Issues so far:
1. Legislative update – ed funding, zoning changes, $1 b. FY19 surplus
2. Select Board vs. Selectmen
3. 3 vs. 5 member boards
4. Engaging residents
Most of program still to come. Well worth the time.
Issues so far:
1. Legislative update – ed funding, zoning changes, $1 b. FY19 surplus
2. Select Board vs. Selectmen
3. 3 vs. 5 member boards
4. Engaging residents
Most of program still to come. Well worth the time.
Posted in Uncategorized
At my office hours this morning, Tony Centore asked when Longmeadow was going to be repaved, and I recounted to Tony about Moe Goulet having recently presented his plan for this year (copy attached below), but that I did not recall what streets were on it.
Tony, Longmeadow is not!
Moe also has a five year plan, but said he did not release it because there are likely to be so many changes. We told him better to release it, with the caveat that it is only a plan and that people cannot count on the actual dates.



Comments Off on 2019 road repair schedule
Posted in DPW
This Saturday I am attending the Massachusetts Selectmen’s Association (part of the Massachusetts Municipal Association) Leadership Conference. I always learn something at Massachusetts Municipal Association events.

Massachusetts Selectmen’s Association Leadership Conference on Saturday, June 8 at the Sharon Community Center
This year’s program will feature a luncheon keynote presentation from Senator Jason Lewis. Senator Lewis serves at the Chairperson of the Joint Committee on Education and the Vice Chair of the Joint Committee on Labor and Workforce Development. His presentation will focus on the state of education in the Commonwealth and the importance of local leadership.
| The conference includes a light breakfast and lunch and will run from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Members will hear from MMA Executive Director and CEO Geoff Beckwith with a brief welcome to the organization and a robust legislative update. From there, the event turns to two tracks of programming, one for veteran selectmen and one for newly elected selectmen.
Topics will include:
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Posted in health, Massachusetts Municipal Association, Select Board matters

School Committee has office hours tomorrow, Friday, June 7 from 9-10 am at Dale Street School. Last of the 2018-2019 school year!
Not only does the School Committee schedule its office hours at the same time as my office hours, but then Anna Mae asks me to tell you about theirs! Special points for those who get to both.

Select Board chair Gus Murby commented at our meeting this week about learning from Medfield resident Basil McCulloch about Pete’s, the store at Lasell Village. I was fortunate, both, to have been the chair of the Lasell Village board for about ten years while Lasell College conceived and built Lasell Village, plus to have Lasell Village name its store “Pete’s,” and finally to have the incomparable Lasell Village favorite, Basil, run Pete’s.
The caricature above hangs in my office and at Lasell Village. The plaque below is just at Lasell Village.

Also, Basil and I are two of the people to ever wear a Pete’s shirt!
I felt 20 years older after they named the store named for me.
Posted in People

I hold regular monthly office hours at The Center on the first Friday of every month from 9:00 to 10:00 AM.
Tomorrow I was scheduled to be enpaneling a jury in a wrongful death trial, so I arranged to have office hours on June 21 instead. That case just settled, and I have decided to go ahead with office hours tomorrow. I had already committed to being there on June 21, so now I will just do office hours on both days – I will hold office hours from 9-10 AM at The Center on both June 7 and June 21.
Residents are welcome to stop by to talk in person about any town matters.
Residents can also have coffee and see the Council on Aging in action (a vibrant organization with lots going on). I can be reached via 508-359-9190 or this blog about Medfield matters <https://medfield02052.wordpress.com>/, where any schedule changes will be posted
Comments Off on Office hours tomorrow, & 6/21
Posted in Select Board matters
Massachusetts Bar Association says “thanks, but no thanks” – i.e. no high school wanted me to volunteer with them on Law Day –

Dear Osler Peterson:
On behalf of the Massachusetts Bar Association, I would like to thank you for offering to volunteer for the MBA’s 2019 Law Day Education Program.
We had an overwhelming response to our call for Law Day volunteers this year and couldn’t be prouder of our membership for stepping up to the plate for this important initiative. We ended up having more volunteers than schools requesting presentations and, although we tried to match up multiple volunteers with schools where we could, we unfortunately could not place everyone.
Regrettably, we were not able to match you with a school this year, but we expect to run this program again in 2020 and hope you will be available to participate then. Thank you for stepping up to volunteer, as our programs cannot succeed without people like you.
If you are interested in additional volunteer opportunities, please click here for information regarding other MBA programs, or you may email the MBA directly at communityservices@massbar.org.
Sincerely,
Grace V.B. Garcia
MBA Secretary and Civics Task Force Chair
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Posted in Uncategorized

It is done! The town now has new LED streetlights and also owns those new LED streetlights, that Facilities Director, Amy Colleran, just had installed. Payback from the energy savings was less than three years, from memory, given that the town used a state grant to make it even more economical to do.
The notice from Amy below received just now –
******************************************
As of yesterday, all the new streetlight have been installed. The project is complete.
Amy Colleran
Director of Facilities
Town of Medfield
Posted in Energy Committee, Green
The Board of Selectmen awarded the Medfield Garden Club $2500 towards its work maintaining garden sites around the town, such as the planters in front of the Town House, Meting House Pond, at the Medfield Memorial Library, and at numerous traffic islands. Just imagine the cost to the town if Medfield instead maintained those sites via DPW employees, like Wellesley for one does.
For extra credit, what flower is depicted on the Medfield Garden Club logo below:

June 4, 2019
Dear Selectmen Marcucci, Murby and Peterson
On behalf of the Medfield Garden Club, we would like to thank you for your approval of our request for funding in the amount of $2500 for ongoing maintenance and renovation of our TASC civic beautification sites. Your heartfelt and public praise for our volunteer efforts and your financial support are important incentives for our thirty-three TASC volunteers in twenty-three community sites as we work to create a four-season garden welcome to all who come to Medfield.
Thank you so very much from all of us in the Medfield Garden Club.
Yours in bloom,
Michele Feinsilver Hoye
President, Medfield Garden Club
Carroll Noel-Mozer
Incoming President, Medfield Garden Club
Molly Sliney
Incoming President, Medfield Garden Club
Nancy Tella
TASC Chair, Medfield Garden Club
Comments Off on MGC’s nice thanks
Posted in Garden Club, Select Board matters
The unusual fringe tree, part of the arboretum of interesting trees at the former Medfield State Hospital site, is in full bloom now, and is worth a visit.

Former long time Town of Medfield Tree Warden, Ellis Allen, prepared and shared the tree map that appears below. He did not note the fringe tree, so I added it. When the fringe tree is not in bloom it is totally unremarkable. There were two more much smaller fringe trees at the site, but they were cut down. Ellis also did not include the interesting line of larch trees along the Charles River Link Trail path that he told me about. That trail runs along the Charles from the Overlook to a hemlock grove high above the river. That area just was not on Ellis’ map. a row of many towering larchs line the path on the right just after crossing the brook. Larchs look like evergreens, but are deciduous.


And here is what the canoe launch along that stretch of trail looked like when it was originally constructed. Now the flat stones in the left photo are invisible in the river under water and mud.
Posted in Medfield State Hospital