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Legal notice: ZBA (May 7, 2026 hearing)

April 23, 2026

 

LEGAL NOTICE — ZONING BOARD OF APPEALS

The Zoning Board of the Appeals of the Town of Lincoln will hold a virtual online public hearing Thursday, May 7, 2026, at 7:00 P.M to hear and to act on the following petitions under the Zoning Bylaws:

New:

  • Lovelane Special Needs Program, 40 Baker Bridge Rd., M/P 142-10-0 for renewal of a special permit for an accessory apartment.
  • John and Irene Briedis, 27 Canaan Drive, M/P 135-9-0 for renewal of a special permit for an accessory apartment.
  • Alexander Benik, 4 Storey Drive, M/P 150-3-0 for a special permit to build a shed and office space on an existing slab.
  • John and Lauren Steele, 33 Farrar Rd., M/P 174-18-0 for a variance to construct a two-story addition, front porch and two car garage.
  • Bruce MacDowell/Alison Zook, 339 South Great Rd., M/P 185-16-0 for a special permit for a change in use.
  • Robert Domnitz, for an Appeal of the Building Inspector’s Decision on 16 Mill St., M/P 115-17-0.

Anyone wishing to be heard on this matter should be present at the designated time and place.

» Zoom link

Meeting ID: 92780169188       Password: 735886

Note that legal notices often must be posted twice by law. For previous legal notices and details on how to submit a legal notice to the Lincoln Squirrel, click here.

Category: legal notices Leave a Comment

Photo exhibit of Mt. Misery beavers opens Friday

April 22, 2026

One of Barbara Peskin’s photos of Mt. Misery beavers.

Images of beavers in their natural habitat on Mt. Misery by four photographers including Lincoln’s Barbara Peskin will be on display in Concord starting on April 24.

“Beaver Life” is a show running through May 24 with an opening reception on Friday, April 24 from 5:00–7:00pm at Wright Tavern (2 Lexington Road, Concord). It’s sponsored by OARS (the Organization for the Assabet, Sudbury and Concord Rivers) as part of their 18th annual Wild & Scenic Film Festival.

Once the Mt. Misery beavers were discovered by Sudbury Valley Nature Photographers club member Jean Fain, she shared her find with three other members (Peskin, Nicole Mordecai, and Phyllis Neufeld), and they returned several times to photograph the animals.

“Barbara has a particular affinity with the Mt. Misery beavers, and has spent many an afternoon with a couple of very friendly Mt. Misery beavers. Spring, summer and fall, we’ve continued to photograph these tail-slapping creatures formerly considered pests and currently considered climate heroes. Come winter, nature’s engineers hole up in their beaver lodges out of view,” Fain said.

The women have also photographed beavers in Lincoln’s Heywood Meadow and the pond behind St. Anne’s-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church as well as Concord’s Great Meadow. But it was at Mt. Misery that Peskin and Fain met the former program director for OARS, who had the idea to put together the exhibit, Fain said.

“Little did we know that beavers would be having a moment around the time of our exhibit,” she added. Beavers are the focus of the new Pixar movie “Hoppers,” an article in Scientific American, and a new children’s book, When Beavers Move In. To top it off, April 7 was International Beaver Day.

Fain shared some of the information that the photographers learned over the course of their year-long project:

  • Beavers, the largest rodents in North America, are crepuscular (active at dawn and dusk).
  • Beavers are extraordinary engineers. They can hold their breath underwater for up to 15 minutes while building dams with sticks and mud. 
  • Beaver teeth are orange due to their iron-rich coating of enamel. Their teeth grow continuously throughout their life, but gnawing on bark and branches helps trim them down.
  • Beavers slap their tails on the water to signal danger to their fellow beavers. “That sudden, loud slap also signals us humans to step away from the pond,” she said.
  • Beavers mate for life, forming strong, long-term relationships that last until one partner dies. The couple works together to maintain dams, gather food, and raise their offspring (kits).

Category: arts, nature Leave a Comment

News acorns

April 21, 2026

Free wine/beer-tasting to aid DVR

The Sudbury-Wayland-Lincoln Domestic Violence Roundtable invites the public to a free wine and beer tasting to support its annual Shower for Safety at Spirits Liquor Store (4 Digital Way, Suite 3, Maynard) on Friday, April 25 from 6:30–8:30pm. There will also be a brief presentation by a survivor. Please bring a new, unwrapped housewarming gift for clients of Reach Beyond Domestic Violence, and Voices Against Violence. Requested items include linens (twin sheets and pillowcases, blankets, comforters, pillows), towels and face cloths, unscented cleaning products and laundry detergent, laundry baskets, kitchen utensils, flatware, dishes, drinking glasses, and small kitchen appliances. Gift cards for supermarkets, Target, Walmart, CVS, and Walgreen’s are also welcome. To make a cash donation, please visit the Roundtable website and note that the donation is for Shower for Safety.

Plant-based potluck

Have you wanted to eat more sustainably but need inspiration for good recipes? CFREE recently posted a 12-week series on the benefits of a plant-based diet and is celebrating with a potluck to share recipes as a community on Wednesday, May 6 from 6:00–8:00pm in Bemis Hall. Bring your favorite vegan dish to share. Click here to register and learn more details. 

Coming up at the COA

Here are some of the May activities hosted by the Lincoln Council on Aging and Human Services. Most events are open to Lincoln residents of all ages. For a full list — including clinics, exercise classes, regular meetings of interest groups, and online chats with town officials — see the COAHS’s newsletter page. Call 781-259-8811 or email gagnea@lincolntown.org for Zoom links and other information.

Movie: “The Patriot”
Friday, April 24 at 12:30pm, Bemis Hall
Celebrate Patriots Day with this historical drama starring Mel Gibson and Heath Ledger. Free popcorn.

Author talk: “The Harvey Girls”
Friday, May 1 at 12:30pm, Bemis Hall
Local author Juliette Fay talks about The Harvey Girls, a big-hearted historic tale of two very different women in the 1920s who must learn to get along and trust each other. Books will be available for purchase.

Abigail Adams: Liberty & Legacy
Friday, May 8 at 12:30pm, Bemis Hall
Actress and storyteller Sheryl Faye stages an immersive multimedia live performance as Abigail Adams as the fearless political thinker, advocate for women’s rights and strong moral compass during the American Revolution. Sponsored by Friends of Lincoln COA & Friends of the Lincoln Library.

“Live Your Best Life” Health Fair
Friday, May 15 at 12:30pm, Bemis Hall
Get your questions answered and visit resource tables staffed by Lincoln police and fire, the town nurse, care managers, elder law attorneys, home care agencies, independent and assisted living facilities, Minuteman Senior Services, the Boston Center for Memory, Perkins Low Vision, Medical Alert, Carleton Willard at Home, and more.

Hip Hop Square Dance for Seniors
Friday, May 22 at 12:30pm, Bemis Hall
This class is designed for maximum fun while doing a low-impact activity. Grab your cowboy hat and boots and join us for a boot-scooting boogie! Sponsored by a grant from the Lincoln Cultural Council, a local agency which is supported by the Mass. Cultural Council.

Tour and workshop at deCordova

Get to know the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum’s current exhibition, “Nature Sanctuary,” with a curator-led tour on Sunday, May 10 from 1:00–2:00pm. On Sunday, May 17 from 1:00–3:00pm, join artist and author Madge Evers for a hands-on workshop, “About Printing with the Sun: Botanical Cyanotypes,” to learn the fundamentals of cyanotype as both a creative practice and a way to engage deeply with natural materials and light. More information and registration.

LOMA: The Fretbenders

The Fretbenders (Diane & Bob Kordas) will be the headliners at the next Lincoln Open Mic Acoustic (LOMA) on Monday, May 11 from 7–10 p.m. in Bemis Hall (doors open at 6:30pm, feature performers play from 8:30-9:00pm). LOMA is a monthly open mike night event with mikes and instrumental pickups suitable for individuals or small groups playing acoustic-style. Come and perform (email loma3re@gmail.com to sign up) or just come listen to acoustic music and spoken word. Free admission.

Club Codman is May 16

Codman Community Farms’ annual Club Codman fundraiser is on Saturday, May 16 from 8:00–11:00pm. It’s an adults-only, costume-optional dance party to welcome spring. Costumes from past events have included a dress made from Codman egg cartons, Lincoln’s very own black bear, and the legendary “farm store shoplifter” complete with a jacket stuffed with produce and other merchandise. Buy tickets here.

Used bike drive

Lincoln CFREE, Green Newton, and MetroWest Climate Solutions are co-sponsoring a bike drive on Saturday, May 16 from 9:00am–1:00pm in Wayland Town Center behind Ace Hardware (see map). Donated bikes will be delivered to the Lowell Bike Connector, where they will be fixed up and distributed to kids and adults in need of low-cost, local transportation. Click here to register (registration optional).

Category: acorns Leave a Comment

Service in June for Tim Barclay

April 21, 2026

Tim Barclay

Tim Barclay of Lincoln passed away peacefully at home on April 7, 2026. He was raised in Scarsdale, N.Y., and spent his summers in Mantoloking, on Barnegat Bay in New Jersey.

Upon graduation from Princeton in 1951, Tim served three years in the U.S. Navy, including six months in Korea. In 1954, he was the navigator of the winning Navy Academy yawl “Lively” in the Newport to Bermuda sailing race. In 1959, he received his Ed.M. in science education from Harvard University.

In his career, Tim was an enthusiastic science and math educator. He taught math and physical sciences at Darrow School in the Berkshires (1954-58) and at Commonwealth School in Boston (1958-71). In 1971, he became headmaster of Cambridge Friends School, a K-8 school.

As Sputnik spurred science and math curriculum reform in the early 1960s, Tim became an original member of the Elementary Science Study program at MIT, developing curriculum and teacher training. Starting in 1980, he worked at the Technical Education Research Center.

Tim was an active member of the Cambridge Friends Meeting, an avid writer, bird watcher, tennis player, sailor, baroque recorder player, and activist for environmental and social justice. He was a warm and welcoming person who took an active interest in others.

He is predeceased by his first wife and mother of his four children, Ann Arter Barclay; his partner, Antonia Stone; and his second wife, Elizabeth Taylor. He is survived by his four children, William, Mary, David, and Jeanne, his sister Barbara Ritter, and five grandchildren. He will be buried in the Lincoln Cemetery. 

The memorial service will be held on Saturday,  June 20 at noon at the First Parish in Lincoln (14 Bedford Road). He will be buried privately in the Lincoln Cemetery. Tim requested that any gifts be made to organizations fighting climate change.

Arrangements are under the care of Concord Funeral Home, which provided this obituary. To sign his online guest book, click here.

Category: obits Leave a Comment

Legal notice: Conservation Commisson public hearing (29 Lincoln)

April 21, 2026

PUBLIC HEARING — CONSERVATION COMMISSION

The Lincoln Conservation Commission (LCC) will hold a public hearing on Wednesday, April 29, 2026 at 7:05PM in accordance with the MA Wetlands Protection Act and the Town of Lincoln Wetlands Protection Bylaw. This is in response to the duly filed Request for Determination of Applicability by Philip North for construction of a shed within the 100-ft Buffer Zone at 29 Lincoln Road (Parcel 143-4-0). Information on how to log onto the virtual public meeting will be included in the LCC Agenda posted on the town’s website at least 48 hours prior to the hearing. More information can be reviewed here.

Note that legal notices often must be posted twice by law. For previous legal notices and details on how to submit a legal notice to the Lincoln Squirrel, click here.

Category: legal notices Leave a Comment

News acorns

April 19, 2026

Planning Board, Affordable Housing Trust seek volunteers

The Planning Board is seeking a volunteer to act as an associate member of the board for a three-year term. This is a limited position governed by zoning bylaw section 21.7.1 which provides for one associate member to serve for special permit applications in the case of absence, inability to act, or conflict of interest on the part of any member of the board or in the event of a vacancy. Submit letters of interest to Paula Vaughn-MacKenzie, Director of Planning and Land Use, by May 15.

The Select Board is seeking up to two volunteers to serve on the Affordable Housing Trust until April 2027. The Trust seeks Lincoln residents who have demonstrated interest or engagement in issues concerning housing, affordable housing, property development, local policy, land use or related topics. Send letters of interest to Peggy Elder, administrative assistant in the Select Board’s Office, along with a completed volunteer application by the end of day on Tuesday, April 21. The board will interview and appoint candidates at its April 27, 2026 meeting. For more information, call 781-259-2601.

Earth Day walk to Walden Pond

Multiple groups starting from Concord and Lincoln will converge at the Thoreau cabin site on Sunday, April 26 to celebrate the natural world with music, inspiring words, and sharing of wishes and commitments. Meet at 2:00pm at the First Parish in Concord or St. Anne’s Episcopal Church parking lot in Lincoln (a two-mile walk), arriving by 3:00pm at the cabin site. The program of speakers and music will last one hour and starts at 3:00 p.m.  You can bring a folding chair if desired. We will try to arrange rides back to the starting point from the state park parking area for folks who prefer not walking back to the church. For more information, contact Brad Hubbard-Nelson or Alex Chatfield.

“Unmasking Women in Crisis”

“Unmasking Women in Crisis: Three Keys to Navigating Life’s Inevitable Big Challenges” is the title pf a webinar with Debra Wong sponsored by the Lincoln and Belmont Public Libraries on Wednesday, April 29 from 6:30–7:30pm. Details and registration here.

Order junior prom flowers from FELS

Support the Foundation for Educators at Lincoln-Sudbury by purchasing your Junior Prom Flowers through FELS. Pre-order white, pink or red rose boutonnieres for $20; white, pink, or red corsages for $45; or a combo pack for $60. Pick up on Friday, May 8 at L-S. Details and order form here (limited availability).

Town gets grant to update hazard mitigation plan

Lincoln has received a $30,000 state grant to update its Hazard Mitigation Plan (HMP). Communities must have an approved HMP to be eligible for certain types of non-emergency disaster assistance funding through FEMA, as well as additional state and federal funding for critical infrastructure improvements and resiliency projects.

Category: acorns Leave a Comment

Police log for April 3–15, 2026

April 19, 2026

April 3

Weston Road (5:37pm) — Lincoln officers assisted Weston police in a search for a missing dog.

Trapelo Road (6:13pm) — Officers assisted a cyclist who had fallen.

Lincoln Road (8:36pm) — Officers responded to the Lincoln Road railroad crossing for a vehicle that had turned onto the tracks and became disabled. The MBTA police responded to the scene as well as representatives from Keolis. The vehicle was removed and normal operations resumed a short time later.

April 4

Commuter rail parking lot (6:56pm) — Lincoln officers assisted MBTA police with removing several passengers at the request of MBTA personnel.

Trapelo Road (4:32pm) — The fire department responded to the intersection of Trapelo Road and Silver Hill Road for the report of a small brush fire. The fire was extinguished. It appeared to be the remnants of the previous day’s permitted fire.

Donelan’s Supermarket (8:14pm) — An officer checked on a group who had gathered outside of Donelan’s Supermarket. The officer advised the caller that the group was waiting for transportation.

April 5

Nothing of note.

April 6

Weston Road (11:21am) — The animal control officer was contacted regarding a large dog on the loose by Weston Road.

Bedford Road (12:50pm) — An officer responded to the library for the report of a minor motor vehicle crash after a fire truck steering mode malfunctioned and struck two parked vehicles. There were no injuries reported.

Old County Road (5:22pm) — Police and fire units responded to a two-vehicle crash that occurred when a vehicle traveling on Old County Road failed to yield at the stop sign, striking a vehicle traveling on Trapelo Road. There were no reported injuries. The operator of the vehicle that failed to yield was cited for the same.

April 7

Lincoln North office building (7:41am) — A caller reported a vehicle parked and occupied. An officer checked on the vehicle and confirmed the occupant was an employee.

South Great Road (8:52am) — An officer helped two motorists exchange information after a minor two-vehicle crash.

Silver Hill Road (8:04pm) — An individual turned in some found property. The owner was notified and arrangements were made to retrieve the items.

April 8

Wells Road (1:05pm) — An individual spoke with an officer regarding an ongoing incident.

Codman Road (2:55pm) — A person spoke to an officer regarding a possible missing/stolen item from their yard.

April 9

Mary’s Way (8:15am) — A caller reported an elderly female walking in close proximity to Route 2. Officers checked the area but were unable to locate anyone.

Wells Road (8:52am) — Officers conducted a well-being check on a person. There was nothing out of the ordinary.

Moccasin Hill (7:17pm) — An officer spoke with a person regarding a possible scam.

April 10

Hanscom Air Force Base (12:38pm) — Lincoln officers responded to Hanscom Air Force Base at the request of Hanscom Security Forces for a person attempting to gain access with an active arrest warrant. Officers took into custody Shawn Ely, 24, from Wareham. He was booked and transported to Concord District Court.

Hanscom Vandenberg Gate (1:42pm) — An officer responded to Hanscom Drive for the report of loud music associated with a protest demonstration. An officer determined the music to be at a reasonable level.

Hanscom Vandenberg Gate (2:23pm) — A second call was made regarding the music that resulted in the same outcome.

April 11

Mount Misery parking lot (10:58am) — A caller reported a loose dog taking shelter under a parked vehicle. Upon arrival, the dog’s owner returned to the parking lot and retrieved the dog.

Silver Hill Road (11:03am) — The animal control officer was notified of an unleashed dog in the area.

Trapelo Road (11:28am) — A motorist reported an abandoned utility trailer occupying a lane of travel. The trailer was towed from the roadway.

Baker Bridge Road (11:36am) — A residential construction company struck a gas line. The fire department and National Grid responded.

South Commons (4:59pm) — An officer spoke with a resident regarding a suspicious item.

Trapelo Road (11:53pm) — A caller reported a loose dog in the area. The animal control officer was notified.

April 12

Trapelo Road (3:12pm) — A caller reported several individuals fishing on the causeway. They were moved along and advised that fishing was prohibited.

April 13

Lincoln Road (7:54pm) — A caller reported about a concern with an outside fire. It was determined that the fire was a small cooking fire.

Old Sudbury Road (7:02pm) — A caller reported a parked/occupied vehicle in their driveway. The vehicle had sustained two flat tires and was awaiting a tow truck.

Trapelo Road (4:15pm) — Police and fire units responded to Trapelo Road near Minebrook Road for a single-vehicle crash. A vehicle had driven off the road and struck a barrier. The operator was not injured but was cited for a marked lanes violation, and the vehicle was towed.

Concord Road (9:44am) — A person spoke with an officer about a device attached to a pole close to their residence.

April 14

Codman Road (7:41am) — An individual turned over a found item.

Cambridge Turnpike westbound (6:33pm) — Lincoln officers assisted the Massachusetts State Police with a motor vehicle crash.

South Great Road (5:44pm) — An officer assisted two motorists with exchanging information after a minor motor vehicle crash.

Beaver Pond Road (6:43pm) — An officer spoke with a person who was soliciting without a permit. They were advised of the appropriate process and cleared from the area.

Sandy Pond Road (4:40pm) — A caller reported seeing two people in waders leaving Flint’s Pond. The information was also forwarded to Lincoln Conservation.

Lincoln Library (11:19am) — Officers helped two people exchange information related to a minor motor vehicle crash.

April 15

North Great Road (5:55pm) — A motorist reported the presence of a deceased raccoon in the roadway. MassDOT was advised of the animal’s location for future retrieval.

Wheeler Road (12:53pm) — An officer spoke with a person regarding a possible larceny.

South Commons (3:02pm) — An officer spoke to a person regarding a possible larceny.

Category: police & fire Leave a Comment

Two different ideas floated for former Stonegate Gardens property

April 16, 2026

A concept for 144 units of housing at 339 South Great Road proposed by Roy MacDowell.

The now-vacant Weston Nurseries on South Great Road has sparked ideas for different uses for the property from two people… and they happen to be brothers.

Bruce MacDowell owns the nursery property and two houses on either side. He and his wife Lynne Bower-MacDowell ran Stonegate Gardens there for years, but she died in 2023. Bruce tried to keep the business going but eventually turned it over to the Weston Nurseries chain, which decided in January to close the location, citing revenue and business model issues.

Bruce’s brother Roy, head of Baystone Development in Weston, floated an idea to the Planning Board on April 14: a development of 144 two-story rental units occupying the nursery parcel plus one of the adjoining house lots owned by Bruce totaling 6.5 acres. The concept would include creating 144 parking spaces and an underground sewage treatment facility while preserving the stone greenhouse (which Bruce built himself over a period of years) as a common area. Baystone’s previous projects include housing in several towns including Weston (680 South Ave.) as well as larger projects such as Cronin’s Landing and Longview Place in Waltham.

Before submitting any formal proposal, MacDowell said he wanted to “get the pulse” of the board. “If I don’t get the feeling from the board this is something you could support or the community would support, frankly we won’t spend the time” pursuing it, he said. 

He noted that the property is zoned for residential use and is not in the Housing Choice Act zones approved for new multifamily housing in March 2024, so there would have to be a zoning change such as a new overlay district, which would require a simple majority at Town Meeting. He offered to designate 25% of the units as affordable, and he and the board discussed the idea of a swap of parcels between the MacDowell property and the HCA zones in South Lincoln. For the state to approve such a move, “we would have to make our numbers work,” board member Margaret Olson said.

The Planning Board was noncommittal, saying it was really up to the town. Olson suggested that MacDowell reach out to neighbors and residents, perhaps in a Zoom meeting, and if sentiment was favorable, bring it to the State of the Town meeting in the fall.

Meanwhile, also on April 14, Bruce MacDowell submitted a Zoning Board of Appeals application to allow a new business, Bodhi Healing, to operate on the nursery property. Bodhi Healing is a “community-centered, science-backed wellness sanctuary dedicated to somatic healing, frequency-based therapies, and the restoration of whole-person health,” according to the application, which describes in detail how parts of the property would be used.

There would be few if any changes to the exteriors of the structures, the application says. It envisions private treatment rooms in the westernmost building, a cafe and retail shop in the main building, a studio for movement classes and educational programming in the greenhouse building, and in the basement, a holistic frequency and detoxification technology suite, including individual wellness equipment rooms for appointment-based sessions.

In an email to the Lincoln Squirrel on April 14, Roy MacDowell said he and Bruce “are aligned on the overall direction and understand his desire to explore multiple options for the property. We believe the location is excellent for multifamily housing, though we recognize that any such project would require significant permitting and Town Meeting approvals. At the same time, Bruce has been considering an alternative that would allow more of the existing site to remain as is.

“The Bodhi Wellness [sic] proposal that Bruce is exploring would likely require a special permit or a variance and, from what we understand, would also need to raise substantial capital to become a reality,” MacDowell continued. “With the site currently vacant, it made sense to Bruce to conduct initial due diligence on a couple of alternatives, both of which may or may not ultimately prove feasible. At this time, our intention is to continue pursuing our multifamily project on a more passive basis while we see whether the Bodhi project can move forward and secure the necessary funding and permits.”

It’s unclear where Bodhi Healing is currently located, and business owner Alison Zook could not be reached for comment on April 16. According to her LinkedIn page, she founded the company two years ago after a career in account management and sales for Becton Dickinson, a medical technology company, and GlaxoSmith Kline. She changed direction due to personal crises and a “spontaneous spiritual awakening,” her website bio page says.

Category: Uncategorized Leave a Comment

News updates

April 16, 2026

  • The April 15 story headlined “Neighbors appeal decision to allow vet clinic on Minuteman land” has been updated with the date of the Zoning Board of Appeals hearing on the proposed Ally Veterinary Speciality Center on Mill Street. It will take place on Thursday, May 7 at 7:00pm.
  • The DPW and Eversource are removing the following item from the upcoming tree hearing on April 22: “The cutting and removal of undergrowth trees has been requested by Eversource Energy. With abutter approval, all trees 10 inches or less in diameter that are growing into the wires will be cut to the stump.” Procedures for more clearly identifying trees in this group will be the subject of future hearings, according to the DPW, which did not immediately respond to emails from the Lincoln Squirrel on April 16 seeking more information. 

Category: news Leave a Comment

Neighbors appeal decision to allow vet clinic on Minuteman land

April 15, 2026

(Editor’s note: this story was updated on April 16 to include the ZBA hearing date.)

Mill Street neighborhood residents have appealed a decision that allowed a veterinary clinic to open on the Minuteman High School property based on its planned educational use.

Ally Specialty Veterinary Center, now located on Bear Hill Road in Waltham, is leasing an unoccupied home at 16 Mill Street from Minuteman. The plan is to have the schools’ veterinary science students do clinical observation and training in the for-profit clinic. The Dover Amendment exempts religious and educational uses from some zoning requirements, including educational uses in a residential zone such as the one occupied by the high school and the intended clinic building.

Planning Board members asked pointed questions about how the property will be used at hearings on March 24 and April 14. Ally owner Michelle Custead assured them that her lawyers had OK’d the use and that Minuteman was eager to use her clinic to help educate its students rather than busing them to other locations off campus. Building Inspector M. Jon Metivier approved the use on March 18 with the proviso that the “educational component is maintained.”

But on April 10, Mill Street residents including Bob Domnitz, a former Planning Board member, appealed Metivier’s decision to the Zoning Board of Appeals. They cited the court case Regis College v. Town of Weston saying that projects allowed under the Dover Amendment must the project must have a “bona fide goal” that is “educationally significant” and must also show that the educational goal is “the primary or dominant purpose” of the proposed use.

“To our knowledge, there is no documented agreement or contract between Ally and Minuteman that describes the parameters of their educational relationship,” the appeal says.

“Our onsite partnership with Ally Veterinary Specialty Center is not supplemental; it is foundational,” Minuteman Superintendent Heather Driscoll wrote in an April 6 letter to Metivier, outlining the clinical skills that students would need for future including certified veterinary assistants (CVAs).

“What makes this model uniquely effective is the daily integration of learning and application. Students are not limited to occasional clinical exposure; they are immersed in it every day,” Driscoll wrote. “Without consistent, onsite clinical access, students encounter significant gaps in both required CVA hours and demonstrated proficiency.”

The ZBA will hold a public hearing on the matter on Thursday, May 7 at 7:00pm.

Even if the ZBA decides that the business is permitted under the Dover Amendment, Ally should still have to abide by the town zoning bylaw’s parking regulations and submit plans showing how they will do so, the appeal argues.

The Dover Amendment was also at the core of a battle in Lincoln over whether a McLean Hospital facility should be allowed in a residential zone on Bypass Road. The hospital planned to house boys aged 15–21 in a large former private home to give them classroom training in dialectical behavior therapy, teaching them social and emotional skills including mindfulness, emotional regulation, distress tolerance, and behavioral flexibility.

The use was originally permitted but then overturned by the ZBA. McLean sued the town, lost in land court but eventually prevailed in the Supreme Judicial Court in 2019, but the hospital never went ahead with its plans. In 2021, it found another location for the intended services and put its two Bypass Road properties on the market.

Category: businesses, land use Leave a Comment

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Movie: “The Patriot”

Apr 25 Sat
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Free wine/beer-tasting to aid DVR

Apr 26 Sun
2:00 pm - 4:00 pm

Earth Day walk to Walden Pond

Apr 29 Wed
2:45 pm - 4:30 pm

Speed painter Rob Surette

Apr 29 Wed
6:30 pm - 7:30 pm

Unmasking Women in Crisis

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  • Legal notice: ZBA (May 7, 2026 hearing) April 23, 2026
  • Photo exhibit of Mt. Misery beavers opens Friday April 22, 2026
  • News acorns April 21, 2026
  • Service in June for Tim Barclay April 21, 2026
  • Legal notice: Conservation Commisson public hearing (29 Lincoln) April 21, 2026

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