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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 *
Friday, January 6, 2017
Franklin & Bellingham Rail Trail Committee to meet Jan 10, 2017
In the News: Milford schools exploring panic button; Master Plan progress noted
From the Milford Daily News, articles of interest for Franklin:
Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)
http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/20170105/milford-schools-smart-phone-panic-button-program-coming-in-february
Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)
http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/20170105/franklin-council-reviews-master-plan-progress
"School officials are targeting a February date to debut a smart phone panic button program to better alert faculty, staff, students and families in the event of an emergency.
The Rave Mobile Safety program will be implemented sometime in late winter, said Superintendent Kevin McIntyre at Thursday's School Committee meeting.
IT Director Matthew Joseph has taken on the rollout of the program, working "hand-in-hand" with the Police Department and Chief Tom O'Loughlin.
Joseph, O'Loughlin and school administrators have been working throughout the school year on the program, which is essentially a smart phone app that allows a faculty member to alert authorities with the click of a button."
Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)
http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/20170105/milford-schools-smart-phone-panic-button-program-coming-in-february
"Town officials said Franklin has made good progress over the past year toward its master plan goals, but the town still needs less costly housing.
The Town Council considered the matter at its Wednesday night meeting as part of a yearly review.
Town Administrator Jeffrey Nutting said one of the highlights of the town's 2016 efforts involved improving the DelCarte Conservation Property, which helps fulfill a goal that the town protect natural resources.
"A management study for the DelCarte property is out," he said, adding that the town was beginning its efforts to combat invasive weeds in the ponds there."
Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)
http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/20170105/franklin-council-reviews-master-plan-progress
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frozen pond at DelCarte |
Thursday, January 5, 2017
Senior Center: January 2017 - Franklin Connection Newsletter
Please note the new Issue of The Franklin Connection newsletter has been published -->> January's Newsletter (PDF)
Read more: http://www.franklinma.gov/node/72413
Read more: http://www.franklinma.gov/node/72413
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expanded parking lot at the Senior Center will accommodate more parking when the 2nd floor and renovations are complete |
Empty Bowls Club Needs Some Helping Hands: Register now to make bowls to fight hunger March 4
The Franklin High School Empty Bowls Club will hold a bowl-making event on Saturday, March 4 to help make ceramic bowls in preparation for the 2nd Annual Empty Bowls Dinner on May 2. Anyone 8 years or older is invited to this free, community event to create bowls out of clay which will be used in the May 2 fundraiser benefitting the Franklin Food Pantry.
The event, held from 10 a.m. to Noon in Room 138 at FHS, is limited to the first 25 people who register. All materials and instruction are provided for free. Pre-registration is required and can be done online at franklinfoodpantry.org/give-help/volunteer/empty-bowls/.
“We are opening our studio to engage the public in a worthwhile project that addresses hunger in our own community,” says Brenna Johnson, FHS art teacher and instructor for the Empty Bowls Club. “It’s a great opportunity for families or friends to experience a craft activity together while supporting a meaningful cause.”
The clay bowls will be fired, painted and glazed in preparation for the Empty Bowls Dinner to raise money for the Pantry. Dinner attendees choose one of the hand-made bowls to take home as a reminder that “somewhere, someone’s bowl is empty.” The May 2 fundraiser, which includes a simple meal of soup and bread, is meant to remind guests of the many “empty bowls” that exist in the lives of those who experience hunger.
The event, held from 10 a.m. to Noon in Room 138 at FHS, is limited to the first 25 people who register. All materials and instruction are provided for free. Pre-registration is required and can be done online at franklinfoodpantry.org/give-help/volunteer/empty-bowls/.
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Event participants will make bowls out of clay that will later be painted and glazed for the 2nd Annual Empty Bowls Dinner |
“We are opening our studio to engage the public in a worthwhile project that addresses hunger in our own community,” says Brenna Johnson, FHS art teacher and instructor for the Empty Bowls Club. “It’s a great opportunity for families or friends to experience a craft activity together while supporting a meaningful cause.”
The clay bowls will be fired, painted and glazed in preparation for the Empty Bowls Dinner to raise money for the Pantry. Dinner attendees choose one of the hand-made bowls to take home as a reminder that “somewhere, someone’s bowl is empty.” The May 2 fundraiser, which includes a simple meal of soup and bread, is meant to remind guests of the many “empty bowls” that exist in the lives of those who experience hunger.
About the Franklin High School Empty Bowls Club
Franklin High School is participating in an international charity project called Empty Bowls, which supports hungry people in local communities. The first part of this project is to make ceramic bowls with students, faculty, district K-12 art teachers, and the Franklin community. Then, the Empty Bowls Club and the Franklin Food Pantry co-host a community meal of soup and bread. All funds raised at this event are donated to the Franklin Food Pantry.
About the Franklin Food Pantry
The Franklin Food Pantry offers supplemental food assistance and household necessities once a month to 504 households, including more than 300 children. Clients have access to bread and fresh produce daily during Pantry hours. As a nonprofit organization, the Pantry depends entirely on donations, and receives no town or state funding. Other programs include a Mobile Pantry, Cooking Matters classes, a Healthy Futures Market, emergency food bags and holiday meal packages. The Pantry is located at 43 W. Central St. in Franklin on Route 140 across from the Franklin Fire Station. Visit www.franklinfoodpantry.org for more information.
FHS girls indoor track post win; boys indoor track and girls basketball lose on Wednesday
From HockomockSports we share the results from the FHS winter sports action on Wednesday
Girls Basketball = Franklin, 38 vs. Bishop Fenwick, 47 – Final
Boys Indoor Track (@ Reggie Lewis Center) = Franklin, 18 vs. Mansfield, 82 – Final
Boys Indoor Track (@ Reggie Lewis Center) = Franklin, 67 vs. Mansfield, 33 – Final
For the remainder of the results around the Hockomock League
https://hockomocksports.com/wednesdays-schedule-scoreboard-010417/
Girls Basketball = Franklin, 38 vs. Bishop Fenwick, 47 – Final
– Bishop Fenwick used a 17-8 run in the third quarter to turn a four point lead into a double-digit advantage. Carli Koffinke led the Panthers with 13 points while Ali Brigham added eight points, Kate Morse had six points and Bea Bondhus chipped in with five points.
Boys Indoor Track (@ Reggie Lewis Center) = Franklin, 18 vs. Mansfield, 82 – Final
– Mansfield picked up first place finishes in nine events and swept first, second and third in four of them. Nick Horn won the 300M, Mike Shannon was first in the 600M, Sean Lanzillo crossed first in the 1 Mile, Kevin McCree won the shot put and Jack Olsen won the high jump. Kevin Crawford, Nick Rispoli and Jackson Murphy swept the 1000M, Paxton Howard, Cullen Lancaster and Eric McQuiggan swept the 2 Mile, Aidan Sacco, Jareme DiLorenzo and Cameron McIntyre swept the 55M hurdles and Kyle Haley, DiLorenzo and Sacco swept the long jump. Franklin’s Tucker Cherry won the 55M dash.
Boys Indoor Track (@ Reggie Lewis Center) = Franklin, 67 vs. Mansfield, 33 – Final
– Franklin and Mansfield split with six first place finishes apiece but the Panthers came through win the win. Jess Kroushl won the 55M dash, Halle Atkinson was first in the 300M, Nicole Clermont won the 1 Mile, Katherine Hartnett crossed first in the 2 Mile, Lauren McGrath won the 55M hurdles and Miranda Smith won the shot put. Mansfield’s Caitlin Whitman won the 600M, Lauren Duggan was first in the 1000M, Amanda Mangano took first in the high jump and Angela Corkery won the long jump.
For the remainder of the results around the Hockomock League
https://hockomocksports.com/wednesdays-schedule-scoreboard-010417/
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FHS Panthers |
Details on each event at the Hockomock indoor track meet can be found here
- Boys
- Girls
Economic Development Committee - endorsed storage use proposal, to set joint workshop
I used Twitter to capture my notes from the short (approx 15 minutes) Economic Development Committee meeting on Wednesday.
EDC meeting: discussion on storage use per zoning; currently only allowed in CII and not in industrial zone. #edc0104— Steve Sherlock (@FranklinMatters) January 4, 2017
EDC meeting: motion to endorse the zoning change for storage use in industrial zone, passed unanimously #edc0104— Steve Sherlock (@FranklinMatters) January 4, 2017
EDC meeting: proposal for joint workshop with Town Council, Planning Board, and Planning Dept to be scheduled #edc0104— Steve Sherlock (@FranklinMatters) January 4, 2017
REMINDER: 350 Mass Greater Franklin Node meeting - Thursday, Jan 5, 2017
Hey, climate fighters,
I hope everyone had wonderful holidays that suited your needs! I knew I wanted a break and I got exactly what I needed.
Now that we've had our respite, it's time to ramp up and wake up our climate spirits by participating in some exciting and fun actions coming up. If you received Katherine Anderson's Climate Movement Weekly Update yesterday, you have an idea of what they are. Links to sign-ups are in the newsletter (you should be receiving it--let me know if you aren't), so let's have a good showing at these events! It's always a blast when 350 Mass activists get together!
- Mon, Jan 9 Day Against Denial rally, Park St. T, Boston Common
- Sat, Jan 14 Bill McKibben and Tim DeChristopher forum, First Parish Church, Harvard Square, Cambridge
- Sat, Jan 14 #NoDAPL Solidarity Fundraiser Sing-Along, Arlington
- Wed, Jan 25 Mass Power Forward Lobby Day, State House
- Sat, Jan 28 350 Mass day-long Organizing and Advocacy Training, Boston (TBD)
We shouldn't be lulled into thinking there's nothing to do since Spectra has hit the Pause Button (for now!); we have the gift of time to make our numbers even stronger! More grassroots outreach and publicity, Con Comms, Mass Power Forward business outreach, legislative work--we'll talk about details at the meeting.
Part of the Spectra fight will likely be in the legislature, convincing our legislators to say NO to the pipeline tax and YES to other non-carbon solutions.
New Volunteer Opportunities: If you'd like to work on 350 Mass' legislative goals, you could be part of the 350 Mass Legislative Team either as a State Legislative Team member for the node OR a Point Person for your own legislator (see the link for more details). And since this node covers 17 towns, that's a fair number of legislators to work with! We'd like to have people fill these roles for each of the nodes. I'll be happy to answer questions how that would work, or if I can't, put you in touch with Andy Gordon, the 350 Mass Legislative Coordinator.
I've also done some outreach to the Nipmuck Nation to see if they'd like to work with us to pressure the Dakota Access banks, so we'll see what comes of that.
I've also done some outreach to the Nipmuck Nation to see if they'd like to work with us to pressure the Dakota Access banks, so we'll see what comes of that.
So bring your calendars to the meeting THURSDAY and we can put our heads together and get things rolling!
Same time, same place: 7:00-9:00 pm, First Universalist Society, 262 Chestnut Street, Franklin.
Same time, same place: 7:00-9:00 pm, First Universalist Society, 262 Chestnut Street, Franklin.
See you then!
Carolyn Barthel, Coordinator
350 Mass Greater Franklin Node508-473-3305
In the News: empty bowls adds workshop; Town Council decides "no" on joint hearings
From the Milford Daily News, articles of interest for Franklin:
Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)
http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/20170104/franklin-empty-bowls-event-exceeds-expectations
Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)
http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/20170104/franklin-council-opts-against-joint-meetings
"Early response to the second annual "Empty Bowls" dinner has already exceeded expectations.
The event - held by the Franklin High School's Empty Bowls Club - looks to raise awareness of hunger by bringing in community members for a simple meal and auctioning off hand-made bowls to remind them that "somewhere, someone's bowl is empty." Proceeds from the dinner benefit the Franklin Food Pantry.
Brenna Johnson, an art teacher at the high school, said the club restarted operations last year after several years of inactivity.
"We approached the Franklin Food Pantry and worked together, hand-in-hand, to construct the event," she said. "We raised over $6,000 that night - it blew us away."
Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)
http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/20170104/franklin-empty-bowls-event-exceeds-expectations
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Event participants will make bowls out of clay that will later be painted and glazed for the 2nd Annual Empty Bowls Dinner |
"The Town Council will not hold joint public hearings with the Planning Board on zoning matters.
The council Wednesday night considered a proposal to streamline the public hearing process by convening hearings with both the council and board present.
The idea was first raised by Councilor Deborah Pellegri, who asked at a prior meeting for a discussion.
Pellegri said she believed such sessions have been held in the past.
"For myself, I think it would be very helpful," she said. "We might be asking questions that, perhaps, we can't answer. The Planning Board could be right there (to answer)."
Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)
http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/20170104/franklin-council-opts-against-joint-meetings
Wednesday, January 4, 2017
Live Reporting: to closing
K. TOWN ADMINISTRATOR'S REPORT tax bills are out, the 1st 2 in each year are estimate the second two are higher as they catch up the first two use the prior rate per Council action, a note was included in the bills asking for contributions to the Veterans fund. if any questions, check with the Veterans Agent | |
L. FUTURE AGENDA ITEMS | |
M. COUNCIL COMMENTS Pellegri - John Tully, a former election worker, passed away this week meals on wheels needs help to deliver meals, contact the Senior Center Jones - Franklin Food Pantry in need of supplies and donations Pfeffer - happy new year to all Kelly - I got my tax bill and called Jeff to complain we do act in the best interests in Franklin, what we do up here affects us as much as it affects everyone when they send us an email about something they don't like, remember that we are neighbors too | |
N. EXECUTIVE SESSION none tonight | |
O. ADJOURN motion to adjourn, passed |
Live Reporting: Subcommittee reports, Legislation
I. SUBCOMMITTEE REPORTS Bissanti - EDC just met Jones - presentation coming on the Town website for next meeting Mercer - delays with Senior Center, biggest hold up is the elevator, need to get the State inspection, once they inspect, then we can utilize the second floor High school project - while open for a couple of years, it has not ended yet. The fields will be up and operating in the spring. Finalizing the last invoice with the contractor. Setting up the audit process with the MSBA to get signed off gym floor being re-done this summer, a glass door issue to be taken care of before we sign off Pfeffer - new addition should be all closed in by now, roof being worked on. Temporary heat there. it will be gorgeous to see what it will look like when done. Stop by 25 Kenwood to see the displays. the Benjamin Franklin books will be on display in a much better showcase for viewing by all. It may not open in July | |
J. LEGISLATION FOR ACTION | |
1. Bylaw Amendment 16-778: Chapter 160, Taxpayers, Delinquent- 2nd Reading (majority vote - via roll call) need to revise to bring into compliance with current MA requirements passed 8-0 | |
2. Bylaw Amendment 17-784: Repeal Sign Restrictions Bylaw- 1st Reading (majority vote) motion to move to second reading, passed 8-0 removing the second reading the billboards across the street are 'pre-existing and non-conforming' they will come down with the new development | |
3. Bylaw Amendment 17-785: Repeal of Sidewalk Snow and Ice Removal Bylaw -1st Reading (majority vote) looking for a discussion and decision on either remove or decide to enforce not practical for for some sections passed 8-0 | |
4. Zoning Bylaw Amendment 17-786: Storage Facility Bylaw (Referral to the Planning Board) this was the item that was discussed at the EDC meeting earlier currently the storage facilities are only zoned for CII they are in an industrial area and have been grandfathered, someone putting a new one in couldn't do so recommended by EDC to proceed vote on referral to Planning Board, passed 8-0 CII property is a valuable property in Franklin, storage is not a good use (for revenue) |
Live Reporting: Master Plan Update
H. PRESENTATIONS/DISCUSSIONS | |
2. Master Plan Update |
multiple items have been covered, the outline of what has been done is summarized by Bryan
Can someone please describe: "compact neighborhood district"?
Taberner: a state term, we have done what we needed to there so nothing more at this time
work force housing, also a state term referring to affordable housing
Pfeffer - we should pick where 40Bs should go rather than having developers come and tell us
Bissanti - we did get a lot of heat for the term 'work force housing', we should not discard the idea, anything under the $500K should be in that category
Kelly - work force housing is a starter home, we need to have that available, we need to be cognizant of the concept and the variable pricing
Jones - do we have the power to determine where our 40Bs could go?
Nutting - no
Live Reporting: Town Council - Jan 4, 2017
Present: Pellegri, Padula, Mercer, Vallee, Pfeffer, Bissanti, Jones
Absent: Dellorco
Jeff Nutting presents an overview on the possibility of creating a joint meeting for public hearing purposes. Technically it can be done but it is a requirement that the Planning Board provide a report to the Council before the Council would vote
no sense of the Council to move forward with this item
Absent: Dellorco
A. APPROVAL OF MINUTES none for approval tonight | |
B. ANNOUNCEMENTS | |
C. PROCLAMATIONS/RECOGNITIONS none tonight | |
D. CITIZEN COMMENTS none tonight | |
E. APPOINTMENTS none tonight | |
F. HEARINGS none tonight | |
G. LICENSE TRANSACTIONS none tonight | |
H. PRESENTATIONS/DISCUSSIONS | |
1. Discussion on Joint Town Council/Planning Board meetings |
Pellegri - recall having done this before, thinks it would be beneficial to help the process, who would sit where?
Pfeffer - not in favor of the joint meeting, the Planning Board needs a separate vote and the Council needs a separate meeting,
Bissanti - refer to the memo from Mark Cerel, while it is legal it is not prudent. I will weigh in with Mark on this. The Planning Board folks I have talked with have issues with the possibility of repercussion with some of the discussions and decisions
Kelly - I can tell you we would be in charge (sorry Tony)
it has worked fine while I have been here
Cerel - you both serve different functions in your capacity. You would still need to have separate meetings to make decisions. How would you take minutes? lots of logistics issues to discuss
no sense of the Council to move forward with this item
summary - proposal for joint meetings not going anywhere (joint workshops are a separate item and they can happen with less issues)
High School and Middle School Mountain Bike Racing Team - Information Night - Jan 19
Do you love riding your bike? Having fun and riding bikes is what we are all about!
Join us for an introduction to the New England High School Cycling Association (NEHSCA) and hear details about our racing season coming in the spring of 2017.
This will be the 2nd season for our regional team from Franklin, Medway, Millis,
Norfolk Bellingham and Wrentham to compete against other New England teams.
Boys and girls in grades 5-12 are eligible, no experience necessary. Our coaches will teach you all the skills you need.
What: Info Night with the Charles River Rats
When: Thursday, January 19th, 2017
Where: Franklin Recreation Department
275 Beaver Street Franklin, MA 02038
Time: 6:00PM – 7:30 PM
Contact: Rob Rood
Phone: 774-302-9883
Email: overthesummitcoaching@gmail.com
Web: www.nehsca.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/nehsca
Join us for an introduction to the New England High School Cycling Association (NEHSCA) and hear details about our racing season coming in the spring of 2017.
This will be the 2nd season for our regional team from Franklin, Medway, Millis,
Norfolk Bellingham and Wrentham to compete against other New England teams.
Boys and girls in grades 5-12 are eligible, no experience necessary. Our coaches will teach you all the skills you need.
What: Info Night with the Charles River Rats
When: Thursday, January 19th, 2017
Where: Franklin Recreation Department
275 Beaver Street Franklin, MA 02038
Time: 6:00PM – 7:30 PM
Contact: Rob Rood
Phone: 774-302-9883
Email: overthesummitcoaching@gmail.com
Web: www.nehsca.com
Facebook: www.facebook.com/nehsca
image from http://www.nehsca.com/ |
Franklin School Committee Coffee Hours: Jan 12, Feb 1, Mar 4
In our goal to engage the community as a partner in improvement of our school system, the Community Relations Subcommittee of the Franklin School Committee will be hosting monthly coffee hours.
Please join us as we work through the 2017 budget process, discuss policy and bring a new superintendent on board. We welcome your input, ideas and suggestions.
Upcoming meeting dates are:
All meetings are held in the conference room at the Franklin Cable Access TV Studio at 23 Hutchinson Street.
Any questions contact Anne Bergen: bergena@franklin.k12.ma.us
Please join us as we work through the 2017 budget process, discuss policy and bring a new superintendent on board. We welcome your input, ideas and suggestions.
Upcoming meeting dates are:
- Thursday, January 12 at 7 p.m.
- Wednesday, February 1 at 7 p.m.
- Saturday, March 4 at 9 a.m.
All meetings are held in the conference room at the Franklin Cable Access TV Studio at 23 Hutchinson Street.
Any questions contact Anne Bergen: bergena@franklin.k12.ma.us
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Franklin TV at 23 Hutchinson St at night |
FHS boys basketball beaten at buzzer by Catholic Memorial
Via Twitter
Final: CM 58 Franklin 57 Ulyen Coleman's 3 with 4.7 seconds left sealed it for the Knights @HockomockSports— Joe Clark (@joeclark0) January 4, 2017
End of 3: Franklin 48 CM 46, Will McDonnell's four threes in the 3rd sparking CM's comeback @HockomockSports— Joe Clark (@joeclark0) January 4, 2017
Halftime: Franklin: 30 Catholic Memorial: 25 @HockomockSports Franklin's defense on Ulyen Coleman has been the difference so far— Joe Clark (@joeclark0) January 4, 2017
End of the 1st quarter at the Ronnie, CM with a 15-13 lead @HockomockSports— Joe Clark (@joeclark0) January 4, 2017
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FHS Panthers |
For other results around the Hockomock League
https://hockomocksports.com/tuesdays-schedule-scoreboard-010317/
FPAC - Open Auditions for Disney’s Beauty and the Beast - Jan 9
Franklin Performing Arts Company (FPAC) will hold open auditions for Disney’s Beauty and the Beast on Monday, January 9 at THE BLACK BOX, the company’s home and performance venue located at 15 West Central Street in downtown Franklin.
Auditions begin at
Please prepare 16 measures of a musical theater song in the style of Disney’s Beauty and the Beast. Callbacks will take place on January 11, as needed. For more information, including a character breakdown, visit www.FPAConline.com.
FPAC will present the enchanting classic on March 11, 12, 17, 18 and 19 at THE BLACK BOX. Based on the Academy-Award-winning animated feature film, the smash hit stage version includes the movie’s memorable songs, written by Alan Menken and the late Howard Ashman, along with new songs by Mr. Menken and Tim Rice. The original Broadway production ran for over 13 years and was nominated for nine Tony Awards, including Best Musical.
The magical story tells of Belle, a young woman in a provincial town, and the Beast, who is really a young prince trapped under the spell of an enchantress. If the Beast can learn to love and be loved, the curse will be broken and he will be transformed into his former self. But time is running out. If the Beast does not learn his lesson soon, he and his household will be doomed for all eternity. This “tale as old as time” is family theater at its best.
FPAC presents Disney’s Beauty and the Beast as part of the company’s 26th season. For more information, call (508) 528-3370.
Auditions begin at
- 6 p.m. for ages 7-9 and continue at
- 6:30 for ages 10-13,
- 7:00 for teens ages 14 and older, and
- 7:45 for adults. (There are limited roles available for ages 7-13.)
Please prepare 16 measures of a musical theater song in the style of Disney’s Beauty and the Beast. Callbacks will take place on January 11, as needed. For more information, including a character breakdown, visit www.FPAConline.com.
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North American theatrical teaser poster for the film, designed by John Alvin |
The magical story tells of Belle, a young woman in a provincial town, and the Beast, who is really a young prince trapped under the spell of an enchantress. If the Beast can learn to love and be loved, the curse will be broken and he will be transformed into his former self. But time is running out. If the Beast does not learn his lesson soon, he and his household will be doomed for all eternity. This “tale as old as time” is family theater at its best.
FPAC presents Disney’s Beauty and the Beast as part of the company’s 26th season. For more information, call (508) 528-3370.
Economic Development Committee - Agenda - Jan 4 - 6:30 PM
The Economic Development Committee is scheduled to meet on Wednesday, Jan 4 at 6:30 PM.
Note: the agenda is brief and apparently can be covered before the Town Council meeting opens at 7:00 PM.
The agenda doc can be viewed in this embedded PDF
or found on the Town of Franklin webpage
http://www.franklinma.gov/sites/franklinma/files/agendas/edc_meeting1-4-17.pdf
Note: the agenda is brief and apparently can be covered before the Town Council meeting opens at 7:00 PM.
- "Review and recommendation on changing Storage Use from CII to industrial zone"
- "Future agendas"
The agenda doc can be viewed in this embedded PDF
or found on the Town of Franklin webpage
http://www.franklinma.gov/sites/franklinma/files/agendas/edc_meeting1-4-17.pdf
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night view downtown Franklin |
"a single joint hearing is legally permissible"
From the Milford Daily News, articles of interest for Franklin:
Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)
http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/20170103/franklin-council-will-weigh-joint-public-hearings
Additional details, including the letter from Attorney Mark Cerel on this matter
http://www.franklinma.gov/sites/franklinma/files/mai/files/h1_town_council_planning_board.pdf
"The Town Council this week is scheduled to take up a measure that could streamline the way the town handles zoning changes.
The council is set to discuss, at its meeting tonight, whether it can hold joint public hearings with the Planning Board.
The matter has been raised in the past by Councilor Deborah Pellegri as a way to make the process move more smoothly.
Deputy Town Administrator Jamie Hellen said that, as things stand now, zoning changes require public hearings by both the council and the Planning Board. Pellegri has suggested that the two hold a joint session, fulfilling both public hearing requirements simultaneously."
Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)
http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/20170103/franklin-council-will-weigh-joint-public-hearings
Additional details, including the letter from Attorney Mark Cerel on this matter
http://www.franklinma.gov/sites/franklinma/files/mai/files/h1_town_council_planning_board.pdf
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construction on the Library renovation continues |
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