Medfield Day

Photos taken and shared by Colleen Sullivan –

OLP - Medfield Day - 2017 - MFi

Medfield Foundation booth – www.MedfieldFoundation.org

Medfield Day 2017 MCAP-2

Medfield Youth Outreach’s Dawn Alcott, Chelsea Goldstein-Walsh, and Liz Sandeman womaning the Medfield Cares About Prevention (MCAP) booth. www.MedfieldCares.org

Note the “02052” hats which Jack Conway Realtors are selling for $10, with all proceeds going to Medfield Cares About Prevention (MCAP).

Disaster preparedness

MMA

The Town of Medfield insures through the Massachusetts Municipal Association’s insurer, the Massachusetts Interlocal Insurance Agency (MIIA).  MIIA sent Mike Sullivan a flyer in advance of this week’s hurricaines with telephone numbers for claims, but also with a description of an interesting service MIIA provides us:

Additional Response Services – Agility Recovery
As many of you know, MIIA has contracted with Agility Recovery. Agility is a national disaster recovery organization focusing on four primary functional needs in the event of a disaster. These four areas include:

• Power – Emergency generators available for deployment within hours
• Computer Systems – Computers, servers, fax machines and printers
• Office Space – Mobile office space to fit any need
• Communications – Satellite connections to restore phone, internet and data

Access to Agility’s services are available to all MIIA members regardless of whether there is an insured loss or not. In the event of an insured loss, MIIA claims will typically coordinate these services with Agility.

 

Medfield exports Tracey Rogers to FMW

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fmw

This article on Medfield’s stalwart volunteer (All Night Graduation Party co-chair and Medfield Foundation youth leadership coordinator, to name a few) Tracey Rogers is from the September newsletter from the Foundation for MetroWest –

Conversation with Tracey Rogers: YIP Instructor

We spoke with Tracey before the first YIP class of the year

Foundation for MetroWest: You’ve taught multiple YIP classes over the past few years- what do you enjoy about teaching these students?
Tracey Rogers: I enjoy introducing students to the world of philanthropy. They often start off thinking of philanthropy as simply donating money. As we work through the program they develop a real understanding of philanthropy as a way to make a broader and more lasting impact in the areas they care deeply about. Students come to YIP wanting to get involved and make a difference in their communities. Some arrive already passionate about a cause based on their personal experience. Many acquire a passion for a new issue as they learn about the needs of the community and hear the philanthropic interests of their peers. I’ve lived in the MetroWest area for 20 years and I am amazed at the range and depth of work being done by local nonprofits.
FFMW: How do you see the students change through the program? 
Tracey: The students genuinely evolve over the course of the program both as individuals and as a class. Typically the quieter kids will contribute more as they are motivated to speak for programs they want to support.  Students who are naturally more outgoing learn to listen more intentionally to another person’s point of view.  The program starts with twenty students and by the culmination, students realize they need the skills and knowledge of the entire class to arrive at the best grantmaking decision.
FFMW: Do you have a favorite memory from a prior class or a favorite section to teach?
Tracey: My favorite part of the program is accompanying the students on the site visits [field trips to area nonprofits].  The curriculum prepares the students very well to this point and they conduct themselves with such acumen.  The questions students ask are discerning and well-researched but they convey real compassion for the organization’s constituents and mission.
FFMW: What has YIP taught you?
Tracey: I’ve always been very involved in my community and hometown of Medfield.  One of the main tenants of YIP is that the students come to agreement through consensus.  Facilitating their discussions has taught me to be a better listener and more purposeful in the way I bring forward my ideas when working as part of a committee or a board member of a community agency.

71 North Street LIP

Bob Borrelli presented his plans for his latest friendly 40B located at 71 North Street (copies below) to the Board of Selectmen on Tuesday evening, and received a BoS vote of town support for this Local Initiative Project (LIP).  The project will be similar to his almost completed (rentals starting in November) 67 North Street project in the Jacob Cushman House, which saved the old structure at the street and added on a new addition at the rear.  Both projects will have eight residential rental units, with two in each being affordable, but where both are rental projects, the town gets credit for all eight units in each as part of our Subsidized Housing Inventory (SHI) towards our 10% affordable housing requirement.

The eight units in the Jacob Cushman House are part of the 21 Subsidized Housing Inventory (SHI) units the town permitted this past year, along with the 13 SHI that are part of the Larkins’ Hospital Road ownership 40B that got the town into a one year safe harbor from unfriendly 40B’s.  The Town of Medfield will need to permit another 13 SHI before next summer to have an additional year of safe harbor from the unfriendly 40B’s, and there are many irons in the fire to provide those additional SHI units.

71 North Street plans

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Library’s 100th is 10/1, 2-5pm

From the Medfield Memorial Library –

Library door

 

You’re Invited!

Medfield Public Library’s Centennial Celebration!

Sunday, October 1, 2017 2-5 pm

Join us for an afternoon of:

  • Jazz
  • Refreshements
  • Kurt Jackson, storyteller
  • Meeting Granville Dailey
  • Learning the history of the library
  • Refreshments and much more!

We will also be holding a reprise of all of the activities of the Grand Opening of the STEAM Room, the library’s new makerspace, for all of those who were unable to attend.

PB hears Medfield Children’s Center

On Monday evening this week the planning board held its fourth hearing on the application of the Medfield Children’s Center to build a child care facility at 75 High Street to serve about 90 children a day. The MCC has been operating out of the Baptist and Episcopal Churches.

The Monday hearing related to the site visit, earthwork, and blasting work. Traffic will be discussed at the October 2 continuation date. About 30 residents attended.

The PB’s per review engineering consultant actively shared information and confirmed materials from the MCC engineer. I was glad to see that the PB used its own consultant so freely and that the town consultant affirmed that the MCC engineer had accurately described things.

I am guessing that the traffic county’s and sight lines will be major issues.

Interesting update afterwards on the MSH, AHT, EDC, and PB plans for town meeting issues.

MSH opens

msh-chuck ferullo-2

Photo by Chuck Ferullo

Medfield State Hospital campus is open

An email from Kristine Trierweiler this afternoon states:

“The Medfield State Hospital campus is open again. 20th Century Fox has officially left the site as of today. ”

 

BoS appointments

The Board of Selectmen is scheduled to make its annual appointments to town committees at our October 3 meeting.  I am posting below the list of committees and appointments, and if people have an interest in serving on a particular town committee, they should let Evelyn Clarke know before 9/29.

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Primary election tomorrow

2017 Medfield Day MCAP

I spent Medfield Day helping the Medfield Foundation with its booth and also spent a shift with Medfield Cares About Prevention (MCAP) – in the photo above I am sharing time with MCAP board member and school nurse Kathy Thompson.  Note the new “02052” hat I am wearing – you can get it at Jack Conway Realtors, and the $10 goes to MCAP.

My observations on the reactions I received from people, in general, as I handed them flyers, either from the Medfield Foundation or MCAP, with an elevator speech line of explanation (“MFi raises money for good things for your town, $2m so far” or “MCAP is working to keep your kids safe from drugs and alcohol”) was that most people were genuinely pleased to get that information, based on many heart felt sounding thanks received.

 

None of that has anything to do with the primary election tomorrow for the empty state senate seat, except that it was the reason I was at Medfield Day, which resulted in the conversations that caused me to learn that:

  • Ted Philips told Medfield’s Fred Davis who told me that he, Ted Philips, is “left of center,” and that Paul Feeney “is left of him.”
  • Democratic Town Committee members Eileen DeSorgher and Sue Bernstein related that they support Ted Philips because he is more experienced.
  • Representative Denise Garlick reported that when she was a new state representative that Ted Philips, then a state house staffer, was hugely helpful to her.

I got to say hello to both Ted Philips and Mike Berry.

 

The ballots for tomorrow appear below –

-- - 1: -- 1: -- 1--··--- I ~be ~ommonwealtb of jfflassacbusetts SPECIAL STATE PRIMARY Penaltv for willfully defacing tearing down removing or destroying a List of Candidates or Specimen Ballot - fine notexceedinoOneHundredOollars. SEcAETARVOFTJIE COMMONWEALTH OF MAs!ACHUSETTS DEMOCRATIC PARTY OFFICIAL SPECIMEN BALLOT Tuesday, September 19, 2017 MEDFIELD To vote for a candidate, connect the arrow .......... to the right of the candidate's name. To vote for a person not on the ballot, write that person's name and residence in the blank space provided and conect the arrow. 1---======= -====================== ........ ==================== I SENATOR IN GENERAL COURT BRISTOL & NORFOLK DISTRICT Vole for ONE rc~~1~EENEY 1s2NorthSt..Foxborougll++++++ .. '='eD"'w"'A""R"'D'=R-c.p =H=1L~1p=sc-,-G.,-.d.- S 1.. -S-har-on.-.- ,-.. ~ FinanceCOIMlitleeMerrbe< ~ DONOTVOTEINTHISSPACE. USE BlANK LINE BELOW FOR WRITE·IN. ...... =======:i::WR:i::rrE=·IN=SP:i:i20170919-ballots_Page_2

BoS 9/19

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