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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 *
Tuesday, October 22, 2019
FTC Consumer Alerts: Charity fraud awareness, here and abroad
Monday, October 21, 2019
Curbside Clothing Starts November 11, 2019
Updated 10/1/2024"The Town of Franklin has partnered with Helpsy, a certified B Corp, to provide FREE textile recycling to residents.
Home pick-up can be scheduled online at www.helpsy.com/franklinma or by calling l-800-244-6350.
If you prefer, drop off bins are available at the DPW Administration office (257 Fisher St.) and the Beaver St. Recycling Center (455 Beaver St).
Prepare your textiles in a waterproof bag.
Enter your information and pick a date.
Label and place your bags at the address provided before
To learn more visit www.helpsy.com/franklinma
"The Town of Franklin has partnered with Helpsy, a certified B Corp, to provide FREE textile recycling to residents.
Home pick-up can be scheduled online at www.helpsy.com/franklinma or by calling l-800-244-6350.
If you prefer, drop off bins are available at the DPW Administration office (257 Fisher St.) and the Beaver St. Recycling Center (455 Beaver St).
Prepare your textiles in a waterproof bag.
Enter your information and pick a date.
Label and place your bags at the address provided before
To learn more visit www.helpsy.com/franklinma
Curbside Clothing Starts November 11, 2019
Franklin is pleased to announce that a curbside clothing recycling program will begin starting November 11, 2019. The company doing the recycling is called Simplerecycling More information about the company can be found on their web page https://simplerecycling.com/.DPW Director Brutus Cantoreggi and Chris White made a presentation to the Town Council on Sep 18,2019 on the Clothing Recycling Program to be started in November.
This is another option to recycle, folks can still use the other non-profit recyclers that they have.
The key benefit for Franklin in implementing this curbside option: For those who want to recycle clothing this way, we can remove it from the solid waste stream and improve our recycle contamination rates.
This curbside option makes it easier for folks to help remove clothing from the solid waste stream. For those who want to call or deliver the clothing, etc. themselves to the other non-profits, they can continue to do so.
it is a weekly program, bags will be coming via mail.
Everything can go in the same bag for convenience. See the listing of acceptable items.
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| Brutus Cantoreggi, DPW Director with Chris White on the Clothing Recycling Program |
Initial mailer information includes two bags to be sent to each household
https://www.franklinma.gov/sites/franklinma/files/news/final_mailer2withbags_8x6_franklin_proof.pdf
Frequently asked questions on this new program
https://www.franklinma.gov/sites/franklinma/files/news/faq.pdf
The listing of acceptable items
https://www.franklinma.gov/sites/franklinma/files/news/acceptable_items_0.pdf
This was shared from:
https://www.franklinma.gov/recycling-solid-waste/news/curbside-clothing-starts-november-11-2019
You can view the Town Council meeting of Sep 18 via the on-demand replay
https://view.earthchannel.com/PlayerController.aspx?&PGD=franknma&eID=683
Economic Development Subcommittee = Oct 23, 2019
Economic Development Subcommittee Meeting
Municipal Building - 355 East Central Street,
3rd Floor Training Room, Franklin, MA
October 23, 2019 = 6:00 PM
Announcements:
This meeting may be recorded by audio or video.
Discussion:
1. Plastic Bag Ban Proposal
This was shared from the Town of Franklin page
https://www.franklinma.gov/economic-development-subcommittee/agenda/edc-agenda-16
Prior EDC meeting notes and audio recordings can be found
| From the back of the room at the EDC meeting, Aug 14, 2019 |
Franklin Candidate Forum - Biennial Election 2019
FM #176
This internet radio show or podcast is number 176 in the series for Franklin Matters.
This recording shares the Candidate Forum conducted in the Council Chambers on Thursday, October 17, 2019. Town Clerk Teresa Burr opens the forum. Moderator Larry Bennedetto outlines the process and introduces the panelists who will ask the questions for the Town Council candidates in the first segment, and then the School Committee candidates in the second segment. I edited to remove the break so the two segments run back to back with a brief musical interlude.
The Town Council segment runs approx 33 minutes. The School Committee segment runs just less than that. The whole forum is just about an hour long.
https://www.hipcast.com/podcast/HW4Mm3yX
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This podcast is my public service effort for Franklin but I can't do it alone. I can always use your help.
How can you help?
Overall:
Through this feedback loop we can continue to make improvements.
Thank you for listening.
For additional information, please visit Franklinmatters.org/
If you have questions or comments you can reach me directly at shersteve @ gmail dot com
The music for the intro and exit was provided by Michael Clark and the group "East of Shirley". The piece is titled "Ernesto, manana" c. Michael Clark & Tintype Tunes, 2008 and used with their permission.
I hope you enjoy!
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You can also subscribe and listen to Franklin Matters audio on iTunes or your favorite podcast application = search in "podcasts" for "Franklin Matters"
This internet radio show or podcast is number 176 in the series for Franklin Matters.
This recording shares the Candidate Forum conducted in the Council Chambers on Thursday, October 17, 2019. Town Clerk Teresa Burr opens the forum. Moderator Larry Bennedetto outlines the process and introduces the panelists who will ask the questions for the Town Council candidates in the first segment, and then the School Committee candidates in the second segment. I edited to remove the break so the two segments run back to back with a brief musical interlude.
The Town Council segment runs approx 33 minutes. The School Committee segment runs just less than that. The whole forum is just about an hour long.
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| Town Council candidates |
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| School Committee candidates |
https://www.hipcast.com/podcast/HW4Mm3yX
-------------
This podcast is my public service effort for Franklin but I can't do it alone. I can always use your help.
How can you help?
Overall:
- If you can use the information that you find here, please tell your friends and neighbors.
- If you don't like this, please let me know.
Through this feedback loop we can continue to make improvements.
Thank you for listening.
For additional information, please visit Franklinmatters.org/
If you have questions or comments you can reach me directly at shersteve @ gmail dot com
The music for the intro and exit was provided by Michael Clark and the group "East of Shirley". The piece is titled "Ernesto, manana" c. Michael Clark & Tintype Tunes, 2008 and used with their permission.
I hope you enjoy!
------------------
You can also subscribe and listen to Franklin Matters audio on iTunes or your favorite podcast application = search in "podcasts" for "Franklin Matters"
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| subscribe and listen to Franklin Matters on iTunes |
FHS Cross Country Results - McIntrye Twilight XC Invitational
The FHS Cross Country teams competed in grade level competition on Friday night in the 9th MSTCA Bob McIntrye Twilight XC Invitational at the CapeCod Fairgrounds.
The PDF of the filtered FHS results can be found here
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1JODAy9xuGG_axMG2P-1E5B9mm2WfdLZ9/view?usp=sharing
Complete results can be found on the MSTCA page
http://www.mstca.org/Fall_Season/Fall%20Past/Fall%202019.html
"Big day yesterday at the MSTCA Twilight Invite! Shoutout to Tyler Brogan who placed 2nd overall and broke his own school record with a 15:36‼️ Fast times/great effort all around🔥 #hocksin7"
https://twitter.com/FHSPanthersTF/status/1185546276970082304
The PDF of the filtered FHS results can be found here
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1JODAy9xuGG_axMG2P-1E5B9mm2WfdLZ9/view?usp=sharing
Complete results can be found on the MSTCA page
http://www.mstca.org/Fall_Season/Fall%20Past/Fall%202019.html
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| FHS Cross Country Results - McIntrye Twilight XC Invitational |
Franklin Candidate Interview: Tom Mercer
This interview with Tom Mercer, candidate for Franklin Town Council in 2019, was collaborated on via email. We reviewed the following questions, some of them were ‘crowd sourced.’ Some of you may remember the call for input solicited in August 2019 for this election. Thank you for your contributions.
Hopefully, the information provided here, and in the other interviews, will enable the Franklin voters to make a good choice among the candidates for each position.
For the following FM presents the question. TM represents Tom’s response.
FM = There are and have been many opportunities to volunteer with community groups in Franklin. Have you taken advantage of any of these? Which ones, and why did you choose that/those?TM = I am a lifelong resident of Franklin and I have successfully served you, the residents of Franklin, as a Town Councilor for the last 8 years, and the last year as Chairman. Previously, as a School Committee Member for 10 years - 8 of which I served as Chairman. I was Chairman of the Building Committees for 3 of our largest and newest town structures – the Horace Mann/Oak Street/ECDC School Complex, the Franklin Senior Center, and most recently the new state of the art Franklin High School. I served as a member of the Dean Community Council. I have served on the Franklin Country Club Board of Directors for over 20 Years. I have also served on the Franklin Performing Arts Company Board of Directors for over 30 years.
FM = Where do you get your news about Franklin?TM = Franklin Matters and the Country Gazette along with the news feeds from the internet.
FM = For all those running for Town Council: We are in a constant water shortage. We are adding to our population and increasing out need for water. Given that all those who live in Franklin draw their water from the same aquifer, do you support a ban on using water for what I will call cosmetic use (lawn watering) during water shortages, even for those with a private well? If not, why not, considering that those with private wells are still dangerously affecting our water level for uses other than vanity? Or put simply: Do you support the private use of wells for lawn irrigation at times when the town's aquifer is dangerously low for use by the community for essential use in homes and fire prevention?TM = This is not the exact way to phrase the problem or solution. the private well issue question usually comes black and white, and the debate can be divisive and counterproductive. Also, private well owners are not the single source of a town water problem or shortage.
The fact is we have very good water quality in Franklin and a safe quantity of it. The best way to address water protection is education and best practices at the individual property owner level and good infrastructure investments.
The town is investing almost $11 million in the reconstruction of wells 3 and 6 off Grove Street to allow us more capacity and better quality. One of the wells right now is shut down due to high iron and manganese levels. But we’ll have a new facility which will help the system. We also just began a new 5-year water main pipe replacement schedule. Consistent infrastructure investments are actually a more effective way to conserve and maintain good water systems.
I’m not clear where this “acquifer is low” claim comes from. Not saying it’s not true, but it really doesn’t matter because the Town is in very good standing with the state DEP with our Water Management Act permit, which regulates town wide water use. It’s actually our Permit with the state that mandates we have mandatory water conservation days, but this is not uncommon. The state of Massachusetts and cities and towns are relatively good at water protection.
The Town DPW and Water Department have won state awards for water conservation. Our system is in good shape right now. Future challenges will be continued innovations and maintenance of the system, as well as stormwater.
FM = What degree of development do you feel is appropriate for Franklin, and how would you balance the need for affordable housing, with the need to avoid congestion?TM = Two years ago the town reached its 10% goal of 10% affordable housing stock by state laws. It allows us to have full control over our own zoning without a 40B housing project being approved by the state and overriding our local zoning. There are few higher priorities than to maintain that 10% status. And that will always be the housing goal, as Chapter 40B has been in state law for fifty years.
the Town Council will have many future debates on zoning, and how the town may want to address this recent growth spurt. It’s a difficult balance, and we will need citizens to participate in these coming years on the issue of development and growth. What do people in this community want to see in the future?
The Town is just over halfway through its ten-year Master Plan process. The Town Council will have an update on that sometime in 2020, as the Town prepares to start that process again in the not too distant future.
The Town Council should approve large cash reserves this year for open space protection, $900,000 in October 2019 which will bring the fund to $2.1 million.
FM = The Town Administrator has suggested that Franklin needs to pass an override measure. What actions will you take to support the passage of this measure?TM = First, we’ll need to monitor the towns’ budget situation closely throughout the year as the Town Administrator and Superintendent build their budgets. I’d expect that we would have a reasonable number in late January. My guess is the next Town Council and School Committee will have to discuss an override, how much and for what and what the community strategy may be.
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| Franklin Candidate Interview: Tom Mercer |
FM = Why should I vote for you?TM = I believe that I have the knowledge to ensure fair and honest representation for the residents and businesses of Franklin. I will work to keep and improve services and spend our tax dollars wisely. Having been previously elected and having served in local government, I am aware of the personal demands and political pressures - but I continue to look forward to those challenges.
I will continue to work hard to improve the communication between town boards both elected and appointed. Franklin deserves leadership dedicated to open government, safe schools, and a healthy local economy. I have built a solid reputation as a leader, facilitating cooperative, and constructive discussions that have led to success. I am proud of my track record, and I ask for your vote on November 5th.
If you have questions to follow up with Tom, you can find his contact information on the Town of Franklin page https://www.franklinma.gov/town-council
Save the Date: Panther Pride Night = Nov 7
Save the Date!
Panther Pride Night is November 7, 2019 and features Clubs, Activities, and Athletic Teams!
Join us from 5:30 PM-7:30 PM in the gym to see all that Franklin High School has to offer!
This was shared from Twitter https://twitter.com/MsTaranto/status/1184989478496149507
Panther Pride Night is November 7, 2019 and features Clubs, Activities, and Athletic Teams!
Join us from 5:30 PM-7:30 PM in the gym to see all that Franklin High School has to offer!
| Save the Date: Panther Pride Night = Nov 7 |
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