Jun 302023
 
MBTA Rethinks Tunnel Construction

By Vincent Stanton, Jr. The MBTA recently changed its position regarding the preferred construction method for the new tunnel under the Fitchburg Commuter Rail Line at Alexander Avenue. Now the plan is to use “cut and cover” construction rather than tunnel jacking. The change will lower the cost of constructing the Belmont Community Path by an estimated $5 million, shorten the construction timeline, reduce the construction footprint, and be less disruptive for nearby residents, the Belmont middle-high school community, and Fitchburg Line riders.  The cut and cover approach will also permit a wider tunnel, which is preferable given the anticipated [READ MORE]

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Letter to the Editor: Airplane Noise

 Environment, July/August 2023, Newsletter  Comments Off on Letter to the Editor: Airplane Noise
Jun 302023
 

To the Editor, Regarding your feature piece in the May/June issue [“Why is There So Much Plane Noise Over Belmont?” BCF Newsletter, May/June 2023], it is good to see attention to the issue. However, the author decided to use valuable print largely to explain simply what is, and not the effects, other than “disturbing” or “too much” noise. Imagine if all that ink was used for describing epidemiological evidence that points to negative health outcomes, instead of rote retelling of recent events and history, easily conveyed with a link or two. People end up in hospitals more often as a [READ MORE]

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A New Weekly Voice for Belmont

 July/August 2023, Newsletter  Comments Off on A New Weekly Voice for Belmont
Jun 302023
 

By Sue Bass Once upon a time, Belmont had a real newspaper. Indeed, within living memory, it had two: The Belmont Citizen (1944–1988) and the Belmont Herald (1931–1988.) By the time Henry and I moved here in 1995, the merged Citizen-Herald was an acceptable but not great source of information. Still, I seem to recall that at one time it employed an editor, a reporter, and at least one stringer who might attend Planning Board or other committee meetings.  Then it got worse, and worse, and worse. No coverage of school sports. No more police log. No more school lunch [READ MORE]

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Local Activists Testify to Limit Rat Poisons

 Environment, July/August 2023, Newsletter  Comments Off on Local Activists Testify to Limit Rat Poisons
Jun 302023
 
Local Activists Testify to Limit Rat Poisons

By Allison V. Lenk The morning we arrived to rally in front of the State House, we noticed two hawks circling the Boston Common. People excitedly pointed out when one of the hawks landed on the weathervane atop the Golden Dome of the State House. We optimistically decided it was a sign that the day’s testimony would make a positive difference in the cause to limit the use of second generation anticoagulant rodenticides (SGARs) which not only kill their intended target, but also sicken or kill birds of prey, other wildlife, pets, and even threaten the health of children. (See [READ MORE]

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UMass Field Station Update

 July/August 2023, Newsletter, Open Space  Comments Off on UMass Field Station Update
Jun 302023
 

UMass Field Station Update By John Dieckmann In the January/February issue of the Belmont Citizens Forum Newsletter, there was a brief article on the status of the UMass Field Station on Beaver Street in Waltham. The city of Waltham acquired the property from UMass last year.  The city planned to issue four requests for proposals (RFPs) covering different parts of the property for potential users to respond to.   To date, one of these RFPs was issued in February, covering about 13 acres of farm land, the main building, and several outbuildings.  According to Stacey Daley, executive director of the Waltham [READ MORE]

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Do We Underestimate Bees?

 Environment, July/August 2023, Newsletter  Comments Off on Do We Underestimate Bees?
Jun 302023
 
Do We Underestimate Bees?

By Fred Bouchard Sit in your backyard by the flowers and watch the bees go about their busy business. Notice their different sizes, colors, and flight patterns. Chubby, buzzy bumble bees—yellow-striped, black-bottomed—cram into white roses. Slender, darting honeybees—tawny orange, pinstriped—slip in and out of pink weigela. (Smaller, faster bees have eluded my view, for now.) Are these garden denizens simply honey-gathering, pollen-spreading automatons? Not so, says author Stephen Buchmann in What a Bee Knows:  “Watch closer: she may be using olfactory tools to give her a 3-D map of her surroundings. She may gather information from the movements of other [READ MORE]

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Ottavio Forte, Renaissance Man

 Arts & Culture, July/August 2023, Newsletter  Comments Off on Ottavio Forte, Renaissance Man
Jun 302023
 
Ottavio Forte, Renaissance Man

By Fred Bouchard Tireless energy, intelligence, and curiosity mark the life and times of Ottavio Forte. Now in his 80s, he has enjoyed success in a colorful array of careers and hobbies: electrical engineer, beekeeper, sculptor, winemaker, distiller, gardener, and homespun philosopher.  Born in Formia (near Naples) in 1940, Forte came to New York at 14, the eighth child of illiterate, hard-working parents. As a high school senior, he claimed second prize in the Brooklyn Science Fair for a model of a vacuum tube. Forte graduated from City College of New York in 1961 in engineering. MIT hired him in [READ MORE]

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Wild Play is Parenting in the Great Outdoors

 July/August 2023, Newsletter, Open Space  Comments Off on Wild Play is Parenting in the Great Outdoors
Jun 302023
 
Wild Play is Parenting in the Great Outdoors

By David Sobel Are you concerned about the academification, indoorification, and digitalization of your child’s life? Especially now, post-pandemic, when most children were forced to be indoors and plopped down in front of screens for much of their schooling?  I felt the same way, even a couple of decades ago when I was raising my children in rural New Hampshire. As a family, we avoided television until my children were about eight years old, though we did borrow DVDs from the library for family viewing. And I am thankful that my wife and I didn’t have to deal with the [READ MORE]

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Profiles in Belmont: Dean Hickman

 Environment, July/August 2023, Newsletter, Recycling  Comments Off on Profiles in Belmont: Dean Hickman
Jun 302023
 
Profiles in Belmont: Dean Hickman

By Elissa Ely Before he became chair of Sustainable Belmont, before the PhD in pharmacogenetics, before moving to the United States, certainly before any awareness of the environmental needs of a Massachusetts town next to Cambridge, Dean Hickman was picking up litter.  “Have been picking up trash anywhere I go since I could walk,” his Instagram says. Growing up in farm country west of London, traveling the footpath systems, Dean took the “Keep Britain Tidy” campaign of the 1960s to heart. Many decades later, on a late rainy afternoon when he could have been enjoying a mug of tea, we [READ MORE]

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BH Students Create Native Plant Garden

 July/August 2023, Newsletter, Plants  Comments Off on BH Students Create Native Plant Garden
Jun 302023
 
BH Students Create Native Plant Garden

By Audrey Brenhouse On Saturday, May 13, the Belmont High School Climate Action Club, with the help of adult and student volunteers, planted our long-anticipated native garden in front of the school. Our  goal is to grow plants native to this area to promote and support native wildlife, helping to restore the land’s natural biodiversity. In the spring of 2022, we held a student-led concert where many families kindly donated to this process. After years of approvals and fundraising, we are proud and grateful to be able to display the result of your generosity.  Over the next few years, these [READ MORE]

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