Friday, January 29, 2021

FBRTC: Give Back – Annual Pour Richard’s Fundraiser With a Twist

"Join us for our annual Pour Richard’s fundraiser, but this time with a twist. Pandemic has been hard on small businesses and we would like to show our support for the business that supported us for years before the pandemic.

We are asking YOU to visit or shop online with Pour Richard’s on the day of our annual fundraiser, Sunday 1/31/2021, 12-5pm. Stock up on your favorite libations and show your love and support.

Please know that we are NOT asking Pour Richard’s to give back anything from the sales. They have been generous in the past and it’s time for us to  #giveback.

We hope you will join us! Thank you!"
 
Shared from  the rail trail web page

Shop online at Pour Richard's with this link https://pourrichardswine.com/home/

FBRTC: Give Back – Annual Pour Richard’s Fundraiser With a Twist
FBRTC: Give Back – Annual Pour Richard’s Fundraiser With a Twist

 

Thursday, January 28, 2021

A message from the Diversity Awareness Club ...

January 26, 2021

To the Franklin Community:

Three weeks ago, an act of domestic terrorism shocked and saddened the American people and left many shaken by the explicit displays of racial, ethnic, and religious hatred. In the days following this attack, members of the Diversity Awareness Club at Franklin High School met to discuss their feelings and to unite in one voice against the dangers posed by white nationalist groups and their enablers. This letter represents that united voice.

It is impossible to entirely separate this event from current political divisions; however, the Diversity Awareness Club believes that a stand against hatred is fundamental and not political - it is American and not Republican or Democratic. We are convinced that the majority of Donald J. Trump’s political supporters reject these acts as well. Nonetheless, we believe it is important for all Americans to reflect deeply on the unique pain experienced by people of diverse racial and religious backgrounds. More than just an attack on democracy, this insurrection made plain the ongoing threat that extremist groups pose to racial and religious equality in the United States.

Below are the unedited voices of the Diversity Awareness Club members. We ask that you take the time to consider their perspectives. They are your classmates, your students, your neighbors, and your fellow Americans.

…”The terrorisms shown at the Capitol resurfaced many of the feelings I’d know when I was younger. The same fear, disgust, and sadness for our country was back. Not only had people committed acts of hate, but they had gotten away with it in a way that people of color wouldn’t have been able too.”- Mia Story

...“In school we barely learn about the history of slavery and the roots of racism. This affects our everyday lives because if we were educated on topics like this, then it would make people more comfortable using their voice, instead of just agreeing with whatever Trump has to say. This man is abusing his power and getting all his followers to do what he says. He encouraged what happened at Capitol Hill and people still think this is okay. This was an act of terrorism, this was not a protest. But when people do peaceful protests to try and save lives they get shot with rubber bullets and burned with tear gas. It is a pure image of racism in America.” - Shay Kilroy

... “The riot at the Capitol should not come as a surprise to anyone. Trump has been abusing his power for 4 years, encouraging hateful extremist groups to behave with malice and violence. Trump told the groups that stormed the Capitol that he loved them. That’s messed up.” - Ji-Yann Chin

... “The people who stormed the Capitol are filled with hate, and it should not be tolerated. I am scared for what could happen in the future; I should be able to do my schoolwork instead of having to be worried about myself, or someone I love getting hate crimed, but sadly this is what it is like being a teenager in America.” -Darby Nicholson

... “One of the most appalling things seen at the capitol in my opinion was that a confederate flag entered that building. This is the first time since the civil war that a confederate flag has ever got into that building. People fought and died so that flag would never be on Capitol Hill, now not even a week goes by in 2021 and that hateful flag entered the building.”- Julia Atwood

... “Allowing such aggressive, unnecessary “protest” with not nearly as much resistance from law enforcement as Black Lives Matter was met with made me angry, and upset, and many other overwhelming emotions that I did not know what to do with.”- Sofia Chouinard

... “Although one of my teachers did bring it up and we did discuss a bit about how insane and stupid the riot was, all the other teachers stayed quiet. I feel that more teachers should have brought it up because of the amount of pain it caused to others. The racism, anti-semitism, these are real problems and not talking about them will not just make them magically disappear.”

... While there is so much wrong with the riots, and so much to say about them, the anti-semitism is what affects me most personally. Knowing that so many people across the country believe in and act violently on the behalf of anti-semitic rhetoric has always been upsetting and scary. But actually seeing people storm our nation's Capitol building and outwardly expressing that they want me, my family, and people of my ethnicity dead, was literally horrifying. And seeing the sitting president condone those actions was even scarier.

“The riot that took place in the Capitol was a disgrace to the democracy that America stands for. The Pro-Trump rioters believe in making America great again, supposedly support the blue lives matter movement but their actions clearly proved that they are not capable of following the laws which go against the American constitution and they also harmed many capitol police officers”.  -Amulya Chirravuri

“So the most important thing we have to do now is face these problems. We have to fight for the liberty and equality that our country is supposed to stand for. We have to choose to move forward, as a town, as a state, and as a country. The riots last Wednesday only showed a small portion of what is to come, and the potential dangers it can provide to our country if untouched. We must do better.”

 

The Diversity Awareness Club remains committed to working with the superintendent and members of the school administration in order to help stop the spread of racism and discrimination and to create a safer environment for minorities entering Franklin Public Schools.

Parents, teachers, and students, we ask for your support in making this community a better and safer environment for all students and families.

Thank you,

Diversity Awareness Club Members of Franklin High School


Shared from Twitter:  https://twitter.com/DiversityFHS/status/1354560761264279553

PDF version of the text:   https://drive.google.com/file/d/1PoWXZIh51bVYXaSnZApTVQzS-88IQaaS/view?usp=sharing


New Book Announcement | Boston Made

Announcing Our New Book

Boston Made: From Revolution to Robotics, Innovations That Changed the World

New Book Announcement | Boston Made

I want to share my excitement at finally publishing our book revealing Boston as one of the most prolific innovation centers in the world for more than four centuries. Built on 20 years of research by my co-author, Dr. Bob Krim, along with my insights from writing about the Massachusetts tech scene for many years, you will find this to be a fun and enlightening book that will change how you think about our region! 

 

Boston Made: From Revolution to Robotics, Innovations that Changed the World

 

Publication:  February 23, 2021, from Imagine Publishing, an affiliate of Penguin Random House.

Learn more about the book and reserve your copy: www.BostonMadeBook.com.

 

As a friend, family member, or business associate, I hope you will consider purchasing the book or sharing this email with anyone you think might be interested!

 

Best Regards,

Alan Earls

  

Below is just one of the Boston innovation stories we cover in the book.

A Boston Made Innovation:
Basketball turns 130 years old

Hoops – the globally popular game of basketball was invented and first played in Massachusetts in 1891. Athletic coach James Naismith was given two weeks by his boss to invent an indoor game where football playing teens wouldn't hit each other – "not rough"- when kept indoors by wintery weather. Naismith did it and basketball was born.


Franklin Downtown Partnership - General Meeting - Feb 4, 2021


SPECIAL FDP GENERAL MEETING
FEBRUARY 4, 2021 AT 8:30 AM
Focus will be on two topics:
  1. Small Business loans/assistance
  2. Vaccine distribution

Speakers include:
  • State Senator Becca Rausch
  • State Representative Jeff Roy
  • Susan Nicholl - Director Liaison, Office of State Senate President Karen Spilka
  • Jamie Hellen - Franklin Town Administrator
  • Cathleen Liberty - Franklin Director of Public Health

All business owners and community leaders are encouraged to attend this important meeting. You will get information directly from state and local officials and have an opportunity to ask questions.

Mark your calendar for this special FDP meeting!

Join the Zoom Meeting:

Meeting ID: 894 4084 5570
One tap mobile
+13017158592,,89440845570# US (Washington DC)

Dial by your location
    +1 929 205 6099 US (New York)

Meeting ID: 894 4084 5570
Find your local number: https://us02web.zoom.us/u/ksIPMBUBh

Franklin Downtown Partnership | 9 E. Central St., Franklin, MA 02038

Sent by franklindowntownpartnership@gmail.com powered by
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Project Envoy - eat out or take out, and you help out!

 

The Interfaith Council Food Security Team is preparing to launch Project Envoy, a community driven project designed to support local restaurants that in-turn will donate some of their proceeds to the Franklin Food Pantry.

Project Envoy starts Feb. 1 and runs through April 30.  

As of this week, the following restaurants are participating: Rome, Acapulcos, Intermission Café, Franklin Central Pizza, George’s Pizza, Dacey’s Market & Deli, Santa Fe, Rhapsody’s Victorian Coffee House, King Street Café, Spruce Pond Creamery, and Franklin Pizza and Deli.

Patrons can visit the Franklin Food Pantry site each day to learn which restaurants are participating on what day as well as follow social media channels. The different Faith organizations in Franklin will also share the restaurant schedule.

https://www.wickedlocal.com/story/country-gazette/2021/01/26/franklin-interfaith-council-launches-program-support-local-restaurants-pantry/4268156001/ 

Franklin Food Pantry - Project Envoy page for a restaurant to enroll
https://www.franklinfoodpantry.org/envoy-program

Download or print a copy of the Project Envoy calendar for February
https://www.franklinfoodpantry.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Envoy-calendar-February.1.27.21.pdf

Project Envoy calendar for February 2021
Project Envoy calendar for February 2021


Tour the Franklin Historical Museum virtually - Jan 28 - 1 PM

Franklin Historical Museum Tour

Event Date:  Thursday, January 28, 2021 - 1:00 PM

Historian Jim Johnston will guide us through the exciting new exhibit virtually! Plenty of opportunity for questions & discussion. 

For the link to join, email Ariel at adoggett@franklinma.gov.  


Franklin Historical Museum Tour - Jan 28 - 1 PM
Franklin Historical Museum Tour - Jan 28 - 1 PM


FHS Gymnastics: Meet Megan! Meet Kim!


Meet Megan! @FHSSports @FranklinHS @FranklinMatters @MetroWestSports @HockomockSports @MyFM1013 @KatCornetta @FHSTrainingRoom @meganpritoni  
Meet Kim! @FHSSports @FranklinHS @FranklinMatters @MetroWestSports @HockomockSports @MyFM1013 @KatCornetta @FHSTrainingRoom  


Pantherbook: "The Reality of Online Learning: Students Perspective"

Tess Bower shares the results of her research into online Learning and its impact on Franklin students on Pantherbook.
"The swarm of kids rushing into school in the morning, the cool seats on the noisy bus, the crowded cafeteria and chattering media center. All sights students have not seen this year. With Hybrid Learning at FHS, some of these norms have taken new shape. The once loud, crowded cafeteria now has students quietly chatting amongst themselves while sitting six feet apart. The swarm of kids rushing into school is now only 1/3rd of the student body, socially distancing themselves while they walk in. Busses are disturbingly quiet and empty, and the media center has signs reading, “Closed before and after school”. To say our beloved FHS has an entirely new atmosphere, would be an understatement. These new norms have been put in place and everyone is continuing to adjust to them. "
Continue reading the article online: https://t.co/eLRaf7GxlG 


Pantherbook: "The Reality of Online Learning: Students Perspective"
Pantherbook: "The Reality of Online Learning: Students Perspective"



John Lewis's speech at the March on Washington

A new history podcast has ten episodes that are well worth listening to.

"It Was Said is a limited documentary podcast series looking back on some of the most powerful, impactful and timeless speeches in American history. 
Written and narrated by Pulitzer Prize winning and best-selling author-historian Jon Meacham, and created, directed and produced by Peabody-nominated C13Originals Studios in association with HISTORY Channel, this series takes you through 10 speeches for the inaugural season. 
Meacham offers expert insight and analysis into their origins, the orator, the context of the times they were given, why they are still relevant today, and the importance of never forgetting them. 
Each episode of this documentary podcast series also brings together some of the top historians, authors and journalists relevant to each respective speech and figure."
Ep 9: John Lewis, We Want Our Freedom Now

The text of John Lewis' speech at the March on Washington

YouTube Video of the full speech  https://youtu.be/tFs1eTsokJg



“We’re a year behind in fulfilling the promise of the Student Opportunity Act"


"The Baker-Polito Administration today filed its Fiscal Year 2022 (FY22) budget recommendation, a $45.6 billion proposal that continues the Administration’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic and addresses critical priorities including promoting economic growth, fully funding the first year of the landmark Student Opportunity Act, and supporting cities and towns across Massachusetts. This balanced proposal does not raise taxes on the Commonwealth’s residents and preserves substantial financial reserves for the future.

Submitted as House 1, this budget recommendation provides $246.3 million in new funding for the Student Opportunity Act including an increase of $197.7 million in Chapter 70 funding, with a particular focus on school districts serving low-income students. The Administration is also proposing to allow municipalities to count $114 million in federal dollars towards their Chapter 70 required local contribution increases to further deliver on the commitments in the Student Opportunity Act. Additionally, House 1 maintains the Administration’s promise to cities and towns with a $39.5 million increase in unrestricted local aid, which is equivalent to the 3.5% consensus tax revenue growth rate."
Continue to read the press release from Gov Baker's office

To review the budget letter and funding details

Chapter 70 info for FY 2022 from DESE

Insights into the details of the budget and slick accounting used

Critics of the budget proposal outline details

Gov Baker budget press conference:  https://youtu.be/S3KlSfJdu5s

COVID-19 Vaccine Information for Veterans

COVID-19 Vaccine Information for Veterans

January 27, 2021

COVID-19 Vaccine Information for Veterans

We know some of our veterans have already received the COVID-19 vaccine, some are not planning on getting it and others are anxiously waiting to receive it.

If you are enrolled in the VA medical system and get called for an appointment to receive the vaccine, you must go to that facility at the scheduled day and time. You can't go to the Brockton VAMC to be vaccinated if you've been scheduled to receive it at the Jamaica Plain VAMC. You can, however, request a different day and time if the scheduled appointment is not convenient for you. The VA is currently scheduling appointments for veterans who are 75+ years of age.

If you are not enrolled in the VA medical system but have a disability rating, you can enroll in the VA medical system and will be eligible to receive a vaccine at one of the VA facilities. Vets who are not enrolled in the VA medical system should contact their civilian health care practitioners for vaccine information.

For current information about vaccines at the VA Medical Centers, please visit:

https://www.va.gov/health-care/covid-19-vaccine/

Here you'll be able to sign up for email updates, find information about vaccine eligibility and get answers to many of your questions. Please remember to continue to adhere to social distancing guidelines and stay up-to-date with the Department of Public Health prevention recommendations. 

COVID-19 Vaccine Information for Veterans
COVID-19 Vaccine Information for Veterans


The Guardian: ‘A remarkable phenomenon’: billions of cicadas set to emerge across eastern US

"Billions of cicadas that have spent 17 years underground are set to emerge across large areas of the eastern US, bringing swarming numbers and loud mating calls to major towns and cities.

The periodic cicadas – bugs with strikingly red eyes, black bodies and orange wings – burrow underground as nymphs and suck fluids from the roots of plants as they grow, eventually bursting into the open as adults in mass synchronized events.

The last such event for 15 states including New York, Ohio, Illinois and Georgia occurred in 2004. The cicadas emerge in a 17-year cycle, meaning they will appear this year once temperatures are warm enough, expected to be mid-May."
Continue reading the article online (subscription may be required)


Scammers cash in on COVID-19 vaccination confusion


Consumer Alerts from the Federal Trade Commission

by Colleen Tressler, Division of Consumer and Business Education, FTC

With every passing day, the news on COVID-19 vaccine distribution seems to change. One reason is that distribution varies by state and territory. And scammers, always at the ready, are taking advantage of the confusion.

Read more

This is a free service provided by the Federal Trade Commission.


Wednesday, January 27, 2021

"Baker delivers ‘very different’ State of the Commonwealth" (video)

"A RESTAURANT OWNER feeding needy families, prompting his competitor to do the same. Aid groups feeding the growing number of economically insecure families. Grocery store workers, who checked people out even at the height of the pandemic.

Those were some of the many Bay Staters Gov. Charlie Baker thanked during his annual State of the Commonwealth address. The pandemic loomed large as his theme, even before the first words were uttered.

Instead of his usual address in a crowded House chamber flanked by Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito, the House speaker, Senate president, and other constitutional officers, Baker was alone in his office, bookended by the Massachusetts and American flags. The moment, he said, was not unlike the solitude people have come to experience in their own homes — far from their family and colleagues while striving to remain safe.

Baker’s speech had no big news or policy proposals as in past years. It offered no indication of whether the governor will seek reelection next year and, aside from a lament at the divisiveness of social media, there was no mention of former president Donald Trump or the insurrection in Washington. "
Continue reading the article online
 
Direct link to the YouTube video of the State of the Commonwealth by Gov Baker  (~ 25 minutes) https://youtu.be/Owhh6C80l5E

Senator Rausch: COVID-19 Vaccination Distribution Update

Senator Rausch State House Briefing
Part 2, Chapter 1 (January 26, 2020)



Dear friends,

I hope 2021 is off to a good and healthy start for you and your loved ones. I am proud and honored to continue serving as your Senator in this new term.

It’s fitting that my first newsletter to you in 2021 focuses on the COVID-19 vaccine rollout in Massachusetts. The good news is that we are moving into Phase Two of vaccine eligibility. Tomorrow morning, residents who are 75+ can start scheduling appointments to receive vaccinations. Please see key information in the section below.

Unfortunately, Massachusetts continues to rank near the bottom of all 50 states for vaccine administration, droves of doses remain on freezer shelves, and some doses are even ending up in the garbage because of the implementation failures to date, despite a solid plan from the Vaccine Advisory Board. The devil is always in the details, and the details have been a deadly disappointment. I share your deep frustrations about how poorly the vaccine rollout process has been so far, I continue to press the administration for improvements, and I worry that vaccination rollout and COVID management in Massachusetts may continue to be embarrassingly substandard going forward. In particular, I am concerned about access to appointment sign-ups, physical ability to get to a vaccination site, inequitable vaccination and testing site locations, insufficient collaboration with local health experts and grassroots health advocacy organizations, language barriers, inadequate communication from the Baker administration, a failure to address vaccine hesitancy, poor judgment calls resulting in changing vaccine prioritization, and public health experts continuing to be outnumbered by big business representatives on the reopening board.

Because the vaccination distribution will take several more months, it is absolutely imperative that everyone continue to take precautions to mitigate/prevent the spread of COVID19. That means masks, hand-washing, and physical distance from others. It’s hard and we’re tired. I get it. Please do not relent in your diligence. Also, try to get 20-30 minutes of physical activity daily, stay hydrated, eat well, and take time to take care of your mental health.

Questions and comments about the COVID vaccine distribution plan and implementation can be emailed directly to the Baker administration at COVID-19-Vaccine-Plan-MA@mass.gov. I welcome constituents to copy me on those emails as well.

I promise to continue advocating for personal and public health.

As always, if you or any of your loved ones in my district have fallen on hard times during this pandemic, please do not hesitate to reach out to my office via phone (617-722-1555) or email (becca.rausch@masenate.gov). We are here to help. You can also find robust resources to help you navigate through COVID-19 on my website.

Yours in service, 

Senator Becca Rausch  


This newsletter was shortened for publication here. To view the full content follow this link:  https://mailchi.mp/1a84a07d935c/maearlyvoting2020-13232068?e=0c2c9810fe

Sign up for the February 9th Senior Coffee here.
Sign up for the February 9th Senior Coffee here.