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incredABLE Day - May 22 |
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 *
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incredABLE Day - May 22 |
– Ben O’Neill netted a pair of goals for the Bulldogs and Shaun Kirby added one in the loss.
– Julia Jette led Franklin with seven points, potting three goals and adding four assists. Emily Spath had a pair of goals and three assists and Jordan Jette netted a pair of goals. Dani Lonati had nine saves in goal for Franklin. Mary Nee and Casey Bradley had the goals for the Bulldogs.
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FHS Panthers |
"The Tri-County Regional cosmetology program will host a Cut-A-Thon and Style-A-Thon from 2:10 to 7 p.m. April 8 in the high school’s salon, 147 Pond St., to raise funds for a Franklin runner who is participating in the Dana-Farber Marathon Challenge 2016.
For a $10 donation, adults can receive a haircut from the high school and post-secondary students. Students can participate for $5. Those who do not wish to have their hair cut can have it washed, blow-dried and styled for the same price."
"The town of Franklin has mailed out the fourth quarter fiscal 2016 real estate and personal property tax bills, which are due May 2.
Payments are considered made once received, and payments received after the deadline will be charged a 14 percent interest.
The fourth quarter tax bills are based on the new valuations and tax rate of $14.40. The first two quarterly tax bills are preliminary or estimated bills. The third and fourth quarterly bills are actual bills and will be adjusted by the amounts estimated for the first two quarters."
Massachusetts Tax Amnesty Starts April 1st |
1st Team Boys Basketball - Hockomock Sports photos |
Franklin senior Tim Prunier captained a Panthers team that won its first Kelley-Rex division title since 2012 and reached the D1 Central Sectional Finals for the second time in his three years on varsity. Prunier, who was voted Hockomock League MVP by the league’s coaches, averaged 13.0 points per game, 4.5 assists per game and 4.0 rebounds a game. He was also selected as the HockomockSports.com Defensive Player of the Year and averaged 2.5 steals a game. In his three years, Franklin reached the sectional final twice and the semifinals once.
2nd Team Boys Basketball - Hockomock Sports photos |
Franklin freshman Jay Dieterle, the HockomockSports.com Underclassman of the Year. broke into the Hockomock League with a rookie season to remember. Dieterle led the Kelley-Rex division champions in scoring with 14.0 points per game and added 4.0 rebounds and 2.0 assists. He scored a career-high 24 points in December to help Franklin upset No. 1 ranked Catholic Memorial and also tied his career mark against Milford and in the playoffs against Westford Academy. He shot 40% from three-point range and 45% from the field overall.
Franklin freshman Jay Dieterle as been named the 2015-2016 HockomockSports.com Boys Basketball Underclassman of the Year, the fifth season the award has been given out.
Franklin senior Tim Prunier has been named the 2015-2016 HockomockSports.com Boys Basketball Defensive Player of the Year, the fifth season the award has been given out. Prunier was also selected as the Hockomock League MVP by the coaches and was named to the HockomockSports.com First Team.
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"Cantoreggi said Franklin would receive just shy of $1 million under the Baker’s budget that will go to putting in new water lines and rebuilding roads.
The Northgate neighborhood, Cleveland area and Summer Street are expected to be reconstructed.
Like Milford, any additional money would benefit Franklin.
“If the additional money comes through, typically what we do is preventative maintenance, which would be crack sealing and chip sealing. It is not necessarily the most glamorous type of work, but it makes the roads last a lot longer,” said Cantoreggi."
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Road construction on East Central St is currently funded with a State grant |
A state official has given the environmental go-ahead to energy company Exelon to expand, but the firm still needs another key state board's approval to build.
Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs Michael Beaton said Exelon’s Final Environmental Impact Report “adequately and property complies” with the state Environmental Protection Act.
“The project has been clearly described and presented, its impacts have been identified, feasible alternatives to the project have been analyzed commensurate with the project’s purpose and need, and the (report) includes clear commitments to mitigate (d)amage to the (e)nvironment,” Beaton wrote in the March 18 certificate which was posted on the state Department of Public Utilities website this week.
"A Franklin man was arraigned Thursday in Wrentham District Court on charges of larceny and forging several checks stolen from a relative, authorities say.
Michael J. Boudreau, 25, of 951 Pond St., faces two counts of forging a check, two counts of attempting to commit a crime and uttering (passing) a false check."
– Seven different players found the back of the net in Franklin’s opening game. Kenzie Pleshaw led the way with a team-high four goals and Emily Spath netted three goals. Sam Jones forced three turnovers on defense and had a pair of ground balls. Dani Lonati made seven saves in net.
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FHS Panthers |
The April item featured in the Museum’s ongoing Item of the Month series is a small Native American Stone Knife from our collection. There is a lot to be learned about how Native Americans in this area used stone tools to create axes, grinding tools, etc. to shape their environment and live off the land. The knife, a general purpose tool, with both a tapering point and a thick edge, demonstrates the highly advanced workmanship and ingenuity of the local Wampanoag tribe.
The research and exhibit is put together by Justin Edwards, a Dean College history major and a student of American History professor Rob Lawson, and by Susan Elliott, museum volunteer.
Visit the museum Sunday April 10th from 1:00PM-4:00PM and view Stanley Chilson Films from the 1950s. See a bit of the Simple Life of Mid Century Franklin on the museum’s large movie screen. Stanley Chilson was a photographer who chronicled life in Franklin from the early 1930s through 1960. His films are rare treasures, that give us a unique view of how life once was in our town.
The Museum will be open from 11:00AM-2:00PM Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, April 19th, 20th and 21st - School Vacation Week. Open to the public and always free the Museum hopes to encourage families looking for something to do with the kids during school vacation. Enjoy ‘History Mysteries’ by guessing the age of a vintage American Flag from our collection. Student visitors will be encouraged to fill out an index card with their guesses. Winners will receive a letter of commendation and a small token of appreciation for visiting and participating. View a Herbert Hoover campaign poster and determine how old it might be. There will even be a question or two to try to stump our older visitors. Enjoy portions of the animated series Liberty’s Kids on the museum large viewing screen. There’s lots to see and much to learn from a visit to the Franklin Historical Museum. Spend your vacation learning a little bit of Franklin’s history.
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Franklin Historical Museum |
The Museum is located at 80 West Central Street, Franklin. Hours of operation are Saturdays 10:00AM – 1:00PM, Sundays 1:00PM – 4:00PM and starting again in April, Thursday evenings 5:00PM – 8:00PM. There is handicap access through the back door of the museum with an elevator to the 1st floor exhibits. Visit soon!
Girls Basketball 1st Team - Hockomock Sports photo |
Girls Basketball 2nd Team - Hockomock Sports photo |
Franklin senior guard Lauren Rudolph put in a solid all-around season for the Panthers to help them finish in third place in the Kelley-Rex division and qualify for the playoffs before bowing out after a tough trip to Westford. Rudolph averaged 9.4 points per game this season, while also grabbing nearly four rebounds and four steals per game. Rudolph spearheaded Franklin’s pressure defense and flourished in the drive and kick offense that the Panthers favor. She has committed to play at Springfield College next year.
Girls Basketball 3rd Team - Hockomock Sports photo |
Franklin senior center Aubrie Kutil developed into a force in the paint for the Panthers this winter, the culmination of a strong four-year varsity career. Kutil led Franklin with 9.5 points per game, while shooting 52 percent from the floor. She added 7.4 rebounds per game and also showed off great vision and touch as a passer out of the post, which was the perfect fit for the Panthers style of offense. Kutil was named a Hockomock all-star by the league’s coaches for her play this season.
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hydrant flushing at Parmenter School |
"Students applying to Dean College for 2017-18 will now have the ability to do so through the Common Application, an online system used by nearly 700 colleges and universities in the United States and around the world to manage the college admission process.
By becoming a Common Application member, Dean College gains the opportunity to discover students who may not have been reached in the past."
"To accommodate a renovation and addition to its building, the Franklin Public Library will be closing on April 11 and re-opening in a temporary location in early May.
The library this week released a timeline of the effort, which will result in its re-opening at 25 Kenwood Circle on May 1. The year-long, $10.5 million project will add a new section to the building, as well as updating its heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems."
"The Franklin Food Pantry and the Franklin High School Empty Bowls Club will co-host the Empty Bowls Dinner from 6 to 8 p.m. April 27 in the Franklin High School cafeteria, 218 Oak St.
Attendees will choose a hand-painted ceramic bowl to take home. A silent auction will feature select pieces that have been created and painted by members of the FHS Empty Bowls Club and local youth, adult and corporate groups. Proceeds from the event benefit the Franklin Food Pantry."
"The Massachusetts Appeals Court has upheld the dismissal of a lawsuit against Franklin Public Schools by a special education teacher once employed by the district.
The suit, originally filed in June 2014, alleged that the schools discriminated against teacher Mary Perry because of her age. In a decision issued Tuesday, the appeals court held that a trial judge's summary dismissal of the case was proper."
"It looks like Back Bay Station, the dingy and outdated transit hub of the MBTA at the corner of Dartmouth and Stuart streets, is getting an aesthetic overhaul, inside and out. So much so you might not even recognize the new structure.
Boston Properties Inc. put forth plans Tuesday for the project, which would entail not just revamping the station itself, but the entire block surrounding it. Retail outposts would line the street level of a new glass office tower – 26 stories of twisting glass akin to several giant boxes stacked on top of each other at odd and seemingly random angles.
The MBTA building itself, which sees some 30,000 commuters each day, would be redone to reflect a more modern transit station. Department stores and a supermarket could be in the picture as well, and the finished product will also offer "a variety of high-quality housing opportunities," which will reportedly include the creation of affordable housing."
Next week, construction will begin on the new sidewalk improvements and new road work on East Central Street leading into downtown.
The bridge deck portion of the new island should be completed by the end of April. The project is anticipated to be fully complete by the end of August.
Also, please note detours. From time to time, please be aware of detours around the downtown construction area through the spring and summer.
Detours may need to be established as the construction team sees fit, and may not be able to give residents notice in advance. If we can, we will.
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downtown triangle section under construction |
Everyone is invited to our big send-off party at the Franklin Public Library on Friday, April 1 starting at 2PM.
Join us for cake, games, treats, crafts, directions to the new location and information. There will be drawings for book giveaways for all ages.
We will be closed from Monday April 11th – Sunday May 1st to relocate to 25 Kenwood Circle
Please help us lighten our load. This is the perfect opportunity to check out enough books, movies and cds to hold you over till we are up and running at our new temporary digs. We will be extending the date the items are due until Friday, May 6th.
Interlibrary Loan will end Friday, April 22nd at 118 Main ST and resume on Monday, May 2nd at 25 Kenwood Circle
Please change Interlibrary Loan pick up location to another convenient Minuteman library. ( i.e Medway or Millis, or Medfield, Framingham, Dover, etc.) OR wait to place your request after April 22nd.
Between April 11th and April 22nd (when the library is closed) interlibrary loan items can be picked up at the Franklin Public Library, 118 Main Street between 9 AM – 5 PM on Mondays through Fridays. Please knock on the children’s door entrance for assistance.
Get a jump start on Summer Reading. Everything is a $1.00Saturday, April 9th, 9:00 AM – 3:00 PM P (Please hold all donations until May 2nd) Monthly Booksales will resume in May at 25 Kenwood Circle.
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Franklin Public Library |