Wellesley booze news: Move to bring beer & wine to grocery stores renewed

jimmiet_A_nice_cold_oneDavid Himmelberger, attorney to the Wellesley stars, and client Peter Katsikaris of Fells Market, were given the floor at this week’s Board of Selectmen meeting to discuss the possible sale of beer and wine at Wellesley grocery stores (Roche Bros.,  also had reps at the meeting…and Whole Foods would be a likely suspect). Himmelberger did all the talking, but claimed his client is constantly being asked by customers buying their Sunday roasts why they can’t also purchase some wine there.

The attorney and client have been keeping a close eye on the movement to allow grocery stores to sell beer and wine in nearby communities, including Weston. They aim to get an article on the warrant for the December special Town Meeting, preferably with the Board of Selectmen’s blessing (as opposed to just going the citizen’s petition route).

An effort to allow local stores to sell booze has been in the works for a while, with a proposal by Fells Market to get something on the most recent Town Meeting aired in February but shelved shortly before it in order to fully flesh it out. The proposal did not push for actual dedicated liquor stores, like those now opening in Needham, and those that border Wellesley in Newton and Natick. Lingering questions include exactly which businesses in town would be considered grocery stores (Wasik’s?).

The general timeline supporters would like to see is that the Board of Selectmen back an article for the Town Meeting warrant, approval at Town Meeting in December, state legislature approval and then to put the matter to a vote by residents, possibly next year. From there, the Board of Selectmen would deal with applications/licenses, etc.

Allowing Wellesley grocery stores into the alcoholic beverages business would continue a gradual loosening of regulations in town. Residents last year voted in favor of allowing restaurants with 50 or more seats the right to apply for liquor licenses, whereas previously you needed 100 seats. Smaller businesses have argued that they found it tough, with being able to sell alcoholic drinks, to compete with bigger establishments in town and in nearby communities.

RELATED: Who says Wellesley’s a dry town?

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Wellesley resident urges fresh thinking on emergency action in light of Morses Pond tragedy

Morses Pond, Wellesley MAWellesley resident Trond Undheim, who spoke up at the Board of Selectmen meeting on Monday regarding the recent drowning at Morses Pond, has published an expanded explanation of his thoughts on how to best make use of human resources during an emergency situation. As Undheim stated during the meeting, he was at the beach that day and his efforts to involve himself and other adults on the scene in the emergency response were unsuccessful.

Undheim, a management expert who lectures at MIT, writes in part:

“I do not blame the lifeguards. The eight lifeguards I saw conducting water rescue were professional. I do not blame the first responders, police, firemen or AMR. I do not blame the Wellesley Town recreation department or indeed anybody else. I do not blame parents or the drowning victim’s caretakers. This was a tough situation, but nevertheless one we need to learn from.

I want to start a debate about the risks of letting our kids and youngsters swim and play at Morses pond. I also propose to change the Emergency Action Plan (EAP) and missing person protocol at Morses pond to allow for volunteer efforts, in and out of water. Furthermore, I think that authorities, large and small, should listen to good ideas, regardless where they are coming from, even in a stressed situation.  This is simply good practice.”

Another Wellesley resident this week made a plea for the community to show its support for the Morses Pond lifeguards and other first responders.

The town is using outside consultants to examine its Morses Pond safety procedures and the safety conditions at the pond, which is still closed to the public. Board Chair Terri Tsagaris said during the Monday meeting that public sessions will likely be held to give more residents a chance to share their thoughts once the consultants have done some of their work, and that an online venue for asking questions and getting information might also be made available.

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Major experiment: Wellesley High to become interactive science museum for a day

scientistWellesley Education Foundation (WEF), the nonprofit outfit that promotes Wellesley Public Schools, is organizing a Wellesley Science & Technology Expo for April 5, 2014 that will convert Wellesley High School into a science museum for a day.

The townwide event “will promote hands-on science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) learning through exhibits, lectures, movies, and demonstrations at Wellesley High School.” Residents of all ages are invited to take part in this event, which will draw on the expertise of those at local colleges and businesses, and from the community at large.

It might be a nice complement as well to the annual WEF Spelling Bee, which often challenges participants with oodles of scientific words.

Smaller school-focused science fairs featuring student projects or outside demonstrations (like at Hunnewell Elementary’s Science Night in recent years) have also been held in town.

If you have ideas or questions regarding the Wellesley Science & Technology Expo, here’s the contact email for the event: wellesleysciencetechexpo@gmail.com.

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All Hail Wellesley!

Photo via Mitch Fournier

Photo via Mitch Fournier

Wellesley resident Mitch Fournier writes: “I see your rainbow pix and raise you some hail from yesterday’s storm.”

RELATED: Quintuple double rainbows over Wellesley

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A plea to support Wellesley Morses Pond lifeguards

Morses Pond, Wellesley MA, 2010A Wellesley resident has posted on Tumblr a plea for the community to rally around Morses Pond lifeguards in the wake of the recent drowning at the local breach.

Mark Nikolewski writes that he swung by the Board of Selectmen’s meeting last night to get an update on the Morses Pond investigation, to share concern about the recent push to boost attendance there and to express his support for local emergency responders and lifeguards. He notes that this portion of the meeting, during which Wellesley Police Chief Terry Cunningham provided an update and discussed the hiring of outside consultants to review Morses Pond safety practices, was brief, so he missed it and didn’t get a chance to have his say.

In the Tumblr blog, Nikolewski focuses on the lifeguards and writes in part:

Before leaving I noticed a group of folks standing outside the hall. Turns out they were a group of Morses pond staff, lifeguards and their families. 

They said they had no idea when the pond would reopen -but that they’d be ready this weekend.

When I realized who they were I took the opportunity to share my appreciation for all that they did and do for us. I let them know that we’re behind them and understand that this must’ve been an awful experience -that I couldn’t imagine the grief and pain they must be feeling.

Many an eye welled up. One of them said said “I wished you’d have been here earlier to say that in the meeting.”

I was left with the distinct impression that these folks are hurting that if we as residents could find some way to express our gratitude and support of our lifeguards it would really make a difference in their lives.

Nikolewski goes on to say he’d love to get suggestions for how the community can respond to these first responders.

Chief Cunningham said during the Selectmen meeting that it’s possible the pond could reopen to swimmers as soon as this weekend, depending on what the consultant finds.

 

Posted in Morses Pond | 2 Comments

Wellesley murder docu-drama lays it on even thicker than we could have hoped for

screenshot_366The writers for Investigation Discovery’s “Sins & Secrets: Murder, Lies & Bondage Ties” TV program — the story of the 1999 murder at Morses Pond of Mabel Greineder by her husband Dirk — reached deep into their thesaurus to paint a picture of Wellesley that contrasted sharply with the gruesome crime scene.

The show (which I sped through in between periods of the Bruins game) had barely started last night when out popped that go-to Swellesley term, “tony.” From there, viewers were treated to current/ex Boston Herald writers sharing their predictable points of view and actors who seemed familiar from pharmaceutical company commercials portraying the Greineders.

Viewers who stuck it out were absolutely bombarded with a wave of classic Swellesley adjectives and descriptions: “well-appointed mansions,” “exclusive,” “upper-class neighborhoods,” “peaceful bedroom community,” “affluent,” “lily-white” (twice), “decked out in the best [Halloween] costumes money can buy,” “well-heeled,” “well-bred,” and “upscale enclave.”  I learned that not unlike the “horndog” Dr. Dirk Greineder, who turned Wellesley into “his own sinful playground,” that “everyone in Wellesley has a guilty pleasure or two,” including the “diet-cheating trophy wives and preppy high-schoolers smoking in the boys’ bathroom.”

And about those Wellesley women: “They never leave their homes without their diamonds and pearls.”

Grimly, the show concluded that none of us have looked at passersby on Wellesley streets and our neighbors in town the same since the Greineder killing. Right.

By the way, this isn’t the first such true-crime show to shine the spotlight on the Greineder case: A&E’s City Confidential (“The Doctor’s Double Life”) did the same in 2003.

RELATED: Wellesley Greineder murder gets fresh TV rehash in “Murder, Lies & Bondage Ties.”

 

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Quintuple double rainbows over Wellesley

UPDATE: 2 more rainbow photos, one sent in by reader BK, who notes “Where else would the pot of gold be?”

Whole Foods rainbow june 2013

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And another from Wellesley’s MM, taken near Fenway Park:rainbow over fenway june 2013

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

After the storm Monday night, rainbows arose over Wellesley.

Instagram Photo

Instagram Photo

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