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Water bills to go up by 13%

March 5, 2026

(Editor’s note: The section about The Commons in Lincoln was updated on March 6.)

Households on town water will see another double-digit increase in fiscal 2027 to continue funding big-ticket projects including the Lincoln Road water main replacement and installation of new “smart meters” at residences.

Rates will go up by 13% in the budget being presented at Town Meeting on March 29, Water Department Superintendent Rick Nolli said at a Water Commission public hearing on March 3. Rates went up by 10% both this year and last year.

Lincoln residents who use 70,000 gallons of water per year (a benchmark slightly higher than the actual figure) are now paying $744 a year. With the increase, that would rise to $841 a year, Nolli said. This is less than that residents of Concord and Wayland pay, but more than Lexington and Sudbury. Compared to some other Massachusetts towns with populations close to that of Lincoln, the town will be paying less than Topsfield ($1,716 a year), Rowley, Mendon, Rockport, Dover, and Merrimac ($928 a year), he said.

The $2.82 million overall operating budget represents a 34% increase over the current year’s. The biggest increases are for debt service ($873,925 in FY27 vs. $398,400 in FY26) and $284,574 in a one-time accounts-receivable adjustment. The latter expense arose because the department discovered that The Commons in Lincoln was being charged 10 times that they should have been since they installed a new primary water meter in late 2019 or early 2020 and it was “incorrectly configured in our billing system,” Nolli said.

The total overcharge was more than $500,000; in addition to the refund, the matter is being corrected by not charging for more recent items such as the new connections for the new units now under construction, and not billing The Commons for their water use since the error was discovered.

The matter may have gone undiscovered for much longer if the Commons hadn’t noticed the sudden reduction in the first bill they got after the billing system was corrected and called the Water Departmwnt about it. 

“After that meter was installed, for some reason, the department’s billing system did not have the correct settings and The Commons continued to pay their bills without question, even though they were incorrect,” Nolli said. “When we started the new water meter replacement program in 2024, we wanted to take care of all the larger meters before getting into residence homes, and The Commons was one of the first ones we did. The first and second billing cycle after the 2024 replacement is when the questions [from The Commons] started coming in, wondering why the water bill was so much less than it had been, and that’s when we realized we had an issue.”

The Water Department is also seeking $457,350 for capital items including year three of the four-year smart meter replacement project, a generator for the Tower Road well, and repairs to several buildings. This is substantially less than the capital requests approved at Town Meeting in March 2025 ($6.79 million) and 2024 ($2.41 million) for the water main project, smart meters and other smaller capital expenses. Most of those expenses are being paid for by bond sales.

Category: Water Dept.* Leave a Comment

News acorns

March 5, 2026

Town report hard copies available

If anyone is interested in a hard copy of the 2025 Annual Town report for FY2025, please stop by the Town Administrator’s office while supplies last. The report is also available online here. For additional materials relating to the Annual Town Meeting on March 29, click here.

LLCT/RLF events

The Lincoln Land Conservation Trust and Rural Land Foundation are hosting these upcoming Zoom events:

Emerson’s ‘Nature’
Tuesday, March 10 at 7:00pm
Ron McAdow reads selected excerpts from Emerson’s Nature, pairing the words with his own photographs of Lincoln’s landscapes. More info and Zoom link.

Pocket Forests
Tuesday, March 24 at 7:00pm
Discover how small, densely planted native forests can transform neighborhoods. Rachel Summers shares how pocket forests restore biodiversity, improve soil, and create thriving habitat in surprisingly small spaces. More info and Zoom link.

Blues/Latin music at First Parish

Guatemalan singer-songwriter Mercedes Escobar and her band will appear “Live in Lincoln Center” on Saturday, March 21 at 7:30pm in the First Parish stone church. Fluctuating between unleashed and sweet, Escobar’s voice has been likened to a mix between Linda Ronstadt and Howlin’ Wolf. She’s created a unique genre which blends the rawness of old blues and country vocals and guitar, with the intensity of magical realism lyrics and the sonic traditions of her home culture. Advance ticket purchase recommended.

Poll workers needed

The Town Clerk’s office is looking for more people interested in becoming poll workers. There will be three elections this year, the first being the Annual Town Election on Monday, March 30. Training is provided. This is a great way to support the election process and become part of a team meeting new neighbors and friends. If interested, please email foxv@lincolntown.org.

SpongeBob musical coming up

The Doomsday Clock is ticking, with Mount Humongous threatening to erupt and destroy Bikini Bottom! Plankton and Krabs are scheming, everyone is panicking, neighbors are turning on each other… can SpongeBob, Sandy, and Patrick save the town? “The SpongeBob Musical, Youth Edition” will be performed in the Donaldson auditorium by the Lincoln School middle schoolers on four days next week:

  • Wednesday, March 11 at 3:00pm
  • Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, March 12-14, at 7:00pm

Tickets are general admission and available at the door from 30 minutes before showtime ($10 for adults or $5 for students, seniors, and LPS employees. Cash or check only.  

Category: acorns Leave a Comment

Property sales in January 2026

March 4, 2026

5 Birchwood Lane — Phyllis Gree to Malcolm W. and Elana Chandler for $735,000 (January 30)

12 Pine Ridge Road — Barlex LD LLC to 12 Pine Ridge LLC for $2,800,000 (January 30)

19 Conant Road — Dudley Hollow LLC to Rohan Hastie for $3,375,000 (January 29)

134 Chestnut Circle — Deborah Page to Eric Paul Roter for $799,000 (January 23)

152 South Great Road — Ellison Family Limited Partnership to Jeffrey David Ribens Trust and Linda Melius Rubens Trust for $1,300,000 (January 13)

 

 

Category: land use Leave a Comment

My Turn: Unraveling the Hanscom misallocation

March 3, 2026

(Editor’s note: A slightly different version of this piece was posted last week in LincolnTalk by Cuetos, who asked that this revised version be published in the Lincoln Squirrel. The Squirrel has contacted members of the Finance Committee and School Committee, and at least one response will be forthcoming.

Cuetos will host a Zoom meeting on this issue on Sunday, March 8 at 7:00pm “to review the facts, explain how the issue developed, and answer questions from residents.”)

The Hanscom School operates under a contract that the town, as the operator, enters into with the Department of Defense. Lincoln taxpayer funds were systematically used to cover Hanscom school benefits and administrative costs that should have been paid with Department of Defense funds. By the later years of the FY21 to FY25 contract cycle, the annual impact of these misallocated charges had reached roughly $500,000.

I first raised the issue with town administration, the finance director, and the Finance Committee in 2022. Despite repeated follow up requests, no investigation began for nearly two years, even though those offices had direct access to the financial data and accounting systems needed to resolve the matter. The issue remained unexamined until 2024, when an audit initiated by the former School Committee chair was concluded and a working group was tasked to investigate the misallocated amounts. A sum of $2,045,000 in misallocated Hanscom expenses was confirmed for FY21 to FY25. The working group was not permitted to review earlier years, even though prior contracts operated under the same full cost reimbursement structure and used the same accounting methodology, which strongly suggests that similar misallocations likely occurred before FY21.

The confirmed expenses had been charged to Lincoln’s general fund instead of the Hanscom reserve, the dedicated account intended to cover Hanscom related costs. Correcting this is procedurally simple. These costs are legitimate Hanscom expenses that can be reimbursed to the general fund through a School Committee vote authorizing a transfer from the Hanscom reserve.

This process has been used twice already. An initial action reimbursed approximately $65,000 for split healthcare benefits. In June 2025, following executive session deliberations, the School Committee approved an additional reimbursement of about $495,000. In total, roughly $560,000 has been returned to taxpayers. This represents 27% of the confirmed FY21 to FY25 misallocated amount, leaving approximately $1,485,000 unreimbursed and any pre-FY21 amounts entirely unexamined.

The availability of funds is not in question. Under the contract structure, the federal government advances the full annual amount rather than reimbursing individual invoices, and the Hanscom reserve is fully under the town’s control. The most recent audited financials posted on the town website show a Hanscom Reserve balance of $9.7 million at the end of FY24, which is more than sufficient to correct the remaining shortfall for FY21 to FY25 and likely adequate to address earlier years if they were ever reviewed.

What has never been explained to residents is why the misallocation occurred, why it took nearly two years for an investigation to begin, why the School Committee limited the review period despite evidence that earlier years followed the same reimbursement rules, and why only a fraction of the confirmed misallocation has been corrected when the remedy is straightforward, locally controlled, and fully supported by available funds. Given the scale of the dollars involved and the fiduciary obligations owed to Lincoln taxpayers, a clear and comprehensive explanation remains necessary.

Chronology of Events (2022–2025)

  1. Benchmarking Analysis and Initial Evidence

Shortly after moving into town, I began studying our municipal finances. I wanted to understand how a town with the lowest proportion of students relative to population could still have such high taxes. My benchmarking against peer towns showed disproportionately higher taxes per capita across many departments, higher spending per pupil, and notably higher retirement benefits per dollar of payroll. A Massachusetts DESE report provided clear evidence that Lincoln was paying the lion’s share of Hanscom staff benefits.

  1. Sharing Findings with FinCom Leadership

I shared my benchmarking analysis with Finance Committee Chair Andy Payne in fall 2022 and invited him to my home. Unfortunately, we could not get past a disagreement about population numbers, and he showed no interest in the spending-per-pupil and retirement-benefits evidence. I also sent my findings to the full Finance Committee; only Fuat Koro expressed interest, though without leadership support he could not pursue it.

  1. Directed to the finance director

After continued requests, Mr. Payne directed me to Finance Director Colleen Wilkins. Following a few emails, she told me by phone that she was too busy preparing for budget season to engage in a “fishing expedition,” as she believed there was nothing to uncover. Communication ended.

  1. Submitting findings to school leadership

I also brought the matter to the School Committee and then-Superintendent Becky McFall, alerting them to the likely taxpayer subsidy. She quickly denied the subsidy’s existence and gave me access to then-Administrator for Business and Finance Mary Ellen Normen, who explained that she could neither confirm nor refute my findings because the underlying benefits accounting and payroll systems are controlled by the Town Finance Director.

It is relevant that Buck Creel — the longtime administrator for business and finance whose responsibilities included interpreting the contract, overseeing Hanscom’s financial submissions, and ensuring that eligible expenses were properly prepared and submitted for reimbursement — served in that role during the period when these misallocations occurred and was appointed to FinCom last year.

  1. Public records request and response

I filed a public records (FOIA-style) request to obtain the data. I received no response within the legal deadline, appealed to the state, and eventually received documents late from Town Administrator Tim Higgins. The response included irrelevant information that did not refute my claim. His email concluded with a statement that even if a mistake existed, it was not illegal.

  1. Escalation and lack of response

I sent multiple emails to the town administrator, FinCom, Select Board, Finance Department, and school administration explaining why the response was inadequate. None replied. I also asked a friend to brief Select Board member Jim Hutchinson, who had chaired FinCom. He told my friend they were too busy and too frustrated with my inquiries to address anything before Town Meeting. Nothing happened afterward.

  1. FinCom meeting and public comment suppression

Because no one was responding, I raised the issue during public comment at a FinCom meeting. Then-Vice Chair Paul Blanchfield cut me off, stating that he had reviewed the town’s FOIA response and that it disproved my claims. That was factually incorrect.

  1. Reduction in transparency

Following that meeting, several changes at FinCom occurred:

    • Zoom meetings became rare.
    • Mr. Payne stopped posting meeting recordings, and his YouTube channel disappeared.
    • The meeting video was missing from town archives until I provided my personal copy.
    • FinCom began developing a more restrictive public comment policy.
  1. Shift in FinCom position and additional barriers

After that meeting, I emailed Mr. Blanchfield again. His position shifted from “you are wrong” to “the town could recover funds except for certain accounting or statutory exceptions,” which was also incorrect. A new excuse emerged: that the contract was classified. I disproved this by obtaining unredacted copies of current and past contracts directly from the Department of Defense.

  1. School Committee chair steps in and launches independent audit

Former School Committee Chair John McLachlan, after seeing an interview referencing the issue, realized he had been incorrectly told the matter was resolved. He pursued the issue personally despite resistance from Town Administration and FinCom leadership. Unsatisfied, Mr. McLachlan launched an audit, reportedly provoking strong objections. A professional auditor was hired, but the process moved slowly and concluded only in summer 2024.

  1. Limitations of the audit and partial shifts in town accounting

I doubted the auditor could determine the benefit misallocation independently because benefits are managed by the Finance Department. In response to my inquiry on the status of the misallocation investigation at a fall 2023 FinCom meeting, Ms. Wilkins and Mr. Blanchfield redirected responsibility to the School Committee and the auditor. Ultimately, the benefit analysis was produced separately by Ms. Wilkins. Notably, during this same period, the Town transferred approximately $65,000 from the Hanscom reserve to the Town’s general reserve to correct split healthcare charges, an action that indicates the underlying issue had been recognized internally even before the formal findings were presented.

  1. Audit completion and formation of a working group

The audit concluded in summer 2024, though it did not examine benefits, which as I said were prepared independently by Ms. Wilkins. The School Committee formed a five-member working group: two School Committee members (Matina Madrick and Kim Rajdev), one Select Board member (Mr. Hutchinson), one FinCom member (Mr. Blanchfield), and myself. I understand that one longstanding School Committee member opposed both the creation of this working group and my inclusion, leading to a very restrictive mandate: we could examine only the FY21-25 contract, even though earlier contracts were also full-cost reimbursement.

  1. Working group findings and limitations

After discussions and adjustments to allocation methods, the committee unanimously agreed on a methodology confirming the misallocation at roughly 500,000 dollars per year. I objected to the refusal to examine earlier contracts. Before disbanding, I moved to recommend reimbursing the full FY21-25 misallocation. Mr. Hutchinson supported the motion; the other three members abstained.

  1. School Committee decision

Throughout FY25, the School Committee delayed any decision. In their final meeting of the year, they entered executive session and decided to reimburse for approximately one fourth of the remaining verified amount. No rationale was provided publicly.

My hope is that by presenting a clear and complete factual record, residents will demand accountability and strengthen oversight going forward. I have kept detailed records of all communications and am willing to review them with anyone interested.

Category: My Turn, schools 1 Comment

Police log for Feb. 19–25, 2026

March 3, 2026

February 19

Offutt Road, Hanscom AFB (11:48am) — An officer conducted a follow-up on Hanscom Air Force Base.

Lincoln Road (6:52pm) — A person came to the station to speak with an officer in the lobby.

Gerard’s Farm Stand, Cambridge Turnpike (9:48pm) — Officers were dispatched to Gerard’s Farm Stand for the report of a box truck on scene while the business is closed. Officers confirmed the store was receiving an after-hours delivery.

February 20

Lincoln Road (4:40pm) — Officers remained on scene for approximately one hour for intermittently malfunctioning railroad gates. Keolis arrived and fixed the malfunction.

February 21

Red Maple Lane (3:24pm) — An officer and Eversource responded to the area for a tree leaning on wires.

Weston Road (11:28am) — An officer discovered a parked/unattended vehicle in a conservation lot.

The Commons of Lincoln (7:15pm) — An officer performed a well-being check on a person. The party in question was fine.

February 22

Minebrook Road (8:58am) — Officers spoke to two people who had requested assistance.

February 23

Codman Road (11:05am) — Officers responded to the area for the report of a large tree branch in the roadway. The DPW was notified.

Bedford Road (6:53pm) — An officer responded to the intersection of Route 2 and Bedford Road for malfunctioning traffic lights. Mass. Highway was notified.

Ridge Road (6:41pm) — A caller reported an issue with snow removal. They were directed to the DPW.

February 24

Trapelo Road (3:40pm) — A caller reported a past interaction with three youths that they found disturbing. The area was checked but the officer did not encounter anyone involved.

February 25

Weston Road (4:56pm) — Officers performed a check of a vehicle parked in a conservation lot for an extended period of time.

Codman Road (12:48pm) — Officers responded to the area for a single-vehicle crash. There were no reported injuries and the vehicle was driven from the scene.

Liberty Lane, Hanscom AFB (10:45am) — A person spoke with an officer regarding a possible civil matter.

Farrar Pond Village (8:47am) — A caller reported a possible issue with a fire alarm panel. The on-site maintenance department addressed the issue.

Category: police & fire Leave a Comment

Legal notice: Planning Board (Verizon)

March 3, 2026

LEGAL NOTICE — PLANNING BOARD

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING FOR SPECIAL PERMIT

The Lincoln Planning Board will hold a public hearing at 7:01 PM on Tuesday, March 10, 2026 via hybrid meeting to review an application for a Renewal of a Special Permit for an existing wireless communication facility located at 30 Lewis Street, Parcel 171-25-0, under Section 12.6 of the Zoning Bylaw. The applicant, Verizon Wireless, proposes to maintain the existing wireless communication facility by Special Permit for a new term.

The application is available for review by e-mailing Jennifer Parker at parkerj@lincolnma.gov. The agenda with the Zoom information and meeting location will be posted to the Town website at lincolntown.org/Calendar.aspx at least 48 hours prior to the hearing. This meeting will be converted to a fully remote meeting if the weather so dictates and appropriate notice will be provided. Anyone wishing to be heard may be present at the designated time and place, written comments will also be accepted.

Lynn DeLisi and Gary Taylor, Co-Chairs
Lincoln Planning Board

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

Legal notice: Planning Board (Dark Skies)

March 3, 2026

LEGAL NOTICE — PLANNING BOARD

Notice of Public Hearing for Changes to the Zoning Bylaw

Hybrid meeting pursuant to Chapter 2 of the Acts of 2025 which extends through June 30, 2027, the ability of public bodies to meet in a fully remote or hybrid manner.  This meeting will be converted to a fully remote meeting if the weather so dictates and appropriate notice will be provided.

In accordance with the provisions of MGL, Chapter 40A, Section 5, the Lincoln Planning Board will hold a public hearing on Tuesday March 10, 2026, at 7:15 PM, to review the following proposed changes to the Lincoln Zoning Bylaw:

To Amend the Town’s Zoning Bylaw as follows:

To see if the Town will vote to amend the Zoning Bylaw by deleting, in its entirety, Section 13.5 entitled Exterior Lighting, found on the Town’s website at https://www.lincolntown.org/DocumentCenter/View/105110/Zoning-Bylaw-ATM-2025, and replacing it with a new Section 13.5, a copy of which is on file and available for viewing with the Town Clerk and the Planning Department, for the purposes of regulating exterior lighting and light pollution in accordance with Dark Skies principles.

Details of the proposed changes are available in the Planning Department, Town Offices, 16 Lincoln Road, Lincoln, Massachusetts, between 9:00am and 4:00pm, Monday through Friday. This information can also be found on the Town’s website at lincolntown.org/252/Planning. Copies will be provided upon request. The agenda with the Zoom information will be posted to the Town website at lincolntown.org/calendar two days prior to the hearing date.

Lynn DeLisi and Gary Taylor, Co-Chairs
Lincoln Planning Board

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

My Turn: Callow asks for votes for School Committee

March 2, 2026

(Editor’s note: Callow is running unopposed for one of the seats on the School Committee. See the full slate.)

By Jessica Callow

My name is Jessica Callow and I am pleased to announce my candidacy for the Lincoln School Committee. I have been a Lincoln resident for nearly 13 years, and my husband Dane and I are raising two children currently in the seventh and fourth grades. As a parent deeply invested in our district, I care profoundly about the strength, inclusivity, and future of our schools.  
 
Over the years, I have been actively involved in our community, serving on board at Lincoln Nursery School for five years, Codman Farm for three years, and most recently the Special Education Parent Advisory Council (SEPAC) since its reactivation in 2023 after years of inactivity. Through SEPAC, I have worked alongside families and district leaders to advocate for students with disabilities and to strengthen communication and collaboration.
 
I have a unique perspective to bring to the School Committee, most notably having a child in district and one who has received out-of-district services for the majority of his elementary education. These experiences have given me a deeper understanding of the varied paths students may take and the importance of ensuring every child feels supported and seen. Recently, I completed the Parent Consulting Training Institute at the Federation for Children with Special Needs, broadening my advocacy skills for neurodiverse learners and students with special needs. This experience deepened my understanding of special education law, collaboration, and systems-level thinking.
 
In addition to my advocacy work, I care deeply about maintaining Lincoln’s tradition of academic excellence while ensuring our schools are financially responsible and sustainable for the long term. I am committed to supporting all learners, strengthening social-emotional and tiered supports within general education, and working collaboratively to ensure our schools remain academically strong, fiscally responsible, and responsive to families. I believe in listening carefully to diverse perspectives with the goal of a shared path forward. I support instructional approaches that foster critical thinking, collaboration, and meaningful real-world learning experiences for students. I look forward to listening, learning, and serving Lincoln in this role and welcome you to reach out and connect.

Jessica Callow
8 Brooks Hill Road
jessicabcallow@gmail.com


“My Turn” is a forum for readers to offer their letters to the editor or views on any subject of interest to other Lincolnians. Submissions must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Items will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Submissions containing personal attacks, errors of fact, or other inappropriate material will not be published.

Category: elections, My Turn Leave a Comment

Legal notice: Historic District Commission (several properties)

March 2, 2026

LEGAL NOTICE — HISTORIC DISTRICT COMMISSION

The Historic District Commission will hold a virtual online public hearing at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, March 10, 2026, to consider the following applications. Anyone wishing to be heard on these matters should be present at the designated time and place.

  • Estate of Dean Benner Eshleman, 89 Lexington Rd., M/P 133-52-0, to determine the significance of the structure in connection with the application for demolition. 
  • Hyde Park Nominee Trust, 59 Conant Rd., M/P 181-5-0, to determine the significance of the structure in connection with the application for demolition.
  • David Knoerr, 5 Hawk Hill Rd., M/P 182-19-0, for approval of the design for the fully demolished structure.

Anyone wishing to be heard on these matters should be present at the designated time and place.

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

Three spending meetings on the horizon

March 1, 2026

Meetings about proposed town spending topics in FY2027 — the town operating budget, water rates, and replacement of the Lincoln Public Library’s HVAC system — are coming up in advance of the Annual Town Meeting on March 29.

Water Commission

First up is the Water Commissioners public hearing on proposed water rates on Tuesday, March 3 at 7:00pm (agenda and Zoom link here). That hearing is technically the continuation of a Feb. 18 meeting, which drew no attendees. “We have scheduled this second session on March 3rd to ensure full community outreach, as the previous February 18th meeting was only posted on the Water Department’s website and not advertised in the local news outlets,” said Water Department Superintendent Rick Nolli.

The Water Department is proposing a 13% rate increased for its customers, matching last year’s increase (10% in March 2025 and another 3% in September 2025). The department warned residents last year to expect rate increases of 10% in each of the three following years to pay for capital projects, particularly the Lincoln Road water main replacement project. In March 2025, voters approved $6.79 million in capital spending in fiscal 2026, most of which was funded by bonding.

Library HVAC

The replacement of the Lincoln Public Library’s HVAC system will be the topic on Monday, March 9, when the Select Board will hold an information session and answer questions during its meeting on Monday, March 9 at 7:00pm (project overview here; agenda and Zoom link will be posted here).

Articles 7 and 8 of the Town Meeting warrant ask whether the town should replace the 35-year-old gas-fired boiler and air conditioning system with a ground-source heat pump solution for $5.40 million (or about $2.5 million net cost to the town after grant funding), or pursue a more conventional system replacement. The Community Preservation Committee recommends bonding the $2.5 million and paying the debt service for that bonding from Community Preservation Act funds.

If approved by voters, “the project will not cause any tax bill increase to residents, although it will incrementally crowd out other CPA-eligible projects in the future,” the Select Board said in its January 2026 newsletter.

FinCom budget session

The Finance Committee will host a virtual budget Q&A session on Wednesday, March 11 at 7:30pm (Zoom link here; password: fincom). The session, which will be recorded and posted, will not include a presentation of the budget itself; for that, residents are encouraged to watch the February 12 FinCom meeting (the budget discussion starts at 14:50) and review the financial report and warrant.

The FinCom is proposing a budget of $54.54 million, an increase of 2.5% over last year.

“All residents have the right to deliberate at town meetings, and we will certainly do our best to respond to comments and questions. But, to keep our in-person Town Meeting as short and focused as possible, we hope to address comments and questions in this virtual Q&A session before we meet in person,” FinCom Chair Paul Blanchfield wrote in a Feb. 24 message on LincolnTalk.

Category: government Leave a Comment

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  • Water bills to go up by 13% March 5, 2026
  • News acorns March 5, 2026
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