The Vox Lumens Renaissance choir concert at the First Parish Church is on Sunday, December 15, not December 13 as reported earlier. The Lincoln Squirrel article has been updated to reflect this correction.
Self-defense classes for women in December
The Lincoln Police will offer a three-session self-defense class for women on December 4, 11 and 18 from 7-9 p.m. The class is free and will take a total of six hours.
- Session 1: Getting to know you; Introduction to basics of defense in everyday life
- Session 2: Learning and practicing hands-on tactics of defense
- Session 3: Practicing and full defense against a “red man” (an officer in large attacker padding)
To sign up, please email jenasalon@gmail.com.
Holiday events include “Gift Local” this weekend
Get handmade items at “Gift Local”
Buy your holiday gifts from a local artisan, chocolatier, jeweler, painter, clothier, felter, glass artist, book artist, fabric artist, wood turner, hatter, neighbor, friend at Gift Local at Bemis Hall on . Sponsored by Old Town Hall Exchange.
“An English Christmas” choir concert
Live from Lincoln Center! Vox Lucens, a 13-member choir Renaissance choir, will present a full-length concert of English Renaissance polyphony on Sunday, December 15 at 3 p.m. as part of the new concert series at the First Parish in Lincoln. This concert will include works by Gibbons, Byrd, Parsons and other English masters, and the choir will collaborate with organist Ian Watson, music director at First Parish and principal keyboard player of the Handel and Haydn Society Orchestra. Suggested donation: $20.
Correction: Final SBAC report now available
A recent Lincoln Squirrel story about the School Building Advisory Committee included a link to an outdated draft of the SBAC report. The story now on the Lincoln Squirrel has been updated to include a link to the final report.
School Building Advisory Committee to report tonight
(Editor’s note: this story has been corrected to include a link to the SBAC’s final report, which previously was available only in draft form.)
The School Building Advisory Committee (SBAC) will present its final report to the School Committee tonight—a report that says Lincoln should pursue state funding for a modified “L-shaped” building and renovation project rather than a “repair only” pathway.
The School Committee meeting starts at 7 p.m. in the Hartwell Multipurpose Room with a continuation of the FY15 preliminary budget presentation. The SBAC is second on the agenda and is expected to begin around 7:45 p.m. There will be time for public questions and comments.
The SBAC was formed to discuss alternatives to the school project that failed to win the required two-thirds majority at a Special Town Meeting a year ago. Under that plan, the state would have provide $21 million for a $49 million project. Some residents subsequently called for a modified design in which the building would be L-shaped, or a more modest and inexpensive repair-only plan.
The report can be viewed and downloaded here. Among its discussion points:
- “The realization that repairs alone, while critical to the maintaining the physical integrity of the buildings, will not further the educational objectives.
- “The possibility that the MSBA [Massachusetts School Building Authority] will not support the project and the implications of such a decision on the ‘pathways’ available to the town.
- “The implementation problems associated with any L-shaped pathway pursued by the School Committee.
- “The issue of whether school campus on Ballfield Road should serve as a potential location for a community center.”
The report examines two hypothetical pathways for a school project—one that assumes MSBA funding and one without such funding—though it did not go into specific plans or cost estimates for either route.
“Although the Committee’s members began their work with very different ideas about what the school buildings needed, they, after weeks of work and deliberations, reached a consensus on what the schools require. These needs are significant and expensive,” the report says. “Thus, MSBA funding is essential for the School Committee being able to implement its comprehensive plan for school facility improvements and repairs that will support educational enhancement at the Lincoln School.”
Lincoln is currently awaiting action on its latest statement of interest (SOI), the first step in applying for a grant from the MSBA. The MSBA’s board of directors is meeting today, though the posted agenda does not include Lincoln.
In an FAQ page on its website, the MSBA explains that SOIs are not considered on a first-come, first-served basis, but rather on several factors, including the “extent and urgency” of a school’s problems relative to those described in other SOIs. More than 200 schools submitted SOIs to the MSBA for consideration in fiscal 2013.
If a renewed offer of MSBA funding doesn’t materialize, “the town will be placed in a difficult position because it will not be able to address the legitimate needs of the schools in a comprehensive manner,” the SBAC report says. “What the town would be willing to pay for under these circumstances is unclear. However, what is clear is that the Town would have to do some deep soul-searching about how much it values the education of its children supported by appropriate facilities and the nexus between a high quality school system and property values.”
The SBAC explored various “repair-only” scenarios under the assumption that this approach would be less expensive than a full-fledged renovation and construction project. However, members found that “any significant repair effort would likely trigger major [building] code requirements and force very significant expenditures. A project designed as a $6 million repair could turn quickly into a repair and code compliance project easily costing $12-$14 million. A project designed to avoid triggering codes would likely not be sufficiently large in scope so as to reasonably guarantee successful and continued facility operation over the mid/long term. It would also present an increased risk of multiple emergency-type repairs,” the report says.
Another reason the SBAC rejected a repair-only pathway is that “such a project would have limited, if any, educational or security benefits.” Without MSBA funding, critical features of the previous plan would have to be eliminated as too costly, including “much-needed” cafeterias and flexible learning spaces as well as a link to the Reed Gym; improvement to the second- and third-grade space; special-needs improvements; improved lighting, air quality and acoustics; and a solution to the ongoing problem of Smith boiler room flooding.
The SBAC looked at the possibility of having a community center tied in some way to a school project but concluded that the town isn’t far enough along in discussions about that idea.
“The committee is concerned about the needs of the schools not being addressed by the town until the town decides what, if anything, it wants to do about a community center. In the view of the committee, this places the proverbial cart before the proverbial horse. The needs of the schools are real; they need to be addressed now, not at some undetermined point in the future,” the report says.
Members of the SBAC are Doug Adams, Ken Bassett, Owen Beenhouwer, Vincent Cannistraro, Tim Christenfeld, Hathaway Russell, Steven P. Perlmutter (chair), Maggy Pietropaolo, Peter Sugar and Gary Taylor.
Lincoln resident Paik plays Rachmaninoff on Sunday
Lincoln resident Wanda Paik will perform Rachmaninoff’s great Piano Concerto No. 2 with Sounds of Stow Chorus and Orchestra on Sunday, Nov. 24 at 3 p.m. at the Hale Middle School in Stow. The concert will also feature Russian choral works, Gretchaninoff’s Hvalite Boga, and Borodin’s Polovtsian Dances, as well as a silent auction.
There will also be an open rehearsal (children welcome) on Saturday, Nov. 23 at 1:30 p.m. for the chorus and orchestra and 4 p.m. for the piano concerto. A donation of $5 is requested.
For more information, see the Sounds of Stow website or browse Paik’s CDs.
“Gobble Wobble” on Thanksgiving morning
Come join your friends and neighbors on Thanksgiving morning for the fourth annual Gobble Wobble—an event for all ages and abilities where you can get a little exercise before the big feast and make a big difference in the lives of those less fortunate.
The entry fee—one bag of nonperishable groceries per runner—will be donated to Open Table in Concord and Maynard. They have come to count on Lincoln’s wonderful generosity from this event. Check out the Open Table website for items they need the most.
On Thanksgiving morning, please arrive at Lincoln Mall with your bag of groceries between 7:30 and 8:15 a.m. for an 8:30 start. There will be two routes going along Lincoln sidewalks, crosswalks and back streets. One will be about 2.5 miles and the other will be about 3.5 miles. This is a fun run, not a race, so there will be no bibs, no times, and no first place (or last place!). It’s just an opportunity to get out and join your neighbors for some exercise and goodwill.
Note that roads will not be closed, so don’t leave young children to run or walk on their own. This is not a town-sponsored event, so you will be asked to sign a simple waiver to protect those who are organizing it. Your safety is your personal responsibility. Please walk, run or wobble safely!
We’ll provide coffee, hot chocolate and munchkins, so an approximate head count would be helpful. If you know you’ll be participating, please email jen@flanagans.us. Also feel free to email with any questions. Spread the word—the more wobblers, the more people we can help!
Hot on the trail
Walking on two of Lincoln’s conservation trails just got a little easier, thanks to efforts by local residents and Conservation Department staff.
A group of neighbors recently repaired and improved the trail that leads from the Conrad/Bradshaw driveway opposite Boyce Farm Road off Old Sudbury Road into the Weston Woods. The residents also purchased the materials used in the work.
Meanwhile, Tom Gumbart and Dave McKinnon of the Conservation Department built a bridge over a wet part of a trail from Garland Road to Flints Pond. The trail has existed for many years but was only usable as a dry fall trail. The new bridge (which was designed to accommodate cross-country skiers as well as walkers) should make it usable year round. A trail link is also being completed from the Commons to Garland Road. When the Route 2 overpass and construction is complete, it will connect to trails in Concord.

Left to right: Stuart Rose, Steve Kutenplon, Peter Conrad, Libby Bradshaw, Dea Angiolillo and Peter von Mertens.

Left photo: Tom Gumbart and Dave McKinnon carry timbers to the trail from Garland Road to Flints Pond. Right photo: the new bridge.
Get closer to the land at Wednesday events
Residents are invited to “Lincoln by the Land,” a talk hosted by the Lincoln Land Conservation Trust about Lincoln’s landscapes with Sue Klem, an LLCT board member and local author of The Nature of Lincoln. Her talk, which begins at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 20 in the Lincoln Public Library, will explore Lincoln’s rugged landscape of hills, ponds, streams, fields, swamp, and woods, and consider what forces created them. Copies of The Nature of Lincoln will be for sale.
Also on Wednesday, the town’s Leaf Blower Study Committee invites residents to meet Dan Mabe, president of the Greenstation, a West Coast sustainable landscape equipment and consulting company. Mabe will discuss steps other communities are taking to reduce noise and air pollution from industrialized landscape practices, describe “green zones” and demonstrate innovative equipment.
Mabe will speak in the Donaldson Room in the Town Office Building at two different times—from 7:30-8:30 a.m. and again from 7:30-8:30 p.m. Please RSVP to Lincoln Conservation Director Thomas Gumbart (781-259-2612 or gumbartt@lincolntown.org) to indicate which session you’d like to attend.
Tonight’s film theme: “Closely Watched Trains”
If you like trains, you’ll love tonight’s Lincoln Film Society presentation, which it’s calling “Closely Watched Trains: An Evening of Chuff-Chuff and Choo-Choo.” The medley of rail-themed short files begins at 7 p.m. in the Lincoln Public Library and will include:
Arrival of a Train
France / 1896 / silent / 1 min.
The Georgetown Loop
USA / 1996 / silent / 11 min.
Snow
UK / 1963 / silent / 7 min.
89mm from Europe
Poland / 1993 / in Polish with English subtitles/ 12 min.
Games on Reflection and Speed
France / 1925 / silent. 8 min.
The Station
Italy / 1953 / in Italian with English subtitles / 11 min.
Train Stop
Russia / 2000 / silent/ 24 min.
Mountain Vigil
Armenian SSR / 1964 / silent. 10 min.
Train of Thought
USA / 2008 / silent. 9 min.
Total program time: 93 minutes.