Showing posts with label legal notice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label legal notice. Show all posts

Sunday, February 11, 2024

Public hearing notice: Planning Board to hear about Autumn Hill Condominiums - Mon, Feb 26

In accordance with the Town of Franklin Zoning By-Laws, the Franklin Planning Board will hold a public hearing at the Town Hall (and can also be attended remotely) on Monday, February 26, 2024 at 7:00 PM in the Town Council Chambers of the Franklin Municipal Building, 355 East Central Street, for a Special Permit and Site Plan application titled “Autumn Hill Condominiums” prepared by Legacy Engineering LLC, Millis, MA, and submitted to the Department of Planning & Community Development on February 2, 2024, by Suejo Corp., Wrentham, MA.

The property is located in the Rural Residential I Zoning District (Assessors Map 302 Lot 6 and 8) at 488 and 496 Summer Street. The applicant is proposing to construct a 44-unit senior village with inclusionary housing. The applicant is applying for two (2) special permits, (1) Chapter 185, section 48: Senior Village Overlay District and (2) Chapter 185, section 51: Inclusionary Housing.

Please note: This will be your only written notice of this public hearing. Should the Planning Board vote to continue this Public Hearing, the date and time will be posted on the Planning Board’s website under Agendas.

Please contact the Department of Planning & Community Development at (508) 520-4907 if you
require further information or if you need to make arrangements to provide translation services for
the hearing impaired, or for persons with language barriers.

Copies of the plan and supporting documentation may be reviewed in the Department of Planning & Community Development during regular office hours.

Greg Rondeau, 
Chairman

Shared from 

The plans as submitted can be found 


Thursday, December 28, 2023

Franklin Historical Commission: Legal Notice - Demolition request for approval

****   LEGAL NOTICE

Notice is hereby given  that the Town of Franklin Historical Commission will hold a Public Hearing, Thursday, January 4, 2024 at 6:30PM regarding a demolition request application for the property at 240 East Central Street, Franklin MA

Meeting will be held at the Franklin Historical Museum
80 West Central Street, Franklin

****

 

HEARING DATE Thursday, January 4, 2024.

Please reach out with any questions.
Thank you,

Mary Olsson, Vice chair
Franklin Historical Commission

Franklin Historical Commission: Legal Notice - Demolition request for approval
Franklin Historical Commission: Legal Notice - Demolition request for approval

Thursday, September 21, 2023

Zoning Bylaw Amendment - 23-901 - King Street area Rezone from SFRIII to B

In accordance with the provisions of M.G.L. Chapter 40A, Section 5, notice is hereby given that
the Planning Board will hold a Public Hearing on Monday, October 16, 2023 at 7:00 PM in the Council Chambers of the Franklin Municipal Building, 355 East Central Street (also available to be attended remotely) to consider amending Chapter 185, Section 5 of the Code of the Town of Franklin.

ZONING BY-LAW AMENDMENT 23-901

Zoning Map Amendment 23-901 would amend the Town’s existing Zoning Map (Chapter 185,
Section 5, of Franklin Town Code) by changing parcels 313-061-000 and 313-062-000 parcels
from the Single Family Residential III zoning district to the Business zoning district
Please contact the Department of Planning & Community Development at (508) 520-4907 if you
require further information or if you need to make arrangements to provide translation services for the hearing impaired, or for persons with language barriers.

Copies of the plan and supporting documentation may be reviewed in the Department of Planning & Community Development during regular office hours.

Greg Rondeau, 
Chairman 

Zoning Bylaw Amendment - 23-901 - King Street area Rezone from SFRIII to B
Zoning Bylaw Amendment - 23-901 - King Street area Rezone from SFRIII to B

Tuesday, July 18, 2023

Conservation Commission: ANRAD - 124-126 Grove Street - Legal Notice

Town of Franklin
Conservation Commission

Legal Notice
Town of Franklin
Conservation Commission

Pursuant to Massachusetts General Laws Ch. 131, s.40 (The Wetlands Protection Act), the Franklin Conservation Commission will hold a Hybrid Public Hearing on Thursday, July 27, 2023 at 7:09 PM on an Abbreviated Notice of Resource Area Delineation filed by Goddard Consulting LLC, Northborough, MA, on behalf of New England Appliance Group, Franklin, MA. The delineation serves to determine the boundary of Bordering Vegetated Wetland, Bank, and potential areas of on-site stormwater basins; and their associated Buffer Zones.

The Project is located at 124 and 126 Grove Street, Map 259, Lot 3 and Lot 4, within the Industrial Zone.

The hearing will provide an open forum for the discussion. This meeting will be done remotely via the “ZOOM” platform and “In-person” in the Council Chambers of the Municipal Building, 355 East Central Street. Residents can visit the Town Website (www.franklinma.gov) and click on the Town Calendar for up to date information on how to access the meeting.

All records and files for this project can be viewed at the Conservation Office located on the first floor of the Franklin Municipal Building.

Any person or organization so wishing will be afforded an opportunity to be heard.

The hearing location is accessible to persons with physical disabilities. If you require a translator or accommodations for a hearing impairment, contact the Conservation Department at the Municipal Building or by calling (508) 520-4929. 

Patrick Gallagher
Chairman



Thursday, June 22, 2023

Roy & Hellen testify on H.2108 to enable Town of Franklin to publish legal notices by alternative means to save money

On Tuesday, June 20, State Rep Jeff Roy and Town Administrator Jamie Hellen testified on a local home rule petition to save the Town of Franklin approx. $40-50K per year by not sending legal notices to the newspaper. Legal notices are posted to the Town website, residents (and others) can subscribe to receive them. Newspapers have been declining in publication. The savings will not significant are substantial.

The testimony submitted by Rep Roy

"Representative Carol A. Fiola, Chair
Joint Committee on Municipalities and Regional Government Room 236
Boston, MA 01233

Senator Jacob R. Oliveira, Chair
Chair Joint Committee on Municipalities and Regional Government Room 416-B
Boston, MA 01233

RE: H. 2108, “An Act authorizing the city known as the town of Franklin to utilize alternative methods for notice of public hearings”.

Dear Chair Fiola and Chair Oliveira:

I respectively request that H. 2108 - “An Act authorizing the city known as the town of Franklin to utilize alternative methods for notice of public hearings” be released favorably from committee.

The proposed unanimous home rule petition would authorize Franklin to post statutorily required legal notices through means other than print newspaper. The language is modeled after Chapter 369 of the Acts of 2022 which authorized the town of Acton to use similar alternative methods of notice for public hearings.

Franklin is well known for its robust community engagement. Citizens are active and regularly consume many forms of media connected to the current events of the town. For instance, the town has over 5,000 email subscribers, multiple sources of social media, cable access through Franklin TV, civic news services such as Franklin Matters and the Franklin Observer as well as the town’s official website. In addition, notices would be posted by the Town Clerk on the bulletin board as well and over time would be expanded to other bulletin boards in heavily frequented areas around town. Since 2017 the town has spent $200,000 publishing meeting notices in print newspapers despite fewer and fewer people reading or subscribing to local print media. With so many readily available alternatives a savings of $40,000-50,000 a year would mean a great deal to the town budget.

As State Representative for Franklin, I can attest to the commitment of Town’s officials to ensuring that town business is conducted in an upfront and transparent way. Franklin has been recognized by the Massachusetts Municipal Association for its transparent approach to public meeting accessibility, especially during the pandemic. The town takes its responsibility to promote civic engagement very seriously and is always looking for new and better ways to inform its citizenry. I have no doubt that as technology continues to expand, Franklin will continue to innovate and expand their notice capabilities. For these reasons, I believe the request to eliminate one small facet of the notice requirement can be accommodated without negative impact.

Thus, I urge your favorable action on H. 2108 and thank you for your consideration of this request. Please do not hesitate to contact me with any questions or concerns."

Full text in PDF form ->  https://drive.google.com/file/d/1XeFmQk1DWeTcSPOta_SrvsauZAlbp30N/view?usp=drive_link

Testimony submitted by Town Administrator Jamie Hellen

Re: Testimony on House 2108, An Act authorizing the city known as the town of Franklin to utilize alternative methods for notice of public hearings

Dear Chair Fiola and Chair Oliveiro:

On behalf of the Franklin Town Council, I am submitting testimony on behalf of the House 2108, An Act authorizing the city known as the town of Franklin to utilize alternative methods for notice of public hearings. I request a favorable report from the Joint Committee and passage of this home rule legislation. The legislation approved and submitted by the Franklin Town Council was modeled after Chapter 369 of the Acts of 2022.

In a unanimous decision, 9-0, the Franklin Town Council petitions the General Court with this home rule legislation to allow the Town to post statutory required legal advertisements through means other than through a print newspaper. As you know, cities and towns are required by statute to file (certain) public hearing and legal notices via a print newspaper publication of general circulation. A few examples of required hearing notifications in print newspapers include conservation, certain financial or property hearings, certain licensing hearings, land use permitting, and tree hearings, among many more. As technology and accessibility to government officials has evolved, advanced, and expanded significantly, the Town believes we can communicate in greater effectiveness to our citizens through electronic and in-person methods, while saving taxpayers significant resources each year from publishing legal advertisements in print newspapers.

Since 2017, the Town of Franklin has cumulatively spent over $200,000 to publish legal ads in print newspapers. That total would have been higher if not due to the two COVID years of 2020 and 2021. The Town is not convinced it’s seeing a significant return on that financial investment with greater attendance, participation or awareness of public hearings through print newspapers. It’s an exceptionally rare situation to have a citizen arrive at any public meeting and suggest they saw the public notification in the print newspaper. Occasionally, this may be the case, and I fully understand this will affect a small portion of the citizens in town. But learning about public hearings via a print newspaper is far from the norm and further fades each year.

The overwhelming number of citizens, including most senior citizens, receive their town news, legal notifications and updates from the Town’s various electronic and in-person sources. The Town has over 5,000 subscribers to various email lists on how citizens stay in touch with local news, hearings, meetings, announcements and public hearing notifications. That content is also published on town authorized social media channels. Specifically for legal public hearing advertisements, the town has nearly 855 subscribers on the “Legal Ads” email subscription list and is a free service for everyone.

Notifications of hearings can also be found on local cable access, the town website, and are often published by local, third party civic news sources in Franklin Matters and the Franklin Observer.

If this legislation is approved, the Town would use this email subscription service as the predominant legal notification method for all state required public hearing notifications. We would facilitate a policy for the entire organization. The Town would also dedicate a bulletin board in the Town Clerk’s Office to post hearing notices. As time evolves, I could even envision numerous posting areas of high visibility or foot traffic. And of course the notices would all be posted on the town website as we currently do.

Furthermore, the Town would also work closely with our local cable access station, Franklin TV, to post legal ads throughout regular programming. They reserve a fair amount of air space for local town news, hearings, meeting notices and also have an archive of all town meetings on YouTube called “Franklin Town Hall TV.” The methods the town has used to inform citizens of hearings have been effective and we would like to continue them without having the additional cost or responsibility to post those same notices in a print newspaper of general circulation. In tightening budget times, saving $40-$50,000 a year on legal ads would be beneficial to the town budget to either reinvest in other civic engagement projects, or in other areas in need of investment.

Franklin is well respected for its transparent publication of information, meetings, hearings, outreach, and communication. The Town has been recognized by the MMA and many other communities for our comprehensive approach to transparency and public meeting accessibility, notably during the pandemic, by meeting citizens where they are consuming content rather than asking them to find antiquated locations for notifications. I rarely hear complaints about the public not knowing about an issue, meeting or a hearing. As Representative Roy and Senator Rausch know well, citizens in Franklin are extremely well informed of when critical meetings, hearings or events are being held in the community.

At the end of the day, with print newspapers in a slow decline and public attention turning into purely electronic and in person forms of communication, it may not be that far off in the future when many other municipalities will be looking for a similar exemption from being required to post certain legal ads in a local print newspaper. Similar to Chapter 369 of the Acts of 2022, many communities will be facing a reality that there is no print newspaper option to suffice this legal requirement, or other communities will simply this legal requirement not the most cost effective use of public spending. This legislation could serve as an additional test case of how to develop better policy on this future trend.

On behalf of the Town Council, I greatly appreciate the time of the Joint Committee to hear this bill. We thank you for your attention to this legislation and urge a favorable report from the committee. I am happy to discuss the legislation with any member of the committee or the legislative committee staff.

Full text in PDF form ->   https://drive.google.com/file/d/1KsMK4jewlbsuK2cmGgnl6TPCdY0h9jkd/view?usp=drive_link 

The H.2108 legislation text can be found -> https://malegislature.gov/Bills/193/H2108

Link to the hearing testimony -> https://malegislature.gov/Events/Hearings/Detail/4561 Rep Roy and Hellen appear approximately 10 minutes into the hearing video

Thursday, May 4, 2023

Board of Health discusses potential changes to tobacco regulations, Health Fair set for May 24 (audio)

 FM #988 = This is the Franklin Matters radio show, number 988 in the series. 

This session of the radio show shares the Town of Franklin Board of Health Meeting held on Wednesday, May 3, 2023. All three board members participated in person; Harris, Cochrane, & Chair Sweet. Health Dept staff present were in the 3rd floor training room. 


Quick Recap:

  • Chair Bridget Sweet opens meeting with roll call of participants all in person; motion to approve mins of Apr, second, passes 3-0

  • Old business, tobacco sales regulations discussion on cap, currently at 32, permitted at 21 (?) Reduce, or maintain. No interest in reduction at ...

  • This time. #boh0503 3 of the 22 are adult only, could have dual caps, i.e. one for full sales, one for adult only. Desire for more info on what the neighboring communities are doing. Qs on 3,13,16,17 for checklist. consensus on unified approach for fines

  • Level of discretion at Health Dept Director action, should there be more of a graduation clause? i.e. first time one set amount, second more, third more, etc... #boh0502 re: consistency of enforcement shall does better than may

  • Currently do not have a permit for catering, may consider for future. Discussion on food truck, trailer permit for year vs. time of event #boh0502 discussion on mobile, temporary vs catering, issue with catering going to another town, other local may not want

  • Discussion on protocol for notification of fee change, hearing notification cost, combine tobacco and body works for one hearing #boh0502 health fair, 5/24 3-6 PM flyers being spread, on Weds at the Library

  • Health inspection report, 14 inspects, 14 reinspection, Council meeting 4/12 - health nurse report, numbers better around for COVID and flu, vaccine recommendation has been updated #boh0502

  • Fundraiser for Gaspar family 5/10 at George's. Motion to adjourn, second, passes 3-0


The meeting runs about 52 minutes. Let’s listen to the Board of Health meeting May 3, 2023. Audio file -> https://franklin-ma-matters.captivate.fm/episode/fm-988-tof-board-of-health-mtg-05-03-23



--------------


The Board of Health agenda can be found ->

https://www.franklinma.gov/sites/g/files/vyhlif6896/f/events/boh_5.3.23_agenda_and_packet.pdf 


My notes collected in a Twitter thread PDF ->

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1O8wbpzBkx6blhpAw3Di2eZ_eRZ5Gg_fz/view?usp=share_link 



--------------

We are now producing this in collaboration with Franklin.TV and Franklin Public Radio (wfpr.fm) or 102.9 on the Franklin area radio dial.  


This podcast is my public service effort for Franklin but we can't do it alone. We can always use your help.


How can you help?

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If you have questions or comments you can reach me directly at shersteve @ gmail dot com


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I hope you enjoy!

------------------


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Board of Health discusses potential changes to tobacco regulations, Health Fair set for May 24 (audio)
Board of Health discusses potential changes to tobacco regulations, Health Fair set for May 24 (audio)

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Town of Franklin: Legal Notice for consideration of demolition of 803 Washington St

HEARING DATE Wednesday, January 11, 2023

****

LEGAL NOTICE

Notice is hereby given  that the Town of Franklin

Historical Commission

will hold a Public Hearing,

Wednesday, January 11, 2023 at 6:30PM

regarding a demolition request

 application for the property at 

803 Washington Street, Franklin MA

Meeting will be held at the 
Franklin Historical Museum

80 West Central Street, Franklin

****


Please reach out with any questions.

Thank you,

Mary Olsson, Chairperson
Franklin Historical Commission

Town of Franklin: Legal Notice for consideration of demolition of 803 Washington St
Town of Franklin: Legal Notice for consideration of demolition of 803 Washington St

Thursday, August 25, 2022

Legal Notice: Bylaw Amendment 22-883

LEGAL NOTICE - FRANKLIN, MA

The Franklin Town Council will hold a second reading and take a final vote on the adoption of Bylaw Amendment 22-883:
Chapter 179 §179-9.1. Water System Map Exhibit A (Map): be amended by adding as an eligible location the following:
§ 179-9.1 Water System Map.
Exhibit A: Extending a water service line from 20 Ridgeview Road for a single water service connection to the existing main on Old Farm Road.

This bylaw amendment shall not become effective until all conditions agreed to between the property owner and the Franklin DPW are satisfied.

This action will take place during the Town Council’s public meeting on September 7, 2022, beginning at 7:00 PM and will provide an opportunity for public input. Location: Municipal Building, 2nd floor Council Chambers, 355 E. Central Street, Franklin, and also via the “ZOOM” platform. Residents can visit the Town website (Franklinma.gov) town calendar to review the proposed bylaw amendment, including the proposed map, and for up to date meeting information, on and after September 2, 2022. Please call the Town Administrator’s Office at (508) 520-4949 if you require further information or to make arrangements for translation services.

Submitted by,

Julie McCann

Legal Notice: Bylaw Amendment 22-883
Legal Notice: Bylaw Amendment 22-883

Wednesday, July 27, 2022

Legal Notice: Franklin Historical Commission - property demolition request

HEARING DATE WED 8/3/22

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is hereby given  that the Town of Franklin
Historical Commission
will hold a Public Hearing,
Wednesday August 3, 2022 6:30 PM
regarding a demolition request
 application for the property at 
121 Grove Street, Franklin MA
Meeting held at the Franklin Historical Museum
80 West Central Street, Franklin

For more about the Franklin Historical Commission, visit their page on the Town of Franklin -> https://www.franklinma.gov/historical-commission

Legal Notice: Franklin Historical Commission - property demolition request
Legal Notice: Franklin Historical Commission - property demolition request

Wednesday, July 20, 2022

Legal Notice: Franklin Historical Commission - property demolition request

HEARING DATE WED 8/3/22

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is hereby given  that the Town of Franklin
Historical Commission
will hold a Public Hearing,
Wednesday August 3, 2022 6:30 PM
regarding a demolition request
 application for the property at 
121 Grove Street, Franklin MA
Meeting held at the Franklin Historical Museum
80 West Central Street, Franklin

For more about the Franklin Historical Commission, visit their page on the Town of Franklin -> https://www.franklinma.gov/historical-commission

Legal Notice: Franklin Historical Commission - property demolition request
Legal Notice: Franklin Historical Commission - property demolition request