Monday, March 17, 2014

"the ones who have their developmental needs met, they do much better"

The article on kindergarten development has raised the issue of common core and standardized testing. The Boston Globe Ideas section has an article on another aspect of the current education situation.
“What the study underscored is the tremendous amount of potential here—they’re a national resource,” Lubinski says. “But it’s hard to separate the findings of this study from what we know about gifted kids in general. The genuine concern is, we know we’re not identifying all of this population. We’re not getting nearly enough, and we’re losing them.” 
To people more worried about kids who are falling through the cracks altogether, doing slightly less than we could for the most gifted might not seem like a pressing problem. But if the study is right that exceptional youthful ability really does correlate directly with exceptional adult achievement, then these talented young kids aren’t just a challenge for schools and parents: they’re also demonstrably important to America’s future. And it means that if, in education, we focus on steering all extra money and attention toward kids who are struggling academically, or even just to the average student, we risk shortchanging the country in a different way. 
“We are in a talent war, and we’re living in a global economy now,” Lubinski says. “These are the people who are going to figure out all the riddles. Schizophrenia, cancer—they’re going to fight terrorism, they’re going to create patents and the scientific innovations that drive our economy. But they are not given a lot of opportunities in schools that are designed for typically developing kids.”

 Read the full article in the Boston Globe
http://www.bostonglobe.com/ideas/2014/03/15/the-poor-neglected-gifted-child/rJpv8G4oeawWBBvXVtZyFM/story.html   (subscription maybe required)

This topic has come up during prior budget sessions and school committee meetings. With the focus on no child left behind and the legal requirements for those with special needs, the students at the high end and in the middle are getting squeezed.

What do we want for our children's education?

Horace Mann Middle School, Oak St Elementary School
Horace Mann Middle School, Oak St Elementary School 



Disclosure - yes, my wife happens to be a kindergarten teacher here in Franklin. 


Sunday, March 16, 2014

Walking Saturday

Saturday gave us a teaser of spring with the temps getting into the 50's in the afternoon. I went for my walk in the morning and caught the following photos to share.

point of view
point of view
When you frame a photo, you are setting up a point of view. We all have a point of view. Some times we act and think like we don't but how we frame things definitely affects what we think and do.


Emeritus at 656 King St opening in May 2014
Emeritus at 656 King St opening in May 2014
 A new senior living center is opening on King St in May. The Emeritus website is full of information on the approach they take for this time of life and the special needs associated with it.

Emeritus entrance on King St
Emeritus entrance on King St

The Emeritus blog has good articles. Recent articles include one on how to live to be 100
http://www.theseniorcareblog.com/post/how-live-be-100

and one on how to make exercise fun
http://www.theseniorcareblog.com/post/how-make-exercise-fun


King St Memorial Park sign
King St Memorial Park sign
 I need to do some research on this person. Can anyone help provide me some insight on who William A Somerby Jr. was? He is recognized with this sign and a memorial in the park.Other than that he was a Colonel in the US Air Force the signs don't provide additional detail.

ready for March madness?
ready for March madness?
 The basketball court looks too wet to play today but give it another day or two of this good spring weather and there'll be some folks gathering to play hoops

Community gardens in their snow blanket
Community gardens in their snow blanket

stream flows under King St
stream flows under King St


lucky to catch a melting drop of water
lucky to catch a melting drop of water
Sometimes the right amount of being there and patience brings a reward. I was able to catch this drop of melting snow! Did you get to take a walk on Saturday? Where did you go? What did you see?

Would you be interested in joining me for a walk some Saturday morning? If so, please leave a comment or send me an email. If there is interest, I'll schedule some time for a group walk and talk.



Franklin, MA: Town Council - Agenda - Mar 19, 2014


A. APPROVAL OF MINUTES

B. ANNOUNCEMENTS
– This meeting is being recorded by Franklin TV and shown on Comcast channel 11 and Verizon channel 29. This meeting may be recorded by Franklin Matters.

C. PROCLAMATIONS/RECOGNITIONS
– Hillside Nurseries

D. CITIZEN COMMENTS

E. APPOINTMENTS
»Historical Commission - Caitlin Coyne
»Municipal Affordable Housing Trust - Eric Buliung

F. HEARINGS

G. LICENSE TRANSACTIONS

H. PRESENTATIONS/DISCUSSIONS
»Brutus Cantoreggi, DPW Director – Presentation: Roads, Water, Trash, & Lincoln Street

»Wine & Malt Package Store License

I. SUBCOMMITTEE REPORTS

J. LEGISLATION FOR ACTION
1. Resolution 14-14: Purchase of land at 92 Wachusett Street – Authorization and Appropriation – Requires 2/3 Vote

2. Bylaw Amendment 14-731:Amendment to Chapter 82, Appendix A, List of Service Fee Rates – 1st Reading

K. TOWN ADMINISTRATOR’S REPORT

L. OLD BUSINESS

M. NEW BUSINESS

N. COUNCIL COMMENTS

O. EXECUTIVE SESSION
– Negotiations, Litigation, Real Property, as May Be Required

P. ADJOURN

Franklin Municipal Building
Franklin Municipal Building


The full set of documents released for this agenda can be found here
http://town.franklin.ma.us/Pages/FranklinMA_CouncilAgendas/2014/03192014.pdf

Franklin Art Association - Scholarship


The Franklin Art Association will award a $1000 scholarship to a qualifying high school senior residing in Franklin or attending a school in Franklin, or a senior whose parent, grandparent or legal guardian is a current member of the association.  
 
Applicants must submit an application, student portfolio, teacher's letter of recommendation and a transcript of high school grades to Franklin High School, 218 Oak Street, Franklin, MA between 2:00 and 3:30 pm in room G140 on Friday , April 4.
An application may be obtained by contacting: tinaguarinoart@gmail.com


FEF Trivia Bee - Mar 19th


Franklin Education Foundation
Franklin Education Foundation
The Franklin Education Foundation Trivia Bee is Wednesday, March 19th @7 in the Horace Mann Middle School Mercer auditorium. The theme is MUSIC and will be a good time for folks of all ages! 
Come for a fun time and you can pick up some great stuff at the raffle. Come cheer on your respective school or business to be the one to win the iconic FEF Trivia Bee Cup! 
All proceeds go to Franklin Public Schools to support innovative educational programs.
For more about the Franklin Education Foundation, visit their website  http://www.franklined.org/


Saturday, March 15, 2014

Emmons St building discussion scheduled for Apr 2

From the home page of the Franklin, MA website comes this announcement:
Town Council Chairman Robert Vallee has postponed the discussion on the Old Municipal Building at 150 Emmons Street which was expected take place at the March 19 Council meeting. It will be discussed at the April 2 Town Council meeting. 
This will allow all interested parties additional time to consider potential future uses of the property. Chairman Vallee encourages all interested citizens to attend the meeting.

Emmons St building - view from West Central St
Emmons St building - view from West Central St


The notes recorded live during the public meeting on March 4
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2014/03/live-reporting-emmons-st-public-meeting.html

The handouts from the meeting were posted here
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2014/03/emmons-st-building-discussion-documents.html


Girls Youth Lacrosse Clinic - Mar 18th

Franklin High School girls lacrosse coach Kristin Igoe assisted by members of the team will hold a lacrosse clinic on Tuesday, Mar 18th. Details in the flyer shown below.

Franklin High School, home of the Panthers
Franklin High School, home of the Panthers

Registration is available through the Franklin Recreation Dept webpage here
http://town.franklin.ma.us/Pages/FranklinMA_Recreation/online




"warnings went unheeded"

On the education front, the growth of the common core and standardized testing should be discussed. 
A new University of Virginia study found that kindergarten changed in disturbing ways from 1999-2006. There was a marked decline in exposure to social studies, science, music, art and physical education and an increased emphasis on reading instruction. Teachers reported spending as much time on reading as all other subjects combined. 
The time spent in child-selected activity dropped by more than one-third. Direct instruction and testing increased. Moreover, more teachers reported holding all children to the same standard. 
Is this drastic shift in kindergarten the result of a transformation in the way children learn? 
No. A 2011 nationwide study by the Gesell Institute for Child Development found that the ages at which children reach developmental milestones have not changed in 100 years.
What I find interesting is that the Univ of Virginia study covered the period 1999-2006. The trend they noticed has only increased since 2006. If one follows that logic, then we are worse off because of this.

Oak St/Horace Mann school complex
Oak St/Horace Mann school complex

Disclosure - yes, my wife happens to be a kindergarten teacher here in Franklin. 

Friday, March 14, 2014

Upcoming Events in Franklin, MA Area: FRI 3/14/14 - THU 3/20/14

FRI 3/14   6:30pm   March Madness Family Carnival. Free. Hockomock YMCA
FRI 3/14   6:30pm   Art Night Uncorked at Franklin Art Center
FRI 3/14   7pm   FHS presents: Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat at HMMS Franklin.

SAT 3/15   8am-1pm   Bottle and Can Drive to benefit Franklin HS All Night Party.
SAT 3/15   9am   3rd Annual Shamrock Shuffle - Medway HS. Sign up HERE.
SAT 3/15   9am-4pm   Franklin Public Library Book Sale
SAT 3/15   11am-5pm   Irish Festival at Patriot Place.
SAT 3/15   7pm   FHS presents: Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat at HMMS Franklin.

SUN 3/16   9am-12pm   Franklin Public Library Bag Sale, $5 per bag of books
SUN 3/16   12-4pm   Winter Carnival at Franklin HS
SUN 3/16   3:00pm   FSPA performs at Showcase Live, Patriot Place as part of  "A Broadway Review"

MON 3/17   Happy St. Patrick's Day!

WED 3/19   9am-7pm   Cupcakes for Cancer Fundraiser for Relay for Life at The Cake Bar in Franklin.
WED 3/19   1:30pm   Senior Circuit Breaker Tax Credit Seminar at Franklin Senior Center.
WED 3/19   7pm   Town Council Meeting, Franklin Municipal Bldg.
WED 3/19   7pm   17th Annual FEF Trivia Bee at the Horace Mann Middle School in Franklin.

THU 3/20   4-5pm   Lego Mania at the Franklin Public Library, ages 6-12.
THU 3/20   7:00pm  Finance Committee - Budget Hearing #3, Franklin Municipal Bldg

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

DelCarte Property - Winter wonderland (video)


Along the walk last Saturday, I stopped by the DelCarte Property. I captured some video from the dam and some photos as I followed a trail through the woods.

The video from the dam and a 360 degree view




DelCarte Open Space sign on Pleasant St
DelCarte Open Space sign on Pleasant St

I think I should have brought my sled!
I think I should have brought my sled!


water and ice
water and ice

culvert view of the dam
culvert view of the dam

the swans found the open water
the swans found the open water


the playground does blend in with the winter trees
the playground does blend in with the winter trees

I can hardly wait for the snow to go sway so I can explore more of the trails.

FSPA: A Broadway Revue



Franklin Performing Arts Company Presents
  
March 16 ♦ 3pm

Showcase Live, Patriot Place, Foxboro 
A Broadway Revue
featuring
Broadway stars Tyler Hanes and Tony Mansker
Opening number staged by guest artist Michael Raine!

 Tyler Hanes' numerous Broadway credits include A Chorus Line, The Boy from Oz, Hairspray, Sweet Charity, Urban Cowboy, The Frogs and Oklahoma!
Tony Mansker made his Broadway debut as Bert in Mary Poppins, and his National Tour credits include West Side Story.

Special appearances by
FPAC's Nick Paone and Hallie Wetzell
FSPA Musical Theater Students
Electric Youth

Music from 
42nd Street, Hairspray, Tommy, Memphis, Footloose, Barnum,
Seussical the Musical, and more!

Doors open at 2 PM for best seat selection.
Showcase Live pub menu and beverages available.



A Broadway Review
A Broadway Review

In the News: distracted driving

The distracted driving program was presented at Franklin High School on Thursday.
A portrait of an attractive young woman with blonde hair smiled at them from a projector screen. 
The bright face belonged to Casey Feldman, who, her father Joel Feldman said Thursday, has become a heartbreaking example of the danger and pain wrought by distracted driving.
Read the full article in the Milford Daily News
http://www.milforddailynews.com/article/20140314/NEWS/140317824/1994/NEWS

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Live reporting - Finance Committee - Budget Hearing #2

Present:  Dowd, Conley, Fleming, Dufour, Dewsnap, Smith, Quinn
Absent: Huemphner, Aparo

Nutting, Dacey

Comment on tips for audio recording
1 - say name before speaking first time, when watching video folks can see who is speaking when listening without the name, they wouldn't recognize the voice

2 - take care with paper handling, the microphones pick up a lot

3 - table taps whether with fingers or pen/pencils also picked up

the combination of the background noises if repetitive can be distracting to the listener


Ryan Jette; Meghan Woodacre
Recreation Dept

over 300 programs a year effectively self funding, expenses generally covered by fee revenue

Q - has the usage gone up?
A - new programs have been introduced to increase overall activity
flag football has almost 500

Q - on 4 - 3 drop
A - moved a full time secretary to a part time

Q - With fields being torn up by the high school
A - we have been working with Dean and Tri-County to use those fields. The college finishes early so that frees up their fields early. It was a bit of a crunch but it is something we can work with

Q - How do you get the money out of Medway?
A - registrations are online and electronically paid so it is automatically deposited in our accounts, no matter where they reside

Q - if it rolls over what happens?
A - generally within $10K and it would roll into the general fund; they also have established minimums to establish a program. The big programs can cover some of the smaller ones

Brutus Cantoreggi
DPW

All in all about $15M total for the budget (including the enterprise accounts)

start with general DPW budget #422
supported by local taxes
highway, central motors, Beaver St recycling

challenge for 2014 is increase workload, 6 less employees since he started
DelCarte and Sculpture Park for example

MassDEP regulatory requirements

HPP - Downtown improvement project
while the State is running the project, when residents have issues, they will likely will call us

basically a level service budget

tree removal increased, has been when it falls down, we pick it up, we'd like to be more proactive
would like to do more asphalt
the Beaver St recycling center is actually starting to look nicer, the folks are satisfied with what we are doing

the major element is storm water, when the EPA sets the regs, it will need to be dealt with

the primary part of most town budgets are personnel costs, my budget is 65% expenses (not personnel costs)

many of the turnbacks are from the employee side, it takes time to hire someone
3 employees are out on workers comp, can backfill until their situation is clarified

TIP money is really tight, there are 101 towns trying to split $45M

if you do the engineering and the standards change you need to re-do the work
need to front the money for engineering work
lions share of state money is going to RT 2

Work to reduce the width of the road, add a sidewalk and we could do it for less

There isn't much money in this budget for roads
the road money is in the capital plan which goes up and down
I have suggested something else to provide that revenue
with adding 2500 seniors, we ought to be building sidewalks
a critical component to health and welfare, it walking
sidewalks need to be in the mix

Q - snow removal, who is responsible for the removal
A - when the contractors are brought in, they supplement the Town work
The DPW personnel budget is overtime

Q - Where do we stand for 2014?
A - just shy of $1M, about $100,000 over budget

we have reduced the amount of salt we put out, if we do the whole town like today, it is about $30,000
if we do the 6 truck route, it is about $6,000

it is hard to show with the numbers but we really has reduced the amount of salt
on the wells, we see the salt go up in the spring time and we need to be careful
the sand goes in the catch basins and we have to pay to ship it away
if you're doing one thing right, something else is wrong

Q - highways salaries, a 15% increase in personnel?
A - actually filled some vacancies and partially due to the increase in collective bargaining agreement

Q - B12 - vehicle parts and accessories
A - we had looked at the averages, the 260 may have been a blip due to a unique event

we try to keep things repaired, when a sidewalk plow goes down, and it costs to fix it, we need to pay for it
we can move money from one line item to another

Q - how early do we bid for fuel?
A - we are participating with a bunch of other towns, we are bidding out a year at a time

we're currently paying $2.09/gal for gas, $3.39 for diesel (we don't pay taxes)
winter is our heaviest use for fuel

Q - on page D6, there is an equipment disposal?
A - a shift to road construction with chip sealing towards the end of the year

Q - what is the size of the fleet
A  - about 250 registered vehicles and a bunch of other lesser vehicles

you are welcome to come down, we are fortunate to have 3 mechanics who do great work

we are in the process of designing the new building, in order to move the equipment and then take down the old building, also loosing space at the high school so the new one needs to be ready to replace it

Enterprise Funds 450/440/434 Section H
Water/Sewer

looking to get another $7.5M bond to continue water work without increasing rates
we have fundamentally changed how we are budgeting
we prepare for the worst, which is what we do
with declining sales of water due to water conservation, the treatment plant is very expensive to run
able to turn facility off about 3 months a year, which reduces the costs
with more water sales, then we would need to turn all the wells on and increase the expenses

manganese, EPA and DEP are looking at it, our system is fine but they are looking at individual wells so we might need to add another treatment plant
eventually it will increase the water rates when the reg are set but we want to be prepare for it

decline decreasing, about 7-8% for unaccounted for water, leaks, fires, hydrant flushing
the biggest savings has been fixing the leaks, new buildings coming in with more efficient appliances
Garelick used to be even bigger, they are reducing their usage

we need to have reserve compression for fire supression
engineering deficit is calculated, if all are running at max, what do you produce? take the max well off line, can you meet that number? if not, that is what you need to reach

water smart development is water efficient development
rain gardens, grey water used for toilet flushing
MA is unique and ahead of other states, 43 inches of rain so we are able to use it
water we can capture from rain it is cheaper than pumping it up

water rain barrels were sold, not sold now as there is no demand

a new grant for rain gardens, new program coming (was a naming contest but not sure what the final name is)

The new fields when the high school comes down, they will be real turf fields
they are smart gadgets to ensure we water when we need to and not over water

Sewer
down a little, just received the Charles River tonight
will spike in 2016 by about $700K due to the sewer system renovations

we did up the sewer rates last year in anticipation of this coming, so we are hoping that we will have enough to cover the increase

reduced a lot of inflow in our pipe to the Charles River, we are sending less waste
also means that ground water stays in the ground which helps our wells

26 lift station and personnel but the lion;s share is the flow

Trash/Solid Waste

cost is going up by the escalator in the contract
proposing a $4/year increase to the Council
the increase would be to $216 so we would still be below what we were 5-6 years ago
this has been a very successful program for the Town

contracts with escalator clauses

  • disposal of the rubbish
  • collection of the rubbish
  • school bus contract
  • school lunch contract with Whitson

these are also enterprise accounts so the extras go back into the fee remediation

mostly based upon fuel costs


All the rest of these budgets are status quo budgets

Planning - 177 A-38
personnel increases are due to negotiation wages
personnel numbers themselves stay the same
no real changes otherwise

NuStyle building used to exit, one building was taken down
another fell down and we need to finish the demo
we know there is asbestos there
used to be a jewelry manufacturing place

Inspection 1- 240 B-53
minor salary increase due to certifications achieved

Health  - 510 E-1
salary adjustment to make the position more competitive relative to our peers

Public Health - 525 E-7
VNA used in lieu of hiring our own staff

Veterans 543 E-18
30 hour position
out reach work shifted


old business - none

Q - DPW biggest percent of the budget is non-personnel cost
can you comment on the payment controls?

A - street opening permit, sticker for landfill, Jim and Susan have worked to put controls in place
We audit to ensure they are following the right procedures, don't take cash at the Beaver St, everything is check or credit card

the accounts payable is controlled whether it is DPW or not, anything over $2500 needs a purchase order, no bills paid without proof of services rendered, controller, treasure, and my signature required
School have their process but the final payments til come trough us

new business
next meeting here at Mar 20th

motion to adjourn
passed


FinCom Budget Hearing Mar 11 - Audio

The audio recording for the first budget hearing at the Finance Committee meeting on Tuesday, March 11.





My notes for this session can be found here:
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2014/03/live-reporting-finance-committee-budget.html


The second budget hearing is scheduled for Thursday Mar 13. The agenda is available
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2014/03/franklin-ma-finance-committee-budget.html


Franklin Municipal Building
Franklin Municipal Building

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 and Tintype Tunes, 2008 and used with their permission

I hope you enjoy!

Note: email subscribers will need to click through to Franklin Matters to listen to the audio podcast.

Franklin, MA: Finance Committee - Budget Hearing #2

The second in a series of budget hearings will be held Thursday evening, Mar 13 beginning at 7:00 PM. This session will be held in the Council Chambers on the 2nd Floor of the Municipal Building.

The published agenda for this session is shown here:




The notes from the first budget hearing, Tuesday, Mar 11 can be found here
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2014/03/live-reporting-finance-committee-budget.html