Friday, January 2, 2015

Upcoming Events in Franklin, MA Area: FRI 1/2/15 - THU 1/8/15

FRI 1/2   1:30pm   Adult Coffee and Craft - Bath Salts - at Franklin Public Library

SAT 1/3   8am-12pm   Bottle and Can Drive - FHS Cheerleaders - at FHS parking lot

SUN 1/4   9am-12pm   Electronics Recycling Drive at Whole Foods in Bellingham. De-clutter your home, most items are FREE to recycle. Click here for more information.

WED 1/7   6:30pm   Franklin Art Association Meeting at Franklin Senior Center. Public welcome. Demonstration by pastel artist Karole Nicholson.

For all the Town of Franklin Public Meetings click HERE.

For event details click HERE.

*If you have any suggestions or events for the calendar, please email Renata@BetterLivingRE.com


Franklin Annual Report 2014: Health Department

Continuing our read through the Annual Report we turn to the Health Department.


Mission Statement


The Franklin Health Department is charged with protecting the public health and well being of the
community, in accordance with federal, state and local public health laws and regulations. To fulfill this responsibility, the Franklin Health Department enforces a multitude of public health laws and
regulations, and administers a comprehensive inspection program.

Inspections

The following list identifies the primary components of the department’s inspection program, and the total number of inspections and re-inspections conducted for each component.

* Food Service/Retail Food/Inspections/ Complaint Investigations ................................. 365
* Title V Septic System Plan Review and Installation/Repair, Total Applications .............. 56
35 New, 21 Repairs, 17 Minor Repairs and Approximately 180 Field Inspections Conducted.
* Chapter II Housing Code Inspection/ Re-inspections  ..................................................... 33
* Public Health Nuisance/Odor/Noise/Animal Complaint Investigation .......................... 72
* Semi-Public Pool/Spa Testing/Inspection and Public Beach Testing .............................. 33
* Inspection and Licensing of Children’s Recreational Camps ............................................ 11
* Tanning Salon Inspection ................................................................................................... 4
* Manicure/Pedicure Establishment  ................................................................................... 8

Communicable Disease 


As mandated by the State Department of Public Health, local health departments must report, investigate and track all communicable disease occurrences in their jurisdictions. The Franklin Health
Department has had a long-term contract with the former VNA and Hospice of Greater Milford, now call Salmon Health Care, to assist with the investigation and follow up of reportable communicable diseases that occur in the community.

The following list depicts the reportable illness activity for fiscal year 2013-2014 in number of official cases:

Malaria ............................................................................ 0
Human Granulocytic Anaplasmosis ............................... 0
Calicvirus/Norovirus ...................................................... 1
Babesiosis ....................................................................... 0
Campylobacter ................................................................ 6
Hepatitis A ...................................................................... 1
Hepatitis B ...................................................................... 0
Hepatitis C ...................................................................... 9
Lyme Disease ............................................................... 13
Meningitis ....................................................................... 2
Streptococcus, Group A/B .............................................. 4
E. Coli ............................................................................. 0
Ehrlichiosis ..................................................................... 0
Giardiasis ........................................................................ 1
Salmonella Enteritis ........................................................ 2
Bacterial Infection, Avium, Vibrio ................................. 1
Encephalitis .................................................................... 0
Cryptosporidiosis ............................................................ 1
Legionellosis ................................................................... 1
Pulmonary TB ................................................................. 0
Chicken Pox .................................................................... 0
Pertussis .......................................................................... 1
Influenza ....................................................................... 40
Dog Bites ...................................................................... 17
Cat Bites ......................................................................... 4
Shigellosis ....................................................................... 0
TB related ....................................................................... 0
Streptococcus Pneumoniae ............................................. 2
Yersinia ........................................................................... 1
Vibrio sp ......................................................................... 1
Dengue Fever .................................................................. 0

Flu Clinics


In fiscal year 2013-2014, the VNA/Salmon Health Care held one seasonal flu clinic immunizing 82
residents. In addition, the VNA/Salmon Health Care provided TB screening/ testing and case follow-up for a number of residents.

Licenses and Permits


The following is a comprehensive list of all permits/licenses issued by the Franklin Health Department during fiscal year 2013-2014. Most licensed/permitted activities require at least annual
inspections as part of the permitting process.

Beaver Permits ................................................................ 9
Burial Permits ............................................................... 87
Bakery ............................................................................. 4
Bottling ........................................................................... 1
Catering .......................................................................... 2
Cleaners/Laundromats .................................................... 1
Recreational Camps ........................................................ 8
Demolition ...................................................................... 0
Septic Installers............................................................. 50
Disposal of Offal .......................................................... 37
Food Establishment .................................................... 109
Funeral Directors ............................................................ 3
Infectious Waste ............................................................. 1
Keeping of Animals ...................................................... 14
Frozen Desserts/Ice Cream ............................................. 8
Milk and Cream ............................................................ 23
Milk and Cream Vehicles ............................................... 4
Mobile Food ................................................................... 3
Pasteurization ................................................................. 1
Private Wells (potable .................................................... 3
Irrigation Wells ............................................................... 9
Recycling ........................................................................ 1
Retail Food ................................................................... 30
Stables ........................................................................... 20
Manicure Establishment ............................................... 17
Tanning Establishment ................................................... 4
Temporary Food ........................................................... 15
Trench Permits .............................................................. 39
Semi-Public Pools/Spas ............................................... 26
Tobacco/Nicotine Delivery Products ............................ 29

The Franklin Board of Health and the Health Department worked diligently to draft and implement
several new public health regulations during the last fiscal year. In April of 2014, a comprehensive
Tobacco and Nicotine Delivery Products regulation was enacted. In addition a new regulation governing the installation of septic systems was also passed by the Board of Health.

Staff


The current Health Department staff is as follows:
David E. McKearney, R.S. Public Health Director
Virginia M. McNeil, Health Agent,
Elizabeth Hoey, Health Inspector, (14) hours and
Mary Ellen Ficco, Administrative Assistant, (16) hours.

The Franklin Health Department wishes to thank all department heads and staff for their continuing
assistance and support of the Health Department throughout the year.

Board of Health


The three-member elected Board of Health is the policy making arm for the Health Department. The
board members assist in the drafting of public health bylaws, and review all site plans for compliance with local and state public health regulations. The board presides over administrative hearings in all matters concerning Health Department licensed and permitted activities. Board members are  available for consultation on issues relative to the public health as well.

Bruce Hunchard, Board of Health Chairman
Donald Ranieri, Jr. Vice Chairman
Philip Brunelli, Board Clerk.

Hours of Operation


The Franklin Health Department office is open Monday, Tuesday and Thursday from 8:00AM to
4:00PM, Wednesday from 8:00AM to 6:00PM and Friday from 8:00AM to 1:00PM

Health Department personnel are available to meet with customers from 8-9:15AM and again from 3:15-4PM each day, or other hours by appointment as necessary.

Respectfully submitted,
David E. McKearney, R.S.
Public Health Director
Franklin Health Department

Health Department
Screen grab of Franklin Health Department page
For additional information on the Health Dept you can visit their page on the official Franklin website  http://town.franklin.ma.us/Pages/FranklinMA_Health/index


------

The full annual report can be obtained from the Town Clerk's office (hard copy) or viewed and/or downloaded from the Franklin website here
http://town.franklin.ma.us/Pages/FranklinMA_Clerk/annual/2014report.pdf

Annual reports of prior years can also be found online at
http://town.franklin.ma.us/Pages/FranklinMA_Clerk/annual/




Bottle/Can Drive - Saturday - Jan 3

Got a few bottles and cans from your holiday parties? 

Help the FHS Cheerleaders by bringing the bottles and cans to the FHS parking lot Saturday morning January 3 between 8:00 AM and noon.

FHS bottle/can drive
FHS bottle/can drive


2014 from the Climate Hawk’s Perspective – The Climate Minute Podcast




New post on Mass Climate Action Network (MCAN)

2014 from the Climate Hawk's Perspective – The Climate Minute Podcast

by massclimateaction
The year 2014 was hot, the climate movement became conscious of itself and saw new dimensions in a big world.
This year is likely to be the hottest year on record and one where climate change undeniably arrived in clear force.
The year will also be remembered as one where climate activism took center stage with lots of rabble-rousing. The President said "Our citizens keep marching. We cannot pretend we do not hear them." From EPA regulations to the Climate March, Climate Hawks were out in force. The KXL pipeline is in deep Presidential trouble because of activism. In NY, fracking was banned, and the polls approve. On top of all that, Kinder Morgan blinked in the face of local opposition.
The climate movement's conception of itself changed in 2014 as well, not the least due to Naomi Klein's book "This Changes Everything". Rebecca Solnit is getting lots of mileage out of a comparison of our times to the French Revolution. She says: "…physics is inevitable…Politics, on the other hand, is not inevitable." In the same way, the #BlackLivesMatter movement is a big one for Climate Hawks. From a convergence of interests, to environmental justice to a simple realization that cities are a locus of climate opportunity, a new way of thinking was born.
The year also saw hopeful signs of an independent media as well as price parity for renewables, and a great window of opportunity for a carbon tax.
Because we recognize the necessity of personal accountability for our actions, because we accept responsibility for building a durable future and because we believe it is our patriotic duty as citizens to speak out, we must insist that the United States put a price on carbon.
Thanks for listening.
…Ted McIntyre
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You can listent to The Climate Minute podcast here:



Franklin Library: Science Friday - Jan 9th

Space is limited and registration is required for the Science Friday event scheduled for Jan 9th. This targeted for students in the 1st through 4th grades.  

Register here

http://events.r20.constantcontact.com/register/event?oeidk=a07ea8hoafg219c5f31&llr=npijo9cab


science Friday  - "world of engineering"
science Friday  - "world of engineering"


This was shared from the Franklin Public Library page
http://franklinpl.blogspot.com/2014/12/science-friday.html


In the News: HMMS goes to Future City


Middle-schoolers from Framingham, Natick and Franklin are among the New England regional finalists in the 22nd annual Future City Competition. 
Teams from The Learning Center for the Deaf-Walden School in Framingham, Natick Public School and the Horace Mann Middle School in Franklin are headed to the regional competition, scheduled for Jan. 24 at Northeastern University in Boston. 
The Future City Competition challenges kids to develop solutions to problems currently facing society. This year's challenge, titled Feeding Future Cities, had students exploring urban agriculture, from aeroponic systems for rooftop farms to recycled gray water to the farm-to-table movement. Led by an educator and adult volunteer, students designed a futuristic urban farm capable of growing enough of one vegetable crop and one protein crop to feed the citizens of their communities.
Continue reading the article at the Milford Daily News: http://www.milforddailynews.com/article/20141231/NEWS/141239363/1994/NEWS#sthash.qUPID4qq.dpuf

screen grab of Future City webpage
screen grab of Future City webpage


For more about the Future City Competition, you can follow this link http://futurecity.org/

Thursday, January 1, 2015

Happy New Year!

Good bye 2014!  

In the middle of Fiscal Year 2015, we get to turn the calendar to January 1 and the new year - 2015.

May the new year bring goodness to all!

happy new year!
happy new year!



PS - -> If you really need to find something to read today, feel free to spend time in the archives. You can scroll through the Meeting Notes (live reporting on meetings going back to 2008) or pick a day (any day back to November 2007) then turn back the clock to find out what was posted on that day.



MBTA: Commuter Rail Schedule for New Year's Day



Please be advised that on Thursday, January 1, 2015, all trains on all lines will operate on a Sunday schedule.

Affected routes:

Newburyport/Rockport Line
Haverhill Line
Lowell Line
Fitchburg/South Acton Line
Framingham/Worcester Line
Needham Line
Franklin Line
Fairmount Line
Providence/Stoughton Line
Middleborough/Lakeville Line
Kingston/Plymouth Line
Greenbush Line
New Year's Eve Schedule info
New Year's Eve Schedule info

Last updated: Dec 31 2014 08:58 AM

Click here for more information: http://www.mbta.com/events/

Sent by the MBTA.

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Franklin Annual Report 2014: Fire Department

Continuing our read through the Annual Report we turn to the Fire Dept.


The Department

The Franklin Fire Department is divided into two divisions: Operations and Maintenance, which is the largest and responsible for dispatch, emergency medical services, fire suppression and hazardous materials response. Administration and Support Services is responsible for personnel, budget and finance, training, code compliance and coordinating the Town's emergency preparedness.


Our Mission

The mission of the Franklin Fire Department is to:

  • Have a positive impact in the lives of citizens and visitors of Franklin in their time of crisis by providing compassionate, contemporary, community driven services.
  • Safeguard human life from the perils of fire, sudden illness, injury or other emergency medical condition, natural and man-made disasters as well as preserve the environment and property from ensuing destruction.
  • Be responsible for a safe, productive and pleasant work environment for our employees, and provide them opportunities to gain new skills and advance their personal career goals.

Tower One - fully extended during the Harvest Festival 2014
Tower One - fully extended during the Harvest Festival 2014


Operational Objectives

• Initiating advanced life support to patients within 8 minutes of receiving the telephone call at our communications center.
• To access, extricate, treat and transport and transport trauma patients to a level one trauma medical facility within one hour of the occurrence of the injury.
• Interrupt the progression of fires in structures within 8 minutes of open flame ignition.
• To insure response readiness remains greater than 70%.
• Provide safety and survival skills for all school students in grade K through 5 consistent with the Student Awareness Fire Education (SAFE} initiative of the Commonwealth.
• Provide educational opportunities for department members to insure optimal performance and safety.
• To develop and maintain "best practice" to insure personnel and citizen safety.
• Insure fire safety through timely, consistent code compliance services to all external customers.
• Provide all department services in a manner that satisfies the needs of our customers.


Message from the Fire Chief

Similar to Fiscal Year 2103, Fiscal Year 2014 continued to be challenging for the members of the department to meet the high level of emergency services we strive to maintain for the citizens of Franklin . Unlike our report last year, Fiscal Year 2014 proved to have reason for hope, with the department receiving a Federal Staffing for Adequate Emergency Response (SAFER) Grant in the amount of $ 741,000. This grant allows the department to replace four firefighter - paramedics positions lost to budget constraints in Fiscal Year 2009 and will pay the salaries and benefits for these positions for the next two years. The last of the four personnel new completed the Academy in the end of May. The department also saw the return to work of two members on long term injury leave, which also aided in daily operations, leaving three employees on long term injury from 2013. These additions greatly improved day to day operations, substantially reducing the department's reliance on overtime.

As outlined in previous reports, in November of 2012, reduction in overall staffing levels forced the department to reduce minimum daily staffing to 9 personnel. The effect on service level has been negative, with a decrease in response time in the King Street District by 5%, increase in on-scene times by over 50% and an increase in overall time of incident, department-wide by 9%. While these conditions continue we are hopeful to increase minimum daily staffing back to 10 on-duty personnel in the beginning of Fiscal Year 15, with the return to duty or retirement of last 3 individuals on long term injury leave.

As indicated above, the department hired four new members to the department - 3 residents of the Town. We welcome William Blanchard, Jamie Murphy, Christopher Schmall and Joseph Padykula to the fire department. All have a varied range of experience in the fields of emergency medical and fire services and are a great addition to our organization. Additionally at the end of this year Robert Donovan stepped down as the Department's SAFE Officer. As SAFE Officer, Bob was responsible for providing and organizing public education for our department that focused on our school aged children and elderly populations. Bob lead this effort with distinction for years - we are grateful for his service and dedication in this position. This year the department responded to more than 3,400 emergency responses an overall increase of less than 1% from last year. This modest increase reflected no major increase in any call type category from Fiscal Year 2012.

In addition to emergency response, the department also continued to try to expand its fire prevention education activities, providing safety and survival education to the most vulnerable population to fire - our children and seniors. Through the dedicated efforts of SAFE Officer Robert Donovan, the department continued to educate over 100 children per month as well as attend various activities at the Senior Center. Lieutenant Tom Carlucci with Firefighter Keith Darling and Doug Perro provide dedicated assistance in completing this important service to our citizens.


Franklin Fire Dept
Franklin Fire Dept
Our employees continue to be the chief reason for maintaining our current the level of success and level of services we provide our citizens. They continue to work tirelessly to protect life and property within Franklin. In addition to their on-duty responses, our employees commit countless hours in continuing education and training targeted to maintain and improved upon their emergency skills. Additionally, they continue to press forward in attempt to provide the highest level of service to the community based upon advancement in the fire-rescue field and advancements in technology. These efforts have yielded significant and broad insight into the requirements necessary to maintain and improve upon the services we provide to the citizens of Franklin.

Respectfully Submitted,
Gary B. McCarraher, Fire Chief


You can find out more about the Fire Dept on their informative town webpage
http://town.franklin.ma.us/Pages/FranklinMA_Fire/index

They publish their response performance statistics quarterly
http://town.franklin.ma.us/Pages/FranklinMA_Fire/Quarterly%20Performance%20Scorecard

Details on the two fire stations and the various types of equipment that the Fire Dept has available can be found here http://town.franklin.ma.us/Pages/FranklinMA_Fire/stations

------

The section on the Fire Dept also included some charts and information that was not as easy to share as the text. You can find the Fire Dept section on page 115

The full annual report can be obtained from the Town Clerk's office (hard copy) or viewed and/or downloaded from the Franklin website here
http://town.franklin.ma.us/Pages/FranklinMA_Clerk/annual/2014report.pdf

Annual reports of prior years can also be found online at
http://town.franklin.ma.us/Pages/FranklinMA_Clerk/annual/


“This is a deep league…every night is a game”

Josh Perry, Managing Editor at Hockomock Sports writes:
There was the possibility that Franklin would look at the scouting report and play with zero energy or maybe the Panthers would fall into the trap of looking ahead to Friday night’s showdown with two-time defending league champions North Attleboro. 
That was what New Bedford was hoping for, but instead Franklin dominated from the opening tip, gave up only six points in the first half, allowed the Whalers to make only five shots from the floor, and cruised to a 71-17 victory on Tuesday night in the new gym. 
“At halftime that was one of the things that the team talked about was let’s not play to anyone else’s level, let’s play our game and let’s focus on getting better,” said Franklin coach John Leighton. “I think our kids did a good job defensively…make them work for every shot.”
Franklin's Lexi Martin #22 - Hockomock Sports photo
Franklin's Lexi Martin #22 - Hockomock Sports photo


Continue reading the article on Hockomock Sports here
http://www.hockomocksports.com/blog/panthers-defense-and-depth-highlighted-in-blowout

"you have to look at the positives"

Milford Daily News gets to write about the new tot lot at Fletcher Field.
"At every school in town there are playgrounds age appropriate for 5- to 12- year-olds, but there is only one in town - on Mason Street - that’s for 2- to 5-year-olds," he said. "This was a great addition for the town." 
A baseball theme was chosen for the tot lot, Jette said, because Fletcher Field is the "mecca of town baseball."
Continue reading the article in the Milford Daily News: http://www.milforddailynews.com/article/20141231/NEWS/141239536/1994/NEWS#sthash.Vf1ORRsZ.dpuf

Fletcher Field tot lot
Fletcher Field tot lot

Addtional photos and video of the tot lot can be found here
http://www.franklinmatters.org/2014/12/fletcher-field-tot-lot-video.html


Blackstone Valley: January Things to Do



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Blackstone River Valley National Heritage Corridor

Happy New Year!
January Things to do 

in the Blackstone River Valley 

National Heritage Corridor

For a complete, detailed listing of events, see the event calendar

Coffee with Charlene

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Join Charlene Perkins Cutler for her monthly coffee hour.  
4:00 PM to 5:00 PM

This month's topic:  WATER POWERED!
Location:  BirchTree Bread Company
                  138 Green Street, Worcester, MA
For more information, click here



Grant writing workshop

Wednesday, January 21, 2015

The Blackstone Heritage Corridor offers a variety of opportunities for funding assistance to our partners.  Join Executive Director Charlene Perkins Cutler as she provides guidance to developing successful grant applications.

Time:        4:00 PM to 6:00 PM
Location: Blackstone Heritage Corridor offices
                 1 Depot Square, Woonsocket, RI 02895

For more information, click here


Save the Dates!

We are looking ahead to some great activities and opportunities.  Mark your calendars, and look for more information in upcoming newsletters.


Late January (date TBD)  Celebration of the designation of
                                           Blackstone River Valley
                                           National Historical Park
                                           with U.S. Senator Jack Reed

February 17(Tuesday) -   Coffee with Charlene

March 17     (Tuesday)  -  Coffee with Charlene 

March 19     (Thursday) -  Blackstone Heritage Corridor 
                                           Annual Dinner 



Find us Here!

Are you planning to attend these events?  Look for us!

March   7 (Saturday) - Blackstone Valley Chamber of Commerce 
                                      Home & Business Expo
                                      Northbridge High School

March 14 (Saturday) - Land & Water Conservation Summit
                                      University of Rhode Island

March 21 (Saturday) - Mass Land Conservation Conference
                                      Worcester Technical High School 


Partner Events in January

January   1 - First Day Hike at 
                      Blackstone River and Canal Heritage State Park
Visitors will enjoy a trek along the Lady Carrington Towpath. Hike highlights may include winter wildlife along the waterway, fields and forest while featuring the historic canal from farm to factory.   Meet at River Bend Farm Visitor Center, 287 Oak Street, Uxbridge, MA.

For more information, go to the BRWA web page:


January 15 - You're the Expert at the EcoTarium (EcoTarium)
You're the Expert is a live show, podcast, and new public radio program on WBUR that uses comedy to make academic research more accessible and exciting. Through games, sketches, and hilariously misguided guesses, a panel of hilarious comedians will try to get to the bottom of what a distinguished scientist does all day. 

For more information, go to the EcoTarium web page:


January 21 - BRWC/FOB Board Meeting
Monthly Board meeting of the Blackstone River Watershed Council/Friends of the Blackstone.

For more information, go to the BRWC/FOB web page:


January 22 - BRWA Board Meeting
Monthly Board meeting of the Blackstone River Watershed Association

For more information, go to the BRWA web page:


January 24 - Superbowl of Birding
Winter is a wonderful time to bird in northeastern Massachusetts and southeastern New Hampshire. In celebration of this season, the Joppa Flats is hosting the Superbowl of Birding XII (Snow date: Sunday, January 25).

For more information, go to the Mass Audubon web page:


January 25 - Wingmasters Presents:  North American Birds of Prey

Come see live birds of prey up close on Sunday, January 25 in this indoor presentation that will introduce you to different types of raptors including eagles, hawks, falcons, and owls.

For more information, go to the Mass Audubon web page:


January 25 - BRWA Annual Winter Hike
Join the BRWA for their annual winter hike at Hassanamesit Woods, a property of the Grafton Land Trust. This 200-acre parcel has a history tied to the Nipmuc Indians, and archaeological studies are underway to uncover and preserve the land's rich cultural heritage. The ecology of the area is characterized by both upland and wetland areas, supporting a rich diversity of plants and animals. The land here drains to the nearby Quinsigamond River, shortly before emptying into the Blackstone River.

Meet at the gated end of Salisbury Street, which is located off of Keith Hill Rd in Grafton, MA near Rt 122.

For more information, go to the BRWA web page:
  



Your event could be featured here!

Include a description of the event, the event date/time, and other information shown on our event listing form.  

Would you like to include a picture?  Be sure to send it along with the form!


Call for Event Listings!

Is your organization hosting fun, informative, adventurous, or educational activities?  We would love to help you get the word out!

Click below for a copy of our submission form


We will try to include all events and activities.  Simply start by providing some basic information about your event, and we will take it from there!
blackstone heritage corridor logo

The Blackstone River Valley National Heritage Corridor is a unique cultural landscape of industrial history and immigration in the interconnected system of the Blackstone River watershed. An energetic nonprofit, the Blackstone River Valley National Heritage Corridor, Inc. partners with organizations, local communities and businesses, and residents to insure the long term vitality of the Corridor.

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