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 *
Thursday, August 18, 2022
Candlelight Vigil for Overdose Awareness Day - Aug 31 at 6:30 PM
Annual Report Of The Design Review Commission - FY 2021
Dan Rather: A BFD
President Joe Biden has signed into law a bill that is, to quote former President Barack Obama, a "BFD." In other words, a "big deal" with a colorful adjective sandwiched in between for emphasis. It was Obama's way of paying homage to Biden's whispered comment (caught on mic) from back in 2010 with the passage of the Affordable Care Act. With apologies to decorum, Obama's summation is warranted. The bill is called the Inflation Reduction Act, which most economists think is an accurate description. Inflation reduction is a worthy goal, but what is even more noteworthy — rising to the level of historic — is how the legislation intends to accomplish that feat. It is a compendium of long-desired action on the part of Democrats around health care costs, taxes, and climate change (representing the most ambitious climate measures ever enacted by Congress). The details are varied and have been covered admirably in other publications. Were they everything that most Democrats sought? No. But they were significant. Once again, a BFD. For the sake of this column, however, let us focus less on the policy than on the politics, and specifically the fact that this bill squeaked through on a purely party-line vote. All Democrats in the House and Senate voted "yea." All Republicans who voted (four representatives did not) voted "nay." All of them. Perhaps we have become inured to this unblinking partisanship. Chalk it up to cynicism, to pure party politics, to the zero-sum game that seems to rule Washington, particularly from Republicans when Democrats are in the majority. Obstruct. Delay. Obfuscate. That is the playbook. But while extreme partisanship might explain the actions, it certainly does not excuse them. This bill aimed to tackle tough challenges, particularly climate change. And on this issue in particular the politics of our time should not be measured in some temporal tally of wins and losses for congressional seats; this is about wins and losses for the habitability of our planet. This isn't about four-year election cycles. It is about epochs measured in millennia. Those are the stakes. And on this score, most prominent Republican elected officials seem eager to deny reality. And the few who don't fall into that camp are apparently satisfied with doing nothing. There may not be a more serious yardstick by which to measure our political era than this failure. As we have often cautioned here, the future of American democracy is at risk these days. But, let us be clear, so is the future of planet Earth. Perhaps even more so. ![]() August 13th 2022 22,917 Retweets125,134 LikesWhen I tweeted the above, I expected to get a decent response; I never expected this level of engagement, but it makes sense. Unlike the politicians, according to polls, most Americans understand the peril and want action. In this upside-down reality, questions emerge that demand answers and accountability:
This is not a debate about policy. "How should we tackle this existential threat?" is a legitimate question on which fair minds can disagree. Should it be tax cuts for business or government regulation? Or both? A carbon tax or subsidies for new technologies? Is nuclear energy a viable option? Should we invest more in electric cars or public transportation? Let's have a vigorous debate. Go at it. There is no monopoly on wisdom. And the country needs a strong two-party system, with a Congress of conscience on both sides of the aisle, to have such debates. But debate whether we should do ANYTHING??? Really???? (Perhaps from the all caps and the number of question marks you can sense my feelings.) This bill was a major step forward on addressing climate change. It's not nearly enough. But it is something. A lot. A BFD. So say the scientists. It's a foundation upon which to build. But it was also a test of the seriousness of the Republican Party on the most serious of issues. It is a test they failed. All of them in Congress. That is not political spin. It's the truth. Just ask Mother Earth. She's screaming out for all to hear. Maybe at some point the politicians who refuse to listen to her pleas will be forced to answer why, and not be taken seriously until they can answer in accordance with reality. © 2022 Dan Rather |
Franklin TV and wfpr.fm schedule for Thursday, Aug 18, 2022
- wfpr.fm or 102.9 on the FM dial = Thursday
11:00a/2:00p/8:00pm Frank Presents – Frank Falvey Presents
- Franklin All Access TV - Our Public Access Channel (Comcast 8, Verizon 26) = Thursday
- Franklin Pride TV - Our Educational Channel (Comcast 96, Verizon 28) = Thursday
- Franklin Town Hall TV - Our Government Channel (Comcast 11, Verizon 29) = Thursday
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Franklin.TV and Franklin Public Radio (wfpr.fm) |
Wednesday, August 17, 2022
Franklin Cultural District: #artshappenhere outlook for the weekend
Farmers Market and Concerts on the Common roll around again for this weekend.
Thursday, August 18
8:30am - Town Council Office Hours (Franklin Senior Center)
6:00pm - Charlie Rock (live music) (La Cantina Winery)
7:00pm - 350 Mass Greater Franklin Node (virtual meeting)
Friday, August 19
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Town Common |
3:00pm - Concerts on the Common: Box Groove (Town Common)
3:30pm - Farmers Mkt Fun: Make your own compass (Town Common)
4:00pm - Food truck: Gotta Q Smokehouse BBQ (Town Common)
5:30pm - Concerts on the Common: Jesse Liam Band (Town Common)
6:00pm - Mike & Missy Music (live music) (67 Degrees Brewery)
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67 Degrees Brewing |
7:50pm - Movie Night: "Spider-Man" (Town Common)
Saturday, August 20
10:00am - Franklin Historical Museum (always free)
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La Cantina Winery |
4:00pm - David Rak (live music) (La Cantina Winery)
6:00pm - Kendo Music (live music) (67 Degrees Brewery)
8:00pm - John Logan - Magic with The Beatles
Sunday, August 21
1:00pm - Franklin Historical Museum (always free)
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The Franklin Art Association Art Gallery remains open during business hours at Escape into Fiction (Main St, Franklin)
Find the full calendar https://www.franklinmatters.org/p/blog-page.html
If you have an event to add to the calendar, you can use the form to submit it for publication: https://forms.gle/oPdi8X3ZbHHyrHzo6
The Town meeting calendar is found https://www.franklinma.gov/calendar
The School district calendar is found https://www.franklinps.net/calendar-by-event-type/26
Franklin Cultural District: #Artshappenhere |
Annual Report of Franklin Public Schools - FY 2021
Annual Report Of The Veterans’ Service Officer - FY 2021
The full Annual Report for 2021 can be found
https://www.franklinma.gov/sites/g/files/vyhlif6896/f/uploads/2021_annual_report.pdf
The collection of Annual Reports can be found online
https://www.franklinma.gov/town-clerk/pages/town-franklin-annual-reports
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Annual Report Of The Veterans’ Service Officer - FY 2021 |