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Library offers seeds of knowledge — and now real seeds as well

April 3, 2025

The Lincoln Public Library’s seed library (click image to enlarge).

The Lincoln Public Library lands all sorts of things in addition to books and music, but now it’s giving something away: seeds.

The “seed library” on the ground floor offers packets of seeks stored in old wooden card catalogue boxes, as well as a notebook with instructions from the original seed packets on planting each type (visitors can jot them down or take a picture with their phone of the pages of interest).

The seeds were donated by Weston Nurseries of Lincoln and Russell’s Garden Center in Wayland. The selection focuses on easier-growing garden plants, “which is why there is more of a focus on fruits and vegetables rather than flowers, as they can be a bit finicky,” said librarian Alison Armstrong, who organized the project after hearing interest from some patrons and noting the idea’s success at other libraries.

Even though libraries are usually in the business of offering things to use in the building, or lending things with an expectation that they’ll be returned, the seed library squares with the institution’s mission. “Above all, the work of the library is providing access to resources and information that patrons may not otherwise have been able to utilize,” Armstrong said. “By connecting with our community partners to establish the seed library, we’re able to facilitate access to people who may have always been interested in building their own garden, but were unable to do so for whatever reason.”

The most important piece, Armstrong continued, “is being able to provide the Lincoln community with a hands-on educational resource, which is at the core of our mission to focus on life-long learning and sharing new knowledge and ideas.”

Category: agriculture and flora Leave a Comment

Correction

April 3, 2025

Codman Community Farms has changed the date of Club Codman from May 10, as originally listed in the April 2 edition of News Acorns, to May 31. The News Acorn and calendar listing have been updated.

Category: Uncategorized Leave a Comment

News acorns

April 2, 2025

Spring market on Saturday

LincFam will host a Spring Market at the Pierce House on Saturday, April 5 from 9:00am–1:00pm with local food, handmade jewelry and artworks, flowers, and folk music with Art Grossman. Click here for details on vendors.

COA&HS activities this month

For a full list of Council on Aging & Human Services events — including clinics, exercise classes, regular meetings of interest groups, and online chats with town officials — see the COAHS’s newsletter page. Call 781-259-8811 or email gagnea@lincolntown.org for Zoom links and other information.

  • Lincoln’s Doo Wop group will host a concert and cereal drive on Thursday, April 10 at 3:30pm in Bemis Hall. Please bring boxes of cereal to benefit the Lincoln Food Pantry
  • Ray Anthony Shepard, Lincoln’s representative to the Special Commission on the 250th Anniversary Celebration of the American Revolution, will read from his work-in-progress, The Forgotten Patriots of Color: A Story of Local Black & Brown Patriots, on Friday, April 11 at 12:30pm in Bemis Hall.
  • “The Nettle Dress: A Tale of Love & Healing” (68 minutes) will be shown on Thursday, April 25 at 12:30pm. After the death of his beloved wife, textile artist Allan Brown spent seven years making a dress by hand just from the fiber of locally foraged stinging nettles.

Two plant sales coming up

  • The ordering deadline for the Middlesex Conservation District’s 2025 Spring Plant Sale is Monday, April 21 with pickup and cash sale on Friday, May 2 from 4:00–7:00pm, and Saturday, May 3 from 9:00am–1:00pm at Farrington Nature Linc. Click here to order.
  • The Lincoln Land Conservation Trust will hold its annual plant sale on Sunday, May 18 from 11:00am–1:00pm at Lincoln Station. There will be a selection of native perennials and shrubs for (no pre-orders) — click here to see the list of available plants. LLCT membership contributions support the sale and planting efforts on conservation land.

Lincoln School Librarian Gwen Blumberg joined Saige at the MSLA award ceremony on March 30 in Plainville.

Third-grader wins statewide contest

xLincoln School third-grader Saige Hamilton has won the Massachusetts School Library Association’s statewide 2025 Bookmark Contest for second- and third-graders in Division 2. Saige is the daughter of Lincoln METCO director Marika Hamilton. Students from schools across the state submitted designs for a bookmark themed “Find Your Path in the Library.” It was the first time Lincoln School participated. 

Gropius House tour and walk

Come see “A New Kind of Architecture in Harmony with Nature” on a tour of the historic Gropius House (68 Baker Bridge Rd.) on Sunday, April 27 from 10:00–11:30am. Walter Gropius (1883-1969) founded the Bauhaus school that united art, nature, and technology. The tour of his 1938 Lincoln home followed by a walk in the grounds reveal design strategies that have returned to architectural importance for sustainable design in the 21st century. Click here for tickets.

Get ready for Club Codman

Dust off your wigs, platforms, and polyester because Club Codman is coming to Codman Farm on Saturday, May 31 at 8:00pm. It’s an adults-only dance party to benefit Codman Community Farms with great music and great drinks. Purchase tickets here.

Category: acorns Leave a Comment

Addendum

April 2, 2025

Here are the transcript and video of the reenactment of the 1775 Town Meeting debate presented during Town Meeting on March 29.

Category: Uncategorized Leave a Comment

Preschoolers pitch in for food pantry

April 1, 2025

Children and parents from the Lincoln Nursery School recently contributed to a food drive for the St. Vincent de Paul food pantry. See more photos on the SVdP Facebook page. Adults, left to right: Lauren Lane, Jenny Rogers, Bridget Healy, Melissa McDermott, LNS Director Nancy Fincke, Alison Young, and Robin Blesius.

Category: charity/volunteer Leave a Comment

Dozens of luminaries petition Healey to stop Hanscom expansion

April 1, 2025

More than 40 leading historians, scientists, and climate and environmental advocates sent a letter today to Gov. Maura Healey asking her to stop the proposed private jet expansion of Hanscom Field.

The airfield is close to Minute Man National Historical Park (MMNHP), Walden Pond, and nearby landmarks which the National Trust for Historic Preservation and has designated as among America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places. Those areas are ground zero for the celebration of the 250th anniversary of the start of the Revolutionary War, with events that will draw thousands to the region.

Minute Man National Park, Walden, and their historic environs represent and reflect our nation’s ability to prevail, evolve, and enlighten in the face of extreme challenge,” the letter says. Signers include musician and Walden Woods project founder Don Henley, actor/activists Ed Begley Jr. and Ashley Judd, 350.org founder Bill McKibben, documentary filmmaker Ken Burns, musician James Taylor, historian Douglas Brinkley Jr., former Massachusetts secretary for environmental affairs John DeVillars, and Ellen Emerson and Mark Thoreau, direct descendants of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry Thoreau.

Last June, Energy and Environmental Affairs Secretary Rebecca Tepper rejected the draft environmental impact report for the expansion and asked the developers to submit a supplemental report with additional information about climate impacts, among other things. The proposal would add 17 hangars that could accommodate more than 60 additional private jets.

Healey is also the target of petitions from the National Trust for Historic Preservation and Stop Private Jet Expansion at Hanscom or Anywhere; the letter has garnered 14,000 signatures so far. The state legislature and the Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act office do not have the authority to stop a Massport project; only Healey has that power.

Click here to see previous news and opinion piece in the Lincoln Squirrel about this issue.

Category: Hanscom Air Field Leave a Comment

Olson loses seat as two newcomers voted onto Planning Board

March 31, 2025

Longtime Planning Board member Margaret Olson came in third and thus lost her bid for reelection in Lincoln’s town election on March 31 as challengers Susan Hall Mygatt and Rob Ahlert won the two open seats. 

The vote was quite close among the three candidates. Mygatt came in first with 558 votes (33%), but Ahlert edged out Olson, 446 to 416 (26% to 24%). 

Though incumbents usually have an advantage, there was one element that probably determined the outcome: both Mygatt and Ahlert opposed the Housing Choice Act rezoning measure that Olson shepherded through last year as Planning Board chair. And in a “My Turn” piece in the Lincoln Squirrel on March 23, Flint (an incumbent who chose not to run for reeelction) endorsed the two challengers. He cited Mygatt’s experience on the Conservation Commission and the Zoning Board of Appeals, as well as the fact that Ahlert of 185 Lincoln Road lives close to the South Lincoln area that was rezoned.

“With all the changes that are slated for this area, I believe it’s critical that the neighborhood has a voice on the Planning Board,” Flint wrote.

The tightness of the race echoed the contentious March 2024 Town Meeting vote on the rezoning measure, which passed by a slim 52%-to-48% margin. Not coincidentally, that was the first year that zoning bylaw changes could be approved by towns with a simple majority vote rather than the previous two-thirds. 

In the other contested race, John Ryan Jr. and Charles Morton IV were the top two vote-getters for the two openings on the Lincoln-Sudbury Regional School Committee, beating out Eric Poch (all from Sudbury). In that town, which also held its election on March 31, Ryan won 1,528 votes, Morton received 1,436, and Poch got 836. Click here for the full Sudbury results. 

In Lincoln, 850 voters cast ballots, or 17% of the town’s 5,020 registered voters.

Precinct 1Precinct 2Total
Select Board
James M. Hutchinson462202664
Write-in/blank14838186
Total610240850
Board of Assessors
Bruce D. Campbell448193641
Write-in/blank16247209
Total610240850
Board of Health
Steven R. Kanner448194642
Write-in/blank
Total610240850
Cemetery Commissioner
Conrad H. Todd470199669
Write-in/blank14041181
Total610240850
Commissioner of Trust Funds
Douglas B. Harding455193648
Write-in/blank15547202
Total610240850
L-S Regional School District Committee (vote for two)*
Charles I. Morton IV367146513
Eric D. Poch6040100
John J. Ryan, Jr.395174569
Write-in/blank398120518
Total1,2204801,700
Parks and Recreation Committee
Thornton D. Ring, Jr.443178621
Write-in/Blank16762229
Total610240850
Planning Board (vote for two)
Setha Margaret Olson305111416
Robert D. Ahlert315131446
Susan Hall Mygatt389169558
Write-in/blank21169280
Total1,2204801,700
School Committee – three years
Kenneth R. Lepage437178615
Write-in/blank17162235
Total610240850
School Committee – two years
Abbey B. Salon439184623
Write-in/blank17156227
Total610240850
Town Clerk
Valerie Fox519215734
Write-in/blank9125116
Total610240850
Trustees of Bemis Fund
Sara A. Mattes447184631
Write-in/blank16356219
Total610240850
Trustees of Lincoln Library
Ray A. Shepard479197676
Write-in/blank13143174
Total610240850
Water Commissioner
Stephen R. Gladstone464197661
Write-in/blank14643189
Total610240850

* Totals do not include Sudbury votes; click here for those results.

Category: elections Leave a Comment

Town Meeting free of controversy and “nay” votes

March 30, 2025

Lincoln’s Annual Town Meeting set a non-pandemic record for brevity, wrapping up in under three hours as every warrant article was approved by unanimous voice vote in a rare controversy-free edition.

Perhaps the most interesting aspect of the March 29 meeting was the confluence of past and future. It started out with a demonstration of the new voting clickers and later moved to a reenactment of Lincoln residents debating at a 1775 Town Meeting whether to allocate money for the war that many saw coming (see related story and “My Turn” piece).

Votes approved funding to buy the clickers last year and were thrilled on Saturday with the instant tallies during a test run, when they were asked to indicate whether this was their first Town Meeting or not (result: 149 no, 24 yes). They also tested the multiple-choice function. Ranked-choice voting will be an option in the future.

Saturday’s vote means that “we can add clickers to the list of techniques that the town moderator can use to ask for a vote,” Select Board member Jim Hutchinson explained. Voice votes will be the first go-to method and standing votes are still an option, but it’s at the discretion of the moderator. The only substantive and unavoidable change from traditional vote-counting is that voting by clicker is anonymous, so attendees can’t see how their neighbors are voting on an issue.

Hutchinson also encouraged officials to use the clickers to get a sense of attendees at future Town Meetings and those of boards and committees even if it’s not a formal vote. “We believe this is a good way to get more feedback from residents,” he said.

Budget

Revenues and expenses will grow by 7.9% in the budget approved for fiscal 2026. However, property owners will see a tax increase of only 0.9%, largely due to the Finance Committee’s use of $902,000 from free cash for tax relief. It’s a big change from 2020, when the tax rate ballooned by 14% due to borrowing for the school renovation project. “Preferred items” that were approved in addition to the FY26 base budget included a new police officer (the first in 25 years) and a part-time administrative assistant in the Planning Office.

These two charts show how Lincoln’s property tax rate has grown over the last decade in comparison to neighboring towns (click image to enlarge).

Future town budgets will be more unpredictable than usual, given the “sweeping and rapidly evolving” presidential orders on public health education, the environment, immigration, and more, said Select Board Chair Kim Bodnar. Pending the outcome of a flurry of legal challenges, “we have insufficient information to warrant making changes to budget and programs” in Lincoln, but the town will need to “evaluate what we need to do to maintain compliance with federal laws… while remaining true to the town’s vision statement and commitment to keeping Lincoln a welcoming community for all our residents, students, staff and visitors.”

Town Meeting Study Committee

Andrew Pang reported on the work of the committee, which was formed after last year’s controversial Annual Town Meeting (ATM) debate and vote on Housing Choice Act rezoning. Among its accomplishments so far:

  • The pre-ATM moderator’s meeting, seen by some as “proverbial smoke-filled room,” is now hybrid for greater transparency.
  • Publication of a Town Meeting primer
  • A two-minute timer visible to those who speak at the audience microphones, though by law, the moderator reserves the right to allow speakers to go longer. The group is also working on improvements to the audiovisual technology that’s used when an overflow room such as the Reed Gym is used.

Pang acknowledged that there have been “perceptions that differing viewpoints were not welcome” and said that the committee is “working on digesting and assimilating those comments [and will then] develop criteria and rules.” Other suggestions that the group is studying are having separate sessions for Town Meeting debate and voting; allowing remote participation in debate, which is complex from a technical standpoint. Remote voting is not permitted by state law, nor is absentee or early voting, he noted. Most would agree that boosting Town Meeting turnout is desirable, though Lincoln had the highest average rate in the immediate area in 2014-2023 (8.4% of registered voters, vs. a low of 3.7% in Bedford).

Pang urged residents to offer feedback on how Town Meeting went using this website, which the committee will consider as it reviews the primer and makes future recommendations. They expect to issue its final report to the Select Board in October and to residents at the November State of the Town meeting.

Water Enterprise Fund

Voters approved a bond issue of $6.79 million to fund Water Department projects, chiefly a water main replacement through the center of town for $6.2 million. Department Superintendent Darin Lafalam recapped his March 4 public hearing presentation outlining Lincoln’s aging water main infrastructure as Water Commission member Steve Gladstone noted that the town has never replaced an entire water main. Bids just came in for the first of two phases from the top of the hill on Bedford Road down Lincoln Road to Ballfield Road and were in line with estimates; work on that piece will take place this summer.

The bond interest and principal will be repaid from water rates, which rose 10% this year and are slated to do the same in the next two years as well.

Zoning amendments

A comparison of Lincoln’s previous ADU regulations (left), and what voters adopted last week to align with new state law (click image to enlarge).

Voters also approved zoning bylaw amendments to have the town’s rules on accessory dwelling units (ADUs) follow recent changes in state law. Those changes relax the rules around units of up to 900 square feet, though the town retained additional restrictions on units from 900 to 1,200 square feet. ADUs up to 900 square feet are now allowed by right with no special permit required.

Asked why the town didn’t simply adopt the same rules for all ADUs rather than keeping different ones for larger units, Planning Board Chair Margaret Olson said, “the Planning Board prefers to make small incremental changes [because] it’s extremely difficult to get regulations right.” It may make further changes in the future; “we’ll see what happens… but we’re making the minimum necessary changes today.”

Category: government Leave a Comment

My Turn: Revolution comes to Lincoln Town Meeting

March 30, 2025

By Lynne Smith

The 1775 Lincoln Town Meeting featured a heated but civil debate about the need for a tax increase to equip Lincoln volunteers to fight the British.

This debate came alive last Saturday at the 2025 Town Meeting as seven reenactors, led by Rick Wiggins as Eleazer Brooks, argued the topic. The passion and clarity of the different views rang out in the Donaldson Auditorium as they must have done in the Old Town Hall 250 years ago.  Those in favor of the tax were eloquent about the need for Lincoln volunteers to be armed and ready. Those opposing the tax and the revolution explained the difficulties caused by a tax increase, the loss of their sons to work the farm, and their hope that the problems with the British could be resolved without resorting to war. 

I was deeply moved by the elegant language of the reenactors. It was, in fact, a recreation written recently, but it captured the serious tone and reflected the views of the speakers, pro and con. That our town records preserved the outcome of this 1775 meeting illustrates the value our Lincoln forebears had for free speech and civil debate. Thank you to Kim Bodnar, the Lincoln Minute Men, and the Lincoln250 Committee for reminding us of what we are celebrating this year — and what we hope to continue.


“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: government, My Turn Leave a Comment

Correction

March 30, 2025

The police log for March 13-25 published on March 27 was missing a link to an earlier story about two arrests made after gunshots were heard on the night of March 15. The post has been updated.

Category: police Leave a Comment

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