something about the redness
of the leaves, the white fence
and the morning sunlight
Fall in Franklin: something about the redness the white fence and the sunlight m, originally uploaded by shersteve.
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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 *
something about the redness
of the leaves, the white fence
and the morning sunlight
Franklin resident Steve Sherlock announced the Laid Off Camp he helped organize for tomorrow is canceled.
Designed to help unemployed people from Massachusetts and Rhode Island brush up on interview techniques, making contacts and using the Internet to find jobs, the camp was canceled due to slow registration.
"We only achieved one third of the required registrations for this non-profit, all-volunteer event to break even," Sherlock wrote in an email late last night. Anyone who already registered will have their money refunded, he added.
He and the four other co-organizers will likely establish a similar camp next year. The event was scheduled for tomorrow afternoon at the Living Waters Church in North Attleborough.
For more information, visit http://laidoffcampprovidence.blogspot.com/.
Modern education systems deserve much of the blame, both for fostering the belief that education ends when a person leaves school and for its emphasis on being right rather than on how to learn from mistakes. This has encouraged caution rather than risk-taking, with individuals preferring to avoid mistakes when possible and hide them if necessary. The world’s four greatest statisticians never took a course in statistics, Mr Ackoff would point out, and three of America’s greatest architects (Henry Hobson Richardson, Louis Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright) never took a formal course in architecture.Read the full article in The Economist here
Society urgently needs to find better ways of inculcating systems thinking in its decision-makers and public-policy experts in particular, he argued. It also needs to change how it accounts for mistakes. Currently, almost any accounting system you can think of records mistakes of commission, when a deliberate act goes wrong, but keeps no record of mistakes of omission: things not done that should have been. The result is a conservative, risk-averse culture that holds back the innovation that society needs.
Board of Assessors | ||
Chris Feeley (write-in candidate) | 217 | |
Board of Health | ||
Bruce Hunchard | 1556 | winner |
Koren Kanadanian | 1150 | |
Planning Board | ||
Anthony Padula | 1570 | |
Joseph Halligan | 1780 | |
Planning Board (Associate) | ||
John Carroll | 1892 | |
Town Council | Votes | |
Tina Powderly | 1868 | 1 |
Robert Vallee | 1826 | 2 |
Glenn Jones | 1767 | 3 |
Shannon Zollo | 1648 | 4 |
Matthew Kelly | 1617 | 5 |
Judith Pond Pfeffer | 1553 | 6 |
R. Scott Mason | 1528 | 7 |
Joseph McGann | 1443 | 8 |
Stephen Whalen | 1437 | 9 |
Robert Avakian | 1378 | |
Daniel Ballinger | 1211 | |
Glenna Richards | 1182 | |
Bryce Kuchs | 592 | |
School Committee | Votes | |
Cynthia Douglas | 1927 | |
William Glynn | 1621 | |
Jeffrey Roy | 1616 | |
Paula Mullen | 1562 | |
Roberta Trahan | 1558 | |
Edward Cafasso | 1507 | |
Susan Rohrbach | 1412 | |