Lincoln will get a three-day taste of India next month during the inaugural Discover India! Lincoln Cultural Festival, which will include movie screenings, a food festival, folk and classical dance performances, an art exhibit and contemporary art lecture, a cooking class and many children’s activities. [Read more…] about India comes to Lincoln in October
Lincoln remembers 9/11
Inpatient hospice eyed for property on Lincoln/Waltham line
A Danvers-based hospice organization hopes to build a 20-bed inpatient hospice facility on Winter Street property straddling the Waltham city line, though there are no plans to alter the one-way status of the street.
In June, Hospice of the North Shore and Greater Boston (HNSGB) purchased the 12-acre parcel, which includes nine acres in Lincoln and three in Waltham. The Lincoln portion sold for $1.4 million. The only current structure is a single-family house on one of three Lincoln lots that were combined in the sale.
“This site is ideal for our purpose,” Diane Stringer, HNSGB president, said in a press release. “It is centrally located, close to Route 128 and easily accessible from the major cities and towns in our service area. It is also very serene and tranquil, as it is wooded, natural and offers views to the Cambridge Reservoir. Most importantly, it is more than large enough to accommodate the facility and have a large natural buffer from the road and neighbors.”
Winter Street in Lincoln is one-way heading north, but the hospice facility’s vehicular entrance and exit will be from the Waltham portion of the property. HNSGB representatives recently met informally at a pre-application “scoping session” with town officials to help plan the process of applying to the required town boards and commissions, “and they repeatedly said they have zero interest in making any change to that” one-way status, First Selectmen Peter Braun said at the September 9 Board of Selectmen meeting.
Inpatient hospice facilities offer a home-like setting where physicians, nurses and support staff provide 24-hour care, including pain and symptom management, and where visiting family members can spend quality time with their loved ones during the final weeks and days of life. Hospice care, which is covered by insurance and Medicare if the patient has a doctor’s prognosis of less than six months to live, can be an alternative to an expensive and disruptive hospital stay for many terminally ill patients.
“While the majority of hospice patients spend their final weeks in their own homes, a growing number have care needs that are simply too complex to be managed in the home setting,” Stringer said. “We’re also caring for more pediatric hospice patients, and there is no facility outside of a hospital that can provide the needed level of care for dying children and their families.”
The Lincoln/Waltham facility will be modeled on Kaplan Family Hospice House, HNSGB’s inpatient facility in Danvers. Staffing will include round-the clock nurses and nursing assistants, as well as a physician, social worker and chaplain on weekdays, according to a letter to the Lincoln Planning Board from Stringer.
HNSGB is the preferred hospice provider of the Partners Healthcare System, which includes Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Massachusetts General Hospital and Newton-Wellesley Hospital, as well as Emerson Hospital and three other hospitals. Since the company acquired Partners Healthcare’s hospice program in 2011, Kaplan House usually has a waiting list and is not easily accessible from many towns south and west of Boston that are now in HNSGB’s service area.
Because HNSGB is a nonprofit charitable organization, it would probably be exempt from paying property taxes on any Lincoln facility. However, selectmen expect there will be discussions with the company about payment in lieu of taxes (PILOT), such as Harvard University pays to the cities of Boston and Cambridge. “Large charitable institutions such an universities and hospitals know that’s something they have to discuss with local towns,” Braun said.
At one time, the Lincoln parcel (known as the “Kennedy property” in an 2005 analysis of six “at-risk” properties in town) was being considered for 40B affordable housing. According to that report, developing 135 affordable apartments on the site would have resulted in a net cost to the town of about $100,000 a year.
Iranian films on tap tonight
The Lincoln Library Film Society will resume screenings tonight (September 10) at 7 p.m. with another installment of “cinemavericks”—innovative filmmakers who did their own thing and guided the art form beyond its inherited strictures. The LLFS will screen the film work of Forough Farrokhzad (1935-1967), one of Iran’s greatest 20th-century poets. Although she only made one film in her short life, it is considered today to be one of the finest moments in Iranian cinema. The House is Black merges visuals with poetry like no other film has done, configuring searing images of reality to match the lines of Farrokhzad’s beautifully sparse and devastating words.
News acorns from the Lincoln Squirrel
Things to know about: Lincoln Junior Hikers, track work, a school building charette and more… [Read more…] about News acorns from the Lincoln Squirrel
Roads to close for MBTA track work
Because of the MBTA’s commuter-rail track upgrade project, several road crossings in town will be closed at the following times:
Tower Road—Friday, Sept. 6 at 11:59 p.m. to Monday, Sept. 9 at 6:00 a.m.
Old Sudbury Road—Friday, Sept. 13 at 11:59 p.m. to Monday, Sept. 16 at 6:00 a.m.
South Great Road (Rte. 117)—Friday, Sept. 20 at 11:59 p.m. to Monday, Sept. 23 at 6:00 a.m.
Lincoln Road will be closed on a similar weekend schedule on dates to be determined, according to Lincoln Police Chief Kevin Mooney. During the closings, all homes will be accessible to emergency vehicles and abutting residents, he said.
School groups, selectmen set to meet
View Bemis Hall space availability and rent online
You can now make reservations for using the second floor of Bemis Hall online. Simply navigate to the “Facilities” section of the town website at www.lincolntown.org or click directly on the Bemis Hall page.
Bemis is available for public use after 5 p.m. on weekdays and after noon on Sundays. Multiple events can be booked for the same day as long as there is a half-hour break between events.
All the information is available online: an online calendar showing times and events already booked, rental fee structure, security deposit, and rules and regulations. Multiple events can be booked for the same day as long as there is a half-hour break between events. Each request is automatically sent to the new Bemis Hall scheduler, Barbara Low. If there are no conflicts, you will receive an email approving your request, though you will still need to mail in your security deposit and rental fee.< Fill out requests for space online by clicking the "Request Reservation" button at the top of the calendar. If you prefer to complete a paper form, both the application and rules and regulations are posted as PDF files on the site. If you have any questions or require further information, contact Barbara Low at 781-259-8341. Her email and phone number are also on the website.
Council on Aging schedule for September
Here are the Lincoln Council on Aging events scheduled for September. Most events are open to all Lincoln residents. For more information, call the COA at 781-259-8811.
Correction
An August 26 Lincoln Squirrel article about Naturestage founder Miranda Loud contained inaccurate information about Katy Payne. The article has been updated to include the correction.