The Franklin Police and Fire departments have teamed up with Tony Gallo of Gallo Moving to collect much needed relief supplies for the tornado victims of Moore, Okla.
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 *
Wednesday, May 29, 2013
In the News: tornado relief
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Where would the anaerobic digester be located?
ZONING BY-LAW AMENDMENT 13-714
Changes to §185-3. Definitions
A ZONING BY-LAW TO AMEND THE FRANKLIN TOWN CODE AT
CHAPTER 185, SECTION 3.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE FRANKLIN TOWN COUNCIL THAT:
Chapter 185 of the Code of the Town of Franklin is hereby amended by the following
addition, added into §185-3 Definitions in alphabetical order:
ANAEROBIC DIGESTER - A structure or series of structures where a biologicalThe foregoing Zoning By-law amendment shall take effect in accordance with the
process, anaerobic digestion, breaks down or “digests” organic waste materials in the
absence of oxygen, and through utilization of separators, biogas recovery systems and
other processes, produces digestate and biogas, which are further processed for
production of soil amendment, fertilizer, electric energy, pipeline quality natural gas, and
similar commercial products.
Franklin Home Rule Charter and Massachusetts General Law Chapter 40A, Section 5.
The public hearing and presentation will take place before the Planning Board, Monday, June 3.
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Pond St entrance to former sewer facility |
Proposed location is on Pond St (next to KinderCare) at the site of the former Franklin sewer facility.
View Larger Map
For more on the public hearing
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2013/05/anaerobic-digester-presentation-town-of.html
"Getting an unaccepted road on a town’s books can be a complicated process"
A Massachusetts Department of Transportation inventory found more than 3,200 miles of so-called unaccepted roads in the state last year, though the state may undercount the true number, according to Turner and several municipal highway officials.
"It really is a bill that’s time has come," Turner said recently. "It’s really necessary."
Such streets pepper the eastern Massachusetts landscape, often in subdivisions where builders skipped town, went bankrupt or died before a municipality reviewed and formally accepted the development’s roads as public ways.
This often causes headaches, with no developer to plow, repair or pave such roads and towns under no obligation and without any state road funding to do any major maintenance of improvements to such streets.
...
Some towns have taken different approaches to unaccepted roads. Franklin adopted a streamlined process to accept roads and has been actively doing so, said Brutus Cantoreggi, the town’s public works director. The town can then count those roads in the formula used to determine how much state Chapter 90 highway maintenance money it receives, he said.
"If it was initially going to be a publicly accepted roadway, that’s where it has to go," Cantoreggi said.
Read more: State bill aims to resolve confusion over unaccepted roads - Franklin, MA - Wicked Local Franklin http://www.metrowestdailynews.com/news/x83400805/State-bill-aims-to-resolve-confusion-over-unaccepted-roads#ixzz2UZx2EMTe
Related posts:
The annual Report section on the DPW's Highway Division
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2013/01/annual-report-2012-dpw-highway-and.html
The DPW presentation to the Town Council in April, 2013 on the various projects being worked this year
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2013/04/franklin-public-works-upcoming-projects.html
The current road condition report
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2013/01/franklin-road-conditions-from-worst-to.html
Monday, May 27, 2013
Memorial Day Parade
The parade is scheduled to start at 10:30 AM. The parade forms at the Historical Museum and will walk up Main St to the Town Common. The parade will make stops at Dean College and the monuments on the Town Common for brief ceremonies.
From last years parade, the Horace Mann Middle School Band:
Horace Mann Middle School Band |
"the day we remember what it means to be a hero"
An essay by Vanessa Desiato, an intern with the MA Dept of Veterans Services:
Read the full essay here
So what does Memorial Day mean to me, now that I'm older, more experienced, and a little bit taller? It means we should stop and think about the sacrifices men and women have given to make this world a safer place for someone else, not just on Memorial Day, but every day. As an intern at the Department of Veterans’ Services, serving Massachusetts' veterans, every day is a Memorial Day/Veteran’s Day hybrid. These soldiers are stronger and braver than I could ever imagine myself being. They are heroes. They are people like my brother, who heard the call to serve, and couldn’t be persuaded to do anything else. Someone I grew up with making snowballs, blowing up hotdogs, and climbing on, was a hero-in-the-making, and I had no idea.
Read the full essay here
"Massachusetts has raised tobacco taxes in 1993, 1998, 2002 and 2008"
This may also happen this year as the Governor, House and Senate all include a dollar a pack increase in their respective budgets for FY 2014.
Read more: http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/x1910060119/States-becoming-more-dependent-on-tobacco-levies#ixzz2UUcmwren
Cigarette tax revenues, along with the settlement money, brought in about $815 million last year, according to the Department of Revenue. That figure would rise another estimated $165 million - for a total of $980 million - under a proposed dollar-per-pack increase supported by the governor, House and Senate.
All of the increase would go to fix the state's aging transportation infrastructure. Nearly all the other tobacco tax revenue now goes into the general fund. Only $4.2 million went to anti-smoking programs this year.
Marc Hymovitz, director of advocacy and Massachusetts state government relations for the American Cancer Society, said the use of tobacco tax revenue to fund anti-smoking programs in earlier years was superseded by the state's economic crises of the past decade.
Read more: http://www.milforddailynews.com/news/x1910060119/States-becoming-more-dependent-on-tobacco-levies#ixzz2UUcmwren
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