Saturday, August 1, 2020

Town of Franklin: August 2020 E-Newsletter

To view the newsletter in your browser or to view prior issues, visit the Newsletter portal
https://www.franklinma.gov/home/pages/newsletter-archive-0


"The Place To Be!"
The Town of Franklin Coronavirus Information Portal is available on our homepage and is updated frequently to provide our residents and business owners with the latest information and resources. Find Franklin specific data under the "Town of Franklin News" tab.
2020 Election Information
The State Primary is scheduled for September 1st and the State Election will be held on November 3rd. Vote by Mail and early voting will be available in addition to in-person voting. Please find the latest information on our website.
Franklin Fire held a promotional ceremony for our new 11 officers and our most recent hire on July 22nd at Fire Headquarters. The Department reorganization went into effect Sunday morning July 19, 2020. Each group now has a Battalion Chief, who is in charge of all personnel assigned to the group. Congratulations to all!
Photo from Franklin Fire Promotion Ceremony
Photo from Franklin Fire Promotion Ceremony
The Department received a fire prevention grant from FM Global to purchase four iPads with accessories. These devices can be used by our firefighters to conduct building pre-plans throughout the community to prepare our first responders with critical information about a property before arrival at an emergency scene.

There will be a meeting with the Town public safety team, representatives of MEMA and Department Heads at the Emergency Operations Center (EOC) at Fire Headquarters on August 3 from 9 am-11 am to discuss the Town's response to COVID-19, as well as lessons learned, to be better prepared for any future outbreak.
The FPS District is in the process of developing a comprehensive plan for the upcoming school year. In order to keep our families, staff and the community informed, we have published a Reopening Website. New information will be added as it becomes available. Please check back frequently for updates. Thank you!

The new street hockey rink/ basketball court is completed at the Fletcher Field complex! The FHS baseball netting project has also been completed! Be sure to check out these great addition to our recreation facilities!

Programming for later summer and fall is available for registration online! Find out more about our offerings on our website.
The Franklin Senior Center is holding many virtual events in the month of July. Find out more on their August Newsletter.

The Curbside Cafe is providing freshly prepared meals, distributed daily at the Senior Center for elders 60 and older.
The Health Department has moved its applications for licenses and permits online. Find links to apply by clicking below.

Health Director Cathleen Liberty has created an online Workplace Safety Training video for our local businesses. This training is mandatory and can be found on the Health Department website.
Ben Franklin has been busy working with his partner Officer Mucciarone. He is looking forward to getting back to being able to visit people and bring smiles.
Curbside Pickup Updates! Patrons can place holds online or by phone. When placing holds by phone, there is a limit of five holds per call. Inter Library Loan is now available! You are able to place holds on items throughout the Minuteman Library Network. Search our catalog at find.minlib.net.
Once you receive a notification that your items are ready, visit the Library between 10:00 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Saturday to pick them up! The Curbside Pickup carts are now located in the vestibule by the parking lot entrance. The Library is still closed to the public, but staff are available to answer questions by phone and email 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Please call us at 508-520-4941. Visit the Library's website for more information about our virtual services and programs!
The fourth brick installation on the Veterans Memorial Walkway took place in July. The next installation is scheduled for November. Engraved bricks for current U.S. service members and veterans are $100. Please contact the Veterans Services Office at (508) 613-1315 if you need a brick order form. Thank you to all brick purchasers for your support of this project! 

The August Veterans Coffee Social will be held via Zoom on Wednesday, August 5 at 10:00 a.m. Please go to the Veterans Services web page on the Town web site for log-in details.

A Purple Heart Ceremony recognizing Franklin Purple Heart recipients will take place on Friday, August 7 at 5:30 p.m. on the Town Common prior to the Concert on the Common. All are welcome.
MAPC has completed a Draft Hazard Mitigation Plan for our review and comment. In order to obtain input from Franklin's Town officials, residents, businesses and nonprofit organizations, the Town and MAPC will accept input during the Public Comment Period from July 22 - August 14, 2020. Your input is especially important at this time. The Draft Hazard Mitigation Plan is available for review and downloading via the link below. Please take the time to review and provide comments, especially on the goals and proposed mitigation. 
Submit questions and comments (including suggested edits) via email to Bryan Taberner at btaberner@franklinma.gov at any time during the public comment period. Thank you.
Find out how to enter our #ThinkBlueFranklin contest and be entered to win one of twenty $100 Amazon Gift cards! Learn more below!
Do you need a Recycling
Center sticker?
Visit our website to prepay all recycling fees and find information on which items are accepted. Payments are only accepted online.

“There’s a lot riding on us”

From the Milford Daily News, articles of interest for Franklin:
"Pan-Mass Challenge 2020 Reimagined — a virtual version of the 40-year-old bike-a-thon that raises millions of dollars each year for the fight against cancer — will get underway Saturday.

The annual bike-a-thon, which usually kicks off in Sturbridge, is going virtual for the first time due to social distancing guidelines and other protocols because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The organization’s traditional ride typically includes 12 routes spanning 25 to 192 miles over the first weekend of every August.

This year, participants will ride or show their support through individual activities — on or off the bike — with the goal of raising $41 million in support of lifesaving cancer research and treatment at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. The PMC donates 100% of every rider-raised dollar to Dana-Farber as its largest single contributor, accounting for 57% of its Jimmy Fund’s annual revenue."
Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)
https://www.milforddailynews.com/news/20200731/pan-mass-challenge-goes-virtual-saturday?rssfeed=true

 There are a  number of Franklin riders, if you haven't contributed to the cause you can do so online  https://www.pmc.org/reimagined

 
“There’s a lot riding on us”  https://www.pmc.org/reimagined
“There’s a lot riding on us”  https://www.pmc.org/reimagined

FHS Update: Week 2 (video)

FHS Principal Josh Hanna provides an update and responds to questions submitted since last week.


Link to video on YouTube  https://youtu.be/AVp7GU-P79o

Week 1 video can be found here:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YTx2cca8NRg





Week 1 video can be found here:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YTx2cca8NRg


The mural referenced in the video
The mural referenced in the video

Franklin Education Association (FEA) Statement on Re-Opening & more





                             July 31st, 2020
Greetings, 
Franklin Education Association Statement on Education under COVID

Dear Dr. Ahern, School Committee Members, and Community Members,
As educators in the Franklin Public Schools, we miss our students and want nothing more than to be back in the classrooms. Fall is usually a time of excitement, eagerness, and hope. This fall, however, is hardly typical. We care deeply about the safety and well-being of our students, as well as the quality of the education we provide. Our obligation, professionally, morally, and ethically, is to keep students, educators, families, and our communities, out of harm's way.
Members of the Franklin Education Association have shown time and again that we hold the interests of our students and their families, their continued success,  and the success of this school system, as our first priority. We feel this was exhibited this past spring in the hours spent preparing crisis learning, researching all kinds of resources and online platforms for ourselves, our students,  and our families, collaborating with teams, administration,  and colleagues, and connecting with students and families as much as possible. This "students first" philosophy compels our educators to go above and beyond in our efforts to elevate the opportunities for our students. We commit to these goals knowing that achieving them often means working long into the evening, sacrificing time with family, and ignoring self care and personal health needs. We do this out of our dedication  to teaching, and our commitment to our students. To ask us to put our lives, and those of our family members, on the line for the sake of reopening, is to ask too much. The district must demonstrate that health and safety conditions and public health benchmarks are met before buildings reopen to anyone. The FEA cannot support any plan that puts any members, any students, or the community, at such serious risk. Medical scientists have not fully reassured the public of the utmost safety to return to school buildings while the deadly disease of COVID-19 persists. More studies come out each day about complications and risks to younger students, middle school students, and impacts of trauma that could happen if we return too soon.
In light of the current rise in COVID-19 cases throughout much of the country—directly caused by premature reopening of communities—our members feel it is unsafe for students, teachers, and staff, to return to buildings.  Specifically, the following are our some of our many concerns:
  • Untenable and unsustainable scenarios for compliance with PPE/distancing guidelines puts the physical and mental health of students, staff, and administrators at risk.  (6 feet of distancing must be the minimum standard in all teaching and learning environments.  Face coverings must be worn by all students, staff, and visitors, with the exception only of documented medical conditions, where this practice is contraindicated)
  • Teachers cannot be tasked with policing students' bodies and behaviors as opposed to being educators who seek to connect with students and cultivate a love of learning. 
  • Staff who are vulnerable, or whose families are vulnerable to COVID-19
  • Environmental concerns loom large such as - 
School buildings with poor ventilation, rooms without windows, inability to use fans, heat indices well over 90 in many rooms, outdated HVAC, cleaning schedules and protocols, lack of timeline and training for all protocols and procedures needed for reopening.
We  understand that the District has an obligation to submit a plan to DESE, to meet the varied needs of students. We ask you to have that conversation, and to formulate that plan,  WITH us, not in spite of us.  The current choice before us is not education or safety. It is education with safety, with all of us working together in support of one another to help suppress, and defeat, this virus.
If we were to return to any type of in-person schooling, including a hybrid model, at this time, our students, educators, staff, and faculty, would have a school experience that would tell us that we are not valued, not worth being heard, not worth ensuring safety, not important in the lives of our community.   At this time, the Franklin Education Association calls upon the Franklin Public Schools to begin the year remotely until such time that a phased-in return allows for proper health and safety measures to be brought into place and monitored. 
 
Respectfully submitted,
Donna Grady, President
Franklin Education Association

Our mailing address is:
FEA
PO Box 654
Franklin, MA 02038

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Senate Passes General Government, IT Bond Bill Conference Committee Report

The Massachusetts State Senate passed a General Government, IT Bond Bill Conference Committee Report today, which authorizes $1.8 billion in investments to modernize the Commonwealth's general government infrastructure, improve cybersecurity capabilities, empower communities disproportionately impacted by the criminal justice system, support early education and care providers, and expand access to remote learning opportunities for vulnerable populations during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Senate-led priorities in the report include the following:

  • $65M in economic empowerment and justice reinvestment capital grants to support communities disproportionately impacted by the criminal justice system with access to economic and workforce development opportunities;
  • $50M to enhance and expand access to K through 12 remote learning technology for vulnerable populations during the COVID-19 pandemic;
  • $37M for a food security grant program to address infrastructure needs for farms, retailers, fisheries, food system food distribution channels to address growing food insecurity and food supply chain needs across the Commonwealth due to the COVID-19 pandemic;
  • $25M to assist licensed early education and care providers and after school programs with capital improvements to ensure safe reopening during the COVID-19 public health emergency;
  • $20M for a body camera grant program for police departments to ensure accountability in public safety;
  • $10M for a statewide criminal justice data system modernization to help better track racial and ethnic disparities across the judicial and public safety systems;
  • $5M for the creation of a common application option for Mass Health and Medicare Savings Program applicants to apply for SNAP at the same time, use the same core eligibility information and verifications;
  • $2.9M for public health data warehouse for the analysis of population health trends including health trends and health inequities related to the COVID-19 pandemic;
  • $2.5M for implementation of an automated electronic sealing process to seal certain criminal records.
The final bill now goes to the Governor for his signature.

Senate Passes General Government, IT Bond Bill Conference Committee Report
Senate Passes General Government, IT Bond Bill Conference Committee Report