Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Franklin TV and wfpr.fm schedule for Tuesday, Feb 22, 2022

  •  wfpr.fm or 102.9 on the FM dial = Tuesday

9:00 AM 12:00 Noon and 6:00 PM  Jazz Journey – with Pamela Hines
2 hours. An insightful tour of Jazz Greats in a golden era

11:00 AM 2 PM and 8:00 PM SAFE Radio– Jim Derick and Dr. Anne Bergen
Addressing issues of Drug Abuse Disorder

  • Franklin All Access TV - Our Public Access Channel (Comcast 8, Verizon 26) = TUESDAY

7:00 am Franklin Art Association: Joyce McJilton Dwyer
9:00 am It Takes A Village: 40 Percent Club
10:00 am Frank Presents: State House Pt. 3
11:30 am Senior Connection: Sleep
12:00 pm Brooke'n'Cookin: Mac'n'Cheese
12:30 pm Sandhya: Eclairs
1:30 pm Pizzapalooza: Margherita Pizza
2:00 pm New England Candlepins: Show 3
3:00 pm Candlepin New Generation: Spring 2019 Show 2
3:30 pm Battleship Cove: Inside the History Pt. 7
4:00 pm The Only Cure Is Education
4:30 pm Extended Play Sessions: Season 10 Show 1 - Tweed funk
5:30 pm Physician Focus: Common and Emerging Diseases
8:30 pm Pack 92 Pinewood Derby 2022

  • Franklin Pride TV - Our Educational Channel (Comcast 96, Verizon 28) = TUESDAY

7:00 am Public School Event: FHS Winter Jazz Night '22
8:30 am Public School Concert: Lifelong Music Pt. 2 01-29-19
12:30 pm FHS PCC: Vaping Panel
2:00 pm It Takes A Village: 40 Percent Club
3:00 pm FHS Girls Varsity Hockey: v Mansfield-OA-Foxboro 02-03-22
4:31 pm Public School Concert: FHS Concert Night 2019
6:00 pm FHS Boys Varsity Hockey: v St. John's Prep 02-16-22
8:00 pm FHS Girls Varsity Basketball: v King Philip 02-18-22
10:00 pm FHS Boys Varsity Basketball: v Taunton 02-08-22

  • Franklin Town Hall TV - Our Government Channel (Comcast 11, Verizon 29) = TUESDAY

8:00 am School Committee: 02-08-22
11:30 am School Committee: 02-16-22: Face Coverings
2:00 pm School Committee: 02-08-22

Get this week's program guide for Franklin.TV and Franklin Public Radio (wfpr.fm) online  http://franklin.tv/programguide.pdf 

Franklin.TV and Franklin Public Radio (wfpr.fm)
Franklin.TV and Franklin Public Radio (wfpr.fm)

Monday, February 21, 2022

Geography Night - Mar 1, 2022 from 5 to 8 PM in the FHS cafeteria

The Franklin High School Diversity Awareness Club is holding a cultural fund raising night on March 1, 2022 in the cafeteria.
"Community members can immerse themselves in different cultures as they experience music, art, and try foods from all around the world!" 


Geography Night - Mar 1, 2022 from 5 to 8 PM in the FHS cafeteria
Geography Night - Mar 1, 2022 from 5 to 8 PM in the FHS cafeteria

Interact Club conducting clothing drive - Drop off Date = March 19

"HELLO SPRING CLEANERS!!!
Please consider donating your clean and gently used clothing, and/or soft goods to Rotary of Franklin MA Interact Club FUNDrive Fundraiser.
It’s easy….simply use this QR Code and pledge to donate today.
DROP OFF DATE is on MARCH 19th ONLY!
King Street Cafe, 399 King St, Franklin, MA 02038"

https://www.facebook.com/groups/FranklinRotary/permalink/10160077505964083/

Interact Club conducting clothing drive - Drop off Date = March 19
Interact Club conducting clothing drive - Drop off Date = March 19



"we can celebrate both our differences and our similarities"

The analogy of "windows, mirrors, and sliding glass doors" struck me when I heard it at the School Committee meeting Feb 8 and then again at the Town Council meeting Feb 16. I was delighted to find my eyes caught a reference to this in my Twitter stream. 

Via Debbie Reese (https://twitter.com/debreese), we find that Reading is Fundamental (https://www.rif.org/) shared a re-print of the original article by Rudine Sims Bishop published in 1990.  

"Books are sometimes windows, offering views of worlds that may be real or imagined, familiar or strange. These windows are also sliding glass doors, and readers have only to walk through in imagination to become part of whatever world has been created or recreated by the author. When lighting conditions are just right, however, a window can also be a mirror. Literature transforms human experience and reflects it back to us, and in that reflection we can see our own lives and experiences as part of the larger human experience. Reading, then, becomes a means of self-affirmation, and readers often seek their mirrors in books."

You can read the full article here -> https://scenicregional.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/Mirrors-Windows-and-Sliding-Glass-Doors.pdf

The Twitter thread ->  https://twitter.com/debreese/status/1495060049634467840

School Committee DEI presentation ->   https://www.franklinps.net/sites/g/files/vyhlif4431/f/uploads/dei_presentation_february_8_2022_5.pdf

Audio recording of the DEI segment -> https://franklin-ma-matters.captivate.fm/episode/fm-727-school-committee-meeting-02-08-22-p2-of-3 


slide from the update on diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts around the district
slide from the update on diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts around the district

FHS girls basketball post win vs. Bridgewater-Raynham on Sunday

Via HockomockSports.com, we share the results of the FHS winter sports action on Sunday:
 
Girls Basketball = Franklin, 48 vs. Bridgewater-Raynham, 44 – Final 
– Following its first loss in three years, Franklin bounced back 24 hours later by pulling out a close win against Bridgewater-Raynham. The Panthers got off to a good start, scoring 15 points in the first quarter and jumping out to a nine-point lead, but the Trojans responded with an 18-8 second to lead by one at halftime. In the the third quarter, Stefany Padula and Katie Peterson each scored five points, as Franklin took the third 14-9 and regained the lead. Franklin shot 8-of-12 from the line in the fourth, including 5-of-6 from Peterson, to hold on for the win. Padula knocked down four from beyond the arc and was the top scorer for Franklin with 15 points. Peterson added nine, all in the second half, and Olivia Quinn chipped in with nine as well.

For other results around the Hockomock League

FHS Panthers
FHS Panthers

Register O’Donnell Reports on January 2022 Real Estate Activity in Norfolk County

Norfolk County Register of Deeds William P. O’Donnell reported that January real estate numbers relative to Norfolk County real estate activity continue to trend down.

“The Norfolk County real estate market” noted Register O’Donnell, “has continued to slow entering into 2022, which is not uncommon for this time of year. January is typically one of the slowest months for real estate transactions.”  There were 11,622 documents recorded at the Norfolk County Registry of Deeds in January, a 25% decrease over last year’s January document volume and a 21% decrease from December.

“The number of deeds for January 2022 which reflect real estate sales and transfers, both commercial and residential, decreased by 4% from January 2021 and by 30% from December. However, the average sales price during the month was $1,439,472, an impressive 51% increase compared to January 2021 and only slightly down from December. Total dollar volume of commercial and residential sales also showed solid gains from one year ago, increasing 57% to over $1.05 billion,” noted the Register.

Overall lending activity showed a decrease again for the month of January. A total of 2,325 mortgages were recorded during the month, a 44% decrease compared to a year ago and a decrease of 22% from December’s number. “It appears that many consumers have already refinanced given the past low interest rate environment,” noted O’Donnell.

A cause for concern in Norfolk County, however, is the increase in foreclosures.   A moratorium on foreclosures enacted on April 20, 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic expired on October 17, 2020.  The Norfolk County Registry of Deeds has been closely watching the foreclosure market. During January, as in December, there were 7 foreclosure deeds recorded as a result of mortgage foreclosures taking place in Norfolk County.  In addition, there were 18 Notices to Foreclose, the first step in the foreclosure process, recorded in Norfolk County in January.  In January 2021 there was only 1 Foreclosure Deed and 9 Notices to Foreclosure Mortgages filed. “The increase in these numbers remind us that some of our neighbors continue to face financial challenges”, said O’Donnell.  “We will continue to monitor these numbers.”

For the past several years, the Norfolk County Registry of Deeds has partnered with Quincy Community Action Programs, 617-479-8181 x376, and NeighborWorks Housing Solutions, 508-587-0950 to help anyone facing challenges paying their mortgage. Another option for homeowners is to contact the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Consumer Advocacy and Response Division (CARD) at 617-727-8400. Register O’Donnell stated, “If you are having difficulty paying your monthly mortgage, please consider contacting one of these non-profit agencies for help and guidance.”

Homestead recordings by owners of homes and condominiums decreased slightly this year at the Norfolk County Registry of Deeds.   There was a 1% decrease in homestead recordings in January 2022 compared to January 2021 but a decrease of 25% from December. A recorded Declaration of Homestead,” noted O’Donnell, “provides limited protection against the forced sale of an individual’s primary residence to satisfy unsecured debt up to $500,000.  It is great to see folks protecting the biggest asset most of us have, our homes.  I would urge anyone who has not availed themselves of this important consumer protection tool to consider doing so.  Please visit the Registry website at www.norfolkdeeds.org  to get more information on homestead protection.”

Register O’Donnell concluded, “January real estate activity slowed in Norfolk County but again, that is fairly typical for this time of year.  We see available real estate inventory as continuing to be a source of concern in Norfolk County. It’s especially a problem for first-time homebuyers attempting to crack the market.  Nothing we see in the numbers indicates any change in that sector of the market.”

The Registry of Deeds continues to be open to the public for business. Registry personnel are processing in-person recordings while vigilantly maintaining COVID related protocols.  The drop-off box located at the main entrance of the Registry Building will continue to be available for use by those members of the public who may not be comfortable entering the Registry of Deeds Building The volume of documents recorded electronically for many of our institutional users continues to increase.. We are also receiving documents in person, via regular mail, Federal Express, UPS and from our drop-off box located just outside our main entrance at 649 High Street, Dedham, MA.”   

To learn more about these and other Registry of Deeds events and initiatives, like us at facebook.com/NorfolkDeeds or follow us on twitter.com/NorfolkDeeds and Instagram.com/NorfolkDeeds.

The Norfolk County Registry of Deeds is located at 649 High Street in Dedham.  The Registry is a resource for homeowners, title examiners, mortgage lenders, municipalities and others with a need for secure, accurate, accessible land record information.  All land record research information can be found on the Registry’s website www.norfolkdeeds.org.  Residents in need of assistance can contact the Registry of Deeds Customer Service Center via telephone at (781) 461-6101, or email us at registerodonnell@norfolkdeeds.org.

January 2022 Real Estate Activity in Norfolk County
January 2022 Real Estate Activity in Norfolk County

Town Council Meeting - 02/16/22 - Audio in 3 parts

FM #735-736-737 = This is the Franklin Matters radio show, numbers 735-736-737 in the series. 

This session shares part of the Franklin, MA Town Council meeting held on Wednesday, February 16, 2022. 

The meeting was conducted in a hybrid format: members of the Town Council and Town Administration personnel, the Police new hires, along with their guest and family members were in the Council Chambers, some members of the public participated in person, some via the Zoom conference bridge, all to adhere to the ‘social distancing’ requirements of this pandemic period.

I’ve split the three hour and 10 minute meeting into three (3) logical segments:

The show notes contain links to the meeting agenda. Let’s listen to this segment of the Town Council meeting of Feb 16, 2022

Part 1 -

Part 2 -

Part 3 -

--------------
Presentation Diversity, Equity & Inclusion - Sara Ahern, Superintendent of Schools -> https://www.franklinps.net/sites/g/files/vyhlif4431/f/uploads/dei_presentation_february_8_2022_5.pdf

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

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?
  • If you can use the information that you find here, please tell your friends and neighbors
  • If you don't like something here, please let me know
Through this feedback loop we can continue to make improvements. I thank you for listening.

For additional information, please visit www.Franklinmatters.org   or www.franklin.news 

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

The music for the intro and exit was provided by Michael Clark and the group "East of Shirley". The piece is titled "Ernesto, manana"  c. Michael Clark & Tintype Tunes, 2008 and used with their permission.

I hope you enjoy!

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

You can also subscribe and listen to Franklin Matters audio on iTunes or your favorite podcast app; search in "podcasts" for "Franklin Matters"

Town Council Meeting - 02/16/22 - Audio in 3 parts
Town Council Meeting - 02/16/22 - Audio in 3 parts

Franklin.TV: Finding Ben Franklin, Part 4

by Pete Fasciano, Executive Director  02/20/2022

Our Who? Benny. What? On our money. When/Where? The Ben Franklin $100 goes back more than a century. Prior to 1914, the $100 bill featured several different portraits, including 6th President James Monroe and Union Admiral David Farragut. One predecessor stands out from the rest.

His name was Senator Thomas Hart Benton, aka ‘Old Bullion’, who championed the gold standard. He and Andy Jackson both favored ‘hard money’. (Remember All the gold in Fort Knox?)

Ben first appears in 1915 in profile. This engraving was rendered by Thomas Holloway from a 1777 bust of Franklin created by Jean Jacques Caffieri (1725-1792).

Only six years later we see Ben in his forward pose. This 1921 engraved image is believed to originate from a 1777 portrait by French painter Anne-Rosalie Bocquet.

In 1966 and again in 2006 our Benny was again featured more prominently. These most recent engravings were carefully wrought following the Josef  Duplessis  portraits.    Ben’s  portrayals  by Duplessis and Caffieri are remarkably similar in their interpretations of Franklin. Their efforts at expressing realism are the how and why we can recognize Ben Franklin – primarily through the icons on our money.

And –  as always –
Thank you for listening to wfpr●fm. 
And, thank you for watching.


Get this week's program guide for Franklin.TV and Franklin Public Radio (wfpr.fm) online  http://franklin.tv/programguide.pdf    

Franklin.TV: Finding Ben Franklin, Part 4
Franklin.TV: Finding Ben Franklin, Part 4

Senator Becca Rausch: February Beacon Hill Roundup

The newsletter is shortened for publication here. To view the full set of contents, follow this link ->  https://mailchi.mp/162be8a34626/reopeningupdate-15917400


View this email in your browser
Senator Becca Rausch: February Beacon Hill Roundup

Senator Rausch State House Briefing   
Part 2, Chapter 13 (February 17, 2021)   

Dear friends,   

It was great to see many of you last month at Virtual Town Hall! We had a terrific turnout of more than 100 people and discussed a wide range of policy areas and aspects of the legislative process. For those of you who missed it, feel free to join me in office hours or stay tuned for the next one!  

With just over 5 months left in this legislative session, lawmaking is in full swing on Beacon Hill. I have been hard at work as Senate Chair of the Joint Committee on the Environment, Natural Resources, and Agriculture, advancing bills concerning sustainability, environmental justice, and more. I've also been advocating for the legislation I filed, and I am pleased to share that 11 (and counting!) of my bills earned favorable committee reports and are moving forward to the next stage of the legislative process! More details on that below.

I was also proud to vote YES on a few key bills that came to the Senate floor. We passed a supplemental COVID-19 spending bill investing another $101 million in our communities to boost access to rapid tests, high quality masks, and vaccines, and shore up the emergency paid sick leave fund. The bill also included a requirement for a vaccine equity plan, derived from my COVID-19 Vaccine Equity Act. While the Governor signed the bulk of that bill into law this week, he vetoed and filed amendments on four key elements, including the vaccine equity component and the February 28 deadline for masks, testing, and vaccine accessibility. I also voted YES for the PACT Act, a comprehensive bill designed to lower prescription drug costs for our Commonwealth's families. Among other things, the PACT Act would cap insulin costs at $25 per 30-day supply and ensure that patients can get their medicines at their pharmacies of choice. I anticipate many more bills to come to the floor shortly, so stay tuned. 

Read on for more about legislation on the move, rich local stories for Black History Month, State House reopening, and office hours. For real-time updates, please follow me on Twitter and Facebook. If you are a constituent and need assistance, please don't hesitate to contact me and my team via phone (617-722-1555) or email (becca.rausch@masenate.gov). We are here to help.  

I wish you and your loved ones strength, health, resilience, and joy.    

Yours in service,  

 
Senator Becca Rausch   

February Beacon Hill Roundup
February has been a busy month for policy work. Joint Rule 10 day is the deadline by which every committee must take some kind of action on every timely filed bill. If you want to learn more about the process, check out my Low Budget Beacon Hill video on how a bill actually becomes a law. I'm proud to share that many of my bills were reported favorably out of committee: 
S.142 | An act providing a bill of rights for people experiencing homelessness S.142

S.143 | An act providing for diaper changing stations in public buildings and accommodations

S.382 | An act relative to celebrating and teaching Native American culture and history 

S.608 | An act relative to recycling car seats 

S.1127 | An act prohibiting body size discrimination 

S.1128 | An act expanding confidentiality to certain sexual assault counselors 

S.1356 | An Act further addressing challenges to municipal governance caused by the COVID-19 emergency heard in Municipalities 

S.1635 | An act to ensure compliance with the anti-shackling law for pregnant incarcerated women 

S.1636 | An act relative to health education in women's correctional institutions

S.2106 | An act modernizing birth certificates 

S.2232 | An act relative to better buildings 
Protects people experiencing homelessness from discrimination in housing, employment and voter registration.


Requires gender-neutral, semiprivate baby diaper changing stations in public buildings and accommodations.



Requires development of educational curriculum teaching Massachusetts tribal history and issues. 




Establishes a state program to enable recycling of child passenger restraints.

Updates existing sexual assault confidentiality statute to extend protections to records of licensed mental health counselors. 

Prohibits discrimination on the basis of a person's height or weight. 




Gives municipalities the option to conduct remote town meetings.





Ensures that pregnant inmates will not be shackled while giving birth or receiving post-partum care. 



Requires the department of corrections to provide health, contraception, and sex education to inmates at women's correctional institutions. 


Updates birth certificates to recognize all families and advance equity and inclusivity. 

Creates energy use standards for large non-residential buildings in Massachusetts. 
Several of the bills I filed received extensions in their respective committees, meaning they are still under active consideration, so I'm looking forward to additional favorable reports in the weeks ahead. Updates to come!

Virtual Evening Office Hours

Virtual Evening Office Hours
 

Sign up for a 15-minute appointment here.    

My team and I host virtual office hours every month. Residents from any part of the Norfolk, Bristol and Middlesex District, as well as residents of the Norfolk, Worcester and Middlesex District (which takes effect in January 2023), are welcome to share their questions and opinions on state issues with me and my team via video chat or phone call.    
    
Upcoming virtual office hours:    
Monday, March 7, 5-6 PM 
Monday, April 4, 5-6 PM 


Our mailing address is:
The Office of Senator Becca Rausch
Massachusetts State House, Room 218
                          24 Beacon Street, Boston, MA 02133                        

Franklin TV and wfpr.fm schedule for Monday, Feb 21, 2022

  • wfpr.fm or 102.9 on the FM dial = Monday

9 AM 12 PM and 6 PM Talkin’ the Blues – Jim Derick & Todd Monjur
2 hours of awesome blues music, info, interviews

11 AM 2 PM and 8 PM A More Perfect Union – with Dr. Michael Walker-Jones,
Representative Jeff Roy and Dr. Natalia Linos

  • Franklin All Access TV - Our Public Access Channel (Comcast 8, Verizon 26) = MONDAY

7:59:00 am Mass Department of Public Health: CO-VID 19
8:00:00 am SAFE Coalition: The Hamlins
9:00 am Concerts on the Common: Jamie Barrett & Electric Youth
12:00 pm Brooke'n'Cookin: Mac'n'Cheese
12:30 pm Sandhya: Eclairs
1:00 pm Cooking Thyme: Candy Apples
1:30 pm Pizzapalooza: Margherita Pizza
2:00 pm New England Candlepins: Show 3
3:00 pm Candlepin New Generation: Spring 2019 Show 2
3:30 pm Physician Focus: Common and Emerging Diseases
4:00 pm The Only Cure Is Education
4:30 pm Extended Play Sessions: Season 10 Show 1 - Tweed funk
5:30 pm Senior Connection: Sleep
6:00 pm Veterans' Call: SHINE
7:30 pm Frank Presents: State House Pt. 3
8:30 pm ArtWeek: Airmen of Note

  • Franklin Pride TV - Our Educational Channel (Comcast 96, Verizon 28) = MONDAY

7:00 am Public School Concert: Lifelong Music Pt. 2 01-29-19
8:30 am Public School Event: FHS Winter Jazz Night '22
10:00 am Public School Concert: FHS Concert Night 2019
12:30 pm FHS Boys Varsity Hockey: v St. John's Prep 02-16-22
2:30 pm SAFE Coalition: The Hamlins
3:30 pm The Only Cure Is Education
4:00 pm It Takes A Village: 40 Percent Club
5:00 pm FHS Girls Varsity Hockey: v Mansfield-OA-Foxboro 02-03-22
9:30 pm Hockomock League Swimming Championship Day 2

  • Franklin Town Hall TV - Our Government Channel (Comcast 11, Verizon 29) = MONDAY

8:00 am Planning Board: 02-07-22
11:00 am School Committee: 02-16-22: Face Coverings
2:00 pm Planning Board: 02-07-22


Get this week's program guide for Franklin.TV and Franklin Public Radio (wfpr.fm) online  http://franklin.tv/programguide.pdf  

Franklin.TV and Franklin Public Radio (wfpr.fm)
Franklin.TV and Franklin Public Radio (wfpr.fm)