrel. Photos must be taken in Lincoln and include the date, location, and names of any people who are identifiable in the photo. Previously published photos can be viewed on the Lincoln Through the Lens page of the Lincoln Squirrel.

Category: Lincoln through the lens, nature Leave a Comment

Letter to the editor: thanks from Domestic Violence Roundtable

February 21, 2015

letter

To the editor:

On behalf of the Sudbury-Wayland-Lincoln Domestic Violence Roundtable and the families living in area domestic violence shelters and transitional housing programs who received your generous donations, I would like to thank everyone who helped make their Valentine’s Day a little brighter. Valentine bags were delivered to clients of REACH Beyond Domestic Violence, The Second Step and Voices Against Violence. This is one of the many projects organized by the Sudbury-Wayland-Lincoln Domestic Violence Roundtable as a reminder to families who have suffered abuse that the community cares about them and wishes them well on their journey to safety. It is a small gesture on our part, but it has a big impact on them.

The Roundtable would especially like to thank Sudbury Extended Day pre-K students for once again decorating the Valentine bags. The children’s decorations add a special touch to the gift bags. Also, thank you to the Lincoln Council on Aging and Marlborough Savings Bank of Sudbury. We also appreciate the contributions of the League of Women Voters of Sudbury and the parents and staff of Sudbury Extended Day as well as the anonymous donations left by caring members of the community. This is indeed a community effort.

Collecting items for the Sudbury-Wayland-Lincoln Domestic Violence Roundtable are (left to right) Karen Cohen, Marilyn Ellsworth, Isabel Rivera, Laura Van Zandt, Joan Gaumnitz and Diane Seligman.

Valentine’s Day bags assembled by Sudbury-Wayland-Lincoln Domestic Violence Roundtable members Karen Cohen, Marilyn Ellsworth, Isabel Rivera, Laura Van Zandt, Joan Gaumnitz and Diane Seligman.

Everyone can make a difference. If you were unable to help with the Valentine Collection, but would like to support the Roundtable’s community projects, please watch for news about our upcoming Shower for Shelters that will take place in May. This drive benefits families transitioning from shelter to new homes.

The Sudbury-Wayland-Lincoln Domestic Violence Roundtable is a community-based nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting safe and healthy relationships, raising public awareness about abusive and controlling behaviors whether exhibited through bullying, teen dating violence, domestic violence, or elder abuse, and ending relationship violence in all its forms. If you share our determination to make our communities safer, please join us at our meetings. The group meets the second Tuesday of each month from September to May at 3 p.m. in the Community Meeting Room of the Wayland Public Safety Building at the intersection of Routes 20 and 27 in Wayland Center. The meetings are free and open to the public. More information about the Roundtable and its activities and about domestic violence can be found at www.domesticviolenceroundtable.org.

Sincerely,

Diane Seligman, Sudbury
Valentine Outreach Committee Chair


Letters to the editor must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to news@lincolnsquirrrel.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.

Category: letters to the editor, news Leave a Comment

News acorns – 2/20/15

February 20, 2015

Pair of Kipling programs at library

To celebrate the 150th anniversary of Rudyard Kipling’s birth, come to “The Magic of Rudyard Kipling,” an entertaining evening featuring storyteller Jackson Gillman as Kipling on Wednesday, March 4 at 7 p.m. in the Lincoln Public Library’s Tarbell Room for the young and young at heart. Kipling’s “Just So Stories” will be brought to life at this joint program of the library’s adult and children’s departments. In advance of Gillman’s performance on March 4, the library is also offering “Kipling 101,” a one-night crash course on Monday, Feb. 23 from 7-8:30 pm. Copies of Kipling’s work will be available at the front desk two weeks in advance.

barbara-adj

Barbara Leggat shows her hand-painted vase she’ll have appraised at the Timeless Treasures Tour.

Timeless Treasures Tour to benefit Emerson Hospital

Barbara Leggat of Lincoln, a Corporator and Auxiliary member of Emerson Hospital, invites area residents to have items appraised at the Timeless Treasures Tour on Saturday, March 7 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Concord Meadows. All proceeds will benefit patient programs and services at Emerson. What antique treasures do you have? For more information and to register, click here or email EmersonAuxiliary@gmail.com.

Sap to Syrup breakfast at Drumlin on March 14-15

Enjoy the results of our farmers’ hard work at Drumlin Farm’s annual Sap-to-Syrup Farmer’s Breakfast on Saturday and Sunday, March 14 and 15. Tickets include a half-hour seating for a full breakfast and access to special programming around the farm. Enjoy our ongoing educational maple sugar programming from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. We welcome you to stay at the farm for as long as you like. You’ll be able to:

  • Enjoy a hearty breakfast of pancakes with real Vermont maple syrup, Drumlin Farm roasted potatoes, and our own sausage
  • See how sap is collected from our majestic maple trees
  • Explore the natural history of trees as you learn about the distinctly Northwoods product of maple syrup
  • Learn about Native American sap-to-syrup techniques
  • Purchase maple syrup made right here at Drumlin Farm to take home with you

Tickets are $15 for adults and $12 for children over age 2. Breakfast seatings are at half-hour intervals starting at 9 a.m. and ending at 12:30 p.m. Seatings begin promptly at your reserved start time and last 30 minutes. Register early for this family friendly fundraising event—call 781-259-2206 or register online.

Play-reading group looking for members

A small group of avid play-readers of all ages is looking to expand. The group meets on the second and third Fridays of every month at Bemis Hall on Friday afternoons from 1-2:30 p.m. and reads a variety of interesting and fun plays. Scripts are provided. The next two plays will be The Actor’s Nightmare on March 13 and Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You on March 20. If you’re interested in joining us or would like to learn more about the group, please call Sally Kindleberger at 781-259-1169 or just show up.

Category: news Leave a Comment

Correction

February 20, 2015

correction-smThe February 19 article in the Lincoln Squirrel about the snow’s impact erroneously identified the Lincoln Police Chief as Sean Kennedy. The police chief is in fact Kevin Kennedy.

Category: government, news Leave a Comment

Lincoln has weathered snow so far, but next storm could add to woes

February 19, 2015

Lincoln has thus far escaped any major problems from the record-breaking snow and cold over the past few weeks, but the danger of roof collapses will only grow with another storm this weekend—and this one may include ice and rain as well as snow.

Police and fire officials reported that as of Thursday, there had been no power outages or medical emergencies directly caused by the weather. “We’ve been very fortunate,” said Police Chief Kevin Kennedy. “The DPW [Department of Public Works] needs to be commended for the job they’ve done maintaining the roadways.”

The Fire Department has had to alter its usual response to calls as a result of the accumulated snow, said Fire Chief Stephen Carter, who is also the town’s emergency management coordinator. In normal circumstances the department sends an engine and a ladder truck, but the ladder truck won’t fit down most driveways these days, so the department sends a second engine that carries extra water instead. Every piece of fire apparatus also now carries at least one snow shovel, since firefighters often have to clear snow away from homes just to get access to residents who need help, he said.

snow-plow

A worker uses heavy equipment to push back snowbanks from the corner of Sandy Pond and Lincoln Roads. Photo by Alice Waugh

Shortly before the January blizzard, Town Administrator Tim Higgins reported to the Finance Committee that “we had spent very little” from the town’s $265,000 snow removal budget. However, as of Thursday, the town had gone through $300,000, and some contractors’ bills from the last storm were still expected. “To see the budget swing so sharply in a four-week period was really pretty amazing,” Higgins said.

The DPW staff who man the snowplows “are pretty much exhausted… they’ve been essentially going around the clock for four weeks,” Higgins said. “I’ve been really pleased and impressed with the quality of their work and their dedication.”

Owners of commercial property with flat roofs have been “very proactive” in clearing snow, Carter said. Workers have been clearing roof drains above the Mall at Lincoln Station, and a crane has removed hundreds of tons of snow from portions of the building’s roof in recent days, said Bill Jackson, president of Jackson Associates, which manages the mall for the owner, the Rural Land Foundation.

Four years ago, the roof over a recently remodeled Donelan’s Supermarket collapsed from heavy snow. The entire mall was closed briefly for inspection and Donelan’s did not reopen until May 2012. After the collapse, roofing was reinforced over the entire mall where necessary and the Donelan’s roof was rebuilt to hold 55 pounds of snow and ice per square foot, well above the current code requirement of 35 pounds per square foot, Jackson said, “so we’re pretty confident.”

School being proactive in roof clearing

The Lincoln School has been clearing some roof areas during this week’s school vacation and the school’s facilities staff has been assessing the roofs in recent weeks. “They do not feel that our roofs are stressed, or in danger in any way,” Superintendent of Schools Becky McFall said in an email to the Lincoln Squirrel last week. “This proposed partial removal is proactive, not reactive. We do not feel that the current snow load presents a roof collapse problem in any way.”

Though there are leaks evident in several parts of the school, McFall told the School Committee on February 12 that those leaks are not due to structural problems but are simply indicators of where the roof membrane has been compromised due to age. “Regardless of how much snow is on the roof, when there is snow and it melts, it’s going to leak in those places, so we’ve got buckets all over,” she said.

The schools have already used up their allotment of five snow days, so the School Committee sent an online poll to all parents asking for their input on how any further snow days should be made up. McFall recommended to the committee that if more makeup days are needed, classes should be held on April 3 (Good Friday), June 25 and then part of April vacation, in that order. The last day of school is currently scheduled for Wednesday, June 24.

snow-hydrant

There’s a hydrant somewhere under there. Photo by Alice Waugh

Fire hydrants often buried

Water Department staff have been working to clear snow away from fire hydrants, and officials have urged residents to “adopt a hydrant” near their home and keep a three-foot radius around each hydrant clear of snow and ice. Water Department Superintendent Greg Woods’ staff has been out with plows and shovels but has had a hard time keeping up with the snow that blocks hydrants anew whenever the roads are plowed.

“It’s very frustrating to have cleared the hydrants in a section of town only to have that open area immediately filled with snow during the next storm,” Woods said. “The significant snow accumulation is making it difficult to clear the hydrants, but every hydrant that’s cleared by a resident gives the department that much more time to focus on the more difficult locations.”

There have been several instances when recently cleared hydrants have been intentionally filled or buried because a contractor saw an open space to push snow. “We understand it’s difficult to keep driveways and sidewalks open with this volume of snow, but there’s no excuse for intentionally covering a fire hydrant. It puts the public at risk,” Woods said, adding that intentionally burying fire hydrants is prohibited by state law and is punishable by a fine of up to $100.

More danger to roofs this weekend

Although there’s been a lot of snow since late January, the snow has been light and fluffy, so it hasn’t stuck to tree branches and power lines. However, this weekend’s storm is expected to feature rain in addition to heavy wet snow, which will only add to the weight already borne by roofs.

“That’s not going to be good,” Carter said. Even without any more new snowfall, the snow that’s already on roofs will settle, and eventual melting and refreezing will only worsen the situation. “I’m dreading that,” he said with a sigh.

At the behest of state and federal governments, Lincoln and other towns have improved their planning for weather emergencies. Local emergency personnel have been checking in with at-risk seniors, worked with The Commons on planning for sheltering residents if it becomes necessary, beefed up mutual aid with surrounding towns for emergency responses, and used reverse 911 calls to alert residents of road closings and potential weather dangers, including potential roof collapses. The Massachusetts Emergency Management Authority also offers tips on roof snow removal and how to recognize signs of a structural problem.

Meanwhile, residents are scrambling to find someone—anyone—with expertise in clearing snow and ice dams and repairing roofs and gutters that have already been damaged. “These guys are going to be busy until May,” Carter said.

Category: government, news, schools Leave a Comment

Obituaries – 2/18/15

February 18, 2015

candle2

Janet Daniels, 90 (January 13) — first woman president of the board of the deCordova Museum

Georgia Drake, 100 (January 7) — honored in 2013 as the oldest living registered voter in Lincoln with the presentation of the Boston Post Cane

Paul Giese, 77 (January 14) — served on several Lincoln boards and commissions

Category: news, obits Leave a Comment

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