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, July 8, 2021
Franklin Dog Park Event - July 10
Fiscal Year 2022 First Quarter Real Estate and Personal Property Tax Bills
Treasurer Collector, Kerri Bertone has mailed the Fiscal 2022 first quarter real estate and personal property tax bills.
Payments are due by August 2, 2021.
Payments received after the due date are charged 14% interest.
Guitar Instructors Needed for Veteran's "Tune it Out" Program
Guitar Instructors Needed!
New TUNE IT OUT Program
We are introducing the TUNE IT OUT program and are looking for VOLUNTEER GUITAR INSTRUCTORS to teach veterans to play acoustic guitar in a group setting. Research suggests that active music engagement reduces anxiety, increases relaxation levels and improves overall well-being.
Please contact the Veterans' Services Office at: (508) 613-1315 for more information.
https://www.franklinma.gov/veterans-services/news/guitar-instructors-needed
![]() |
Guitar Instructors Needed for Veteran's "Tune it Out" Program |
Wednesday, July 7, 2021
Franklin residents: Recycling Pick-up Update - July 7
Recycling Pick-up
The attached recycle route will not be completed today (7-7-21), Waste Management will be staffing an extra truck in Franklin tomorrow (7-8-21) to recover any recycling not picked up today.
https://www.franklinma.gov/home/news/recycling-pick
Update From Waste Management ~ Wednesday, July 7 |
Franklin Annual Report - 2020: Franklin Conservation Commission
Franklin Conservation Commission is responsible for promoting and protecting the Town of Franklin’s natural resources, and protecting the Town’s wetlands resources.
The Commission is comprised of seven volunteer residents appointed for three year terms by the Town Administrator. Current Commission members have diverse professional experience related to environmental science, biology, engineering, and project management. Because of their different backgrounds, each commissioner is able to offer a different perspective during the review of applications for a wetland permit that ultimately benefits Franklin.
Franklin has continuously been represented at the annual conference of the Massachusetts Association of Conservation Commissions each March, with Commissioners attending classes and workshops and talking with other Commissioners from across the state as well as lawyers, ecologists and engineers active in conservation.
Permitting of Work Within or Adjacent to Wetlands Resources
The majority of the Commission’s attention is directed to administering Massachusetts and Franklin wetland protection laws and regulations. Those laws and regulations require Conservation Commission permits to work in or within 100 feet of a wetland, in the 100 year flood hazard zone, or within 200 feet of a perennial stream.
During the first quarter of FY20 the Commission voted to accept fast tracking NOI/ANRAD peer review consultant services as recommended by the Conservation Agent and DPCD. This change has helped move big projects along the permitting process more quickly.
During FY20 the Conservation Agent reviewed and administratively approved 15 minor buffer zone applications.
During FY20 the Conservation Commission received 46 permit applications to work within areas under their permitting jurisdiction. In addition the Commission issued Certificates of Compliance for previously permitted projects, and granted permit extensions to allow projects to finish. The table below is a summary of Conservation Commission activity during the 2020 Fiscal Year.
Some of the more interesting project applications before the Commission during FY20 include construction of a marijuana cultivation and production facility at 160 Grove Street and the Town’s projects off Meadowlark Lane and Griffin Road to improve water quality and reduce pollutant loading in the Chicken Brook-Charles River sub-watershed.
DelCarte Conservation Area
The Commission continues to work on the DelCarte Area (aka the Franklin Reservoirs) off of Pleasant Street. There are a series of seven “structures” (six dams that had been originally used for cranberry farming and a stone wall that beavers had dammed) along Miller brook thru the 100+ acre DelCarte Area.
Senior Story Hour: April 2021 (audio)
The Franklin Senior Center reads short stories, essays, poems and more. This episode aired on Franklin Public Radio for April 2021.
Audio link = https://player.captivate.fm/episode/e93d98b9-5ba6-4146-83ea-842209526130
Friday: 11 AM, 2 PM, and 8 PM = “Senior Story Hour” – Senior Center Scribblers Group Original writing presented by the authors Listen each week on the air at 102.9 FM, and online at our website, wfpr.fm
Franklin, MA: Past & Present Part 3 (video)
This is a video that highlights images of Franklin's past as compared to pictures that were taken from those same locations today.