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Library HVAC project postponed; 0% tax increase in FY27

March 13, 2026

Officials have decided to pass over the Town Meeting agenda items on funding a new HVAC system for the library after learning that the projected tax incentives were too optimistic.

Warrant articles 7 and 8 would have asked voters to approve a $5.4 million project to install for a ground-source heat pump system or, failing that, $330,000 for a conventional boiler for the library to replace the library’s aging gas-fired boiler and air conditioning system. After a $1 million grant and $1.93 million in tax incentives, the cost to the town was pegged at about $2.47 million. This would not have resulted in a tax increase; the amount was to be bonded with the debt paid from future Community Preservation Act funds.

In summer 2025, the Green Energy Committee was awarded a three-year MassSave Energy Manager Grant, which was used to hire Power Options, Inc. as the town energy manager. The firm targeted the library decarbonization study as the most immediate need and brought in Energy Systems Group (ESG) to perform a more detailed study of library decarbonization strategies and develop 2-year life-cycle cost estimates, according to a Jan. 8 memo.

But ESG found that the expected tax credits were “best case scenario… it changed the dynamic. $1.9 million was not the number we felt comfortable with,” Assistant Town Administrator Dan Pereira told the Finance Committee on March 11. The group working on the project “made a recommendation to pause and allow us more time to work on the tax incentive side and get a better second opinion on costs.”

The group expects to present a revised spending proposal to voters at a Special Town Meeting in the fall. In the meantime, tax consulting firms feel that the incentives now on the table are “stable” and will still be available later this year.

Potential capital projects for Lincoln (click image to enlarge).

The FinCom discussed what to do with the unexpected drop in expected spending for FY27. Several members suggest “giving back” some or all of the money in tax relief to residents. In February, the FinCom had recommended a tax increase of 3.5% for the median household in FY27, inclusive of the library HVAC program. The committee is now recommending using an additional $1.3 million ($2.3 million total) to offset debt service to result in a recommendation of a 0.0% increase in FY27 taxes for the median household, FinCom Chair Paul Blanchfield said.

Aside from the library, major capital costs expected in the new few years include $5.32 million in FY28 (the largest being $2 million for Ballfield Road restoration) and about $2 million in FY2029–30, with the next big expenditure coming in FY31 for a comprehensive road project currently estimated at $12 million. Farther in the future: a rebuild of the DPW site on Lewis Street, and land acquisition to expand the Lincoln Cemetery.

Category: government Leave a Comment

Dark Skies group finalizes zoning amendment proposal

March 12, 2026

After much debate about whether a zoning bylaw can mandate behavior (specifically, requiring people to turn off outdoor lights after 10:00pm), the Dark Skies Subcommittee of the Planning Board finalized a draft of a bylaw amendment that would put more controls on outdoor lighting for new and substantially renovated buildings.

The board debated the matter at its March 10 meeting but postponed a vote on whether to endorse the measure until its next meeting on March 24. Residents will vote on the issue at Town Meeting on March 29.

The proposal is essentially identical to the March 4 version outlined in a March 8 Lincoln Squirrel article (“Dark Skies group tries again for limits on new outdoor lighting”) except for two added definitions and a wording change to make it clear that the requirement to turn off outside lights after 10:00pm applies only to lights at new or substantially renovated homes and not to new or replacement fixtures on existing homes.

The former condition would apply when exterior lighting after 10:00pm is not associated with an “active use,” meaning when lighting is required for ongoing or expected activity such as a planned arrival to a residence, unless otherwise approved by the Planning Board through site plan review or special permit.

The earlier time restriction would have applied to existing homes as well — something that Planning Board Co-chair Lynn DeLisi said she had a “philosophical objection” to. “I just don’t think this belongs in a zoning bylaw,” she said. However, the issue may come up again if the subcommittee proposes a future amendment to the town’s general bylaw, which does include behavior-based restrictions on things like use of gas-powered leaf blowers and noise in general.

Sherry Haydock, co-chair of the Dark Skies Subcommittee, said that the complaint they heard most often was “light trespass,” or bright lights shining onto someone’s property from a neighbor’s house.

“All these complaints are not going to be solved by this bylaw,” since the new rules would not apply to existing lighting, DeLisi remarked.

“That is true,” responded Haydock, acknowledging that “we can’t change those lights but we hope to change behavior through educational materials, public forums, mailings, and friendly letters” to owners of homes who are the subject of neighbor complaints. The caller from the subcommittee would explain the environmental harm done by excessively bright, misdirected, or all-night lighting. The hope is that those residents will voluntarily change to Dark Skies-compliant fixtures or at least install motion detectors or timers.

Some of that educational material is now available via the Dark Skies survey, which includes illustrations of bad lighting practices, lightbulb color temperatures, etc., and the group’s Jan. 12 Select Board presentation.

Category: land use Leave a Comment

News acorns

March 11, 2026

Take the educational Dark Skies survey

In support of its zoning bylaw amendment that will come before voters at Town Meeting on March 28, the Dark Skies Subcommittee of Lincoln’s Planning Board has posted a survey to explore the level of understanding that residents have regarding Lincoln’s Dark Skies Initiatives and where there may be gaps in knowledge. Each section of the survey is brief and designed to assist in the development of educational materials which will be provided to the community for future planning.

TMSC forums on Monday

The Town Meeting Study Committee will host two public forums on Monday, March 16 to present its recommendations to the Select Board and take questions and comments. The report will also be presented to Town Meeting on March 28. The discussions will take place at 8:15am in the Donaldson Room at Town Offices and online that evening at a Zoom link to be posted at the TMSC web page.

Portrait fundraiser for food pantry

Lincoln photographer Corey Flint is hosting a portrait fundraiser for SVdP of Lincoln and Weston’s food pantry on Saturday, March 21 from 2:00–5:00pm at the Pierce House. In just five minutes, Corey will create a portrait for up to four people (sorry, no pets). The suggested donation is $90, with 100% of that going to help our neighbors in need. You can also click here to sponsor a portrait session for a family served by the food pantry (put “portrait donation” in the notes). Spots are limited; click here to book.

Three artists to head panel at deCordova

On Thursday, March 26 from 6:00–8:00pm, the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum will host the 2026 Paul J. Cronin Memorial Lecture, featuring the three artists behind the original commissions for “Art & the Landscape: The Land Tells Our Stories,” opening across multiple Trustees properties in June 2026. This special program introduces the artists and the distinct landscapes that will host their site-responsive works, offering an early look into how each project reflects personal histories, ecological narratives, and place-based storytelling. Together, these artists ask a powerful question at the heart of this year’s lecture: Can art create an ecology? This panel is free and open to the public. Click here to register.

Category: acorns Leave a Comment

Theodore A. Cerri, 1926–2026

March 11, 2026

Theodore A. Cerri

Theodore Angelo Cerri, age 99, formerly of Wayland, Lincoln, and Stoughton, died on February 28, 2026, surrounded by his family and friends. Ted was a devoted husband, father, grandfather, great-grandfather, a major of the U.S. Army, an active-duty veteran of both World War II and the Korean War, and a Bronze Star medal recipient.

Born on July 15, 1926, in Rumford, Maine to Domenic Cerri and Anna Negrini, Ted was raised in Dedham. He was the third-oldest child, predeceased by all his siblings: Lawrence Cerri, Walter Cerri, and Virginia (Booj) Francesconi.

Ted married Carmela (Candy) Defilippo on June 8, 1952, the week before he was deployed to Korea. They were happily married and completely devoted to each other for nearly 73 years when Candy passed away in January of 2025.

After attending Dedham High School but before graduating and still in his 17th year, Ted joined the U.S. Merchant Marine. He sailed to Europe, Asia, and Africa on a liberty ship called the S.S. Henry Ward Beecher, delivering supplies and soldiers to strategic locations while facing a constant threat of attack on the high seas. Ted enjoyed describing his experiences as a mariner — climbing to the crow’s nest, passing ammunition to the gun crews, steering the ship, and standing lookout on the bow in thick fog for the blue warning light on the stern of the vessel that was just yards ahead in the convoy.

Ted Cerri while in the Army.

Ted’s regular military service began in 1945 as an enlisted man serving in Germany until 1948. During that time, he worked as an MP, and also visited various German towns by jeep, looking for parts and supplies for the U.S. Army base in Bremerhaven. Upon his return to the U.S., he attended Boston University on the G.I. bill, made the Dean’s List, participated in the ROTC program, and was designated Distinguished Military Graduate, accepting a regular army commission in 1952 at the rank of 2nd Lieutenant. His degree was in Liberal Arts with an emphasis in German literature.

Acceptance of his officer’s commission meant immediate entry into the Army for a minimum of three years and his active-duty orders arrived on June 12, 1952, while he and Candy were on their honeymoon. He was sent to Fort Benning for Infantry Company Officer’s School and then to Fort Knox to train recruits in the 3rd U.S. Infantry Division in Korea. While there, he received his briefing on the division’s missions and status from Col. John Eisenhower (Ike’s son). The next day he was assigned to G Company of the 65th Regiment, which was on the front or main line of resistance near the 38th parallel of the Korean Peninsula. A military transport dropped him off alone at the side of a road at dusk near a trail and the driver instructed him to go find his company. It grew dark after he climbed a few hundred meters and, seeing no sign of his company, spent the night on that hill in freezing temperatures. The next day he was assigned to lead the company’s second platoon.

In January of 1953 while out on patrol in Wonju, Ted found a little South Korean girl abandoned and hiding in a cave. Ted put her at ease and then brought her to a MASH unit where she got the care she needed. In later years, when asked about his combat experience, Ted was quick to point out that the fact he was able to help that innocent victim of the war is what made it all worthwhile.

Ted Cerri with the South Korean girl he found hiding in a cave.

Lieutenant Cerri received the Bronze Star Medal for outstanding heroism. On July 16, 1953, near Kumwha, North Korea, a U.N. patrol became trapped in a minefield, with several men wounded from detonated mines. When Ted heard of this, he immediately left the comparative safety of his position with one or two of his men and moved toward the minefield under heavy fire. He directed the evacuation of the wounded and remained there with complete disregard for his personal safety until all the casualties had been safely removed. He received a second Bronze Star for Meritorious Service, a Korean Citation for his service in the front line, and the Combat Infantry Badge.

After the war Ted reverted to inactive status and joined the Massachusetts National Guard, serving as a captain there for four and one half years in various capacities, including Company Commander and Battery Commander. He was assigned to the 94th Command Headquarters as Operations Supervisor, Combat Commander, and Assistant G-1 from 1963-1965. He was promoted to major in 1965 and served in the Army Reserve until 1972. He retired from the military after serving 24 years.

Ted had a long career in the insurance business, beginning with the Employer’s Group in the later 1950s and then moving on to Utica National Insurance Group where he was the regional loss control manager until his retirement.

Ted was a skilled woodworker (his father was a carpenter by trade), and he especially enjoyed precision work with molding and paneling, often using his lathe and a table saw for which he built a customized table. Ted and his father, Domenic, built Ted and Candy’s house on 93 Forest Road in Stoughton in the 1950’s, where they resided for over 45 years before moving to Lincoln in 2008. They lived independently until May 2024, when they moved into Sunrise Senior Living in Wayland.

Ted, who will be extremely missed, is survived by his two children, Jo Ann Cerri England (Dan England) and Michael Cerri (Judith Campos); his six grandchildren, Genevieve Rudolph (Andy Meisenheimer), Domenic Cerri (Mary Beth Grewe), Camila Campos-Cerri, Daniela Acosta, Marie England Doe (Nic), and Theodore England; and his great grandchildren August Rudolph, Eliana Acosta-Lopez, Isabel Grewe-Cerri, Raphael Grewe-Cerri, and Adeline Carmela Meisenheimer.

Ted also leaves behind his late wife’s dear sister, Maria Falcione, and their brother-in-law, Harold Hanlon, as well as five nephews and two nieces, a host of other relatives, and close family friends. Known as Grampy Ted to both family and chosen family, he deeply loved and cared for each of us. His honorary great-grandchildren Milo, Landon, and Layla Guzman, also had a special place in his heart.

He cherished his Sunrise of Wayland community (staff and friends), who referred to him as a “real gentleman.” He adored the nurses and therapists from Transitions with Care. He was so appreciative and touched by Brian Tony Mwesige and his team from Platinum, who were lovingly by his side these past few months. Our family is so grateful to them all.

Ted had many friends and neighbors to whom he was devoted. He also loved many family dogs, including his grand-dog Lucy who recently passed as well. Ted (Grampy) was always present for us all. He will forever be in our hearts.

A private celebration of life will be held later this year, at the Massachusetts Veterans Memorial Cemetery in Winchendon, with full US Army military honors.

In lieu of flowers, please consider donating to the Wreaths Across America program at the MVMC in Winchendon, or to the Friends of the Veterans’ Memorial Cemetery. Checks can be mailed to either group at 14 Winter Place, Winchendon MA 01475.

Arrangements have been entrusted to Dee Funeral Home & Cremation Service of Concord. Click here to share a condolence or remembrance on Ted’s tribute page.

Category: obits Leave a Comment

William R. Cummings Jr. dies at age 68

March 10, 2026

William R. Cummings Jr.

William Roy Cummings, Jr., of Fitchburg, formerly of Lincoln, died on February 21, 2026 at Fitchburg HealthCare following a lengthy illness. He was 68.

Known to many as Billy, he was born in Medford on January 4, 1958. He grew up in Lincoln and graduated from Lincoln-Sudbury Regional High School with the class of 1977. He started his own business, Acton Landcare Landscaping and Snow Plowing, which he ran for most of his adult life until his health declined. Billy will be remembered for his hard work ethic during the many years he took care of his customers. He was a man who also enjoyed the simple pleasures in life: attending concerts, enjoying a meal at a local restaurant and spending quality time with his family and friends.

He leaves behind his three daughters: Lisa (Cummings) Gurrie married to Michael Gurrie, Carrie Cummings, and Kimberly (Cummings) Hays. He also leaves behind his grandchildren Isabella Hays, Hailey Cummings, Jackson Gurrie, and Brayden Gurrie, along with one brother, Thomas Cummings married to Morten Tjelum. Billy was preceded in death by his parents, William and Palma Cummings.

Private burial services are planned at Lincoln Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, donations in his memory may be made to the Parkinson’s Foundation. Arrangements have been entrusted to Dee Funeral Home & Cremation Service of Concord., which provided this obituary. Click here to share a memory.

Category: obits Leave a Comment

Police log for Feb. 26–March 5, 2026

March 10, 2026

February 26

Page Road (5:53pm) — A person walking on Page Road reported the odor of natural gas. National Grid was notified.

Old Farm Road (1:50pm) — A person spoke with an officer regarding a possible scam.

February 27

Concord Road (8:36am) — A person spoke with an officer regarding a past motor vehicle crash.

The Commons of Lincoln (5:47pm) — An officer spoke with a person regarding a possible scam.

February 28

Indian Camp Lane (12:38pm) — A person spoke with an officer regarding a neighbor dispute.

Donelan’s Supermarket (4:47pm) — A caller requested an officer perform a check on a person who appeared to be confused. An officer spoke with the party; there was no issue.

Tower Road (6:50pm) — A person spoke with an officer regarding a possible harassment incident.

March 1

Harvest Circle (1:15pm) — An officer spoke with a person regarding some missing items.

March 2

Huckleberry Hill (3:22pm) — The fire department responded to a residence for the odor of gas inside the home. Firefighters located the source and rectified the issue.

Lincoln Woods (9:30am) — An officer responded to the area for the report of a past hit-and-run property damage incident.

Bypass Road (7:29am) — Police and fire units responded to a two-vehicle crash at the intersection of Route 2A and Lexington Road. A vehicle failed to yield and struck another. One of the operators was transported to the hospital and the operator responsible for the crash was issued a citation for failing to yield. Both vehicles were towed from the scene.

Wells Road (6:07am) — An officer assisted a resident with an issue related to their door lock.

March 3

Cambridge Turnpike westbound (9:42pm) — Officers assisted the Massachusetts State Police with a motor vehicle crash.

Lincoln Road (7:46pm) — An officer responded to the railroad crossing for the report of malfunctioning railroad gates. Keolis was notified.

March 4

Bedford Road (10:10am) — Officers assisted the Massachusetts State Police due to malfunctioning traffic lights.

Storey Drive (7:40pm) — Officers checked the area for the report of an occupied vehicle parked on the side of the road. The vehicle was gone on arrival.

Concord Road (3:05pm) — Police and fire units checked the area for the reported wire in the roadway. The fire department was able to move a support cable out of the road. The utility company was notified.

Trapelo Road (3:59pm) — An officer encountered several youths who were on the ice by the Cambridge Reservoir. They were advised to move from the area.

Lincoln Road (2:41pm) — A person retrieved some items from the police station.

March 5

Hanscom Law Enforcement, Robbins Road, Bedford (10:17am) — Hanscom Air Force Base Security Forces consulted with an officer regarding prescribed medication.

Greenridge Lane (9:59pm) — Police and fire units responded to the area for utility wires on fire. The fire department extinguished the flames and police remained on scene until the utility crews arrived.

Tower Road (11:14am) — An officer helped a detail officer with traffic flow on South Great Road and Tower Road.

Category: police & fire Leave a Comment

Legal notice: Planning Board (16 Mill St.)

March 10, 2026

TOWN OF LINCOLN PLANNING BOARD
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING FOR SIGN PERMIT

The Lincoln Planning Board will hold a public hearing at 7:01 PM on Tuesday, March 24, 2026 via hybrid meeting to review an application for a Sign Permit pursuant to Section 16.5 of the Zoning Bylaw. The applicant, Michelle Custead, proposes adding one building-mounted sign and one ground-mounted sign for Ally Specialty Veterinary Center at 16 Mill Street, Parcel 115-17-0. 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

Correction

March 10, 2026

The discussion of incorrect water billing for The Commons in Lincoln that was included in the March 5 Lincoln Squirrel story headlined “Water bills to go up by 13%” gave an incorrect date for when the new water meter at The Commons was installed. It was actually in late 2019 or early 2020, according to Water Department Superintendent Rick Nolli.

“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 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.”

Category: Water Dept.* Leave a Comment

My Turn: Hanscom cost allocations

March 9, 2026

By Paul Blanchfield, Finance Committee chair

Preface: I am writing as an individual who happens to be the chair of the Lincoln Finance Committee and a member of the Collins Center Working Group.

For over 50 years, Lincoln Public Schools (LPS) has run the Hanscom K-8 school through contract with the Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA).

The town benefits by being able to:

  • Educate the children of those that serve our country
  • Operate as a larger district, allowing for more extensive resources for students and staff
  • Share costs across Lincoln and Hanscom, which reduces overhead and Lincoln’s financial burden; and
  • Receive payment for these services at a higher rate than alternative arrangements. Bedford, which does not have a contract with DoDEA, educates Hanscom’s ninth- to 12th-grade students but receives federal impact aid and state mitigation aid, at a fraction of the reimbursement rate received by Lincoln via DoDEA.
Contract structure

The LPS Committee (LPSC) is solely responsible for the oversight and management of the contract, working with the Superintendent of Schools and in collaboration with town staff and committees as appropriate.

Contracts are constructed as a base year plus four one-year options exercised at DoDEA’s discretion (i.e., FY26–30 is a FY26 contract with four one-year options). In contracts up to FY25, LPS had a single negotiated fixed price for services provided within a year, independent of actual expenses. DoDEA does not provide additional funding, regardless of expenses, beyond that which is negotiated in advance, with a few exceptions (e.g., capital projects). The FY26–30 contract is based on the number of enrolled students. LPSC plans to evaluate the financial results for the new contract at the end of FY26 and determine whether there are implications for future year budgets and reserve policy decisions.

Over the life of the arrangement, revenues exceeded costs and the Hanscom Reserve Fund was established to maintain surpluses. It remains available for Hanscom-associated costs and/or future liabilities. In each contract negotiation, DoDEA regularly requests reductions to LPS’s initial proposals.

The Hanscom Reserve Fund has a current balance of ~$10 million against ~$14 million in unfunded liabilities (OPEB or other post-employment benefits, pension, unemployment), per the Collins Center.

Cost allocation methodology and working group

In late 2022, David Cuetos inquired about the Hanscom contract among numerous other concerns.

In June 2023, LPSC requested a review of the contract, procured a grant, and engaged the Collins Center, which provided a final report in May 2024, which was subsequently used to support FY26-30 contract negotiations. The report recommended the establishment of formal cost allocation methodologies for Hanscom-related OPEB, indirect town admin costs, and non-teacher pension costs, among other items.

A Collins Center Working Group was established in June 2024, including two LPSC members (Matina Madrick and Kim Rajdev), a Select Board member (Jim Hutchinson), a Finance Committee member (myself, Paul Blanchfield), and a member of the public (David Cuetos).

The group met in the summer of 2024 with a charge to:

  • Review the town’s indirect cost methodology and recommend an updated methodology
  • Confirm the town’s method to allocate OPEB and pension liabilities and propose an appropriate method going forward
  • Propose a plan to have disaggregated valuation statements for OPEB and MCRS pension liabilities across the Town of Lincoln, LPS, and Hanscom.

The working group recommended to:

  • Adopt a revised indirect cost methodology approach (percent of budget vs. fixed approach), which would result in an additional ~$190,000 in FY24 Hanscom-related costs.
  • Adopt a revised pension cost approach (disaggregated vs. fixed), which would result in an additional ~$215,000 in FY24 Hanscom-related costs.
  • The new methodology resulted in ~$1.5 million in additional Hanscom-related costs identified from FY21–FY24 from the $67 million contract over the same period, or 1.8% of the total.
Hanscom Reserve Fund transfers

LPSC adopted the working group’s recommendations for FY26 and beyond, with additional adjustments for the FY24 and FY25 pension liabilities. This was in recognition that the prior methodology was in place up to the end of FY24, that disaggregated actuarial assessments were not in place prior to FY24, and that the prior indirect cost methodology was adopted for the FY21-25 contract.

In addition, the Hanscom Reserve Fund could be needed to cover future liabilities, including but not limited to unemployment, retirement/OPEB liabilities, contract non-renewal, and closure costs should Lincoln not be awarded a future contract and/or if the base were to close. Reassessing costs from periods prior to FY21 (i.e., past contracts) was deemed not feasible given the lack of disaggregated actuarial assessments.

Summary

The town benefited from David Cuetos raising the issue and the town engaged, albeit slower than some might like, in a thorough process that included researching and confirming the issue, engaging a third-party (Collins Center) for support, establishing a working group, and adopting new methodologies.

LPSC manages the DoDEA contract and the Hanscom Reserve Fund and balances the risk and rewards of transferring funds to the town’s General Fund with the sizable potential future liabilities as noted above.

If the updated methodologies developed by the Working Group were applied to the full FY21–25 period vs. just for pension in FY24–25, they would have resulted in an additional $1.5 million in expenses ($600,000 million in pension costs and $900,000 million in indirect costs) that have not been authorized by LPSC to be transferred from the Hanscom Reserve Fund to the General Fund.

The Hanscom Reserve Fund remains available to LPSC to pay for Hanscom-related expenses or to transfer to the General Fund, now and in the future. As a fixed price contract through 2025, DoDEA will not pay LPS more for newfound expenses, and the same is true for 2026-30, save for changes in enrollment.


“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: schools 5 Comments

Protesters stand out against ICE at Hanscom Field

March 9, 2026

It was a cold and bleak afternoon, but that didn’t deter about two dozen residents of Lincoln and neighboring towns who stood with protest signs to protest ICE prisoner flights from Hanscom Field on March 6 as they have done every Friday for the past several months.

Many of the protesters are from Lincoln, though some did not want to give their names for fear of being targeted by people who support the actions of (ICE) U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, such as the counter-protester who shouted at the group from across the road. One of the protesters was a woman dressed in a full-body owl costume (including mask) who strutted and flapped her wings in time to music such as “Immigrant Eyes” by Willie Nelson and “Get Up, Stand Up” by Bob Marley.

“I’m the entertainment,” she said.

They’re calling attention to the fact that ICE charters private planes to fly suspected illegal immigrants from its intake center in Burlington to detention centers elsewhere in the country. Almost three-quarters of those arrested have not been convicted of any crime, according to the libertarian-leaning Cato Institute. ICE temporarily stopped using Hanscom Field for transport flights last summer but resumed operations in the fall.  

“You do what you can do, being somewhere where you can cheer on the people fighting the good fight,” said AJ Fripp of Lincoln.

An area doctor who gave his name only as John handed out hand warmers, water and tissues for the protesters. Over the summer, he also helped a couple of people who fainted from the heat. The protesters “are people whoa actually give a damn,” he said. “It’s worth doing, I think.”

The protesters’ actions at Hanscom and elsewhere are “all about undermining the pillars of ICE,” such as the airfield services operations companies such as Signature Aviation that support the charter flights, said Andy Platt of Acton. “They’re not being forthright and honest in their role in facilitating these flights… this is all being supported by these myriad companies that may in some cases have good reputations to maintain.”

Among the regular Friday protesters are members of LincolnWitness.org, many of whom staged a nighttime vigil at Lincoln Town Hall in January. The group’s calendar lists future “De-ICE Hanscom” standouts as well as other area protests.

After the protesters had been there for a while, a counter-protester (a regular figure at these events and “our resident loony-tunes,” as one protester described her) arrived and harangued the group from the traffic island across from where they stood with their signs. Echoing familiar right-wing tropes, she said the government is “doing good to get rid of people who come through the open border — criminals, murderers, rapists [running around] while we were shut in our homes wearing masks” during the pandemic.

The woman, who would not give her name or hometown, went on to assert that the Epstein files had exonerated President Trump of any wrongdoing and that ICE protests around the country included “Antifa, No Kings, Jews Against ICE, and the Palestinian flag.”

Massport runs Hanscom Field but has no direct involvement in scheduling or operating flights and, as a federally obligated airport, does not have the power to restrict any legal flights, Massport spokesman Jennifer Mehigan told the Bedford Citizen in late January.

“ICE flights are coordinated and managed exclusively by the fixed base operators (FBOs),” she said. “Any questions about ICE flight details should be directed to the Department of Homeland Security.”

In January, Gov. Maura Healey demanded that two private airline companies, GlobalX Airlines and Eastern Air Express, stop providing flights from Hanscom Field for ICE to remove Massachusetts residents who have been detained.

“Flying these residents out of state and away from their support systems and legal counsel — often within hours of arrest — is intentionally cruel and purposely obstructs the due process and legal representation they are owed. This is not the justice we believe in or stand for in Massachusetts or as Americans. This practice must stop,” Healey said in a Dec. 15 letter to then-Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and Acting ICE Director Todd Lyon.

Avelo Airlines, a commercial airline serving airports including the one in Wilmington, Del., announced on Jan. 9 that it was ending its nine-month-old partnership with ICE. The announcement came a week after two Delaware lawmakers introduced legislation to pressure the company to terminate its contract with ICE.

It’s unclear whether GlobalX Airlines is still flying ICE detainees out of Hanscom Field.

Click images below for larger versions and captions.

ICE-owl
ICE-notcleared
ICE-flag
ICE-pair
ICE-counter
ICE-bible

Category: Hanscom Air Field Leave a Comment

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  • Library HVAC project postponed; 0% tax increase in FY27 March 13, 2026
  • Dark Skies group finalizes zoning amendment proposal March 12, 2026
  • News acorns March 11, 2026
  • Theodore A. Cerri, 1926–2026 March 11, 2026
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