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, March 21, 2014
Upcoming Events in Franklin, MA Area: FRI 3/21/14 - THU 3/27/14
FRI 3/21 6:30pm Art Night Uncorked - Franklin Art Center.
FRI 3/21 7pm Casino Night to benefit Franklin Youth Baseball
SAT 3/22 9am-12pm Patriot’s Pancake Breakfast Fundraiser to benefit BFCCS students, Elks Lodge Franklin.
SAT 3/22 8pm Concert: Lori McKEnna with Mark Erelli, First Universalist Society, Franklin. (sold out)
SUN 3/23 12:30pm Cupcake Decorating for Teens. The Cake Bar, Franklin.
SUN 3/23 1pm FPAC Free Concert Series: Opera for Kids - Franklin.
MON 3/24 7pm Planning Board Meeting, Franklin Municipal Building.
TUE 3/25 7pm School Committee Meeting, Franklin Municipal Building.
WED 3/26 6:30pm Cooking Matters - FREE class. Hockomock YMCA Franklin.
WED 3/26 7:00pm Finance Committee - Budget hearing #4 (may be last one of series)
THU 3/27 7am-9am Power of Voices - YMCA Annual Youth and Families Breakfast. Patriot Place - Foxborough.
For more details on above events click HERE and select the event of interest.
*If you have any suggestions or events for the calendar, please email Renata@BetterLivingRE.com
More on PARCC
Franklin Downtown Partnership Announces 2014 Event Dates
The Franklin Downtown Partnership has set the dates for this year’s Strawberry Stroll, Harvest Festival, Holiday Stroll and Beautification days. The FDP also announces its General Meeting Dates and invites the general public to attend and learn more about important issues and happenings in town.
Franklin Downtown Partnership
Downtown Beautification Day will be Saturday, May 17, 9:00 a.m. to Noon. The Partnership, the Franklin Garden Club and many volunteers will install more than 1,200 flowers and greens, and community service hours will be available to students. Contact Eileen Mason at emason11@verizon.net for details about sponsorship and volunteer opportunities. Winter Beautification Day will be Sunday, November 23.
The Partnership’s 11th annual Strawberry Stroll will take place on Thursday, June 12, from 4:00 to 7:00 p.m. A sidewalk sale, entertainment and the Partnership’s mouthwatering Strawberry Shortcakes will kick off summer in sweet style. The FDP currently is signing up sponsors for this event. Contact event Co-Chairs Nicole Fortier, nfortier@deanbank.com, or Bryan Taberner, btaberner@franklin.ma.us, for more information.
The always-popular Harvest Festival will be Sunday, October 5, from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., rain or shine. This annual event will draw at least 6,000 visitors to town for a fun afternoon of local entertainment, shopping, food and games. Booth registration information will be available on the FDP website in June.
The Holiday Stroll is set for Thursday, December 4, from 4:00 to 7:00 p.m. A visit from Santa, holiday music, crafts and specialty shopping draw hundreds of people downtown for this special holiday evening. Roberta Trahan and Gregg Chalk will co-chair this event.
Along with these popular events, the FDP also set its General Meeting dates: May 1, September 4 and November 6. The Partnership invites all business owners and residents to join discussions about issues affecting the area and learn more about the FDP’s efforts in revitalizing downtown Franklin. The meetings take place at 8:30 a.m. at the Dean College Campus Center.
More information about the events, meeting dates, sponsorship and volunteer opportunities can be found at www.franklindowntownpartership.org.
The Franklin Downtown Partnership is a 501(c)3 organization that works to stimulate economic development downtown to create a positive impact throughout the area. To that end the FDP runs events and takes an active role in downtown improvement projects like beautification efforts and streetscape design. The Partnership currently has close to 200 members and welcomes all businesses and residents.
Any business, organization or resident interested in membership or sponsorship should contact Executive Director Lisa Piana at downtown.franklin@yahoo.com or (774) 571-3109, or visit the office at 9 East Central Street.
Franklin Art Association: Special Show Meeting
SPECIAL SHOW MEETING
Please come - We need all to help us
Who: All members and all new members to join in
Place: Guarino's, 75 Jefferson Road, off King Street, Franklin
When: Wednesday, March 26
Time: 7-9 PM
Objective: Request for help* with FAA Spring Show, at Dean College, May 16, 17, 18
*All tasks will be reduced to small responsibilities No one will have to do anything they cannot do.
Detailed information with be available for each 'assignment'.
It is a wonderful way for newer members to become more part of FAA. We want and need you!
We want to get to know you newer members and 'work' with you.
Please come, we need everyone's help. Mark your calendars now to come over.
See you there!
Thank you. Bill Wallhausser and Gail Eckberg, Co-chairs, Spring Show
Gail - geckberg1@gmail.com
Bill - bwallhausser@gmail.com
MassBudget: Rewarding Work: The Minimum Wage and Tax Credits
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Thursday, March 20, 2014
Live reporting - Finance Committee - Budget Hearing #3
Present: Dowd, Smith, Conley, Fleming, Heumphner, Dewsnap
Absent: Dufour, Aparo, Quinn
Nutting, Gagner, Dacey
Minutes from meeting of Mar 13th to approve
motion to approve, second, passed 6-0
Library - Felicia Oti
About $300K below the state requirements
attempting to show good faith effort to get a waiver and continue to operate
$950K would be the standard and we can't afford it
a couple of personnel changes, two part-timers add 5 hours
proposing to open Sunday, looking to use the book sale revenues to support Sunday
increased expense budget to get closer to the standard
Q - how are the Sunday hours
A - the people are coming every month, it is increasing. I don't want to be too optimistic but it is looking good
Nutting - there used to be two large sales by the Friends of the Library; to avoid that effort, and sell every day, the library is doing this; getting more and more interest; you don't get the same selection as you might have but you can go more frequently
Oti - We are thankful for the additional staffing, we are looking to being more youth in and then they are more likely to check out a book while there
everyone wanted to have us open on Sunday, Sunday's will be beneficial for families, students...
the community donates the books, comes to buy the books, and then we can give back by opening the hours
Q - what is the trend on circulation?
A - ereaders down due to licensing issues, we are working through all the issues, folks want the current books and publishers are not wanting to deal with this.
Police - Chief Semerjian, Kevin Ryan
only change in the budget is for the request of an additional officer
part of the demand is that the current workforce has been here sometime, at any point in time we can have three folks out due to vacation, so this would help us cover
we added one a year ago and we would like to add another now
we have some folks out on injury and that is a taken slot that we can't replace yet
Q - add folks with experience?
A - we look to add the best candidates, we try to keep a balance of the ages
we ran a test where 165 folks passed to file the wait list
we can take a transfer it is quick and easy, or if we get a new hire, they go off to the academy for training before coming back for local training
we did the test, now need to finalize the actual process
in the old days, it was everything about the test, now we need to figure it out
we are a few months away from doing it for the first time
we can keep the list as long or as short as we want
for transfers we can take an officer from any other dept
we have more options on transfers now
Q - question on 11 in B-7
A - actually the number of holidays, not the number of people
Q - B-8 is that software?
A - That is what runs all our operations, it is an annual cost for support
Facilities - Mike D'Angelo
844 under general government
maintenance of all town and school properties aside from the pump stations that DPW manages
requesting an additional custodians for the new high school
had cut 8 custodians in 2007, with the new school and new facility more glass, etc.
the need for help is driving the request
cleaning about 43,000 sq ft per night with the new person
estimate of the electric cost for the new building
hundreds of cameras, the TV studio, estimate from the architect
consumption of gas will be less compared to the current building, still an estimate
looking at July 24/25 for the school to be turned over to the Town
other change is the collective bargaining for salary increases
1.2 million sq ft of building space
Q - $100K less in natural gas
A - we are doing better, we are trending down, with energy upgrades, those are paying off
took out some modulars so that helped
electrical will go up and gas down but overall, it is likely to be about the same for the new building as the old
phone costs are going down, our minute rate is going down
we are trying to do a lot of things, gives folks raises and does more but up only 6,000 year to year after adding a person
finished out the LED lighting on the elementary schools
3 year payback on electrical and then the service costs will go down with LED as well
Q - do you have training to do for the new equipment in the high school
A - starting about in Apr we'll be getting training on all the systems before we take over. Typically there is constant training for my staff, school staff and kitchen staff, etc. extensive training for every system. they are warrantied for a full year
Nutting - lt looks like we will be opening at or over capacity, we usually lose some students to other high schools
Fire Dept - Chief McCarragher, Paul Sharpe
Fire budget is as is, no salary increases due to no collective bargaining agreement
four firefighters being paid for by a Federal grant that expires in Oct 2015
currently the grant pays for all salary and benefits
Dispatch union is under contract
biggest jump is in training, the State got out of training and now need to register with the national service. All the medics need to certify
ambulance billing was farmed out last year, this year it is in the budget
fire service is really a team sport, now that we are the staffing level, we can do some long term planning
a couple of success stories
in capital budget added automated lift systems
last year 12 injuries, this year only 2
capacity to retire all the command staff in the next seven years, working on succession planning
bringing others in to do training to help with the succession training
we are not the only department facing this
Q - training? yearly
A - 20 hours, a one time training program
Q - response time efforts? if you lost the four people, how would it effect the performance
A - we would not be able to sustain the performance; medical on scene; 9 mins to 18 doesn't seem long but if you are not breathing for that time, it is huge
could see some savings from the regional dispatch, could also see some savings from bundling on the ambulance contract billing
less injuries, less overtime, beyond response time there are other issues with staffing
forced overtime 58% less this year than last year
60-70% of the calls are medical emergencies
remainder is for fires, emergencies and other calls of the 'last resort'
other public service we will provide
quarterly report for grant, 16 fires, half out of town support and half in town
still a substantial work load, looking to do a more robust risk reduction program
looking to put out a program to avoid falls, if we reduce 25% of those calls, that is a savings and can help build capacity
assisted living facilities are a call per unit per year, if we take some calls away,that helps
Q -how many times do we call out of town ambulances?
A - about 100 times a year, we look at that closely
there is a business side to that, if we can staff that, there is some income potential as well
we used to be 8 to 8 busy, most of the calls went to the industrial parks, during the down turn the residential area increase, when the economy comes back, the industrial area may increase, if the residential doesn't go away, then we have an increase
About 100 time out of time, so it balances out
Regional dispatch
this has been on going for the last three years funded by the State
Legislature passed the bill to allow us to go regional, this is truly the best regional operation
telephone tree in a time compressed environment
with regional, it will save time and be more efficient
some incidental costs like a start up business
there is a cost per call and we will be about half of the total volume
Q - it is not just shifting money, it will save money?
A - yes
Q - if the infrastructure is in place will there be expansion capability?
A - Yes, we may be able to expand. There are options with additional partners, there are two other who do want to come in. Once you see success, you'll see people moving towards this
Q -
A - peak period is likely to be 5-7 at anytime during the day
discipline based call handling, trained with the system and the nature of the call, they take the info and go right to dispatch
Q -
A - land line phones are easy but cell phones are problematic, newer cell phones are getting better. The state Police actually handles the cell phone 911 call. There is a technology solution and a people solution
old business
new business
next meeting, Wed Mar 26th
more admin dept, school dept
potentially voting next week on the final depending upon what time it is
motion to adjourn
Absent: Dufour, Aparo, Quinn
Nutting, Gagner, Dacey
Minutes from meeting of Mar 13th to approve
motion to approve, second, passed 6-0
Library - Felicia Oti
About $300K below the state requirements
attempting to show good faith effort to get a waiver and continue to operate
$950K would be the standard and we can't afford it
a couple of personnel changes, two part-timers add 5 hours
proposing to open Sunday, looking to use the book sale revenues to support Sunday
increased expense budget to get closer to the standard
Q - how are the Sunday hours
A - the people are coming every month, it is increasing. I don't want to be too optimistic but it is looking good
Nutting - there used to be two large sales by the Friends of the Library; to avoid that effort, and sell every day, the library is doing this; getting more and more interest; you don't get the same selection as you might have but you can go more frequently
Oti - We are thankful for the additional staffing, we are looking to being more youth in and then they are more likely to check out a book while there
everyone wanted to have us open on Sunday, Sunday's will be beneficial for families, students...
the community donates the books, comes to buy the books, and then we can give back by opening the hours
Q - what is the trend on circulation?
A - ereaders down due to licensing issues, we are working through all the issues, folks want the current books and publishers are not wanting to deal with this.
Police - Chief Semerjian, Kevin Ryan
only change in the budget is for the request of an additional officer
part of the demand is that the current workforce has been here sometime, at any point in time we can have three folks out due to vacation, so this would help us cover
we added one a year ago and we would like to add another now
we have some folks out on injury and that is a taken slot that we can't replace yet
Q - add folks with experience?
A - we look to add the best candidates, we try to keep a balance of the ages
we ran a test where 165 folks passed to file the wait list
we can take a transfer it is quick and easy, or if we get a new hire, they go off to the academy for training before coming back for local training
we did the test, now need to finalize the actual process
in the old days, it was everything about the test, now we need to figure it out
we are a few months away from doing it for the first time
we can keep the list as long or as short as we want
for transfers we can take an officer from any other dept
we have more options on transfers now
Q - question on 11 in B-7
A - actually the number of holidays, not the number of people
Q - B-8 is that software?
A - That is what runs all our operations, it is an annual cost for support
Facilities - Mike D'Angelo
844 under general government
maintenance of all town and school properties aside from the pump stations that DPW manages
requesting an additional custodians for the new high school
had cut 8 custodians in 2007, with the new school and new facility more glass, etc.
the need for help is driving the request
cleaning about 43,000 sq ft per night with the new person
estimate of the electric cost for the new building
hundreds of cameras, the TV studio, estimate from the architect
consumption of gas will be less compared to the current building, still an estimate
looking at July 24/25 for the school to be turned over to the Town
other change is the collective bargaining for salary increases
1.2 million sq ft of building space
Q - $100K less in natural gas
A - we are doing better, we are trending down, with energy upgrades, those are paying off
took out some modulars so that helped
electrical will go up and gas down but overall, it is likely to be about the same for the new building as the old
phone costs are going down, our minute rate is going down
we are trying to do a lot of things, gives folks raises and does more but up only 6,000 year to year after adding a person
finished out the LED lighting on the elementary schools
3 year payback on electrical and then the service costs will go down with LED as well
Q - do you have training to do for the new equipment in the high school
A - starting about in Apr we'll be getting training on all the systems before we take over. Typically there is constant training for my staff, school staff and kitchen staff, etc. extensive training for every system. they are warrantied for a full year
Nutting - lt looks like we will be opening at or over capacity, we usually lose some students to other high schools
Fire Dept - Chief McCarragher, Paul Sharpe
Fire budget is as is, no salary increases due to no collective bargaining agreement
four firefighters being paid for by a Federal grant that expires in Oct 2015
currently the grant pays for all salary and benefits
Dispatch union is under contract
biggest jump is in training, the State got out of training and now need to register with the national service. All the medics need to certify
ambulance billing was farmed out last year, this year it is in the budget
fire service is really a team sport, now that we are the staffing level, we can do some long term planning
a couple of success stories
in capital budget added automated lift systems
last year 12 injuries, this year only 2
capacity to retire all the command staff in the next seven years, working on succession planning
bringing others in to do training to help with the succession training
we are not the only department facing this
Q - training? yearly
A - 20 hours, a one time training program
Q - response time efforts? if you lost the four people, how would it effect the performance
A - we would not be able to sustain the performance; medical on scene; 9 mins to 18 doesn't seem long but if you are not breathing for that time, it is huge
could see some savings from the regional dispatch, could also see some savings from bundling on the ambulance contract billing
less injuries, less overtime, beyond response time there are other issues with staffing
forced overtime 58% less this year than last year
60-70% of the calls are medical emergencies
remainder is for fires, emergencies and other calls of the 'last resort'
other public service we will provide
quarterly report for grant, 16 fires, half out of town support and half in town
still a substantial work load, looking to do a more robust risk reduction program
looking to put out a program to avoid falls, if we reduce 25% of those calls, that is a savings and can help build capacity
assisted living facilities are a call per unit per year, if we take some calls away,that helps
Q -how many times do we call out of town ambulances?
A - about 100 times a year, we look at that closely
there is a business side to that, if we can staff that, there is some income potential as well
we used to be 8 to 8 busy, most of the calls went to the industrial parks, during the down turn the residential area increase, when the economy comes back, the industrial area may increase, if the residential doesn't go away, then we have an increase
About 100 time out of time, so it balances out
Regional dispatch
this has been on going for the last three years funded by the State
Legislature passed the bill to allow us to go regional, this is truly the best regional operation
telephone tree in a time compressed environment
with regional, it will save time and be more efficient
some incidental costs like a start up business
there is a cost per call and we will be about half of the total volume
Q - it is not just shifting money, it will save money?
A - yes
Q - if the infrastructure is in place will there be expansion capability?
A - Yes, we may be able to expand. There are options with additional partners, there are two other who do want to come in. Once you see success, you'll see people moving towards this
Q -
A - peak period is likely to be 5-7 at anytime during the day
discipline based call handling, trained with the system and the nature of the call, they take the info and go right to dispatch
Q -
A - land line phones are easy but cell phones are problematic, newer cell phones are getting better. The state Police actually handles the cell phone 911 call. There is a technology solution and a people solution
old business
new business
next meeting, Wed Mar 26th
more admin dept, school dept
potentially voting next week on the final depending upon what time it is
motion to adjourn
Franklin Voices: Open Letter to the Franklin Town Council
This came in from a couple of sources. A few of the Town Council in their closing comments referenced this having heard it was already making the rounds. Their comments indicated no set plan (contrary to the statements within the letter). Their comments also referenced their prior 5-4 vote as proof that the Council is not likely all on board (contrary to the implications of the letter). The Councilors also stressed that if any resident wanted to get the details to reach out to them. Their contact information (email and phone numbers) are posted on the Franklin webpage. They would be happy to discuss to clarify any possible misunderstandings.
Open Letter to the Franklin Town Council regarding 150 Emmons Street property (Old Municipal Building)
You can add your name to the petition by opening this link
If the link above is having some trouble try this one
http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/open-letter-to-the-franklin-town-council-regarding
The building was originally a school (right side of building as pictured) and then renovated in the 1990's to add the left portion and become the Franklin Municipal Building. It served in that capacity until the move to the building at 355 East Central St. Currently the building is used by the Recreation Dept.
My notes from the public meeting earlier this month can be found here
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2014/03/live-reporting-emmons-st-public-meeting.html
The next formal discussion on the future of the building is currently scheduled for the Apr 2 Town Council meeting. http://town.franklin.ma.us/Pages/FranklinMA_News/01CE66C3-000F8513
Open Letter to the Franklin Town Council regarding 150 Emmons Street property (Old Municipal Building)
On behalf of Franklin, Massachusetts property owners, business owners, customers and citizens of Franklin we urge the Town Council to put on hold any decision to sell the Emmons Street property, including an RFP, for one year.
* Please Note - Franklin, MA residents, property owners, or business owners are eligible to sign this open letter. Resident address information will not be displayed on site, and will only be used when verifying and delivering signatures to Town Council on April 2nd, 2014. Please indicate your business address if you are a business owner and note in the comment field.
1. We believe it is critical to understand the impact of the new traffic pattern prior to the Council deciding what type of development it would like to see on the site.
2. This would provide the business community and customers with alternative parking during the streetscape project construction. We cannot afford to lose any business during the construction process due to the lack of parking or access to properties.
3. If the Council decides to sell the property after the streetscape is completed it will potentially command a higher value at that time.
4. The property has been in the town’s control for over a century. Another year will not make a difference to the financial condition of the town, but a hasty decision will affect the town for years to come. We ask that you give the community time to participate in the decision-making process.
You can add your name to the petition by opening this link
If the link above is having some trouble try this one
http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/open-letter-to-the-franklin-town-council-regarding
![]() |
150 Emmons St - the subject of the discussion |
The building was originally a school (right side of building as pictured) and then renovated in the 1990's to add the left portion and become the Franklin Municipal Building. It served in that capacity until the move to the building at 355 East Central St. Currently the building is used by the Recreation Dept.
My notes from the public meeting earlier this month can be found here
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2014/03/live-reporting-emmons-st-public-meeting.html
The next formal discussion on the future of the building is currently scheduled for the Apr 2 Town Council meeting. http://town.franklin.ma.us/Pages/FranklinMA_News/01CE66C3-000F8513
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