Providing accurate and timely information about what matters in Franklin, MA since 2007. * Working in collaboration with Franklin TV and Radio (wfpr.fm) since October 2019 *
Monday, December 15, 2008
Free technology for teachers
One to add to the list of "the best things in life are free" category
Go visit: Free Technology for Teachers
For example, smartboards are being talked of for use in the classroom. There is a website that focuses on the tips and tricks to use them to their fullest.
Enjoy!
Births, Deaths, Marriages - 2007
Births
- May 2007 was the most popular month for births with 32, followed closely by July and August with 31 each
- November and December tied for the least amount of births recorded with 19 each
- June and August recorded the most deaths with 16 each, followed closely by April and July with 15 each
- November recorded the least with a total of 6, January was next with 10
- September edged out June as the most popular choices for wedding dates with a total of 25 versus 22
- February was the least popular choice of wedding dates with only 2 followed by January and November with 3 each
Sunday, December 14, 2008
In the News - rail trail, teen drinking forum
Franklin rail trail steams forward
By Joyce Kelly/Daily News staff
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Read the full article in the Milford Daily News here
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Forum on teen drinking planned for King Philip
By Heather McCarron/Gatehouse News Service
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Saturday, December 13, 2008
house fire, one death
FRANKLIN -
Read the full article online at the Franklin GazetteFirefighters found a body in the kitchen of a home at 652 Old West Central St. after knocking down a fire there last night. The person has not been identified.
According to a statement released by the Franklin Fire Department, police received a report of a house explosion in the area of 658 West Central Street just after 11 p.m. Friday.
Fire crews found flames coming from the first-floor kitchen area of a two-story, single-family house at 652 Old West Central St. They were told a person was possibly trapped inside.
Firefighters knocked down most of the fire in the kitchen and searched the home. After extinguishing more fire in the kitchen, firefighters found a body that "had sustained fatal injuries from the fire."
"probably my favorite teacher"
Ninety-year-old Palma A. (DeBaggis) Johnson, who inspired her students to convince the Legislature to make the ladybug the official state insect, was struck and killed by a truck while walking to church Thursday morning, according to the obituary provided by Ginley Funeral Home.
Johnson, born in Franklin, taught Latin at Franklin High School from 1939 to 1944, and returned to teaching at Redland Park Kindergarten and the Kennedy Elementary School after her children were grown.
Thirty-four years ago, Johnson inspired her students at Kennedy - and legislators - to change the law and adopt the ladybug as the state insect.
read the full article in the Milford Daily News here
MBTA Parking - pay by phone?
Thanks, adamg!The MBTA has begun experimenting with a system that lets commuter-rail and ferry riders pay for parking by cell phone instead by rolling up all those dollar bills to stuff into those tiny slots at parking lots.
The new system, at parking lots along the Kingston line and at the Quincy and Hingham commuter-boat terminals, lets riders set up accounts and then dial a toll-free number to have the day's parking fee charged to their credit cards:
Upon creating a free pay by phone account, customers call the toll free number from their mobile phone, key in the location and parking numbers, and the parking fee is charged to their credit/debit card.
Gee is there enough bandwidth for dozens of phones calls to connect at the same time? Let's hope that is part of the pilot.
Friday, December 12, 2008
Circle of Friends: Gandalf Murphy and the Slambovian Circus of Dreams

Saturday,
December 13th, 8:00PM
"Gandalf Murphy & the Slambovian Circus of Dreams is simply one of the finest American bands out there on the road. " -AllMusic Guide
with special guest Lindsay Mac
Tickets = $20
make a donation to the Franklin Food Pantry
The Franklin Food Pantry is asking residents of the community to open their hearts and to help the less fortunate people who have difficulties feeding their families. In a country as rich as ours, no one should worry about keeping food on their tables. Hunger hurts physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually.This was originally posted in the Franklin Gazette here
This year, the food pantry has seen a dramatic increase in people needing to access resources to help them live with dignity. The recession has made "financially stressed" a common household word.
We have 2,182 registered clients, which represents 927 households. In this number are 312 seniors who are living on the edge.
The pantry accepts all donations, both perishable and non-perishable. Our grants do not allow us to purchase non-food items. We have a need for toilet paper, tissues, paper towels, shampoo, toothpaste, soap and diapers.
To make a donation to the Franklin Food Pantry through the Country Gazette’s Gifts of Hope drive, make a check payable to Franklin Food Pantry Inc. and send c/o The Country Gazette to 159 South Main St., Milford, MA, 01757. Monetary donations can also be made to Franklin Food Pantry Inc., 80 West Central St., Franklin, MA 02038.
For more information about the pantry, call 508-528-3115. Ask for Linda or Michelle.
Thursday, December 11, 2008
FM #27 - Solar Energy - Part 2
In this second part, we will listen to Matt Arner, President of SolarFlair Energy, Inc. which is based nearby in Hopkinton. Matt gets into greater detail about the solar analysis, the process of obtaining permits, of applying for the rebates and actually getting an installation of solar electricity or solar heating for your residence or business.
Time: 44 minutes, 37 seconds
MP3 File
Session Notes:
This podcast for Franklin Matters is Part 2 of the information session on solar and renewable energy sponsored by The Franklin Area Climate Team and held at the Franklin Public Library Wednesday evening, Dec 10, 2008.
The recording of this evening is split into two parts. In the first part, we listened to Tyler Leeds, Project Manager from the Mass Renewable Energy Trust as he provided an overview on the grants and rebates available to MA residences and commercial or industrial operations.
In this second part, we will listen to Matt Arner, President of SolarFlair Energy, Inc. which is based nearby in Hopkinton. Matt gets into greater detail about the solar analysis, the process of obtaining permits, of applying for the rebates and actually getting an installation of solar electricity or solar heating for your residence or business. There is a great opportunity to tap into solar.
Listen, learn, and enjoy!
- insert clip -
Part 1 can be found here
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This podcast has been a public service provided to my fellow citizens of Franklin, MA
For additional information, please visit Franklinmatters.blogspot.com/
If you have questions or comments you can reach me directly at shersteve @ gmail dot com
The musical intro and closing is from the Podsafe Music Network
Jon Schmidt - Powerful Exhilarating Piano Music
FM #26 - Solar Energy - Part 1
Part 1 of 2
Time: 48 minutes, 59 seconds
MP3 File
Session Notes:
This podcast for Franklin Matters captures the information session on solar and renewable energy sponsored by The Franklin Area Climate Team and held at the Franklin Public Library on Wednesday evening, Dec 10, 2008.
This evening at the library is one of the Energy $ense series put together by FACT, with the help of Fred Schlicher, Program Manager from the Mass Climate Action Network, and by the Friends of the Library. One more evening in January is scheduled. Details on that session can be found on Franklin Matters or the town website.
The recording of the talk this evening will be split into two parts. In the first part, we will listen as Ted McIntyre introduces Fred who in turn introduces Tyler Leeds, Project Manager from the Mass Renewable Energy Trust.
The segment we are about to begin runs about 45 minutes. This is longer than I would normally make available but there is not a natural break until Tyler finishes. You can of course, listen to as much as you can, mark your spot and return. As you listen, you’ll recognize that the presentation by Tyler is well done, the questions are generally distinctly heard and the overall conversation is very informative.
Listen, learn and enjoy!
- insert clip -
In the second part, we will listen to Matt Arner, President of SolarFlair Energy based in Hopkinton. Matt will get into more details about the analysis and process of obtaining permits, applying for the rebates and actually getting an installation of solar electricity or solar heating for your residence or business. There is a great opportunity to tap into solar.
----- -----
This podcast has been a public service provided to my fellow citizens of Franklin, MA
For additional information, please visit Franklinmatters.blogspot.com/
If you have questions or comments you can reach me directly at shersteve @ gmail dot com
The musical intro and closing is from the Podsafe Music Network
Jon Schmidt - Powerful Exhilarating Piano Music
"We've gotten our money's worth"
The School Committee is recommending the town's school building committee remove all modular classrooms at Davis Thayer Elementary School and Franklin High School as soon as school ends next summer.
"The modulars throughout the system are reaching the end of their usable life, and those are the oldest in town," said Chairman Jeffrey Roy.
Davis Thayer's two modular classrooms at the corner of Union and West Central streets are probably the least popular because they are ugly, Roy said.
"They're an eyesore in the middle of town. I know a lot of people wanted them down from the standpoint of beautification, but we had to get as much life out of them as possible," said Roy.
When the district laid off teachers at Davis Thayer, two classrooms were left vacant, so it is now possible to dismantle the schools' modular classrooms, Roy said.
Read the full article in the Milford Daily News here.
For all that occurred during the School Committee meeting on 12/9/08, click here.
single tax rate stays
Town Council unanimously voted a slight increase in the tax rate for fiscal 2009, also keeping a single tax rate for residential and business properties last night.
As recommended by the Board of Assessors, the council approved raising the tax rate from $10.23 per $1,000 of property to $11.17 per $1,000.
Doing so will bump up the average residential bill by about 2.1 percent, or $88 for the average house, which is less than past annual increases, said Town Administrator Jeffrey D. Nutting.
Read the full article in the Milford Daily News here.
The tax rate is somewhat misleading. It will fluctuate as the residential valuations go down (next year is likely to see a greater decrease) the rate will increase.
Bottom line, the overall tax revenues the town can receive are capped at less than 2.5% unless there is an override. The override in June failed so the increase is 2.1%.
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
Live reporting - Energy $ense - Part 2
The audio version of this section can be found here
brief interlude for the presentation switch
Fred introduces Matt
Matt Arner
SolarFlair Energy, Inc.
Hopkinton, MA
- Solar electricity
- solar hot water (mostly for domestic hot water use)
- The solar grid feeds the inverter (the brains of the system)
- The inverter is tied to the breaker panel, just like another breaker with the exception that it provides power into the breaker panel (not drawing from like the normal breakers).
- If you are generating more power than you need to use, you send the extra back out through the meter to the power company. Effectively turning back the meter.
- Matt's home system is generating enough that it pays for 90% of the electricity they use.
- Bought and converted to energy efficiency appliances
- converted more appliances
- then installed hot water system
- then installed solar system
- almost 100% solar powered but over time, a five year plan
How much does it cost?
- Payback: approx 7-8 years
- System life: 25 years
So you could effectively pay the same amount for green solar as you would for your normal electrical monthly bill.
expecting to see an 8% increase in electric rates
For commercial installations
- Payback: 5 years
- Return on Investment: 14%
solar hot water becomes a good alternative if you don't have the south facing roof
They make the process easy. The permitting process can take up to 3 months, the actual installation takes 2-3 days.
For more information on SolarFlair Energy, Inc. please click through to their web site. It has additional information on the solar water heating, solar electricity and several photos of residential and commercial installations.
If you want to examine the potential for solar for your home, you can follow the steps to start here.
For commercial installations, you can follow the steps to start here.
Renewable Energy Installers |
Solar Energy Business Association of New England (SEBANE) North East Sustainable Energy Association (NESEA) Directory |
Disclaimer: The Massachusetts Technology Collaborative (MTC) has not investigated, and expressly disclaims any duty to investigate, any company, product, service, process, procedure, design, or the like which may be presented on the aforementioned websites. The presentation of these website links does not constitute endorsement, warranty, or guaranty by MTC of any company, product, service, process, procedure, design, or the like. The entire risk of any information presented is assumed by the user. |
Live reporting - Energy $ense

At the Franklin Library for the Energy $ense series presentation on Solar and Wind Installations. What grants and incentives are available?
Introduction by Ted McIntyre and Fred Schlicher
The audio version of this can be found here
Tyler's presentation:
Tyler Leeds
Project Manager, Massachusetts Renewable Energy Trust
Plug for energy efficiency
http://www.masssave.com/
Background
Commonwealth Solar
Micro Wind
Larger Wind
Q&A
Over 1000 active projects generating renewable energy in MA
Solar PV - photovoltaic
Map showing 50 communities within MA that are not eligible for grants
Key goals of Commonwealth Solar
- coordinate efforts with MA DOER
- target of 250 megawatts (NW) installed
- provide a streamlined rolling rebate process
- maintain a quality control function
Rebates for residential up to 5 kilowatt systems (average home uses 4 kilowatts)
They would rebate 20 to 40 % of the installation
refer to website for details on the step by step process to install and apply
Q - where do farms fall?
A - farms are non-residential
Initial installations of micro wind have not been yielding as much as had been expected.
Still a learning process, where does it make sense, where doesn't it?
The opportunity maybe in the neighborhood net metering process. A neighborhood would get together to install a larger turbine for the 8-10 neighbors to utilize instead of a single installation.
Some municipalities do have special permitting processes for turbines
Big Apple Farm is looking to install the same size turbine as the one announced for the Mount St Mary's Abbey.
Location is key for wind, solar actually provides a better ROI than wind.
Q - is there a website that would provide information on wind strength
A - yes, one of the first things they did was to develop wind maps. (link to be provided later).
Multiple questions, good discussion, hopefully the recording will catch these.
Data acquisition system can tie to a website to provide real time updates on energy generated.
(update later)
All the steps to the process of determining eligibility for a solar rebate through to the installation and successful operation can be found on the masstech.org/solar site here.
The second part of the evening covered a local installer whose service includes navigating the permitting and approval process for the home owner or commercial owner.
How to Avoid the Holiday Over-Eating Blues
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Office parties. Family gatherings. Neighborhood open-houses. Like it or not, holiday time is party time!
Since the season is here, I want to introduce you to a concept that might just make your holidays a little more enlightened:
Nervous Food is my name for any edible thing we shove into our mouths when we're in social situations. Not because we WANT it. But because it's there.
Like the mushroom caps - stuffed with what could easily be described as Alpo. Or the crab puffs that we snarf down, as Hal from HR recites the latest office policy on Instant Messaging.
First, let me be clear: this is not about diets or weight-loss.
This is about going unconscious.
It's about leaving your present-moment awareness back in the comfort of your quiet home.
Here are a few techniques to help you stay conscious and connected in any social situation. Try them, and you might discover that you can leave parties feeling energized and purposeful. Not stuffed and buzzed.
1 - Take a pre-party temperature reading.
Take your "temperature" about social settings.
Are you uncomfortable at parties? Do you eat food without tasting it? Can you talk about anything with anyone? Or do you prefer an intense conversation with one or two people? Do you often feel left out or uneasy? Do you try to be in the know?
There are no right answers. This is to simply get clear about your desires and behaviors, and to honor that clarity. Self-awareness is the starting point.
2 - Set your intentions.
Prior to any social situation, set intentions.
What does this mean?
This means that you create your experience before you walk through the door of the event. It means that YOU set the tone for your whole evening.
Do this before you leave your house. Or while sitting in your car outside the party.
Simply intend who you will BE and what you will DO at this event.
Some examples:
I'm a great listener. I truly taste the food I eat. I delight in other people's passions and interests. I have lots of fun without overindulging. I attract the perfect conversations. I am loved.
Your intention is powerful and will act as sort of a beacon to guide you during the party.
3 - Give yourself permission to say NO
Most of us say a knee-jerk "yes" to every invitation we get without asking ourselves if we really want to go.
Saying no doesn't mean you're saying no to the party or the people. It might mean that you're saying "yes" to yourself.
Maybe you need to go to bed early. Or you want to spend a quiet night writing in your journal.
Sometimes we eat out of distractedness and nervousness because our deepest desires aren't being met. When we ignore our true desires, we might try to compensate by filling up on "shadow desires." Shadow desires often come in the form of food and alcohol.
4 - Attract, Don't Push
Parties can be highly charged. Sometimes we walk through that door and instantly feel ourselves trying to "measure up," or prove ourselves to anyone who seems hip.
If you're familiar with this behavior, try this technique:
Stop and take a breath. Intend that you attract the perfect people to you. Do it with a sense of service, and trust.
Attraction is a powerful principle. You might be amazed at how effortless the party becomes, and how surprising the conversations are! You might hear the perfect solution to a personal challenge. Or you might be an angel to someone who needs a listening ear.
5 - Become an Alcohol-Free Observer
Recently, I opted out of drinking the perfunctory glass of wine at a dinner party. I chose to be present and to simply observe. I actively listened to people and observed the conversations all around me. Not in an aloof way, but in a deep way. I had a great time!
Try it. Forego the alcohol and become an observer. Quietly and non-judgmentally witness your behavior. See how actively you can listen in conversations. Really taste the food on your plate. You might discover a whole new definition of fun!
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This is not the typical magazine advice on holiday overeating. But it does work! You really can let the holidays and the Nervous Foods teach you a thing or two about how to create awareness and space, rather than anxiety and over-eating!
Performer, songwriter, and creativity consultant Christine Kane publishes her 'LiveCreative' weekly ezine with more than 4,000 subscribers. If you want to be the artist of your life and create authentic and lasting success, you can sign up for a FRE*E subscription to LiveCreative at www.christinekane.com.
WANT TO SEE HUNDREDS MORE ARTICLES LIKE THIS ONE?
See Christine's blog - Be Creative. Be Conscious. Be Courageous - at ChristineKane.com/blog.