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Wellesley health checkup: Strong resources, lingering mental health gaps

January 22, 2026 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

The Wellesley Health Department and an outside research partner earlier this month revealed findings from a community health assessment conducted as part of the town’s plans to spend Opioid Settlement Funds from state lawsuits against corporate drug makers and sellers.

You can watch the presentation from Trendline Analysis via a Wellesley Media recording of the Jan. 8 Board of Health meeting. Expect the report and related interactive dashboard to become publicly available via the Health Department at some point.


The Wellesley Health Department is holding a session on Feb. 23, 6pm at the main library to discuss study results and foster ideas from members of the public regarding opioid abatement fund programs.


The survey results were largely not surprising. Overall, Wellesley residents are healthy, according to the study.

That’s not to say there aren’t plenty of areas to watch and address. Mental health was cited as the top concern in a ranked choice question, for example (though among older residents, housing was #1). The biggest barrier to health services is waiting time, busy Wellesley residents said, and that’s not so different from people in other communities the researchers have surveyed.

health assessment survey

Researcher Kendall Bennett dove into substance use and risk factors, and found that mental health is the leading driver of substance use, followed by stress, peer pressure, and physical pain.

Fortunately, Wellesley has “more health navigation support or health resources than pretty much anywhere we’ve ever looked at,” Bennett said. But the fact that almost half of those surveyed said they wouldn’t know where to look for mental health help if needed “presents a giant opportunity, especially when 20% of people have experienced mental health challenges in the past 12 months, and 10% of people said they experienced or had someone in their home experience substance use issues,” she said.

The researchers found that hospitalizations in Wellesley of people using opioids, heroin, or marijuana are extremely low. One EMT interviewed said they’d used narcan, to address an opioid overdose, just once.

“When you’re looking to use your opioid [abatement] funds, I understand why you might have some challenges, especially with the guidelines they put into place,” Bennett said. Substance use can be challenging to address in a well-resourced town like Wellesley as well because people might be better able to hide their issues, or handle them discretely through private care.

While adults in town have concerns about youth use of alcohol, vaping, and other substances, the researchers found that use among youth in town appears to be relatively low, especially since the COVID-19 pandemic in Wellesley and elsewhere. Alcohol use is one area where there are opportunities to address youth behavior, Bennett said, especially among students who go to college in town (in one year, Babson cited one in 33 undergrads for alcohol-related infractions, which is high vs. other nearby schools).

Recommendations include expanded youth education programs (maybe something like a youth substance use coalition), and more discreet support options for youths and adults. This also could include adults to take a closer look at their own behavior and model setting, such as those who bring booze to tailgates or walk around with it on Halloween during trick or treating.

On mental health, a big challenge is getting services for children, from neuro/psych assessments to talk therapy, and working it into young people’s busy schedules. Bennett complimented a focus group of Wellesley High students, who she said had good suggestions about how to weave mental health support into school days.

One challenge for adults in Wellesley has been shifting from high-powered careers into retirement. Social workers also said it can be difficult to identify some cognitive decline because so many people in town are so highly educated and are starting at such a high cognitive level.

Wellesley already offers many resources on the mental health front, though Bennett said the town could benefit by better syncing up its personnel and programs across departments, especially where they are working with the same families or individuals. Developing formal pathways between departments is a common recommendation by the firm to communities it works with.

The health assessment appears to have overlapped in parts with a recently released senior needs assessment done on behalf of the Wellesley Council on Aging. As in that study, seniors cited transportation challenges in accessing health services, social isolation, and housing issues.

Based on this initial survey it’s possible a deeper dive into some data could happen in the future. For example, questions were asked about what the drivers might be for mental health issues and what recommendations might be made to head some of them off.


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Government

What your representatives will discuss & vote on at Wellesley Annual Town Meeting

January 21, 2026 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

The Wellesley Select Board this week signed off on the warrant for Annual Town Meeting, scheduled to start on March 30 at 7pm at Wellesley High School and expected to last into April.

The warrant contains a list of 36 articles that will be discussed and voted on by elected Town Meeting members (technically, they will vote on motions under the articles). This has been described by town leadership as the smallest number of articles on an Annual Town Meeting warrant in memory.

Members of the public are welcome to attend the meetings, which will also be shown live by Wellesley Media and posted as recordings afterwards.

The town’s appointed Advisory Committee, which vets articles ahead of Town Meeting and issues a report on them, will hold a public hearing on the aarrant articles on Wednesday, February 25 at 7:30 p.m. in the Juliani Room at Town Hall.

This Town Meeting is notable in that the town and school budgets will be split and discussed separately. A proposal was made to do this the last time around, but it came too late in the game.

The Department of Public Works will have a super busy meeting, sponsoring about a third of all articles. These cover requested spending for plans or work on Weston Road, Great Plain Avenue, the water system, and the DPW campus itself, among other things.

The town will look to get Town Meeting’s OK for spending on a new Comprehensive Plan and the Natural Resources Commission seeks creation of a stabilization fund that would build up reserves to allow for possible land purchases down the road in a more efficient way.

A hot topic at recent Town Meetings—Residential Incentive Overlays (RIOs)—will make it back to the floor for a proposed zoning bylaw change. An effort to amend the bylaw at the 2025 Annual Town Meeting fell short, but a task force that later emerged has paved the way for a Planning Board-sponsored article to make amendments. RIOs are a tool used for some housing developments.

There are no citizens petitions on this year’s warrant.


The Swellesley Report welcomes letters to the editor on Wellesley-related topics.

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Filed Under: Town Meeting

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Wellesley Symphony Orchestra announces narrator for “Lincoln Portrait”

January 21, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

Dr. David Podell, Mass Bay President
Dr. David Podell, President of MassBay

The Wellesley Symphony Orchestra (WSO) has announced that Dr. David Podell, President of Massachusetts Bay Community College, will narrate the orchestra’s upcoming performance of Aaron Copland’s “Lincoln Portrait” on Sunday, February 8, 2pm, at Wellesley High School, 50 Rice St.

David Podell, Ph.D. joined MassBay in 2016 as its sixth president. A long-time academic leader and scholar, Dr. Podell’s passions have focused on expanding higher education access and providing high-quality educational opportunities to help students advance their academic goals, advance their careers, and enrich their lives.

“We are very pleased to welcome Dr. Podell to the stage,” said Carol Davidson, President of WSO. “David Podell is a strong supporter of the Wellesley Symphony. We could not ask for a better partner towards our mission of promoting and introducing classical music of diverse composers to a broad audience throughout MetroWest and beyond.”

“Lincoln Portrait”, composed in 1942, combines Copland’s stirring orchestral music with excerpts from Abraham Lincoln’s speeches and writings. The work has become a celebrated piece of Americana that honors Lincoln’s legacy of democracy and freedom. Dr. Podell adds, “I am moved by the beauty of Copland’s music and the power of Lincoln’s words. To me, Lincoln Portrait couldn’t be more timely.”

In addition to Lincoln Portrait, the orchestra will perform Sinfonia India by Carlos Chavez and Ludwig van Beethoven’s Symphony No. 3 – Eroica.

MassBay serves approximately 6,000 students from the greater Boston and the Metrowest region on campuses in Wellesley Hills, Framingham, and Ashland. Through transformative education, MassBay contributes to the growing regional economy and cultivates the potential of their students, empowering them to thrive in our local and global communities

Now in its 77 th season, the Wellesley Symphony is the orchestra-in-residence at MassBay, directed by Mark Latham. The Symphony presents six concerts from October through May and performs at MassBay’s Spring Commencement.

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Obituary

Dr. Julia Hendrix Miwa, 62; Organic Chemist, Educator, Mentor, and Beloved Family and Community Member

January 21, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

Dr. Julia Hendrix Miwa, age 62, of Wellesley, MA, passed away peacefully on November 11, 2025, after a year-long battle with a rare epithelioid sarcoma cancer. Born January 24, 1963, she grew up in Teaneck, New Jersey and went on to lead an extraordinary life defined
by enduring curiosity, deep engagement with family and community, and remarkable generosity toward others.

Dr. Julia Hendrix Miwa
Dr. Julia Hendrix Miwa

Julia, the fourth of six children, was born in Bethesda, Maryland to Ellis and Jean Hendrix. She graduated from Teaneck High School, actively participating in a variety of extracurricular activities, including track and field, swimming, and the marching band. Her love of science led her to major in Chemistry at Haverford College, where she excelled both academically and athletically. She helped build the nascent Haverford Women’s Swimming Team and eventually became the starting goalkeeper for the college’s Women’s Lacrosse Team. Upon graduation, she returned to Teaneck and taught Chemistry and Physics at her high school alma mater for two years and inspired the next generation of students before pursuing graduate studies in Chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

At MIT, Julia joined the Lansbury lab, where she successfully synthesized the complex amyloid protein implicated in Alzheimer’s disease and earned her PhD. She was an avid cyclist, completing century rides to Lake Winnipesaukee and Provincetown. She combined her swimming and lacrosse skills with weightlifting to become a formidable water polo goalkeeper.

With an eye towards teaching at the collegiate level, Julia accepted a post-doctoral research position in the Bartlett Group at UC Berkeley. There, she expanded her research on protein folding and long-chain amino acid synthesis. Living in the Bay Area, she embraced new activities such as rock climbing and grass doubles volleyball. Two years into her post-doc, she applied for and was awarded a tenure-track teaching opportunity at Wellesley College. This undergraduate-only institution was her dream job: teaching advanced chemistry topics to exceptional students in small classrooms through lectures, labs, and research projects. Julia’s engaging and enthusiastic teaching style quickly earned her recognition among students and faculty, including the prestigious Pinansky Prize for Outstanding Teaching.

Over more than three decades at Wellesley College, she explored innovative instructional approaches, with a focus on making her notoriously challenging organic chemistry subject material more intuitive and accessible. One of her most significant pedagogical contributions
was the creation of a tutorial-style, chemistry-centric, quantitative skills track, designed to help students from underserved high schools strengthen their math abilities without delaying their academic progress. Longitudinal studies determined that her students subsequently
matched the performance of their more highly prepared peers, and succeeded equally in STEM majors. Her augmented-track teaching approach has since been adopted by other departments, such as Economics and Physics, opening more doors for disadvantaged students.

Julia’s impact extended beyond the classroom through her tireless mentoring. Students credit her with influencing their career choices in medicine, public service, research, and teaching. Most significantly, she supported her students as whole individuals, regularly attending their theatrical performances, choral concerts, and athletic competitions, enthusiastically present as a “fan in the stands” who understood there was more to life than problem sets.

In her personal life, Julia was a loving wife, mother, daughter, sister, and friend. She was an adventurous traveler, versatile athlete and coach, creative “dance mom,” and someone known for her generosity, patience, humor, and unwavering support. As a first-generation college graduate, she took pride in seeing both her daughters complete their own degrees. She served on the Wellesley Community Children’s Center Board and ran the 2023 Boston Marathon to raise funds for the center. She volunteered with the Wellesley ABC program and dedicated countless hours to Wellesley POPS, creating and altering costumes for high-school theater and chorus productions.

Julia is survived by her husband Brett Miwa; daughters Elise (married to Alex Guenette) and Cordelia; her mother Jean Case Hendrix; siblings Kathleen Schimmoller, Susan Hendrix, Mary Occhipinti, and John Hendrix; a large and loving extended family; and cherished pets Miller and Ramona.

There will be a Celebration of Life for Julia Miwa on January 24, 2026 at 1PM in the Wellesley College Houghton Chapel. Not coincidentally, that date would have been her 63rd birthday, chosen so all can commemorate the blessing that was her coming into our world. Inspired by her undergraduate experience at Haverford College, the event will draw upon the format of a Quaker Meeting, beginning with an extended period of silence for personal reflection, and followed by opportunities for some who knew her to share brief comments for others to contemplate in turn.  A reception will follow the celebration.

For anyone who would like to attend this event virtually at that time, there will also be a live zoom option at this link

In lieu of flowers, the family welcomes donations to support future chemistry students at Wellesley College using the designation “Julia Miwa Chemistry Department Fund” at wellesley.edu/give


If you’d like us to run a complete obituary of your loved one on Swellesley, please send to theswellesleyreport@gmail.com

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Filed Under: Obituaries & remembrances

Hey, Y.A.L.L.—Wellesley Free Library’s teen engagement takes center stage

January 21, 2026 by Deborah Brown 1 Comment

Wellesley Free Library, winter 2024For years, the Wellesley Free Library’s Teen Advisory Group (TAG) has been the driving force behind the library’s most popular events for its young patrons.TAG is the ultimate incubator for library fun. This flexible group, with a membership of both teens and tweens, focuses on sparking and steering library programming. TAG has helped launched hit events like Random Movie Night, the vocal showcase of Teen Karaoke, and the creative outlet of Paint and Sip. If you’ve enjoyed a library program tailored for youth, chances are TAG helped dream it up.

Now librarians have doubled down on teen power with the creation of another group—the Young Adult Leadership League (Y.A.L.L.). Specifically designed for high school students eager for deep, impactful community service, Y.A.L.L. will undertake long-term, focused volunteer projects to directly benefit the wider Wellesley community.

Their inaugural mission? The incredibly touching Book Bags for Newborns project, generously sponsored by the Wellesley Library Foundation.

“The students are putting in their valuable time to do research and help create designs that will result in donated book bags for new parents at Newton-Wellesley Hospital,” teen librarian Andy Yzaguirre said in an email.

While both programs empower the library’s young patrons, Y.A.L.L. was specifically established in response to a clear call from high schoolers themselves for a structured, community-oriented volunteer pathway, transforming their passion for service into tangible local impact.

Want to get involved? Email welteens@minlib.net

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Filed Under: Books, Clubs, Wellesley Free Library

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Save the date: Wellesley Choral Society to present ‘Around the World’ concert on Jan. 31

January 21, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

Wellesley Choral Society
Wellesley Choral Society (courtesy photo)

 

The Wellesley Choral Society will present its second concert of the 2025-2026 season on Saturday, Jan. 31, at 7:00pm at the Wellesley Hills Congregational Church, 207 Washington St. The theme of the concert is “Around the World.”  All the music will have a geographic location in the title or lyrics.

The music performed will be a mix of movie, Broadway, light classical, and popular songs. Chorus members will be highlighted as soloists and in small ensembles.  The Wellesley Choral Society is led by Music Director Edward Whalen and will be accompanied on piano by Hisako Hiratsuka.

The event is in the style of a casual pop/cabaret performance. The audience is seated at tables and there will be complimentary food and drink, a silent auction, and a sing-along.

The Wellesley Hills Congregational Church is accessible and there is ample free parking in the church lot and on the street.  Tickets may be purchased at the door; general admission is $20, seniors and students $15, ages 12 and under are free.  A limited number of free tickets for Wellesley seniors are available at the Wellesley Council on Aging (COA).  Seniors may call the Wellesley COA to express interest at (781) 235-3961.  Items acquired in the silent auction can be paid for in cash, by check, or credit card.


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Wellesley takes part in ‘Free America’ walkout

January 20, 2026 by admin

More than a hundred people gathered in front of Wellesley Town Hall and across the street on Tuesday afternoon in front of the library as part of the nationwide “Free America” walkout on the one-year anniversary of the current federal administration taking office.

People held signs, spoke out, and waved to passersby in the latest rally along that stretch of Washington Street.

Free America walkout
Photo by Iris Zhan

 
Free America walkout
Photo by Iris Zhan

 
Free America walkout
Photo by Iris Zhan

 
Free America walkout
Photo by Iris Zhan

 
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Photo by Iris Zhan

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Filed Under: Government, Politics

Community

Martin Luther King Jr. Day celebration brings message of hope to Wellesley

January 20, 2026 by Maya Hazarika Leave a Comment

J.R. Harris at MLK Jr. Day event at Tishman Commons, Wellesley College
J.R. Harris addresses audience at MLK Jr. Day event (photo by Iris Zhan)

 

The Tishman Commons at Wellesley College filled with community members on Monday morning for World of Wellesley’s 26th annual Martin Luther King Jr. Day program. This year’s gathering explored Dr. King’s legacy through the wilderness adventures of J.R. Harris, an 81-year-old explorer with six decades of solo expeditions across remote landscapes that have taught him lessons about endurance and moral clarity.

Harris, author of “Way Out There: Adventures of a Wilderness Trekker,” named one of Backpacker magazine’s 50 best hiking books of all time, began with his story in Queens. A reluctant trip to a Boy Scout mountain camp sparked his interest in wilderness.

What followed during his keynote was a visual journey (through a recorded video) of his decades of exploration through diverse mountains and regions. The underlying message was of courage: “If you want it badly enough, whatever it is, you can do it.”

J.R. Harris at MLK Jr. Day event at Tishman Commons, Wellesley College
(Photo by Iris Zhan)

The presentation took a serious turn when Harris described what he called “a bad day or a good day” in Tasmania’s remote Southwest Arthur range. Nature, indifferent to his experience, nearly killed him. “You can’t [b-s-] alone,” he reflected. “It’s just you, whether you come home or not.” He learned humility is as important as courage.

However, it was his engagement with Indigenous cultures that affected him most. His studies of Inuit traditions were more than reading; Harris went there and learned firsthand how communities navigate their relationship with harsh environments.

He lived his dreams for six decades, almost always unsupported and alone. But exploration, he explained, became more than adventure; it became “a lens to understand” broader human struggles.

The connection to Dr. King’s legacy emerged through Harris’s later work. As the first African American on the board of directors of the Explorers Club and chair of their diversity, equity, and inclusion committee, he has worked to preserve what he calls “the instinct to explore.” As one participant later observed, “Young people need to know that there are so many ways to be in the world and be an example.”

His central insight landed with quiet force: “Mother Nature doesn’t care who you are, it doesn’t discriminate, it’s for everyone and treats everyone the same.” In the wilderness, Harris found a space where worth is measured not by social position but by character and preparation, themes reflected in Dr. King’s vision of a society judged “by the content of character rather than the color of skin.”

 

Connecting wilderness ideas, contemporary challenges

 

After the keynote, attendees participated in table discussions guided by questions designed to connect Harris’s wilderness ideas with contemporary challenges. One table discussed courage without recognition. A participant shared stories from Minneapolis, where people “step forward anonymously with great courage to bring food” to residents afraid to leave their homes. Others discussed priests in Mexico preparing meals for migrants riding trains north, and undocumented workers who “dare to still go out and work” despite the constant threat of arrest.

World of Wellesley President Rama K. Ramaswamy
World of Wellesley President Rama K. Ramaswamy (photo by Iris Zhan)

 

World of Wellesley President Rama K. Ramaswamy said the focus on real-life experience was intentional. The organization chose Harris “to broaden our keynote voices to include resilience, patience, and moral courage,” key to Dr. King’s vision of lasting change. The discussion questions were meant “to encourage depth rather than coverage,” prompting participants to see how Dr. King’s values “show up in everyday choices — how to live them in the here and now, not just remember them as history.” After more than 20 years with the group, Ramaswamy said MLK Day programs work best when they focus on honest reflection and shared responsibility, not “one-day performances.”

The conversation turned to the experience of people who grow up in tight-knit survival communities, develop bonds shaped by shared struggle, but face isolation when moving into professional environments. “They sometimes lose the support of their local community,” one participant explained. “And that takes some courage to thrive without the support of very close friends and community.”

MLK Jr. Day event discussion
Attendees discuss topics inspired by the keynote address (photo by Iris Zhan)

 

Another table tackled the challenge of sustained commitment in a culture that prioritizes quick wins and visible results. A member of the Wellesley Select Board shared their group’s conclusion: “It looks like commitment to something…being willing to have disagreements but being respectful in the conversation…developing courage to accept backsliding and opposition and tackling difficult questions, but meeting people where they are. Don’t lose heart, or you’re going to get stuck.”

The discussion questions themselves revealed the program’s sophistication. Attendees considered how solitude sharpens moral clarity while community refines it through accountability, and where these “two ways of knowing need each other.” They examined what happens when progress feels incremental and how to maintain commitment over the long term.

Laura Van Zandt, treasurer of World of Wellesley, explained that the organization brings in different speakers each year, and this year’s choice reflected outreach. The MLK Day program, which has shifted from breakfast to lunch over the years, consistently uses keynote addresses with facilitated discussions. “Other times you end up at a table with people you don’t know, and you talk about, you know, what might be difficult things,” Van Zandt noted.

As the program concluded, attendees learned about upcoming World of Wellesley initiatives: the 2026 Community Book Read featuring “Dear America: Notes of an Undocumented Citizen” by Jose Antonio Vargas, and a Feb. 1 reading of Frederick Douglass’s “What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?” The continuity suggested an organization committed to what one speaker called the long work, the kind that happens when speed and visibility aren’t the measures of progress.

That restlessness and willingness to explore new places or social spaces reflects Dr. King’s legacy, not only on his holiday, but in ongoing discussions about progress.

 


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Filed Under: Education, Holidays, Neighbors

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