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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 *
Norfolk County Registry of Deeds | |||
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Franklin Senior Center |
School Committee member Cynthia Douglas will be seeking her fourth term if re-elected this fall.
Douglas is one of eight candidates seeking the committee's seven seats in Franklin's Nov. 3 election.
Richard Power, a new candidate seeking a Town Council seat, said he would like to see the town engage more with its citizens.
Power is one of 14 candidates seeking nine council seats in the town's Nov. 3 election. The Norwood native has lived in town since 2006.
The following announcement of candidacy was submitted by Don Ranieri, Franklin Board of Health incumbent seeking re-election.
I'm 63 years old and a lifelong Franklin resident. My wife and I raised six children in Franklin and we have eight grandchildren.
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Franklin Public Schools - 'the key to learning' |
1. Cafeteria – Intent to open negotiations
2. Secretaries – Intent to open negotiations
3. FEA – Intent to open negotiations
4. Van Drivers – Intent to open negotiations
a. Representative Roy, Dennis Giombetti for Senator Spilka & Senator Ross
b. Safety Update – Maureen, Synergy & Franklin Police
c. FHS School Improvement Plan – FHS Administrators
d. Coordinated Program Review – Debbie Dixson
1. Johnson & Wales University, Providence, RI 1/27/16 or 1/28/16 depending on availability.g. I recommend acceptance of checks totaling $1075.00 from various parents for Music field trips as detailed.
2. New England Institute of Technology, East Greenwich, RI 2/25/16 or 3/3/16 depending on availability.
1. GDCC – Staff, Family and Medical Leavei. I recommend elimination of the following Policy:
2. GDCC-E – Family and Medical Leave of Absence
1. JFABB – Admission of Exchange and Foreign Students
O’Malley - Actually, my story is a story of education. I grew up in Boston, South Boston tenement poor kid story. As much as Southie believes in the church, it believes in education as a liberating force. So I was imbued in education from an early age. I've always been in education, interested in education and treated it with a seriousness somewhat beyond my calling. I went to BC High, then put myself through college and got my master’s degree and then I continued to get my doctorate at UMass Amherst. Education is a journey that doesn’t end.
My mother was a teacher. I married a teacher. We had four children who went college and had all gone through the Franklin Public Schools. The most important experience of Franklin I have is that my kids went here and all did well. I am grateful for that.
I was a teacher in Boston and came out here during the days of Dorothy Swanbeck and Jack Doherty. I was the assistant principal. So some of my voters, I know I had the opportunity to suspend at some time. I hope they don’t hold that against me. I went on to become the principal at Leominster High School. A good school. I’m a big fan of teenagers. The experience at the high school then led me to be the assistant superintendent at Leominster. And then to the superintendent of school in Ayer.
With my doctorate I taught at Fitchburg State College. I taught at UMass. I taught a term at WPI. Teaching is part of learning. There is no line where one stops and the other begins. I got a call out of the blue and ended up at the Benjamin Franklin Classical Charter School. An unbelievable experience. It had started and run into some rocky times. They hired me initially for a short period of time and I ended up staying for six years. In that time, things calmed down and the true excellence of the school came through. Charter schools are parent choice schools. You can’t do better by our parents than by giving them the choice.
As it turns out the Franklin schools are good schools. So they are hard competition for the charter school. And the charter school is pretty good competition for Franklin so it has worked out the way they drew it upon the drawing board. Both get better because of the existence of the other.
There was an opening for School Committee so I put my name in for it and was fortunate to win. It was the first time I’d ever run for office. I am running on a vision of the importance of education and not out of any need of something I need to fix. I am a big booster of education in Franklin, I believe it can be better. I can be better. I am in it for as long as I can get out of bed. This is the stamp that I have put on my life. I have benefited from education all my life and that’s a long winded answer as to why I am here.
O’Malley – The first and most important challenge is the need for this town to recognize what they have. The more people hear about the schools, the more they will see Franklin schools are worthy of their support. Our schools need more financial support. We are 18% under the state average. We are building a decent school system and we are doing it without some of the funding that could get us to the next level. We’re heading there. I think we have the teaching corp. I can’t image why the funding of the schools is not a more hot button issue in this town. Every year we are at the same 18% deficit. We are not catching up.
Education is a people business. Teachers teach children. You can have any number of sparkling things but without the right teachers in the classroom, you don’t have a strong education. Every time I drive by the high school I think the town did a good thing. That is step one. Step two is to support those teachers and to keep them. We do lose teachers. Ten miles down the road they get more money. I am now retired and I understand what fixed income means. But they need more than what we are giving them.
The other issue is one that has grown over time is that of safety. In my day, we wanted doors that were covered so the kids couldn’t run out. It is different now. You can’t say anything more important to the children and to their parents than “Your school is safe”. School safety is dominant. We have a good handle on it and we can do more. We were meeting this summer on school safety. That group will make a report and we’ll see how much it will cost.
Third thing is technology. My iPad is a continuous amazement but technology is more than stuff. Having teachers who can use it well is important. Having a technologically literate staff is a blessing. We need to provide every possible support for teachers to work with technology. Training, bringing people in, using good software, whatever it takes. The potential of technology to me is spectacular in this regard. For too long in education we had the approach that if we taught to the middle of the class, the ends would fall in. That doesn’t work today. Technology allows you to meet more kids where they are.
We have become lost in our priorities because of the expense and complexity of modern education. Today, I believe some children are getting left behind. We have resource challenges in all areas of education and in particular have unfathomable costs in special education. We are all God’s children and everyone should achieve to their maximum. The promise of the circuit breaker funding plan by the state was to mitigate the increase in costs and the state would pick it up. That hasn’t happened.
Education is a people business and 85% of the school budget is in support of the personnel costs. The benefits costs look to continue on an upward trend. Where is our funding priority? We need to get our house in order. I feel development in town needs to be sensible.
One more thing: PARCC. Our theme this year is more rigor and more complexity. I couldn’t agree more. We need to challenge our kids. We are not competing against Bellingham, we are competing against the world. They need to be the best they can be to quote an ad. PARCC takes them from memorizing the times tables to understanding music, and that is a level up from our old educational model. We voted for the pilot. I am sure we’ll see it again. Complexity and rigor is not a punishment for kids, ultimately it is a real war for talent. The studious kids need to reach higher levels. It demands of us to work with the kids who less swiftly access the curriculum. They deserve that.
Teachers are such heroic people in my view. All the issues of family wind up on their doorstep everyday. The most important teachers in the world are the elementary school teachers. They have to teach all the subjects, and they have to teach those who are most vulnerable. I like to tell this story in my college classes. On 9/11 the first responders saved America. On 9/12 teachers save America. Every kid who went to school was greeted by a teacher who assured them that it was going to be all right. They never got the credit for that which they deserve. They are the glue that keeps this culture together and we are fortunate to have them.
O'Malley - I will say that I think there is no one wanting the School Committee position who will bring more passion to this. The finest thing we do in this culture is teach our young. We do it well in Franklin. We can do it better. School Committee is not a place for beginners. The issues are complex. We need to be accessible to the public. We need to have an open mind.
The experience I have, the commitment I have, I have no particular issues in the fire, so to speak, this makes me a good candidate. I am anxious to serve another term. Education needs the best people. I hope I will be there. I will support who ever does get it.
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FHS Panthers |
– Franklin got the win on the road with a 25-17, 24-26, 25-22, 29-27 win. Maddie Kuzio stepped into the lineup and played terrific defense according to head coach Kate Horsmann and had 12 service points, seven digs and five aces. Beth Neal had 21 assists, 12 kills, three aces and a block, Aubrie Kutil had 13 kills and three digs and Dayna McCue had 12 digs, five aces and a pair of kills.
– Senior Kelsey McPhee scored a pair of goals and Dana Lewandowski also scored once for the Panthers. Franklin head coach Lisa Cropper said Taylor Reutlinger and Kenzi Pleshaw also had strong games.
Despite addiction and overdose statistics that continues to grow, a local coalition of health experts, legislators and citizens-at-large is working to tackle the opioid epidemic in the area.
The Support for Addicts and Families by Empowerment (S.A.F.E.) Coalition, spearheaded by state and local officials, has now established a Board of Directors and nine other committees.
The committees, including education, legal, pharmaceutical, communication, high school peer-to-peer, fundraising and others, consists of a Board of Directors, but the coalition is looking for others to join the committees, said Jordan Warnick, a Medway Board of Health member and former professor of pharmacology at the University of Maryland.
Pour Richard’s Wine and Spirits, 14 Grove St., will host a wine and whiskey tasting from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Nov. 19 to benefit the Medway Foundation for Education.
Foolproof Brewery from Pawtucket, Rhode Island, will offer beer samples and Berkshire Mountain Distillers from Sheffield will pour their barrel-aged gin and bourbon.
Assistant Town Clerk Teresa Burr said she believes her experience in the office would help her if she is elected to the town clerk position.
Burr is one of four candidates running to replace current Town Clerk Deborah Pellegri, who is retiring in November. Franklin's town election is Nov. 3.
Newcomer candidate Elizabeth Simon is running for the town clerk position this fall, hoping to improve the efficiency and convenience of the office.
Simon is one of four candidates running to replace longtime Town Clerk Deborah Pellegri, who is retiring. Franklin will hold its town election on Nov. 3.
The Massachusetts Department of Transportation and Massachusetts State Police launched a Toll Plaza Safety Awareness Campaign calling attention to enhanced safety measures currently in place at toll plazas across the Commonwealth.
This campaign was launched following the tragic death of a MassDOT toll
collector in July. The campaign includes public service announcements on message boards, posters at E-ZPass toll lanes, and the distribution of speed limit
reminder tear-sheets to commuters at the 'Cash Only' toll booths. The principal
focus of the campaign is to raise public awareness of the posted speed limit at
toll plazas, and the potential hazards faced by the toll collectors who staff the
toll plazas when speed restrictions are not followed.
'Highway safety is our highest priority at MassDOT, both for drivers, but also
for the men and women who staff our toll plazas, 24-hours a day, year round,'
said MassDOT Highway Administrator Thomas J. Tinlin. 'This campaign highlights the need for drivers to pay careful attention to posted speed limit signs and other safety information when approaching and travelling through toll plazas. We encourage travelers to be vigilant when driving through these areas to ensure the well-being of those who work at these locations and members of the public.'
MassDOT has implemented safety improvements such as the installation of
additional advanced 15 MPH speed limit signs strategically located before each
toll booth, and reduced speed limit signs at the toll booths. In addition,
pavement markings immediately before each location have been refreshed. The
agency has also conducted a review of the lighting to make sure all equipment
is fully operational in these areas.
'Through this campaign, we hope to remind motorists that safety is paramount
when traveling through toll plazas on the Turnpike, as well as the Sumner and
Ted Williams tunnels,' said State Police Major Terry Hanson, Troop E Commander.
'It is our goal that this campaign will prompt drivers to travel through toll
plazas with an extra measure of care, and to raise awareness that the toll
plazas are staffed 24/7.'
As a component of the campaign, State Police have also increased speed
enforcement at toll plazas. From Sept. 26 through Oct. 12, approximately 294
citations (Civil, Warning, and Criminal) have been written for violations which
occurred in the E-ZPass lanes. More than 1,200 citations have now been issued
since Aug. 27.
For transportation news and updates visit MassDOT at our website:
www.mass.gov/massdot, blog: www.mass.gov/blog/transportation, or follow MassDOT on twitter at www.twitter.com/massdot.
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swifters that have clogged up sewer pumping stations |
“We have a view, which happens to coincide with Gov. Baker’s view, on how we’re going to make up for the fact that Massachusetts is at the end of the pipeline,” says Weld. “The current battleground is gas. Five years ago, gas was the favorite child of the environmental movement because it wasn’t coal and it wasn’t oil. Those days are over. Now it’s a member of the hated fossil fuel community. Some in the environmental movement think everything is going to be wind and solar before long. It reminds me of the 1960s and all my fellow hippies in Cambridge saying, if only we could all love each other. I do think hydro is going to play a major role and soon.”
Weld also notes that ML Strategies represents Spectra Energy, which wants to expand its Algonquin pipeline. “That’s a pretty easy sell,” he says. “There are issues with it, but conceptually it’s a fairly easy sell except for the people who now suddenly don’t like natural gas because it’s a member of the fossil club, which I think is not a well-taken position. It’s going to be a long time before that point of view becomes relevant.”Read the full article in the Commonwealth Magazine online
Kristin Letendre Cerce, Franklin High School teacher and former Wellness Coordinator, received the 2015 Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association (MIAA) Wellness Coordinator of the Year Award on Friday, October 23rd at the Doubletree Hotel in Westborough, MA.
Her award was presented by Carolyn Bohmiller of the MIAA and State Representative Jeffrey Roy of Franklin.
Dozens of FHS students as well as many Franklin school administrators, including Maureen Sabolinski and Peter Light, were in attendance.
Congratulations to Franklin High's Kristin Cerce on being named the MIAA Wellness Coordinator of the year. pic.twitter.com/t5Uz3KAyZ3
— Jeffrey N. Roy (@jeffroy) October 23, 2015