Thursday, October 4, 2012
The Special Town Meeting commences at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 10, in Town Hall.
Today is Thursday, Oct. 4. Here are five things you need to know: 1. The Special Town Meeting Warrant, Board of Selectmen Report and Finance Committee Report (attached) are now online. The meeting will be held at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 10, in Town Hall. For more information, see the town’s Town Meeting website. 2. From the town: Overnight on Mass. Ave. (Schouler Court to Brattle Street): The town’s contractor D&R Paving will be performing overnight road paving on Mass. Ave. (Schouler Court to Brattle Street), for one night, starting on Thursday, Oct. 4, at 8 p.m. to Friday, Oct. 5, at 5 a.m. (weather permitting). Performing this work at night will decrease potential public safety issues inherent with large equipment and commuter traffic as…
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Tuesday, September 25, 2012
The Board of Selectmen unanimously agreed Monday that a proposed leaf-blower compromise wasn't ready for the Special Town Meeting on Oct. 10 and that a Town Meeting leaf-blower committee is the way to go.
After much deliberation Monday, the Board of Selectmen agreed to ask Town Meeting members to form a new leaf-blower committee at the Special Town Meeting on Wednesday, Oct. 10, instead of asking them to act on a new leaf-blower “compromise.” At Monday’s meeting, board chairman Kevin Greeley brought forth a proposed warrant article (below), which was crafted from input at the first leaf-blower subcommittee meeting last week and replaced the seasonal ban on gas-powered leaf blowers with seasonal restrictions. However, after a lengthy discussion, the board unanimously voted to go the committee route instead, as selectmen, namely Daniel Dunn, believed the article needed “too many refinements.” For one, Town Manager Adam Chapdelaine said the …
Monday, September 24, 2012
The Special Town Meeting is set for 8 p.m., Wednesday, Oct. 10., in Town Hall. The two leaf-blower articles are expected to generate the most buzz.
- GOVERNMENT
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Monday, September 24, 2012
For more on the Special Town Meeting: "Selectmen Reluctantly Schedule Special Town Meeting on Seasonal Leaf-Blower Ban."
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Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Stephen Harrington, a Town Meeting member from Precinct 13, responds to Selectmen who recently criticized his decision to submit a petition for a Special Town Meeting on Arlington's seasonal ban on gas-powered leaf blowers.
- GOVERNMENT
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Wednesday, September 12, 2012
The following is a Letter to the Editor from Arlington resident Stephen Harrington, a Town Meeting member from Precinct 13. Harrington recently submitted a petition for a Special Town Meeting regarding Arlington's seasonal ban on gas-powered leaf blowers. His decision to submit the petition was criticized by Selectmen at their Monday meeting. The Mystic River Watershed Association (MyRWA) is a private non-profit that has served, since 1972, the communities of Somerville, Medford and Arlington to protect and restore the Mystic River by mobilizing volunteers. A laudable mission. Most of MyRWA's funding comes from State and local grants of which 20 percent is given in compensation to the executive director, according to the most recent IRS …
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
With 'hands tied,' selectmen called the meeting for Wednesday, Oct. 10.
The Board of Selectmen scheduled a Special Town Meeting Monday to address Arlington’s seasonal ban on gas-powered leaf blowers, but make no mistake, they didn’t want to. “If there was anyway I could vote against this, I certainly would,” Selectman Steven Byrne said before the vote, which set the meeting for Wednesday, Oct. 10. “I find this (Special Town Meeting) to be a waste of town resources.” Byrne’s sentiments were echoed by his colleagues. “I wish I could vote against it too,” the board’s chairman, Kevin Greeley, said, “but our hands our tied.” The board had to call the Special Town Meeting because of a citizen petition submitted by Stephen Harrington, a Town Meeting member from Precinct 13. ----- Do you agree with Selectman Steven …
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Wednesday, August 29, 2012
The day after the Board of Selectmen unanimously agreed to establish a committee to review the ban, a Town Meeting member took matters into his own hands.
A Town Meeting member submitted a petition to the town Tuesday to call a Special Town Meeting regarding Arlington’s seasonal ban on gas-powered leaf blowers. Stephen Harrington, of Precinct 13, who opposes the ban, said nearly 250 registered voters in Arlington signed his petition – only 200 signatures are needed to force a Special Town Meeting. ----- Do you support Harrington’s petition for a Special Town Meeting? Let us know by posting a comment below. ----- If Harrington’s petition is validated by the town, the Special Town Meeting would be the second attempt to repeal the ban, which was passed at Town Meeting in April. A group of landscapers collected more than 1,400 signatures in May to force a Special Election. At the Special …
Friday, July 20, 2012
Arlington resident Rich Carreiro, a former Precinct 19 Town Meeting member, writes that members have near-zero accountability for their actions due to the current voting structure.
- OPINION
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Friday, July 20, 2012
The following is a Letter to the Editor from Arlington resident, Rich Carreiro, a former Precinct 19 Town Meeting member. July 19th's vote on the leaf-blower ban once again shows what many of us have known for years -- Arlington's "representative" town meeting is anything but. Why? Because Town Meeting Members have near-zero accountability for their actions. If you want to know how your TMMs voted, the only way to even begin to have a chance to find out is to get a seat in the gallery at Town Meeting, hope that you can see your TMMs from where you are sitting, and when a counted vote comes along, see which way they vote. Good luck! Now, having said that I am nonethless firmly convinced that Arlington's Town Meeting is a far better form of …
Arlington resident Stephen Harrington, a Precinct 13 Town Meeting member, writes that the seasonal leaf-blower ban may have been upheld, but the special-election results speak for themselves.
- OPINION
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Friday, July 20, 2012
The following is a Letter to the Editor from Arlington resident Stephen Harrington, a Precinct 13 Town Meeting member. On Thursday, July 19, 8,158 voters turned out for a special election deciding whether to overturn a ban that the 2012 Town Meeting had placed on private use of leaf blowers. More voters turned out for this referendum than in any of the last 10 annual town elections even with a six hour voting window, half that of a usual election; even though many people had vacation plans during this hot summer; even though most of east Arlington was in the midst of a clean-up from a devastating microburst less than 24 hours before. The result of the referendum was overwhelmingly in support of overturning this ill-considered ban. More …
A look at how Arlington's neighborhoods voted on the seasonal ban of gas-powered leaf blowers, which was upheld.
Seasonal Leaf-Blower Ban Upheld in Arlington 1
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Thursday, July 19, 2012
Opponents of the ban fell 241 "No" votes shy of a repeal.
Despite taking Thursday’s vote by more than a 2-to-1 margin, opponents of Arlington’s seasonal ban on gas-powered leaf blowers, which was passed at Town Meeting in April, fell 241 “No” votes shy of repealing the ban. State law required opponents to get at least 5,780 “No” votes, which represents 20 percent of Arlington’s 28,898 registered voters, in order to overturn the action of Town Meeting. Instead, they got 5,539, or roughly 68 percent of the 8,158 votes cast. There were 2,619 “Yes” votes. Thursday’s Special Election had 28 percent voter turnout overall. By comparison, April’s Town Elections, which featured hotly contested races for both the Board of Selectmen and School Committee, as well as numerous Town Meeting member races due to …
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Arlington Town Hall
730 Massachusetts Ave, Arlington, MA
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John B
6:29 pm on Thursday, October 4, 2012
That savings has nothing to do with your article.   more ›