Sunday, June 21, 2015

Fight Hunger Paintball Challenge – July 12, 2015


"In memory of Quinton Buehrens"

Proceeds to support The Franklin Food Pantry

Come spend the day “FIGHTING HUNGER”

No family should ever go hungry and the Franklin Food Pantry works miracles every day supporting those families in Franklin that are in dire need of Food and other supplies.


  • Time: 8:30 am to 5:00pm
  • Registration: 9:00am
  • Games start at 10pm and ends at 4pm



Fight Hunger Paintball Challenge
Fight Hunger Paintball Challenge

In the News: Community Coalition, South Meeting House


State legislators, medical experts and officials from the town’s school district and police department will meet later this month to garner local solutions to the state’s opioid epidemic. 
State Rep. Jeffrey Roy, D-Franklin, has arranged the June 30 meeting, which starts at 7 p.m. in the Franklin High School auditorium, 218 Oak St. 
The public session will establish a direction for the new community coalition that aims to create a support network for residents struggling with addiction. And Roy has invited medical and law enforcement experts to shed light on the opioid crisis in Massachusetts.
Continue reading the article in the Milford Daily News
http://www.milforddailynews.com/article/20150620/NEWS/150629622/1994/NEWS

Related posts on the community coalition and opioid problem can be found here
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2015/06/what-if-we-can-each-help-turn-tide-of.html
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2015/06/representative-roy-announces-community.html




When first constructed in 1861, the South Franklin Congregational Meeting House on Washington Street served a need of convenience for its flock. 
The Congregationalist community in that area, known as Wadsworth then, had to trek several miles to reach their only church in the center of town, and in inclement weather or harvest seasons, traveling there could prove difficult, according to town historical records. 
So, to allow them to practice their faith without taking the burdensome trip, the South Franklin Congregationalists erected a church in their part of town. The historic wood building still stands today — only that niche it met 154 years ago no longer applies. 
Yet the town’s oldest religious structure may not sit vacant for much longer.
Continue reading the article here
http://www.milforddailynews.com/article/20150621/NEWS/150629621

"this hasn't been done before, so it can't be done"

Via Ann Williams writing on the Pour Richard's Facebook page

Inertia-noun 
A tendency to do nothing or to remain unchanged.

"Inertia, or maintaining the status quo, can be a good thing. If you're hiking up the side of a mountain, you want the rocks to stay put. But business is different; if you are standing still, there are 5 other businesses that aren't. By standing still, you're actually losing ground.

At Pour Richard's, we take the path less traveled. Instead of selling the heavily advertised brands you find in the big box stores, we feature wines, beers, and spirits from small producers. The best part of my job is finding exciting new products- a new nanobrewery in Northampton, a better version of an Irish Cream- and then translating that excitement to our customers.

We do that by tasting, by talking, and hopefully, occasionally by pairing the wine (beer, cocktail) with the food that it was meant to accompany. It's a great way to introduce our customers to something new. It's also fun.

Our customers-wonderful, adventurous, fun people-have embraced this approach. Franklin has been an absolutely awesome place to do business-with one small exception: food.

When we have a product or an event that we feel would be enhanced by food, we'd like to do it legitimately: file a food safety plan, pay the town $50, and post a limited license to serve samples. Recently, we tried to do just that. I received my Servesafe food safety certification, filed an extensive food safety plan, and applied for permission to serve samples of Brazilian BBQ with caipirinhas. But Franklin does not currently allow non-food businesses to apply for these one-day permits. After several mostly cordial conversations with the town's health inspector, the only discernible reason for this seems to be inertia: this hasn't been done before, so it can't be done.

sometimes it just feels like this....
sometimes it just feels like this....

We understand that resisting inertia can be uncomfortable. But progress and growth don't happen without stepping out of the comfort box. If we've complied with all of the safety codes, why can't we receive a permit? Is inertia a good reason to say no?"

#shopFranklin


Saturday, June 20, 2015

No fireworks? No parade? No matter, Franklin will still celebrate the 4th of July.

The schedule of events is available on the 4th of July Coalition webpage and shared here.

2015 Franklin 4th of July Celebration
2015 Franklin 4th of July Celebration


2015 Franklin 4th of July Celebration 
Laser Light Show 
July 3rd 10PM  @ Town Common

Wednesday, July 1st:

  • 6pm-10pm Food Booths and Amusements Open
  • 7pm-9pm Phantom Band with Tyler Zajac

Thursday, July 2nd:

  • 6pm-10pm Food Booths and Amusements Open
  • 7pm-10pm ZOD Band (local youths with Matt Zajac)

Friday, July 3rd:

  • 12pm-10pm Food Booths and Amusements Open
  • 3pm-5pm Tyler Zajac Solo
  • 7pm-10pm Corvairs (oldies band)
  • 10pm LASER LIGHT SHOW (with sound and 3D glasses)

Saturday, July 4th:

Children's Day
  • 12pm-10pm Food Booths and Amusements Open
  • 12 noon Children's Parade
  • 1pm-5pm Children's Entertainment
  • Anna and Elsa from FROZEN
  • Jamie Barrett (Franklin's own)
  • Flippo the Clown
  • 7pm-10pm Groove Doctors Band (local musicians)

Sunday, July 5th:

  • 1pm-7pm Food Booths and Amusements Open
  • 2pm-5pm BATTLE of the BANDS (prizes will be awarded)



* * * * * NO PARADE THIS YEAR, SORRY! * * * * *



Note: This is one of the many great events happening in Franklin that is put together by an private/volunteer organization and not the Town. You can contribute to the cause here
http://july4thfranklinma.com/donations.asp

You can volunteer for the cause here  http://july4thfranklinma.com/volunteers.asp


Blackstone River Theatre Summer Solstice Festival is TODAY!





CC HEADER A


 

ARE YOU READY FOR THE 5th annual BRT SUMMER SOLSTICE FESTIVAL?

WE ARE! More than 50 incredible volunteers have  transformed a beautiful but underused park in Cumberland into a world class festival space... FIVE stages, a session tent, and 40 food and craft vendors are set up, ready for YOU to enjoy an amazing day of music, dance and culture!

PLEASE JOIN
US
 
TODAY! 
Join Our Mailing List!

FOOD VENDORS 
Mickey G's Clam Shack, GottaQ BBQ, The Salad Man & Juice Bar, Del's Lemonade, and the Ice Cream Machine.

CRAFT VENDORS
Tom and Alices Apiaries, Scentsy, Doodle Paintings, Thirty-One Gifts,
K&T Jewelery Accessories, Reclectic Design,
Bonnie Lee's Creations, Renewal by Andersen,
Silver 'N Such, La Wren's Nest, Starlite Jewelry Design, Tupperware, Celtic Beat, SilverLeaf Studios, 
mpic studios, Tir Na Nog Irish Dance, Pocasset Wampanoag Creations,
Boyd Holms, Rusted Goat Soaps, Silpada Designs,
R.I. Home Improvement, Premier Water Systems, Sandra-Lynn Custom Jewelry Designs, Daren Rathbun Photography, Queen of Everyday, Celtic Revival, Mommie's Hobbie Designs, The Glass Heron,
Sassy Classy Clay Creations, Massage Envy,
Havana Banana, Fibi and Clo, Head Designs by N'Italia, Usborne Books & More,
Hills Home Market,
Yarina Threads,
Jewels by Crissy B


IT'S SOLSTICE FESTIVAL TIME!
We have an amazing time planned for you! Full details can be found at: www.riverfolk.org/brtssf


We have an almost perfect day weather-wise...not too hot, not too cold, lots of sun but not too much! Definitely too cool for the beach...


Nothing left to say but we promise you an incredible day for the whole family! Hope to see YOU today!

* Satellite parking will be provided two minutes away at Mercymount Country Day School
* We have a 14-passenger shuttle working between 1-6 p.m. travelling to Mercymount AND to the farther parking lots at Diamond Hill Park

The After-Festival session at BRT is COMPLETELY SOLD OUT as of Thursday! THANK YOU!

  

Looking forward to seeing you on Saturday!
Russell Gusetti, Executive Director  

5th annual BRT Summer Solstice Festival


Looking for a great family-friendly outdoor music festival without having to travel hours to find it? Blackstone River Theatre has your solution as we move our programming outside to present the
5th annual Blackstone River Theatre Summer Solstice Festival

at Diamond Hill Park, Rte. 114, Cumberland, on Saturday, June 20. The Summer Solstice Festival will run from 11:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. with five stages that focus on Celtic and world music, dance and culture. There will also be more than 40 craft and food vendors and a new session tent area where attendees are encouraged to bring instruments to play with some of the festival musicians.

NOTE: The Welsh band Calan will NOT be appearing due to visa problems in London. However, Pendragon will perform for one of their spots and Matt & Shannon Heaton will perform at the other!  
Festival performers include Eastern Medicine Singers, The Gnomes, The Gothard Sisters, Cassie & Maggie MacDonald, Robbie O'Connell & Dan Milner, Pendragon, RUNA, The Vox Hunters with Torrin Ryan, and Will Woodson and Joey Abarta.

There will also be nonstop Irish step dance featuring 50 dancers from Tir Na Nog Irish Dance. A children's stage will feature Irish magic shows with Debbie O'Carroll, Mary King & Phil Edmonds, Art on the Spot Face Painting and henna, and Marvelous Marvin's Circus Arts. 

Admission is only $15 adults, $10 seniors, $5 children ages 6-15, children under 5 free. Festival sponsors include the Town of Cumberland, Blackstone Heritage Corridor, Inc., Navigant Credit Union, Valley Breeze, Tir Na Nog Irish Dance, Open MRI of New England, Ocean State Urgent Care and Angelo's Palace Pizza. 

Forward email to a friend!



Blackstone River Theatre | 549 Broad Street | Cumberland | RI | 02864

What's happening with the South Franklin Congregational Meeting House?

The South Franklin Meeting House has been sitting unused since the Historical Museum left it in 2007. What to do with the building has been an on-again, off-again conversation and Franklin has just published a report by an architect outlining some of the more practical options.

Did you know
South Franklin Congregational Meeting House 
Constructed in 1861, the South Franklin Congregational Meeting House (SFCMH) also known as Union Evangelical Meeting House originally functioned as a Congregationalist church. The building is designed in the Greek revival style with 4 Doric columns along the north façade. The building is rectangular in footprint and is approximately 2 stories tall with an attic and bell tower. 
Located within what is currently designated as the greater South Franklin Area, the church was originally intended to provide the Congregationalists of South Franklin a place to commune when inclement weather or the harvest season made worshiping at the main Congregationalist church in the center of Franklin difficult. When religious services were not in session, the building also served as a debate hall for the South Franklin area. 
In 1972, the Federated Church deeded the building to the Town of Franklin. The building housed the Franklin Historical Museum from 1975 until 2007 when the museum relocated. 
The typical exterior wall construction is wood framed with painted clapboard siding and corner  boards on the exterior and painted lath and plaster on the interior.
South Franklin Congregational Meeting House
South Franklin Congregational Meeting House


You can read the full report here
http://town.franklin.ma.us/Pages/FranklinMA_News/02135427-000F8513

You can also find the same copy here (while the Town of Franklin website has been known to change their links from time to time - this link won't change)
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B0wjbnXDBhczOVNSRWRGTEdlVHc/view?usp=sharing


Franklin Community Leaders Recognized At Hockomock Area YMCA Annual Meeting

The annual meeting of the Hockomock Area YMCA was held on May 13, 2015. The organization gave special recognition to several members of the Franklin community, including teen leader Tara Lambert and the Franklin Food Pantry.

Tara Lambert, a Franklin resident, was honored as the Bernon Family Branch Youth of the Year at the Hockomock Area YMCA. A near constant presence in the life of the Bernon Family Branch, Tara has served as a member of the Leaders Club, a Member Services volunteer, a swimming instructor, a lifeguard, and a camp counselor. While presenting her with the Youth of the Year Award, Tara’s advisor Nate Packert shared how Tara “has displayed amazing leadership qualities, and she goes to the Y every day with her best foot forward.” A natural people person with a bright smile, Tara has shared how one of her most important goals is simply to make people happy.

Tara Lambert receives Youth of the Year Award alongside her family
Tara Lambert receives Youth of the Year Award alongside her family

Recalling her experience with the Y, Tara remarks, “I like how my Y story began. I remember the Counselor-in-Training fee was due at the end of the week which was a lot all at once. My parents called the camp director and he said ‘We will make it work for your family.’” From the director’s perspective, this was certainly a sound investment, since Tara went on to become one of the Y’s most impactful youth leaders.

Tara looks back fondly on her time at the Y. Upon receiving the award, her closing thoughts were, “The way I see it, life is like a series of books…while my YMCA book is far from over, this is a pretty amazing way to end this chapter.” Tara’s next chapter will be at Westfield State University, where she will be studying nursing. The Hockomock Area YMCA is proud to name Tara a Youth of the Year recipient, and while we wish her nothing but the best of luck with her next chapter, we sincerely hope to see her YMCA book be filled with many more pages of impact and opportunity.

In addition to Tara’s Youth of the Year Award, the Franklin Food Pantry was honored with the Bernon Family Branch’s Red Triangle Award. The Franklin Food Pantry is committed to providing immediate hunger relief and healthy sustainable solutions. It does so by empowering the community through resources, education, and collaboration, efforts that go far beyond bringing food to people. Upon presenting the Food Pantry with the award, Bill Chouinard, the Chairman of the Bernon Family Branch’s Board of Managers and himself a Franklin resident, remarked how the people at the pantry “continue to be where children and families need them the most, working to meet the basic human needs, while preserving the dignity of those that they serve.”

Photo L-R: Hockomock Area YMCA President Ed Hurley; Franklin Food Pantry Executive Director Erin Lynch; Bernon Family Branch Board of Manager Chair Bill Chouinard, and Hockomock Area YMCA Board of Directors Chairman Brian Earley
Photo L-R: Hockomock Area YMCA President Ed Hurley; Franklin Food Pantry Executive Director Erin Lynch; Bernon Family Branch Board of Manager Chair Bill Chouinard, and Hockomock Area YMCA Board of Directors Chairman Brian Earley

In addition to serving 600 families through traditional food pantry operations, the Franklin Food Pantry partners with the Hockomock YMCA and Stop & Shop to create the Healthy Futures Shelf. This service provides the Pantry’s clients access to nutritious choices, and helps to prevent chronic health issues like high blood pressure, diabetes, and obesity.

Erin Lynch, the Executive Director of the Food Pantry, spoke about this partnership with the Hockomock Y in her acceptance speech. She said, “I couldn’t ask for a better partner than the Hockomock Area YMCA. They’ve shared resources, time, talent, and treasure with us over the past year, and I truly appreciate it.” The Hockomock Area YMCA, along with the entire Franklin community, truly appreciates the Food Pantry’s innovative work in forging strong community health. The Hockomock Y was proud to present the Franklin Food Pantry with the Red Triangle Award, and we look forward to a continued, prosperous partnership in the years to come.

About Hockomock Area YMCA:
Where Cause Meets Community. At the Hockomock Area YMCA, strengthening community is our cause. The Hockomock Area YMCA is an organization of men, women, and children sharing a commitment to nurture the potential of kids, promote healthy living, and foster a sense of social responsibility.

Our YMCA is committed to partnering and collaborating with others to create and deliver lasting personal and social change in the 15 communities we are privileged to serve. The Hockomock Area YMCA is a not-for-profit charitable cause-driven organization with facilities in North Attleboro, Foxboro, Franklin, and Mansfield. For more information visit hockymca.org.