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Dec. 15 funeral for Ronald Row, 97

December 3, 2023

Ronald Row

Ronald Victor Row, age 97, of Lincoln died peacefully at home surrounded by his loving family on November 28, 2023.

He is survived by his daughters Elizabeth of Arlington, Va., and Mary Gravely (Winston) of Richmond, Va.; sons Frank (Deedee) of Chelmsford and Gordon (Leslie) of Groton; ten grandchildren (Heather Williams, Ronnie Row, Robert Jennings Spangle, W. Jacob Spangle, Kelsey Row, Delaney Row, Harrison Gravely, Eva Gravely, Tristan Row, and Georgia Row), three great-grandchildren, and multiple nieces and nephews. He is predeceased by his loving wife of 61 years, Jane (Eager) Row, and his daughter Katherine Victoria Row.

Ron was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, the third son of the late Victor and Elfreda (Wismer) Row. He graduated from McGill and Harvard Universities and settled in Lincoln, where he and Jane raised five children and two grandchildren. He was a longtime member of St. Anne’s in-the-Fields Episcopal Church and the Appalachian Mountain Club, and was a founding member of the Lincoln-Sudbury Civic Orchestra in 1973.

Ron’s life was filled with a love of adventure and the outdoors, which he instilled in all his children. Family life was studded with camping trips, hiking, winter sports and above all sailing. After owning a series of smaller boats, Ron purchased a larger sailboat, the Victor, to allow his entire family to travel along the Maine coast during long stretches of the summer.  These were very special times, and Ron delighted in both celestial wayfinding and the challenge of daytime sailing through pea soup fog with Jane as navigator.

Early in life, Ron displayed a keen affinity for mathematics. Prior to attending McGill University, he devoted his summer to learning calculus. Following his McGill years, he pursued a doctoral degree in physics at Harvard University. To make certain Harvard was a good fit, he rode his single-speed bike festooned with makeshift panniers (courtesy of his mother) from Montreal across the White Mountains of New Hampshire to Cambridge. Camping roadside and in whatever youth hostel would accept him, he completed the four-day journey ready to begin the next chapter of his life.

During his time at Harvard, he was fortunate to have taken a liking to a rather attractive and brilliant lab partner who later became his wife. After completing his degree, he taught for several years at Harvard and then worked as an applied physicist for GTE Sylvania before becoming a consultant to a number of technology companies.

In addition to playing violin in the Lincoln-Sudbury Civic Orchestra for many years, Ron was also a self-taught pianist. His strong sight-reading allowed him to play nearly anything on the piano on demand. Scott Joplin and Rodgers & Hammerstein tunes regularly permeated the Row house, to everyone’s delight.

A devoted family man and community member, Ron was beloved by a large extended family and many others who knew him. He touched many lives and will be greatly missed but his influence will live on.

Family and friends are invited to attend visiting hours at Dee Funeral Home (27 Bedford St., Concord_ on Thursday, Dec. 14 from 4–7 p.m. A funeral service in celebration of Ron’s life will take place at St. Anne’s in-the-Fields Episcopal Church in Lincoln on Friday, Dec. 15 at 11 a.m., immediately followed by a reception in the parish hall.  Services will conclude with burial at Lincoln Cemetery.   

In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the Appalachian Mountain Club, 10 City Square, Boston, MA 02129 or St. Anne’s in-the-Fields, P.O. Box 6, Lincoln, MA 01773. 

Arrangements are entrusted to Dee Funeral Home & Cremation Service of Concord, which provided this obituary. To share a remembrance or to offer a condolence in Ron’s online guestbook, please click here.

Category: obits 2 Comments

My Turn: To include or not to include the mall?

November 30, 2023

By Laurie Gray

To include the mall or not to include the mall — that is the HCA question.

I am a supporter of Option E, and I want development at the mall. What I would like for the mall is for some number of housing units to go up in the range of 150 units while maintaining the viability of Donelan’s. I would also want to keep a commuter rail lot. For environmental reasons, I want to support people who already use the commuter rail. Keeping a grocery store in the mall also supports the environmental mission of the town — to have more people walk rather than drive to amenities. I would also like to see a large percentage of these units at the mall be affordable. If the mall is rezoned through the HCA, we could only ask developers for 10% of the units to be affordable.

What I have heard is developers do not want to go through Town Meeting. That is the line that has been repeated. I agree that developers would rather not have to negotiate with the town. They would not get as much of what they want, which is profit. People have said that developers won’t go through town meeting, and therefore the only way to get housing at the mall is to push it through the HCA. I am skeptical of this.

First of all, before August, the mall was not even allowed to be included in the HCA because mixed use land (residential + commercial) was not allowed in the proposals. There were other plans to develop the mall outside the HCA. Other projects like Oriole Landing have gone through town meeting successfully. It may take time but I believe it is worth it to have the town center that is best for our residents, current and future. Once we give up our rights to developers, it is gone. This is our prime real estate.

I know there has been chatter about special interests and secrecy in the Option E group. I’m not sure exactly what the special interest would be in this case. However, is it possible there is a special interest tricking people into thinking the best way to get housing at the mall is through the HCA? I am worried that we are being taken advantage of. That our moral principles, which are strong and great, could blind us to what could really be going on. Good, smart people can be misled.

I plan to vote for Option E on Saturday. I would also support slowing down the process. Including the mall in our HCA proposal is a new concept, only introduced around September. Could the town get more information about the plans for the mall before including it in the HCA? I want to trust but verify, because this decision is too important.


“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* 1 Comment

My Turn: Reflections on a community center for Lincoln

November 30, 2023

By Barbara Slayter

Over the years, there has been a lot of discussion about the pros and cons as well as the specific characteristics of a community center that we might eventually have in Lincoln. Three contributions to the Lincoln Squirrel’s “My Turn” in recent weeks have shaped my thinking about how to vote at Saturday’s Special Town Meeting. They are Ellen Shorb’s “How would you use a community center?,” Dilla Tingley’s “A community center for Lincoln” and David Levington’s “How about equity for seniors?”

Ellen’s delightful essay encouraged us to imagine possibilities. The question she posed was not “How would I use a community center in Lincoln right now?” but rather “How might I have used it when I first moved to Lincoln with four young children?” and “How might I use it in the near future?” Her lively responses led me to reflect on these same questions for myself. How might I have used a community center at different stages in my life? What opportunities could have existed in the past and what might be available in the future? It is intriguing to speculate!

Dilla’s essay led me to ponder another set of questions. We are not talking about a senior center. We are talking about a community center that will serve the whole community — seniors, school children, and everyone in between. LEAP will be ensconced in the community center as planned, but more than that, the building will be accessible to all ages, interest groups, and organizations in the community in the way that the facilities at Bemis Hall (much as I treasure them) simply can’t accommodate. If you have ever tried to schedule a discussion group at Bemis or a public meeting with your state representative, you know the pressure that exists on use of those spaces.

With an “edge” about seniors being left out, David asks us to look at the big picture. Given three options to consider, he (and almost everyone else) writes off the least expensive as being unacceptable, a structure totally inadequate for addressing the programmatic and administrative needs of the COA&HS and Parks and Recreation.

He then looks at the tax implications of the remaining two choices and determines that, from his perspective, the difference is not large. Why not, he asks, take the step to create a structure that will serve us well over a long period of time? “Why not?” I ask myself. This might be an opportunity not to be missed. Who knows when it will come again.

I would also add another thought. Isolation and loneliness are widely regarded as significant concerns in contemporary American life. Across the country approximately 30% of households have only one adult in residence. 

In Lincoln, a significant number of adults live alone. While this may be especially true for seniors, it is also the case for all age groups. I can well imagine the benefits of a gathering place where residents can get together informally, at will, and as need be for casual interactions over a cup of coffee or planned discussions, activities, or events.

How special to have a place to go without invitation, or pre-arrangements, or pre-programming. Just turn up! This is my community, my center, and I, along with everyone else in this community, am welcome. And if it is beautiful, spacious, and accommodating, so much the better.


“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: community center*, My Turn 1 Comment

My Turn: 90 residents sign letter in support of Option C

November 30, 2023

We the undersigned Lincoln voters have carefully reviewed the options for compliance with the Massachusetts Housing Choice Act at the Special Town Meeting on Saturday, Dec. 2. We plan to support Option C for the following reasons:

  • Option C, in which all the rezoning takes place near the train station and in the area surrounding the mall, provides the best and most likely opportunity to create a vibrant, welcoming center for this town.  
  • We have confidence in the Rural Land Foundation to live up to its mission to acquire, protect, and steward conservation land in Lincoln as it has done conscientiously since its formation in 1965.

Option C is preferable to Option E because:

  • Option E does not include the mall in its rezoning plan. We believe improvements in the mall will not happen in the near future if we delay the process for future Town Meeting approvals.
  • Option E designates 54.3% of new units at Battle Road Farm, a disingenuous plan since approval of new housing is unlikely to take place. Battle Road Farm has a cumbersome and complicated process in which 100% of condominium owners must approve a requested change. In terms of approval for new housing, Battle Road Farm is a non-starter.
  • We believe that affordable housing can be achieved in other ways in the rezoned areas. We are content, for now, to agree to 10% affordable housing in the mall area.  
  • We believe that Option C offers the most environmentally sound approach to joining efforts to address greater Boston’s housing needs and strengthen the use of the commuter rail, while also maintaining our commitment to conscientious stewardship of our environment.

Therefore, we support C, which will:

  • Strengthen Lincoln’s commercial area, creating a vibrant center for the town.
  • Provide a timely and honest response to the housing crisis in greater Boston.
  • Enable Lincoln to work toward an optimal housing affordability ratio.
  • Adhere to our values of cherishing our environment while supporting the human needs of our larger community.
Sarah Andrysiak
Carl Angiolillo
Lisa Barna
Ken Bassett
Cindy Bencal
Alex Benik
Merrill Berkery
Laura Berland
Becky Bermont
Sarah Bishop
Rebecca Blanchfield
Pam Boardman
John Bordiuk
Rory Bordiuk
Janet Boynton
Brian Burns
Jessica Callow
Tom Casey
Alex Chatfield
Jason Curtin
Christine Damon
Priscilla Damon
Alice DeNormandie
Nancy Donaldson
Anne Doyle
Andy Falender
Jon Ferris
Kristen Ferris
Jim Fleming
Nancy Fleming
Martha Frost
Rainer Frost
Amy Funkenstein
Gina Halsted
Emily Haslett
Tom Haslett
Ruth Ann Hendrikson
Lis Herbert
Zach Herbert
Shira Horowitz
Ken Hurd
Pam Hurd
Brian Jalet
Judy Kearney
Joan Kimball
John Kimball
Jackie Lenth
David Levington
Elizabeth Levy
Connie Lewis
Gwyn Loud
Sara Lupkas
Rick Mandelkorn
Rachel Mason
John Mendelson
DJ Mitchell
Staci Montori
Buffer Morgan
Terri Morgan
Richard Nichols
John Nolan
Trisha O’Hagan
David Onigman
Jason Paige
Ginger Reiner
Kurt Reiner
Aldis Russell
Greg Schmergel
Joanna Schmergel
Ellen Shorb
Paul Shorb
Barbara Slayter
Victoria Slingerland
Jonathan Soo
Kara Soo
Bill Stason
Jim Stock
Peter Sugar
Tricia Thornton-Wells
Dilla Tingley
Christina Van Vleck
Mary Jo Veling
Katy Walker
Irene Weigel
Susan Welsh
Krystal Wood
Jennifer 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* 3 Comments

Clarification and amplification

November 30, 2023

Several readers have posted comments and emailed the Lincoln Squirrel about the November 29 Lincoln Squirrel article headlined “Option E is not viable, HCA consultant says” to complain that it was biased. A better word choice for the headline would have been that Option E is not “compliant.”

The reason Utile gave for deeming Option E noncompliant was because its south Lewis Street subdistrict is smaller than 5 acres and is not contiguous with the rest of the Lincoln Road subdistrict. Some commenters (including but not limited to members of the Lincoln Residents for Housing Alternatives) noted that they had submitted a new option that includes 2 Lewis St., saying this now makes the option acceptable to the state. 

“After sending our initial option to the Selects and the HCAWG, the Lincoln Residents for Housing Alternatives (LRHA) requested that the HCAWG notify us if they or Utile noticed discrepancies so we could correct them before we issued a public version,” LHRA member Benjamin Shiller said in an email to the Squirrel at 6:20 p.m. on November 30. “Instead, the HCAWG received Utile’s advice and immediately published the comment that Option E was not compliant due to this easily remedied issue. This project is extremely detailed and small discrepancies, like those uncovered by the LRHA in the HCAWG submission to the town, can be corrected once they are pointed out.”  

It’s unclear when the LHRA officially submitted its amended Option 3. The Lincoln Squirrel was unaware of that development at the time the article was written, since it was not brought up at the Zoom session held shortly before publication.

LRHA also notes that the Housing Choice Act Working Group amended its own four options after it submitted Option C to the state for a preliminary compliance check, due in part to issues pointed out by the LRHA. HCAWG delves into the details of wetlands, open space, units per acre, and modeled unit capacity numbers in the “2023 11 30 – Deeper Dive into Calculations” update at the top of the HCAWG web page. In a November 30 email to LincolnTalk, Shiller said there are still problems with the state model and the HCAWG options that could allow much more development than intended, as he explains in these two videos (short and long versions).

This is an unusual story where complicated details are changing sometimes several times a day in a flurry of activity leading up to an important town-wide vote. The Lincoln Squirrel has amended the headline in the November 29 article but stands by its reporting as being accurate at the moment the described events took place. 

Category: news 4 Comments

News acorns

November 30, 2023

Flashlight candy cane hunt postponed for a week

Due to the predicted evening rain for Friday, Dec. 1, the Parks & Recreation Department is moving the free Flashlight Candy Cane Hunt at Pierce Park to Friday, Dec. 8 from 6–7 p.m. 

Bake sale and COA&HS gift bag drive at Town Meeting

The Lincoln Girl Scouts will hold a bake sale with coffee and treats right before the Special Town Meeting on Saturday, Dec. 2 at 9:30 a.m. (voter check-in starts at 8:30 a.m.). They’ll also be collecting donations for the Council on Aging & Human Services holiday gift bag program — consider bringing a donation to town meeting. Click here for a list of needed items.

Shop for the holidays at LSF online book fair

Purchase books for your family, friends, and teachers at Lincoln Public Schools at the Lincoln School Foundation’s first online book fair fundraiser. Twenty-five percent of all sales before before Monday, Dec. 11 go to the LSF to fund innovative teaching grants (after that date, 15% of any books purchased still go to LSF.) Check out Bookfair.org’s pre-curated staff picks and award-winning book lists organized by grade, or search by subject and reading level. On the LSF book fair website, you can also find your school’s grade or specialist wish list. Wishlist purchases will be anonymous to the teachers; any books purchased (including those from wish lists) will ship directly to you. Then simply drop them off in the appropriately labeled bin in your school’s front lobby. Questions? Email bookfair@lincolnschoolfoundation.org

Coming up at the Council on Aging & Human Services

“Under Milk Wood”
Friday, Dec. 8 at 12:30 p.m. (Bemis Hall)
This staged reading of Dylan Thomas’s 1943 radio play, “Under Milk Wood,” is a celebration of life in a small Welsh fishing village, at once moving, hilariously funny, sometimes bawdy and always wildly poetic.  Cast members include Lincoln residents Mary Crowe, Ben Dubrovsky, and Sally Kindleberger. Wordsmove Theater graciously donated their time to the community and this show is free to all.

A Gathering of Celtic & Christmas Music
Friday, Dec. 15 at 12:30 p.m. (Bemis Hall)
Come enjoy the magical sounds of Celtic instruments coupled with vocals. Musician Jeff Snow‘s knowledge of his Scottish heritage create a delightful program of traditional and original songs. Sponsored by Friends of Council on Aging & Friends of the Lincoln Library.

Category: acorns Leave a Comment

My Turn: Thoughts on a community center

November 30, 2023

By Craig Donaldson

On Saturday, a key vote will determine the future course of the proposal to build a town community center. As I have considered our best course over the last year, the answers to several key questions have gradually become clearer:

Does the town have sufficient resources now to support current and future program needs? 

The Council on Aging and Human Services (COA&HS), Parks and Recreation Department (PRD) and Lincoln Extended-Day Activities Program (LEAP) are three stakeholders among a virtual beehive of social, educational, and cultural activities sponsored by town government and local organizations. A mixture of core staff and large numbers of volunteers provides the leadership and energy to make these three programs available.

Though possibly skewed by recent experience with the pandemic and my perspective as a participant in COA activities and service on the Friends of the COA board, it appears that matching these programs to current resources and venues increasingly taxes the ingenuity and patience of all, despite exercising our Yankee virtue of “making do.” In upcoming years, any increase in number and scope of programs will be stymied without improved accommodations. Though any particular program’s value must be judged in the eye of the beholder, there are likely valuable programs which have failed or were never started for lack of suitable venue or facility.

Is it necessary to build a new building now to meet current and future needs?

Concern that stakeholder programming was being inadequately served by our existing facilities resulted in funding for further study this year. The Community Center Building Committee (CCBC) and consultant ICON Architecture have appraised currently available venues as part of their charge. Early indications suggest that remodeling and renovation of existing spaces to enhance parking, access, and necessary amenities would cost significantly more than building a new facility.

Meanwhile, the experience with resources such as Bemis Hall, Pierce House, Town Hall, and our schools and churches suggests that ongoing programming will entail continuation of familiar stresses, with additional strain should programming expand. Investing in new space would add a central venue, up to modern code with parking, internet interconnectivity and facility to host a wide array of activities for all ages, interests and needs. Concern that the existing venues will lie fallow after a new building is opened appears unfounded, given crowding in some town facilities and likely gradual growth of town services and programs.  

Would an alternative site to the Hartwell campus be preferable now?

The charge to CCBC and ICON from the Special Town Meeting in fall 2022 was to provide three alternative cost points for a community center at the Hartwell site on the school campus. Some proponents of the community center concept have reasonably suggested that the new facility be located in the commercial center at the train station, given a projected increase in population density there as the state mandate for additional housing takes shape.

As discussions have evolved, however, it is clear that the needs of all three stakeholder programs will be best served by space at Hartwell, interfacing LEAP with the school, PRD with outdoor and gym facilities and COA&HS with all. The path to an expanded commercial and housing center has yet to be clearly mapped and its realization appears remote, particularly considering community center stakeholder needs which many feel have been evident and growing for years.

How can we afford the cost of a community center now?

The cost of a new building is certainly an important concern, especially as we now face the fresh burden of debt for the new school. As many have urged, we must be clear about the difference between what we need and what we want. The CCBC and ICON have created plans for a center at three different cost points to allow careful choice of the best fit for our needs and means as a town and as taxpayers. Whichever option is chosen for further design, it should feature a core structure which would enable efficient adaptation and enhancement in future years should needs dictate and means allow. It is clear that costs will only be higher as time goes by — an important reality urging us to reach decisive action soon.

How can we assure the best choice for the town?

The CCBC has taken on the task of leading the process through these issues, working with ICON on behalf of the town to solicit input from townspeople as well as keeping us informed of the issues and options at hand. Discussion and voting at Saturday’s Town Meeting will result in a choice for the town to pursue in detail prior to a final vote on funding in March. Throughout, constructive participation with civility, compromise, and good faith has been prominently displayed on behalf of reaching the current crossroads for the town.

Exercise your civic enfranchisement by joining the festivities on Saturday!


“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: community center*, My Turn Leave a Comment

My Turn: Option C vs. Option E

November 30, 2023

By Benjamin Shiller

After spending a lot of time thinking about the various options for the Housing Choice Act, I have become very concerned about potential consequences of having too much growth too quickly. I thought the most concentrated housing option, Option C, might be manageable at the stated increase in units — 454, or about a 20% increase in Lincoln (excluding Hanscom) housing units. However, digging deeper, I learned that the increase could be much higher than stated, raising serious concerns about unintended consequences. The reason for the severe underestimate is the inclusion of properties with substantial wetlands and town-owned lands. The state compliance model heavily discounts such properties, excessively so, raising the concern that the actual number of additional units may be more than twice as high.

I have created this video, explaining this in more detail, which I hope you might consider viewing. 

There are plenty of ways to do more than our part to alleviate the local housing shortage without jeopardizing our town. We could try to choose parcels more selectively to avoid a surprise. For example, we could choose parcels that are privately owned and which do not contain wetlands. 

There really doesn’t seem to be any rationale for including public lands, as they do not count at all towards compliance. For example, it has been claimed that the DPW needs to be included for contiguity, because the road counts as public lands rather than “public ways” which are to be exempted from contiguity. However, even if you think roads on municipal land do not count as “public ways,” which seems contrary to how Massachusetts defines a public way, one could change it to a municipal road with the stroke of a pen, then drop the DPW from Option C.  

Ryan Estate poses a bigger issue, but one that can be solved with a little creative thinking. Ryan Estate is probably needed for contiguity for options where the majority of the acres surround the mall. However, Ryan Estate could be assigned to its own subdistrict with much lower density, eliminating the risk of surprises. Option E does this.

I close with a question. Proponents of Option C have repeatedly claimed that development would take place slowly over time. If that is the case, then what is the harm of selecting a less risky option, like Option E, along with the mall redevelopment, which together would increase housing units (yes, new housing) across Lincoln by about 15%? This would already be a very large change especially since it is all concentrated in one area. We could do that, then see if substantial rapid development causes any issues. If it does not, then we could do additional rezoning to increase housing units further, and avoid the HCA limitation of 10% affordable units. I have difficulty seeing why all of our housing expansion has to occur right now under the Housing Choice Act.

Benjamin Shiller is a member of Lincoln Residents for Alternative Housing.


“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* 1 Comment

My Turn: Option C is best for the mall and the town

November 30, 2023

By the Rural Land Foundation Board of Directors

As the December 2 Town Meeting approaches, we thought it would be helpful to briefly remind you of who we are, why we think our preliminary proposal to redevelop the mall with by-right mixed-use zoning is in the best interest of Lincoln, and our current thinking of the HCA options.

The RLF and its mission

The Rural Land Foundation (RLF) is a nonprofit land conservation organization whose central mission, along with our sister organization the Lincoln Land Conservation Trust (LLCT), is to help protect the rural character of Lincoln. The RLF board, made up of 17 Lincoln residents and its three Lincoln resident staff members, all care deeply about this town.

While our primary goal is to help the town conserve land through acquisition, creative planning, and limited development, we also own and operate the mall for the benefit of Lincoln residents. Proceeds from operating the mall fund our land conservation activities in Lincoln. Through the years, RLF’s creative model has helped us work with the town to conserve more than 2,500 acres of land and create over 80 miles of interconnected trails. Whether it is protecting most of the 100+acre Wheeler Farm back in the early 1960s with a limited development model, or more recently, conserving much of the Wang property and providing an opportunity for the town to create a much-needed athletic field, our goals and commitment are to help the town meet its needs and preserve its rural character.

RLF’s preferred option

At the December 2 Special Town Meeting, the town is asking Lincoln residents to vote on a preferred zoning warrant article that meets the requirements of the Housing Choice Act (HCA). Four of the zoning options (C, D1, D2, and D3) allow the town to take credit for the mall rezoning towards the total number of units the state requires for Lincoln to comply with the HCA. We think all four of these particular options make sense for the town to take credit for housing units zoned at the mall. It is our belief that Option C creates the best opportunity to:

  • Create new multifamily housing near public transportation
  • Provide economically diverse housing options and create affordable housing that may actually be built
  • Help the mall’s valued tenants in an otherwise struggling retail environment
  • Minimize climate change impacts

We see this as an exciting opportunity to work with town residents and officials to revitalize our small commercial area and create a sustainable and vibrant town center. For any potential redevelopment that is considered at the mall, we are committed to help the town ensure a commercial-based town center for the long term.

Why by-right zoning is best for redeveloping the mall

We are asking for the by-right mixed-use zoning for the mall vs. the Town Meeting process because we believe it:

  • Provides the most financial flexibility
  • Creates site planning clarity for RLF and a future developer
  • Allows the mall to be on the same competitive playing field for developers as other HCA by-right zoned areas within Lincoln and surrounding towns
  • Is more likely to attract essential outside capital for much-needed reinvestment in the mall
  • Still preserves our commercial center and is more likely to create a vibrant and sustainable town center
Public process

RLF is fully committed to a public process that, in addition to Planning Board site plan review, includes numerous feedback sessions with town residents and many other opportunities to let us know what you like and what you don’t like. Our last redevelopment project at the mall in the early 2000s, where we saved the post office and Donelan’s from leaving, involved a process that included Town Meeting and nearly seven years of listening and public feedback, much of which we tried to incorporate. The uncertainty, cost, and length of that process almost resulted in the project not coming to fruition.

We know many residents are very concerned about the future of the commercial center and we appreciate that interest. The RLF board and staff have worked hard over the years to maintain a commercial center for Lincoln and we hope to ensure a vibrant and sustainable center for the future. It is our belief that a well-thought-out “Lincoln-scale” redevelopment project will help our valued tenants at the mall continue to thrive. However, ultimately, Lincoln residents control the future of our commercial center by either shopping there and using the services or not.

Trust and support

As we have done for decades with our conservation projects, we are respectfully asking you for your trust and support. RLF has a track record across decades of being a thoughtful steward for the town. We are asking the citizens of Lincoln to trust our organization to do what’s best for the community at the mall, consistent with our nonprofit mission, and we seek more flexibility in achieving these goals. We want to continue to partner with the town to improve its socioeconomic diversity while maintaining its rural character, thriving agriculture and open space for enjoyment by all.

P.S. We know that there have been a lot of specific questions about the project and RLF. We will continue to try to answer those questions through the FAQs on our website and the HCAWG website.

RLF board members are Michelle Barnes (chair), Susan Allen (vice chair), Kenneth Bassett, William G. Constable, Daniel England, Andy Falender, Andrew Gnazzo (vice treasurer), James Henderson, Weston Howland III, Diana Jong, Gwyneth Loud, Robert Mason, Ellen Meadors (treasurer), Paul Shorb, Nancy Soulette (secretary), Andrew Stevenson, and Susan Welsh.


“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* Leave a Comment

My Turn: Mothers Out Front endorse Option C

November 30, 2023

By the Mothers Out Front Lincoln leadership team

Lincoln’s Mothers Out Front leadership team enthusiastically endorses HCA Option C.

We believe that transit-friendly housing is a climate solution. By increasing housing density near public transportation and within the town center, Lincoln will be part of the solution to both the regional housing crisis and climate. In Lincoln and statewide, we feel that housing, climate, quality of life, diversity, inclusion, and a thriving economy are all critically important community issues.

We therefore support enacting zoning changes that comply with both the law and spirit of the MBTA Communities Act. We vigorously encourage construction of additional housing at the mall and near Lincoln’s train station. Option C is the only plan that does not increase density near or in the expanding Hanscom airport and Lincoln’s one environmental justice community.

We encourage the town to continue advancing a broad program of climate mitigation, environmental justice, and resilience strategies through our 2023 Climate Action Plan, including sustainable building practices, ecological landscaping around new development, and minimizing carbon emissions.

We extend our sincere appreciation to our Select Board, the Housing Choice Act Working Group, town staff, and all who have worked towards developing these zoning options.

We wholeheartedly hope you will join us on Saturday and Vote for Option C.

Lincoln’s Mothers Out Front leadership team members are Emily Haslett, Staci Montori, Rachel Neurath, Trish O’Hagan, and Candace Pearson.


“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.

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