Friday, September 30, 2011

Community Awareness Meetings: on child sexual abuse

Dear Members of the Franklin Community,

Please accept this invitation to join community leaders at a Community Awareness Meeting designed to bring members of the community together to discuss the issues of child sexual abuse, to learn about its human and economic impact and what together as a community we can do to prevent it.  
These meetings will take place on Wednesday October 19, 2011 at 12:00 noon at the School Department training room at Town Hall and Thursday, October 27th at 7:00 PM at Horace Mann School auditorium.  These meetings will last approximately 60 – 90 minutes and are being facilitated by the Hockomock Area YMCA.  This presentation has the full support of community leaders in education, public safety and park and recreation, and the Town Administrator.

The Hockomock Area YMCA is partnering with Darkness to Light, a national non-profit organization dedicated to the prevention of child sexual abuse.  Darkness to Light has developed an award winning prevention training, Stewards of Children.  Stewards of Children is the first training ever developed that is designed for adults and focuses on prevention.  It is an evidenced based training proven to change beliefs, actions and attitudes toward child sexual abuse.

This meeting will demonstrate that child sexual abuse is an issue that affects everyone, not just those that were abused and their family members.  It will reinforce that the cost, both human and economic, is high but that the solution of prevention is inexpensive and effective.  This meeting will clearly illustrate that child sexual abuse can be prevented in real-time and ultimately these meetings will show that by participating in the solution every adult in a community can be a part of a cultural change.

These presentations are an opportunity to demonstrate to community leaders the magnitude of the issue of child sexual abuse, its economic and emotional costs to our community and what we can do about it.  It is vital that parents, teachers, coaches and all citizens reinforce the message that because children our or future we must protect their childhoods. 

Please join us in helping to strengthen our Franklin community.  We encourage you to invite others whom you think would be interested in this important cause.    

Please respond by email if you will be able to make one of these meetings.  Thank you.

Sincerely,
 
Bartt Pinchuck
Branch Director
Hockomock Area YMCA
Bernon Family Branch
45 Forge Hill Road. Franklin, MA 02038

Franklin Fire plans open house, Oct. 2

Sent to you by Steve Sherlock via Google Reader:

via Wicked Local Franklin News RSS by GateHouse Media, Inc. on 9/29/11

The Franklin Fire Department is holding a Fire Safety Open House at Franklin Fire headquarters, 40 W Central St., on Sunday, Oct. 2, from 10 a.m.-2 p.m., with free pizza from Papa Gino's.

Things you can do from here:

Sisters at Mount Saint Mary’s plan open houses for candy facility

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via Wicked Local Franklin News RSS by GateHouse Media, Inc. on 9/29/11

The sisters at Mount Saint Mary's Abbey, 300 Arnold St., Wrentham, will hold open houses to celebrate the completion of their new candy making facility on Saturday, Oct. 1 and Saturday, Oct. 8.

Things you can do from here:

Thursday, September 29, 2011

How should we tackle hunger?




The D.C. Central Kitchen is one of the many organizations that is tackling hunger head-on. They turn leftover food into millions of meals, offer culinary job training to once homeless and hungry adults and teach urban kids about healthy foods. Take a look at their website, learn what they do and how similar models can be implemented in your community.

What can you do to help the Franklin Food Pantry?
  1. Volunteer your time
  2. Donate some money or food 
  3. Spread the word about the services we do provide



To find out more about the Franklin Food Pantry 





Hamilton Storage Technologies


The tax increment finance agreement says that if Hamilton Storage leaves before the decade is up, the agreement ends and the next tenant will pay the normal rate. 
"The benefit is that they are going to double their staff size," Councilor Matt Kelly said. "We're going to give them a little break, and those people are going to shop out of our stores, eat at our restaurants and stay at our hotels." 
The deal is part of the town's economic development incentive plan to attract businesses such as Hamilton to the Forge Park area. The tax on the land itself, 3 Forge Park, won't change, but improvements to that land, such as buildings, will be taxed at a lower level initially and gradually rise over the 10 years, at the end of which the company would pay normal taxes. 
"I think it's a good thing for our community," said Town Administrator Jeffrey Nutting, noting potential jobs and business brought to area hotels and restaurants through clients of the company. "What we lose in property tax, we hopefully will recover in hotel tax and meals tax."

Read more: http://www.milforddailynews.com/archive/x1499150553/Franklin-approves-tax-break-for-prospective-Forge-Park-business#ixzz1ZKjplI1p

For a complete set of reporting from the Town Council meeting on Weds 9/27, check here
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2011/09/town-council-092811.html


Bats in peril



Program: Bats in peril: The Uncertain Future of North America's Winged Mammals

When: Saturday, October 22nd, 2:00 p.m.

Where: Franklin Public Library

Cost: Free

Info: Kate Langwig is a second year graduate student in the PhD program in Ecology, Behavior, and
Evolution. She obtained her Bachelor’s degree in Neuroscience from Union College, and has worked for the Albany Pine Bush Preserve, The Nature Conservancy, and New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. For the past three years she has been studying the recently emerged infectious disease of bats,
white-nose syndrome. She is a co-author on three papers on the disease, including an article projecting regional extinction of the little brown myotis which appeared in the journal Science in 2010. Her primary research is focused on investigating white-nose syndrome transmission dynamics in multiple bat species.


2011 Metacomet Annual Meeting Program


More about the Metacomet Land Trust can be found on their website



McGovern talks with Medway farmers about local agriculture needs

Sent to you by Steve Sherlock via Google Reader:

via The Milford Daily News News RSS by Whitney Clearman/Daily News staff on 9/28/11

phoMDmedcommfarm1_0928.jpg
As U.S. Rep. Jim McGovern looked over orchards and berry fields yesterday, farmers took the chance to pitch ideas about improving local agriculture.

Things you can do from here: