Letters to the Editor May/June 2026

 May/June 2026  Comments Off on Letters to the Editor May/June 2026
Apr 242026
 
Letters to the Editor May/June 2026

To the Editor of the Belmont Citizens Forum Newsletter, The January/February Newsletter essay on Chicago real estate investments by Belmont-born Peter Chardon Brooks III led me to think your readers also might like to know of his activity as a Boston art collector. In the mid-1860s, Brooks joined others acquiring paintings by French artists of the Barbizon School, coming to own important works by Corot, Millet, and Vermont-born William Morris Hunt, a Barbizon enthusiast. Quality was very important to Brooks, and he was aware of Boston’s developing ambition as a cultural center, made explicit when the young Museum of Fine [READ MORE]

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Belmont Historical Society Enjoys New Rooms

 Historic Preservation, History, May/June 2026  Comments Off on Belmont Historical Society Enjoys New Rooms
Apr 242026
 
Belmont Historical Society Enjoys New Rooms

Viktoria Haase, Belmont Historical Society president, provided an overview of the society’s collection in its new digs in the Belmont Library, including old newspapers and census ledgers in the Local History Room. The Underwood Room is lined with books, including a variety of town records along with books by local authors. Find both rooms on the second floor.

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Miyawaki Forest Grows Through Two Seasons

 Environment, May/June 2026, Plants  Comments Off on Miyawaki Forest Grows Through Two Seasons
Apr 242026
 
Miyawaki Forest Grows Through Two Seasons

By Fred Bouchard and Jean Devine By Clay Pit Pond’s bridge on that brilliantly sunny October morning, dozens of eager planters — aged 12 to 80, armed with shovels and trowels — were swarming among hundreds of potted saplings and bushes at Belmont’s inaugural Miyawaki Forest. (Akira Miyawaki, 1928-2021, was a Japanese botanist who developed the practice of restoring small plots of degraded land with densely planted pocket parks.)  Curious joggers, dog-walkers, strollers, and pram-pushers who paused for a look-see or polite query barely slowed the feverish activity that unrolled all day long, from 8 AM to 6 PM. The [READ MORE]

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BCF Editor Retires

 January 2004, May/June 2026  Comments Off on BCF Editor Retires
Apr 242026
 
BCF Editor Retires

By Sue Bass Meg Muckenhoupt didn’t invent the Belmont Citizens Forum Newsletter. It was already nearly four years old when she answered an ad for a new editor. Sharon Vanderslice, who had suggested creating the newsletter and had designed the first iteration, was tired of doing it. The first issue with Meg’s name as editor was Volume 5, #1, of January 2004, quite a while ago. Now she has announced that the last issue she’ll edit is this one, Volume 27, #3, of May 2026. Meg announced this on February 16. “I am not facing grave illness, and I am [READ MORE]

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Profile in Belmont: Anne Marie Mahoney

 May/June 2026  Comments Off on Profile in Belmont: Anne Marie Mahoney
Apr 242026
 
Profile in Belmont: Anne Marie Mahoney

By Elissa Ely At some point, we all become experts in grief. After Anne Marie Mahoney lost her mother, husband, sister-in-law, brother, and father within a few stunning years, she became an involuntary expert. Hospice and hospital resources were available in the beginning, but after a year or so—when the paperwork was done and the casseroles were no longer delivered—she had a sense that others felt it was time for her to move along. They may have been ready. She was not. “You wake up one morning,” she remembers, “and the permanence of loss sets in. Everyone’s dead. It becomes [READ MORE]

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Environmental Leader: David O’Neill

 Climate Change, Environment, May/June 2026, Newsletter, Open Space  Comments Off on Environmental Leader: David O’Neill
Apr 242026
 
Environmental Leader: David O’Neill

Mass Audubon, founded in 1896, is one of the oldest and largest conservation organizations in New England. With more than 112 wildlife sanctuaries across Massachusetts, a network of 180,000 members and supporters, and a mission to protect the nature of Massachusetts for people and wildlife, Mass Audubon combines land protection, habitat restoration, conservation science, and environmental education to safeguard biodiversity and build climate resilience across the Commonwealth. The Belmont Citizens Forum spoke with David O’Neill, president and CEO of Mass Audubon, about the organization’s statewide conservation strategy, its partnerships with communities and policymakers, and his vision for the future of [READ MORE]

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Apr 242026
 
Community Preservation Committee Endorses Projects

By Aaron Pikcilingis Each spring at Belmont’s Annual Town Meeting, Town Meeting members (TMM) consider projects recommended by the Community Preservation Committee (CPC) and vote whether to award each Community Preservation Act (CPA) funding. TMM may choose to either fund the project as recommended, reject the project, or reduce the funding. CPA funding requires both the recommendation of the CPC and Town Meeting, so TMMs may not elect to vote for different projects or substantially alter a proposed project, nor may they vote to provide more CPA funding to a given project than is recommended by the CPC. For FY2027, [READ MORE]

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Belmont Joins the ADU Era

 Construction and Housing, May/June 2026  Comments Off on Belmont Joins the ADU Era
Apr 242026
 
Belmont Joins the ADU Era

By Jeffrey North Belmont now allows small accessory apartments by right on most residential lots, putting it roughly in line with neighbors like Arlington and Lexington — but the number actually built so far remains very low. After years of debate, Belmont has joined the growing list of Massachusetts communities that allow “accessory dwelling units” (ADUs) on most residential lots. The town’s ADU bylaw, approved at the March 2025 Special Town Meeting, was crafted to comply with the state’s 2024 Affordable Homes Act, which requires communities to allow at least one small ADU by right where residential units are allowed. [READ MORE]

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May/June 2026 BCF Newsletter

 May/June 2026, Newsletter  Comments Off on May/June 2026 BCF Newsletter
Apr 242026
 
May/June 2026 BCF Newsletter

  In this issue: Harvard Study Offers Vision for Brighton Street The zoning is to be developed utilizing the same form-based code that Town Meeting adopted in March when it created new overlay zoning for Belmont Center. Read more. Belmont Joins the ADU Era Belmont now allows small accessory apartments by right on most residential lots, putting it roughly in line with neighbors like Arlington and Lexington — but the number actually built so far remains very low. Read more. Community Preservation Committee Endorses Projects For FY2027, Belmont’s CPA surcharge will generate about $1.8 million and the state match will [READ MORE]

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Harvard Study Offers Vision for Brighton Street

 May/June 2026  Comments Off on Harvard Study Offers Vision for Brighton Street
Apr 242026
 
Harvard Study Offers Vision for Brighton Street

By Jeffrey North and Vincent Stanton, Jr. On March 30, the Belmont Select Board, Planning Board and Office of Planning and Building, with support from consultants able.city, held a kickoff meeting at the Belmont Library for a proposed new overlay zoning of the Brighton Street business district. The zoning is to be developed utilizing the same form-based code that Town Meeting adopted in March when it created new overlay zoning for Belmont Center. Select Board chair Matt Taylor proposed a timeline with draft zoning in place by late spring, followed by additional public meetings and review, culminating in a Town [READ MORE]

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