The Mach 13 article headlined “My Turn: CCBC introduces architects and airs concerns” contained misnumbered paragraphs. It also should have included a link to the next meeting of the Community Center Building Committee, which is Wednesday, March 15 at 2:30 p.m. (Zoom link here.) For future meetings and other information, see the CCBC web page. The original article has been updated.
Police log for March 1–9, 2023
March 1
Baker Bridge Road (6:36 a.m.) — A cyclist fell in the area of 55 Baker Bridge Rd. Police and fire units responded.
Cambridge Turnpike eastbound (7:02 a.m.) — Two-vehicle crash. The Fire Department responded and assisted the motorists. Lincoln police remained on scene to assist the Massachusetts State Police, who were handling the crash.
Windingwood Lane (9:49 a.m.) — A caller reported a suspicious scheme involving an injured relative requiring an immediate transfer of money. The caller identified the call as attempted fraud and reported it to the police.
Hanscom Drive (11:03 a.m.) — Lincoln police assisted faculty of the Guild for Human Services with an individual located near the Sartain gate of Hanscom Air Force Base.
Conant Road (8:12 p.m.) — A caller reported hearing a dog barking. Police checked the area but were unable to hear or locate the dog.
North Great Road I12:22 p.m.) — A motorist reported that a deer struck their vehicle and continued into the woods. Police were unable to locate the deer.
March 2
Juniper Ridge Road (6:28 a.m.) — The Fire Department responded to a report of an odor of smoke inside the residence. They determined that the odor was possibly from smoke not venting properly through the chimney.
Tower Road (1:00 p.m.) — A resident brought an item to the station for destruction.
Lexington Road (7:00 p.m.) — Police were called to a residence to assist with an attempted vehicle repossession.
March 3
Country Pizza (4:13 a.m.) — Police checked on a vehicle that was parked and occupied. The operator cleared from the area a short time thereafter.
Concord Road (11:42 a.m.) — An individual walked into the police station to report that he and his wife were separated on the trails near Walden Pond. Units from the Lincoln Police, Lincoln Fire, Concord Police, Concord Fire, Massachusetts DCR, and the Massachusetts State Police assisted in the search. The parties were ultimately reunited approximately two hours later.
Wells Road (3:51 p.m.) — An officer responded to speak to a resident regarding a lost/stolen item.
Concord Road (5:16 p.m.) — Police responded to the area of 110 Concord Road for a jackknifed dump truck and trailer. A detour was established for Concord Road south-bound traffic. A tow truck was requested to remove the vehicles.
Cambridge Turnpike westbound (6:46 p.m.) — The Concord Fire Department requested a mutual-aid ambulance from Lincoln for a two-vehicle crash on Route 2 in Concord.
March 4
Wells Road (3:30 a.m.) — A caller reported hearing what they believed to be gunshots in the area. Officers responded and believed the noise was the result of a plow truck blade striking a raised utility hole.
Harvest Circle (5:20 a.m.) — During snow removal operations, a small vehicle used to clear sidewalks tipped over and caught fire. The Lincoln Fire Department arrived, addressed the fire, and righted the vehicle.
Cambridge Turnpike westbound (9:35 a.m.) —Concord police requested assistance locating a vehicle traveling east in the westbound lane of Route 2. A check of the area was conducted but no wrong-way vehicles were located.
Lincoln Road (10:40 a.m.) — Two-vehicle crash. Driver #1 was traveling north on Lincoln Road and Driver #2 was traveling west on Codman Road. Driver #2 failed to stop at the stop sign and struck the first vehicle. Both parties were uninjured. Driver #2 was issued a criminal complaint for operating a motor vehicle without a license and failing to stop at a stop sign.
Goose Pond Road (2:34 p.m.) — A resident reported their mailbox was damaged, possible due to snow-plowing efforts.
Donelan’s Supermarket (4:04 p.m.) — Two individuals were reported to be impeding a walkway by Donelan’s Supermarket. Police spoke to the individuals, who subsequently went on their way.
Concord Road (9:54 p.m.) — A caller reported a vehicle crashed into a utility pole in front of their residence. While on the phone with the 911 operator, the vehicle fled the scene, heading toward Wayland. Wayland Police were alerted and subsequently located the vehicle at 111 Glezen Lane. Lincoln police went to that address. The operator of the vehicle was identified and advised that a criminal complaint would be issued for leaving the scene of a property damage crash and a marked lanes violation.
Bedford Lane (10:51 p.m.) — A caller reported that their vehicle had been struck by an individual driving past their location that was firing either a BB gun or paintball gun. An officer responded, spoke to the reporting party, and checked the area. Nothing was found.
March 5
Doherty’s Garage (12:49 a.m.) — An occupied vehicle was located in the area of Doherty’s Garage. The vehicle cleared from the area a short time later.
Indian Camp Lane (1:25 p.m.) — Minor motor vehicle crash.
Pierce House (2:04 p.m.) — A caller asked an officer provide a shovel to free their vehicle stuck in the snow. An officer responded and was able to free the vehicle.
St. Joseph Church (6:22 p.m.) — A caller reported leaving an item behind in the church. An officer was able to assist the individual and retrieve the item.
March 6
Lincoln Road (8:12 a.m.) — Animal Control was notified about a sick raccoon in a resident’s driveway.
56 Offutt Road (11:35 a.m.) — An officer spoke to a resident about a possible past fraud incident.
Laurel Drive (1:20 p.m.) — A Bank of America employee notified the police to report a customer was attempting to withdraw a large sum of money and felt as though the customer was being scammed. Police responded and did, in fact, alert the customer that they were being scammed.
Lincoln Road (4:14 p.m.) — Animal Control was notified about a sick raccoon in a resident’s driveway.
Conant Road (4:50 p.m.) — An officer spoke to two residents regarding a dog encounter.
North Commons (5:16 p.m.) — An officer spoke to a resident who had reported identifying a scam prior to being victimized. Safeguards were discussed to insulate the resident from possible future attempts.
Bedford Road (6:24 p.m.) — A caller that reported an individual was walking on Bedford Road with no shoes. Officers made contact with the individual and arranged transport back to their residence.
March 7
Conant Road (10:26 a.m.) — An officer responded to speak with a resident reporting possible missing items from their home.
Lincoln Road (12:47 p.m.) — An officer assisted the DPW with traffic while they hung the Town Meeting banner.
Wells Road (3:24 p.m.) —Framingham police called to request assistance with contacting a resident about a missing item. The resident was not home.
Conant Road (5:19 p.m.) — An officer spoke to two residents regarding a dog encounter.
March 8
Birchwood Lane (3:51 p.m.) — An individual reported an ongoing situation that required police intervention.
Wells Road (5:14 p.m.) — Court paperwork was served in hand.
March 9
Weston Road (11:19 a.m.) — An individual spoke to an officer about an earlier encounter with a motorist.
Laurel Drive (2:06 p.m.) — A caller reported a possible scam.
Town election candidates: Planning Board
The Lincoln Squirrel will be introducing readers to candidates on the March 27 town election ballot, starting with the two contested races, and the PTO is hosting a candidate forum as well. First up: the Planning Board, which has three candidates competing or two seats. Following are their lightly edited responses to questions posed via email in alphabetical order by last name:
- Lynn DeLisi (incumbent)
- Mark Levinson
- Craig Nicholson
Lynn DeLisi
What made you decide to run for re-election to the Planning Board at this time?
This is a crucial time for Lincoln, as we are facing new state regulations that have been designed to combat the affordable housing shortage throughout the Boston area and elsewhere. The Planning Board has been actively discussing the possibilities for change to the Zoning Bylaw that governs our town for some time. Within the next year, the board, in collaboration with a representative committee created by the Selects, will be considering whether to make specific changes that will comply with the new Housing Choice Act (HCA) and would allow for more affordable housing that meets town goals without irreversibly changing the natural beauty and open space that we all treasure.
The proposals on the table will require a carefully conducted, data-driven, thoughtful, and responsible planning process that will take place in open collaboration with residents. Zoning changes that allow for new development may be irreversible and have an impact on the quality of local life for town residents in decades to come. Since I have been intensely involved in these discussions as a member of the Planning Board for quite a while now, I feel it is my responsibility to the residents of Lincoln to stay on the Board and apply my knowledge and expertise to the decisions to be made as the town progresses into key next stages.
What would you bring to the table in terms of specific professional and/or personal experiences?
I have been a member of the Planning Board for nine years, and at first there was a steep learning curve for me to climb. I was quietly listening my first year, taking it all in and understanding what town planning and development were all about. I studied the Town Bylaw as my textbook. In fact, my Planning Board “education” involved more years than my formal training to become an MD and psychiatrist (seven years)! Regardless, I believe it is less about your professional background or experience that makes a good board member. Rather, it is more about a commitment to a process of well-researched planning and town engagement that ensures you are defining and pursuing town goals that represent the priorities of those who have elected you.
Since this is a contested seat, why should Lincolnites vote for you in particular? What past history or personal/political positions make you better qualified than one or more of the other candidates?
There are two characteristics that I have displayed in my career that are very relevant to this position.
(1) I have always sought ways to bring people together to collaborate. I co-founded two international professional societies, very successful today, and developed international multi-site research projects, all of which brought together diverse sets of individuals to work together and collaborate. This is what we need to do as members of the Planning Board.
(2) I have always gravitated toward finding ways to aid people more vulnerable than myself and have consistently shown empathy toward their needs. As a Planning Board member, I spoke out against rezoning the South Lincoln station area without consideration of the people who live there, the establishment of a residential treatment home for borderline personality disorder that was being “sold” to us erroneously as an educational institution, and the Minuteman HS with its high tower I thought unnecessary and then its athletic field with lighting I thought excessive for the neighborhood. I also worked hard on the marijuana study committee to keep it out of Lincoln and away from our children, knowing the psychiatric consequences. Thus, I have a record of representing the residents of each neighborhood in any controversy that interferes with their well-being. Going forward, I will fight against expansion of Hanscom Field, changes in zoning that put any current Lincoln residents at risk of losing their homes and any other issue that arises.
What do you think is the biggest issue facing the Planning Board over the next three years, and if elected, how do you plan to address it?
My experience on the Planning Board so far is that you cannot predict what the next important issue will be. As of today, I believe that whether we can or want to comply with the State’s Housing Choice Act (HCA) is one of the biggest challenges the Planning Board will need to address. To comply would require changing the zoning of South Lincoln within ½ mile of the commuter rail station to permit multifamily housing development at a density of 15 units per acre for at least eight acres. This would only be 20% of what full compliance with the HCA would require in total.
It will be essential to quantify and address the potential impacts of HCA compliance in advance, making sure that the town fully understands its benefits and costs and what happens if we do not comply. I need to see carefully constructed plans for how this might look, and how it would impact town finances, public utilities, traffic, and commercial activity both positively and negatively. I want to keep in mind that open spaces, trails, and wildlife in Lincoln are irreplaceable treasures.
I believe strongly that the residents who are most vulnerable to zoning changes must not be placed in jeopardy of losing their homes. How could that happen? Once zoning allows for significantly higher density, then there is an increased incentive for owners of some of our town’s key, lower-density, affordably priced rental units to sell to developers who would make money by replacing them with higher-density condos (85% of which would be market rate). Ironically, the net result would be the displacement of our most economically diverse residents and a decrease in our affordable housing options.
Who are your three biggest heroes in American history and why?
Eleanor Roosevelt, Elizabeth Blackwell, and Dorothy Dix are the first three who come to mind —all strong women who spoke up loudly for what they believed in and became a voice for equal opportunities for women, minorities and the most vulnerable members of our society. They are my role models and heroes.
Is there anything else you would like voters to know about you?
I was born in New York City and grew up in a small New Jersey town. I spent my childhood summers in overnight camp in rural Pennsylvania gaining an appreciation for the natural environment, open space and wildlife that would stay with me to the present. I graduated college with a major in zoology from the University of Wisconsin and medical school from The Medical College of Pennsylvania. Shortly afterwards, I spent time providing medical care to migrant chili farm workers in rural northern New Mexico and then became a psychiatrist by working at the only federally funded public psychiatric hospital in D.C., particularly because its mission was to serve the disadvantaged.
I was always challenging my mentors, wanting the evidence that didn’t exist at that time for the accepted practice of psychiatry. I became a fierce advocate for truth by gathering scientific data as a full-time researcher for several years at the National Institute of Mental Health in Bethesda. While doing that I raised two wonderful children, now well into adulthood and both strong advocates for social justice and environmental protection. Throughout my life I spoke out loudly for issues I believed in and diverted my efforts when there was need, such as by helping survivors of an earthquake in El Salvador, the 9/11 disaster in New York, and Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans.
My current day job is focused on working with mostly immigrant and disadvantaged communities in Cambridge/Somerville and individuals who need care for serious mental illness. My research is focused now on interventions that can reduce disparities that exist in the delivery of high-quality mental healthcare. Academically I mentor new generations who come after me.
I write all this above about me because it has relevance to how I serve on the Planning Board. I seek out the evidence from data supporting or refuting the issues as a scientist would. I focus on bringing people together in collaborative efforts and I have empathy for others in crises. Moreover, I have a deep desire to preserve land that is natural, with wide-open spaces, clear nighttime stars, fields of wildflowers, organic farms, and wildlife of all kinds roaming conservation land.
Hopefully this gives you some idea of who I am. I welcome your contacting me with issues that concern you and your neighborhood. If re-elected to the Planning Board, I will do my best to represent you. I can best be reached by email at lynn_delisi@hms.harvard.edu or delisi76@aol.com.
Mark Levinson
What made you decide to run for a seat on the Planning Board at this time?
Lincoln is facing a number of challenges that have the potential to greatly affect the future character of the town. The recently passed Massachusetts Housing Choice Act attempts to mandate much higher-density multifamily housing in Lincoln. For various reasons, this would apply not only to the Lincoln Station neighborhood but to other areas around town as well. I believe actions by the Planning Board can be a key factor in helping the town to navigate these challenges, while also promoting other goals, such as support for local businesses, diversity, affordable housing, and the environment.
What would you bring to the table in terms of specific professional and/or personal experiences?
I have lived near Lincoln Station for almost 25 years and have been active in issues affecting our neighborhood and the town. I have served as one of two neighborhood liaisons to the Planning Board and its South Lincoln Planning Advisory Committee (SLPAC). I have also been committed to environmental issues and volunteered for many years for the Sudbury Valley Trustees, a very active and successful land conservation organization.
As someone with both a scientific and business background, I know the value of thoroughly researching any proposed course of action to determine the likelihood of achieving its benefits as well as its potential downsides.
Since this is a contested seat, why should Lincolnites vote for you in particular? What past history or personal/political positions make you better qualified than one or more of the other candidates?
I believe I share the goals of many Lincolnites for our town: viability of local businesses, diversity, affordable housing, encouraging use of public transportation, and doing what we can to fight climate change while maintaining the rural character of the town. I also believe it’s very important to maintain a reasoned, fact-based approach to managing change where any new initiatives are evaluated for their likely real-world effects, both positive and negative.
If elected, I will represent the views and opinions of all Lincoln residents, not only those of my neighborhood. I will do my best to be open-minded, fiscally responsible, and always consider both sides of any issue.
What do you think is the biggest issue facing the Planning Board over the next three years, and if elected, how do you plan to address it?
The biggest issue is the Housing Choice Act and its potential to transform the character of the town through high-density housing. There are also major challenges from the proposed Hanscom Field expansion, and the proposed expansion at Lincoln Commons.
Who are your three biggest heroes in American history and why?
Abraham Lincoln — he was a modest, thoughtful man from humble origins who used his power as president for the benefit of the people, rather than himself and his associates. He doggedly persevered through the difficult and dispiriting trials of the Civil War, always keeping the end goal in mind.
Ruth Bader Ginsberg — she was a ground-breaking figure as the second woman justice of the Supreme Court. She used her prodigious intellect to further the causes of civil liberties and gender equality.
Rachel Carson — she was one of the founders of the modern environment movement. Her work spurred a transformation in public attitudes towards the environment, and led to the banning of many pesticides and the creation of the Environmental Protection Agency, among others.
Is there anything else you would like voters to know about you?
I grew up in the New York City area and first came to Boston as a freshman at MIT. After leaving MIT with a PhD, I spent two years doing physics research in Switzerland and then five years in the New York City area before returning to Boston. I worked for several startup companies and got an MBA working nights at BU. I’ve lived in Lincoln since 1998. My two adult sons graduated from Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School and live in the Boston area.
Craig Nicholson
What made you decide to run for a seat on the Planning Board at this time?
I have been actively engaged in planning in Lincoln for a number of years. Although my role has varied over the years, I have continually been interested in the work that the board does and found ways to stay involved, including my current service as a non-voting associate member of the Planning Board, as well as my prior role on SLPIC [the South Lincoln Planning and Implementation Committee].
Although I have considered running in years past, I felt my commitment to the School Building Committee (SBC) and the time that entailed wouldn’t allow me to fully commit to the Planning Board. Now that our work on the SBC is winding down, and given my interest in the critical planning initiatives facing Lincoln both in the short term and long term, I made the decision to run. The timing is right, the challenges are there, and I see some really interesting opportunities ahead to put my skills in planning, collaboration, project management, and sustainability to work in a new and exciting way.
What would you bring to the table in terms of specific professional and/or personal experiences?
On the personal side, I grew up in a small town on the South Shore. It was a town with a strong agricultural past, primarily based around cranberries, with a tremendous amount of open space — trails out the back door, very much like Lincoln. What drew me to Lincoln was being able to see that same experience that I had as a child available here for our children.
I spent the early part of my career as an environmental consultant, traveling all over the U.S. working on projects small and large. It was through these experiences where I started to really focus on how our built environment shapes our lived experience. This is what ultimately brought me to Tufts University, where I received my master’s degree in urban and environmental policy and planning.
My work with Washington Gateway Main Street (WGMS) in the South End also served as a catalyst in my life. I see my experience with the Main Streets organization as a potential template for future resident and business engagement and participation in Lincoln. It was through WGMS where I gained experience working with a vast array of stakeholders including residents (of which I was one myself), retailers, restaurant owners, artists, landlords and developers to shape and implement the long-term planning vision aimed at creating a sustainable mix of housing, commercial and office uses within the neighborhood. We engaged in “leakage” studies in order to understand where residents were spending their money outside the community so that we could work with building owners to try to recruit those types of businesses to our community in order to keep that spending local. We would host community events to bring neighbors together in order to strengthen their community ties.
Lincoln is not Boston, I certainly understand that, but there are pieces from my experience that do overlap with some of the challenges that we are encountering here. I currently spend my days managing renovations of hotel properties throughout the country. Much of this work includes a focus on sustainability and carbon emissions reductions. I am actively involved in benchmarking large properties in Boston to develop a roadmap for our clients towards net zero emissions, and I am often called upon to support our clients in fulfilling their ESG [environmental, social, and governance] goals.
Here in Lincoln, I point to my experience on SLPIC and the SBC as highly influential in my growth and understanding of how to engage our community and build consensus from the ground up. My experience serving on various committees and organizations in town has provided me with opportunities to engage with residents from all over Lincoln in deep and meaningful ways. I don’t take that for granted, and if elected to the Planning Board will relish the opportunity to engage more deeply with our community as we collectively plot our path forward.
Since this is a contested seat, why should Lincolnites vote for you in particular? What past history or personal/political positions make you better qualified than one or more of the other candidates?
The diversity of my professional experiences (noted above), coupled with my previous community engagement in Lincoln, differentiates me from other candidates in the race. I know each of us brings a passion to planning, but I hope that my desire to involve and truly listen to the breadth of voices in our community to build a comprehensive, inclusive planning agenda for the future will set me apart on Election Day.
What do you think is the biggest issue facing the Planning Board over the next three years, and if elected, how do you plan to address it?
I struggle with this question as —depending on who you are, where you live, what your past or current experiences are — your biggest issue may not even be on the radar screen of someone else in town, perhaps not even your immediate neighbor. For instance, members of our town are currently faced with the Housing Choice Act, the proposed Hanscom expansion, affordability, and transportation challenges. In my mind, the single biggest issue is how the Planning Board balances all of these various matters. Addressing this needed balance will involve a multi-faceted approach that requires extensive communication, education, and outreach. Many of these issues cannot be adequately addressed around a conference table at the Planning Department — it will require Planning Board members to get out there in the community working with residents where they are.
Who are your three biggest heroes in American history and why?
It’s very difficult for me to select three individuals as my biggest heroes in America, given some of my personal and professional experiences. When I read this question, my initial thought was of first responders — anyone who rushes into a dangerous situation putting themselves at risk to help others. This stems from my own experience working on environmental cleanup at Ground Zero in 2001 and crossing the finish line of the Boston Marathon just ten minutes before the bombs went off in 2013.
I considered other individuals, but kept returning to yet another profession: educators. When I reflect on my childhood, there are several teachers who stand out as truly shaping who I am today. Every one of us likely has those individuals in our personal histories. And when I consider the challenges our country faces today, one of the most significant is faced by educators… yet despite what they endured through the pandemic and what they continue to endure with violence, limited resources, and so many more obstacles, teachers keep showing up for their students (including my own children) and inspiring them.
My Turn: CCBC introduces architects and airs concerns
By Lynne Smith
(Editor’s note: Lynne Smith hopes to go to the Community Center Building Committee meetings through June and write a My Turn piece each time. To see details of upcoming meetings, see the CCBC web page.)
At the March 8 meeting of the Community Center Building Committee evening meeting, Sarah Chester, Chair of CCBC, introduced two representatives of ICON Architecture, the firm selected “to assist the CCBC in developing a range of Community Center design choices and budgets, including options not to exceed 75% and 50% of the current project estimated cost of $25 million for the Hartwell complex supplemented or not with existing available town space with the intention of presenting said choices at a fall, 2023 Special Town Meeting for a vote on a preferred option,” as mandated in the measure approved at a Special Town Meeting on November 30, 2022.
The architects described what they plan to accomplish by the fall 2023 Special Town Meeting with the $325,000 allocated for their services. They emphasized they would focus on a “base plan” with a cost basis that would be common across all three options: 50%, 75%, and 100% of the prior cost estimate of $25 million. They mentioned Maslow’s hierarchy of needs and said they would identify “needs” versus “aspirations” with each option [offering] a complete, viable alternative. They also emphasized their experience designing sustainable buildings with very low energy use and excellent air quality and said these qualities would be “baked in” to all options. They said all the right things!
Those attending on line and in the room raised two big concerns:
First: Existing available town spaces. Many residents, including me, want to see “existing available town space” used for COA&HS and Parks & Recreation programs. This was not mentioned until the CCBC opened the meeting to the public. Town Administrator Tim Higgins and Select Board member Jonathan Dwyer reassured some of us that the use of alternate spaces would be explored. Personally, I am hopeful that all our treasured buildings — Bemis Hall, the Pierce House, the Lincoln Library, Codman Barn, town offices — will be maintained and in active use. Few towns of our size have such a rich resource of beautiful historic buildings. However, if they are not actively used for municipal purposes, then I fear that deferred maintenance will lead to their collapse.
Second: Public outreach and programming needs. The architects have been given a June deadline for presenting a framework for three options. They would then spend the summer working on details and cost estimates in time for the fall meeting vote. It is crucial that the committee provide clear opportunities for public input to help shape those options as they are being developed this spring. It was not at all clear at last night’s meeting if and how this would happen.
A public outreach plan has not yet been created and all work defining the perceived needs has been conducted in private meetings between stakeholders.
Perceived needs from the last design seem like a starting point for current deliberation, but no concrete data has been made available. Instead, we have been given anecdotes. For example, senior dining (lunch on Fridays) and potential cooking classes are used to justify the need for a new kitchen when there are multiple kitchens and dining areas around town that could accommodate these programs. Nor is the uneven pavement and inclement weather under Pierce House tent a good reason to build a new exercise center when nearby towns offer luxurious new gyms which residents could access with vouchers. As for parking at Bemis, all spaces in front could be made handicapped-accessible during large events. If folks can’t walk across the street safely, perhaps they need more than municipal services can provide.
Although Sarah Chester announced that CCBC meetings would be held publicly every other Wednesday from now until June, it is not clear that these meetings will include public discussion. Public outreach should be more than marketing the plans that have been developed in private meetings.
I am 78 years old, have lived in Lincoln for 20 years, and have fallen in love with its scattered historic buildings, wooded trails, and minimal commercial spaces. I want to continue to explore all aspects of the town and run into various folks as I do so. I have no desire to always go to one brand-new building for everything! I hope that CCBC takes seriously the need to find out what town residents, not just the stakeholders (COA/HS and P&R) want for our future.
“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.
My Turn: Climate Minute #2 – Tightening up windows
Editor’s note: This is an expanded version of a piece that was posted on LincolnTalk on March 10. You can read Climate Minute #1 here.)
By Michael Moodie
Single-glazed windows – a blight on your budget and the planet
Heating and cooling our homes is a major source of greenhouse gas emissions. Windows (especially single-glazed ones) are one of the worst causes of the energy use that creates those emissions.
Single-glazed windows are like thermal holes. They are the source of enormous heat loss in the winter and heat gain in the summer. They have an impact similar to a hole in the wall of your house.
So, get rid of single-glazed windows. But don’t replace them with double-glazed windows — the future is all triple! Triple-glazed windows are no longer much costlier than double-glazed. A recent quote from Marvin Windows showed only a 10% difference.
Benefits of triple-glazed windows
Triple-glazed windows will:
- Save you money — winter and summer — for as long as you’re in your home
- Increase the resale value of your home
- Be much more comfortable to sit by in the wintertime
- Reduce energy use and related emissions
- Help you be a good steward of precious Lincoln buildings that may last hundreds of years, benefitting both you and future residents
You get a lot for your investment!
MassSave provides seven-year, no-interest loans for approved triple-glazed windows replacing single-glazed, plus rebates of $75 per window. (Note: Neither incentive applies to double-glazed windows replacing single-glazed. The Commonwealth is clearly promoting triple glazing.) IRS tax credits of $600/year (resetting each year) are available for qualifying windows, so spreading work over several years can bring down the cost further.
What’s it likely to cost to replace single-glazed windows with triple-glazed ones? The “installed costs” below are based on a recent price check. Since prices change fast in the window market, please take these costs only as illustrations for comparison.
*U-value (reciprocal of R-value) is the rate of heat transfer through the window. Lower is better.
**Assumes installation of about 10 windows at the same time, which lowers the overall cost per window; includes $500/window for installation.
***Assumes (a) heating with good cold-climate heat pump and (b) electricity rates at Lincoln Standard Green level. Does not assume any incentives, which may shorten the payback period by a few years.
A single-glazed window replaced with a triple-glazed unit will yield the most energy-efficient result. Another option, for windows that are fixed (very common in Mid-century Modern homes) or never opened, is to leave the single-glazed window in place and install two interior panes.
Adding interior panes to single-glazed fixed windows
The WinSert Plus from Alpen Windows includes two panes, one of which has a low-E coating, effectively turning a single-glazed window into a triple-glazed one. Efficiency will be a bit less than for a true triple-glazed but at far lower cost because the existing window doesn’t have to be removed. This seems a promising approach, but we don’t yet have reviews on it. We welcome input from others with experience with this product or similar ones.
Improving double-glazed windows
Energy-efficiency experts generally don’t recommend replacement of double-glazed windows because of the high amount of carbon embodied in them. However, such windows should be replaced with triple-glazed units if the seals fail or if exterior walls are being upgraded as part of a renovation or energy retrofit.
Older double-glazed windows with narrow spacing between panes, no inert gas (e.g., argon) and/or no low-E panes are only slightly better than single-glazed windows. For such windows (and even for good double-glazed windows) consider inexpensive ways to improve their efficiency.
David Green’s book Zero Carbon Home discusses options for installing a second/third pane inside the house. WinSert Lite (single-pane) and WinSert Plus are other options he doesn’t cover.
Another option for improving the performance of double-glazed windows is to install double-cell honeycomb shades and leave them down at night in occupied rooms, and all winter in unoccupied rooms. Blinds with side tracks seal all sides of the blinds, thus insulating significantly better than those without. Blinds Chalet is one of a number of firms that sells honeycomb shades with side tracks. Any reasonably handy person can install such shades by themselves.
The bottom line
There are many ways to improve poorly performing windows. They all have good long-term financial benefits, make your home more comfortable, and help you be a good steward of your home. For more details on improving your windows, see the recording of the February 28, 2023 CFREE Zoom presentation “Getting to Zero: Windows.”
Michael Moodie is writing on behalf of CFREE (Carbon-Free Residential, Everything Electric), a working group of the Lincoln Green Energy Committee.
“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.
News acorns
Girl Scout cookies at transfer station on Saturday
Lincoln Girl Scouts will be at the transfer station this Saturday, March 11 from 10 a.m–noon selling all your favorite Girl Scout cookies. Come by and get your Thin Mints, Caramel Delights, gluten-free chocolate chip cookies and more for $5 per box. Cash, check, or Venmo are welcome. Donations will also be collected for St. Vincent dePaul food pantry.
Weekend activities at deCordova
Mini Greenhouse Workshop with Derby FarmSaturday, March 11 from 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
Terrariums are self-regulating miniature ecosystems housed in a glass container. You can personalize your own miniature landscape and walk away with something alive, thriving, and beautiful to breathe fresh life into your home. They’re a wonderful and simple way to reconnect with the natural world. All supplies included. Click here to register.
Curator Tour of “New Formations”
Saturday, March 11 from 1-2 p.m.
Join Chief Curator Sarah Montross for a unique opportunity to explore the New Formations exhibition. Visitors will look closely at the artwork on view, learn about the artists and their processes, and hear from the experts about the process of making an exhibition come to life. Click here to register.
School of Honk at deCordova Sculpture ParkSunday, March 12 from 2-3:30 p.m.
Celebrate music, dance, and spectacle with School of Honk at deCordova! Inside the galleries, visitors can explore the New Formations exhibition, which features human bodies in powerful athletic performance, ecstatic expressions of dance and collective procession. These artworks suggest our need for rituals, ways of gathering, and performing for ourselves and one another. Outside in the Sculpture Park, visitors can gather, sing, dance and enjoy the lively, spontaneous music of School of Honk. Join us for this unique and celebratory experience! Click here to pre-register.
Presentation on going solar
“Adding Solar,” the third presentation in the “Getting to Zero” series, will be given by Roy Van Cleef, manager of sales for New England Clean Energy. Van Cleef will discuss recent technology in solar panels, how solar companies assess your solar panel needs, rebates and incentive programs, net metering, and more. Click here to register. Still to come: “Getting to Zero: The Historical Home presented by FoMA” and “Install Heat Pumps.” The Getting to Zero series is presented by CFREE (Carbon Free Residential, Everything Electric), a working group of Lincoln’s Green Energy Committee, helping resident’s affordably achieve energy-efficient, electrified, comfortable and healthy homes.
Take survey to help town’s Climate Action Plan
To reduce carbon emissions and increase the community’s resilience to climate change impacts, the town has embarked on creating a Climate Action Plan and is gathering input from residents. The plan aims to identify needs and goals and develop achievable strategies to increase resilience and sustainability while including equity and environmental justice throughout the process. Your feedback will directly inform the development of goals and strategies that guide the town’s future climate action work. The survey will close on March 27, 2023. Click here to take the survey.
There will be two additional workshops on Wednesday, April 12 at 7 p.m. and Friday, April 14 at 8:30 a.m. To register for either one or to join the mailing list to stay updated on the project, click here. Questions may be directed to Jennifer Curtin, Lincoln’s Assistant Director of Planning and Land Use, at curtinj@lincolntown.org.
“Newsies Jr.” musical by Lincoln School students
Inspired by the true story of newsboys in turn-of-the-century New York City, Disney’s “Newsies Jr.” is the tale of Jack Kelly, a charismatic newsboy and leader of a band of teenage “newsies,” the young people who sold afternoon editions of newspapers directly to readers on city streets. It’s loosely based on the real-life Newsboy Strike of 1899, when newsboy Kid Blink led a band of orphan and runaway newsies on a two-week-long action against Joseph Pulitzer, William Randolph Hearst, and other powerful New York newspaper publishers who had raised distribution prices at the newsies’ expense. More than one-third of all Lincoln School middle school students are involved in either the cast or crew. Show dates in the Donaldson Auditorium:
- Wednesday, March 29 at 3 p.m.
- Thursday, March 30 at 7 p.m.
- Friday, March 31 at 7 p.m.
Tickets will be sold at the door ($10 for adults, $5 for students/seniors/LPS employees; cash or check only). All proceeds go towards the show budget.
Rep. Gentile to hold office hours in Lincoln
State Rep. Carmen Gentile (13th Middlesex, which includes Precinct 1 in south and west Lincoln) will host in-person office hours for constituents at the Lincoln Town Hall on Friday, March 24 from 9–10 a.m. This is a great time to ask questions and share your thoughts about issues in our community and across the Commonwealth. An RSVP is requested by not required; contact his aide Ravi Simon at ravi.simon@mahouse.gov or 617-722-2810 ext. 8.
ZBA seeks alternate member
The Zoning Board of Appeals is seeking an alternate member. To learn more, visit the ZBA web page, and download, compete and return a volunteer application form.
Town candidate forum set for March 21
The Lincoln PTO will host a forum featuring the candidates for the two contested races on the March 27 town election ballot on Tuesday, March 21 from 7–9 p.m. in the Lincoln School Learning Commons. The event will also be live-streamed on Zoom and posted afterwards on the town’s video webpage.
Four candidates — Peter Buchthal, incumbent Adam Hogue, Jacob Lehrhoff, and Matina Madrick — are vying for two seats on the School Committee. On the Planning Board, there are two openings and three candidates: incumbent Lynn DeLisi, Mark Levinson, and Craig Nicholson. (DeLisi has said she will not be able to attend the forum due to a family commitment.)
The event is intended not as a debate but as an information session and meet-and-greet whereby voters can get acquainted with candidates and their views. At the forum, moderators will pose questions to candidates from cards submitted by audience members. Attendees will get question sheets and pencils when they arrive, and they’re asked to pose questions that apply to all candidates in a race and not individual candidates.
During the week of March 13, the Lincoln Squirrel will publish two sets of mini-profiles of the candidates. The full election slate is available here.
Design firm for community center is chosen
The Community Center Building Committee has announced that the Town of Lincoln has hired ICON Architecture for professional services to develop plans for a community center within the Hartwell segment of the Lincoln School campus on Ballfield Road.
“It was a very difficult decision,” and references were a major factor, said Select Board member Jonathan Dwyer (the board’s liaison to the CCBC). Town Administrator Tim Higgins noted that ICON Architecture demonstrated openness in their past work to repurposing older buildings and were committed to the town’s sustainability goals.
Six firms submitted proposals and four were invited for interviews. There were two finalists — the other was Maryann Thompson Architects, which came up with the two design concepts that gained the most positive feedback from residents at a 2018 Special Town Meeting.
The most recent cost estimates in November 2022 pegged the project at about $26 million, which caused considerable consternation among residents. Based on a Special Town Meeting vote in December 2022 when design funding was approved, the designer must develop a range of design choices and budgets, including options not to exceed 75% and 50% of the $25 million estimate, for the Hartwell complex (supplemented or not with existing available town space).
ICON Architecture — a women-owned Boston firm that specializes in institutional building types, building renewal, multi-family, and affordable housing — will develop schematic design options in preparation for a vote on a preferred design and budget at a Special Town Meeting in November 2023.
Lincoln entrepreneur makes home-cooked food in a jar
By Maureen Belt
After nearly 25 years of putting her registered dietitian and nutritionist credentials to work for others — most recently at a nursing home — Lincoln resident Jodi Gorman sprung out on her own. In 2020, she opened Happy Jars, a delivery service for healthy and flavorful small-batch homemade soups and salads.
Gorman’s business plan involved sourcing the finest and freshest ingredients, tweaking family recipes, creating new ones, and ladling or layering the finished creations into tall clear jars to be delivered to customers (though they now can be picked up at the Codman Farm store as well).
Startups require jumping through lots of hoops. There was acquiring a catering license, registering as an LLC, and strict health codes to follow that govern everything from purchasing ingredients to sterilizing cooking tools and logging temperatures. Gorman needed to rent an industrial kitchen to comply with those codes, so she he called around and eventually found a fit at St. Matthew’s United Methodist Church in Acton. The venue even offered bonus storage space.
Gorman culled recipes passed down in her family as well as other tried-and-true favorites she’s created over the years. Using as many local and organic ingredients as the season would allow, she began tweaking them for commercial success. Her husband Evan and their two school-aged daughters, Sage and Isa, served as testers, offering feedback like “extra cilantro” and “more parsley.” Neighbor and confidant Sabra Alden chimed in with ideas for bumping up protein and other nutrients.
Once the testers’ high standards were met, Gorman relied on her extensive dietary background and completed the tedious work of precisely itemizing not just ingredients but also the nutritional values and calorie count of every soup and salad. Then there needed to be a website where customers could order and pay for the specials of the week. Another Lincolnite, and graphic artist Linda Cordner, designed the site and maintains it.
Of course, as Gorman was busy doing all this in late 2019, having no idea a global pandemic was brewing.
“We were totally prepared and ready to go the day before everything shut down,” she said at the end of a long day of cooking batches of lentil soup. One added hitch: Mason jars were scarce during the height of the pandemic — problematic for a company called Happy Jars. Opening day moved from March 2020 to July. As it turned out, the timing worked out well for a gourmet home delivery business to enter the market.
“Most people were working from home,” Gorman noted, while many others were avoiding restaurants and limiting trips to grocery stores. It’s a good business to be in. According to the consulting firm McKinsey & Company, food delivery has become a global market worth more than $150 billion since 2017. The bulk of that increase came during the pandemic, the report stated, adding the market can expect an 8 percent growth going forward. As for Happy Jars, it has yet to yield much profit, but repeat customers and word-of-mouth referrals are leading to an encouraging bottom line.
Alden is the kind of friend who walked dogs with Gorman in the predawn hours while Gorman debated risking a career with full benefits for the uncertainty of owning her own business. “She talked a lot about doing this for so long — for years,” said Alden, who was elbow-deep in a sudsy pot in the sink.
Besides being a supportive listener and go-to pot scrubber, Alden talks to farmers about produce availability. She picks chicken off bones, sanitizes jars and counters, sweeps floors and inspects lettuce leaves individually. “We triple wash it,” she said, “and the romaine — literally we wash every leaf.”
Each week Gorman makes two soups and salads from her growing recipe collection. Customers log into her website by Sunday night to place their orders from a menu that includes all sorts of soup and salads with memorable names like Uplifting Udon, California Dreaming, Why Not Waldorf, and Sunshine on a Cloudy Day. She can usually accommodate vegan and gluten-free customers as well as special requests. One person asked for no salt in the turkey chili and brown rice soup, so Gorman simply separated that portion from the batch and omitted the salt.
She sources local ingredients whenever possible. For example, she makes croutons from bread purchased at Nashoba Brook Bakery, a slow-rise artisan bakery in West Concord.
“A lot of kids eat my food, and their parents just have peace of mind,” Gorman said. To accommodate children, Happy Jars offers 16-ounce containers that fit neatly into lunch boxes. With the emphasis on protein and nutritious contents, most of her soups and salads are complete meals.
Small soup batches are prepared every Monday and packed on Tuesday after properly cooling and setting. Salads can’t be made that far ahead. “The red cabbage gets brown overnight, Gorman said.” Another Lincoln friend, Terry Kay, helps with Tuesday deliveries in Lincoln and surrounding communities. Delivery fees are based on the size of the order. Heating instructions are included, and contents are good for one week from the day they were prepared. Customers may also pick up their orders — a trend that’s growing since she had to raise delivery rates. And now they’re available to buy in the Codman Farm store as well.
Nearly three years into being an entrepreneur, Gorman is still having fun and looking forward. “I love that I am my own boss and that I make my own hours, and that really goes well with motherhood,” she said. “I knew I wanted to do something else and I was ready. I love to cook, and I really love to feed people, and I love to feed people really good food.”
You can follow Happy Jars on Instagram here.
Correction
In the March 5 edition of News Acorns, an incorrect date was given for the FoMA/Lincoln event on the revitalization of Lincoln’s Modern school. The event will take place on Thursday, March 16 from 6:30–8 p.m. in the school’s Learning Commons.