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The Swellesley Report

Since 2005: More than you really want to know about Wellesley, Mass.

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Top Stories

Commencement speakers headed to Wellesley
Watch Health Dept’s Community Needs Assessment forum
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Taste Buds Kitchen redefines the joy of cooking in Wellesley

April 3, 2026 by Deborah Brown Leave a Comment

For Adam Maleh, the kitchen has always been a place of joy, but it took years of whisking and sautéing to realize that the magic wasn’t just in the recipes.

“I discovered that I love cooking a long time ago,” says Maleh, the owner of Wellesley’s newest culinary destination. “But what I’ve realized is that more than the joy of cooking itself, what I really love is sharing cooking and sharing food with people that I love. That was ultimately what made me want to open Taste Buds Kitchen.”

Taste Buds Kitchen, Wellesley
Adam Maleh (center) and family celebrate the opening of Taste Buds Kitchen on Linden St.

 

Located at 161 Linden St., the 2,000-square-foot custom-designed kitchen studio is more than just a place to follow a recipe; it’s a happy place where the mess stays behind, but the memories travel home.

By day, Taste Buds is a Kids Kitchen, hosting baking workshops, summer camps, and birthday parties for aspiring chefs as young as two. By night, the space transforms into an grown-ups only BYOB kitchen, perfect for sophisticated date nights and  corporate team-building events.

The philosophy is simple: aspiring chefs of all ages are there to learn, laugh, and cook. Every session is designed to be hands-on and entertaining, ensuring that everyone creates a culinary masterpiece without the soul-sapping downer of clean-up.

Safety and inclusivity at the table

In true welcoming fashion Taste Buds understands the complexities of modern dietary needs. The studio does not cook with peanuts or tree nuts, nor are these ingredients part of their recipes. While they cannot guarantee that third-party ingredients were produced in nut-free facilities, they take rigorous steps to ensure no whole nuts, nut butters, oils, or flours enter their kitchen.

Taste Buds menus can be tailored for:

  • vegetarian preferences
  • gluten-free diets
  • dairy-free and egg-free requirements
  • vegan requirements

Taste Buds Kitchen, Wellesley

What’s cooking?

The upcoming schedule offers an array of crowd pleasers. Adults can try out “Rustic Italian” nights featuring chicken parmesan with wild mushroom and truffle oil risotto, or “Tasty Thai” sessions that offer gluten-free and dairy-free Pad Thai and pineapple chicken satay with nut-free Thai sauce.

Kids and families can have fun with “Under the Sea” cupcakes and “unicorn pizza” for ages 2-8; while the on Family Cooking Class (ages 6+) menu are Italian favorites like handmade pasta dough and lasagna cupcakes.

Events are offered seven days a week. As Maleh notes, the goal is always the same: sharing the love of food with the people who matter most.

Taste Buds Kitchen
161 Linden St., Wellesley
Open seven days a week


More food, more better

 

Rotary Taste of Wellesley—May 20

Taste of WellesleyLOCATION: Wellesley Country Club
BUY YOUR TICKETS TODAY here: https://taste-of-wellesley.square.site/


Charles River Chamber, Spring Seasonings—April 13
LOCATION: Newton Marriot

Where to eat in Wellesley—sponsored by black & blue Steak and Crab

Where to eat in Natick—more than 70 dining options

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Friday is Letters to the Editor day on The Swellesley Report

April 3, 2026 by admin

The Swellesley Report accepts letters to the editor. Letters must be of general local community interest and must be signed. Community shout-outs are also accepted and encouraged. For example, a non-profit may thank an organization for a donation received.
 

In a letter this week, a writer says Wellesley should “put students and public schools at the center of every major development decision.”

  • See more letters here.

How to submit your letter to the editor

 
The deadline is Wednesday at noon for letters to appear that week, or a week further out. Send letters to the editor to theswellesleyreport@gmail.com

Submitting a letter to the editor does not guarantee that your letter will be posted on The Swellesley Report.

Letters must be written for The Swellesley Report only—we do not accept form-type letters sent to multiple news agencies.

Please review detailed guidelines for letters to the editor here.


Please send tips, photos, ideas to theswellesleyreport@gmail.com

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Page Waterman, Wellesley
London Harness, Wellesley
Paul Macrina Electrical
Wellesley Wonderful Weekend

Wellesley Annual Town Meeting night #2: Split budget motions go smoothly, get approved

April 2, 2026 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

Wellesley Town Meeting on Tuesday, March 31 for the first time in decades voted on separate motions for town and school budgets. This dramatic change in protocol—proposed during last year’s Town Meeting and put forward by the Select Board for this spring—actually did not result in any dramatic results. Each motion, 8.2 for the town budget and 8.3 for the school budget, was overwhelmingly approved after just over an hour of presentations and questions/comments.

(See Wellesley Media recording of the March 31 session.)

The overall town and school budget adds up to $226.2m, with $121.5m on the municipal side, $96.8 on the school side, and $2.8 for free cash to balance the budget. The budget represents less than a 1% increase from the previous year’s, due largely to a smaller application of free cash for FY27 (which starts on July 1, 2026).

Municipal (non-school) budget

Presentations on the roughly $121.5m municipal budget were made by reps for the town, the Department of Public Works, and the Board of Library Trustees.

Select Board Chair Marjorie Freiman explained that splitting the town and school budgets into separate motions was done to allow for a clearer picture to Town Meeting members and residents of how funds under the overall budget (aka, omnibus budget) are spent when you break out shared expenses like those for healthcare.

“This was a challenging budget year in which the board requested level service budgets and maintenance of all staffing levels,” Freiman said, noting serious consideration was given to anticipated significant healthcare cost increases (that turned out not to be so large after all). “Boards and departments worked diligently to meet” the budget guidelines set out by the Select Board, she said. The town is also bargaining with all unions this year as it seeks to satisfy employees and maintain competitiveness in hiring and retaining these workers.

Beyond operating budgets, the board had requested a review of cash capital carryover from previous years and it was revealed that $6m was available from projects not started or completed. These available funds made it possible for the board to decrease cash capital outlays for FY27.

Wellesley Executive Director Meghan Jop took over the town presentation from there, building on her talk the previous night about the Town-Wide Financial Plan.

omnibus budget 27

One thing Jop and other town leaders have touted is Wellesley’s avoidance of an operating budget override for the 12th straight year, even as other communities are approving overrides or putting them up for vote (Natick, for example, adopted a $7m override last year). Wellesley continues to make conservative revenue assumptions, and is attempting to keep spending in line with that, having recommended 3% budget increases for most departments, including the big ones.

One area where revenue has increased is via motor vehicle excise taxes, as new multifamily housing developments have brought more cars to town. One area where expenses are lower relates to pension and other post-employment benefits (OPEB) contributions, as those programs get closer to being fully funded.

Department of Public Works Director Dave Cohen started off his dive into the proposed DPW level-services budget by joking about “there being no snow in the forecast,” an allusion to the busy winter his team had clearing snow and ice from Wellesley roads.

Among items he pointed out were $532k in capital deferrals to help the down balance its budget, and a projected decrease in Recycling & Disposal Facility revenue for FY27. Capital funds will be used in the coming fiscal year for street improvements, playing fields work, and vehicle replacement, among other things.

Marla Robinson, Chair for the Board of Library Trustees, rounded out the town budget presentations. It was another busy year for the library system, which had some 358k visitors. Robinson previewed that the Hills branch is in for interior and website upgrades this year thanks to a private donation.

The library system’s budget is going up slightly, largely as a result of step increases for employees who are hitting thresholds in their careers. Also of note, the library is consolidating two part-time positions into one full-time job. $25k was removed from planned cash capital for parking lot improvements as a result of town-wide efforts to contain capital costs.

The Advisory Committee had a favorable recommendation for the town budget, and Town Meeting members had just a handful of questions for presenters. The town has improved its public facing documents, such as the Town-Wide Financial Plan, in recent years. (That, combined with ongoing reporting from Swellesley, has helped to make for a more informed Town Meeting and public. Hey, everyone else at Town Meeting was patting themselves and their teams on the back, so why not us?)

Questions from Town Meeting members focused on breaking out the shared costs for schools ($44.9m, per the Town-Wide Financial Plan presentation, page 4), as well as funding for police mental health expenses and those related to dealing with federal agencies and for emerging fire department challenges like fighting battery fires (Town Meeting was assured all of this is property funded).

Article 8 Motion 2 passed by a count of 199/2/0 (this vote total represents about 84% of Town Meeting members).

School budget

Before School Committee and School Department presenters addressed Town Meeting, Moderator Mark Kaplan made clear what the town legislative body’s role is regarding the $98.6m school budget, which meets the Select Board’s 3% increase guideline and represents the lowest percentage increase since FY23. Unlike with the broader town budget, Town Meeting members cannot based on state statute make any motions to increase or decrease line items within the school budget.

The budget was settled upon “through a close calibration of student enrollment and individual student needs to staffing needs rather than cuts to programming,” said School Committee Chair Niki Ofenloch. “This is a far different story than many of our peer districts which are facing drastic cuts to programming or budget overrides, or both.” The School Committee refers to its budget as being largely a level-service one, with a few “modest investments” totaling about $26k focused on strategic priorities.

Supt. Dr. David Lussier, feeling at home at Wellesley High School, took things from there. He presented the proposed Wellesley Public Schools budget for fiscal year 2027 (and in thanking Assistant Superintendent of Finance and Operations Cindy Mahr for work on what he said will be her last WPS budget, he said she’d being moving on to a new professional opportunity).

“The story of the WPS budget for FY27 is a story of maintaining a focus on academic excellence and social/emotional health of our students while also navigating a very tricky and complicated fiscal landscape both for our school resources and that for the town as well,” Lussier said, noting that WPS is heading into year four of a 5-year strategic plan that guides its efforts.

Lussier referred to 10-year longitudinal analysis done to help gain and share understanding of why costs are rising as enrollment declines—a regular focus for Town Meeting members and others in town.

“I think the headline here is that any savings from declining enrollment doesn’t come close to offsetting the non-discretionary increases in spending, a trend that has been well documented in communities throughout the Commonwealth,” he said.

As always, Lussier shared enrollment charts showing declines and increases over the years, and of course the declines in recent years (along with decreases in the number of elementary school sections). One result of shrinking enrollment will be the cutting of 12 full-time equivalents, amounting to $968k in savings; Lussier broke out the specifics on which positions are coming and going.

enrollment

The superintendent pointed to big increases for this services organization in personnel costs—they’re up about 32% over 10 years—and staff compensation makes up the bulk of WPS’s budget (and this is another collective bargaining year).

Lussier also referred to mandated services, such as special education, and rising transportation costs (student fees remain the same in FY27); on special ed, he said the town saves millions by keeping students within the district when possible, and expects to generate a couple hundred thousand in revenue in FY27 by serving students from out of district.

The Advisory Committee made a favorable recommendation by a vote of 9-3, with one abstention. Those not in support wanted to send schools a message about school performance, administrative vs. student facing investments, and general transparency. Though others worried about the ramifications of what not passing the budget would be, such as requiring a Special Town Meeting in the near-term.

Town Meeting members hit school reps with a flurry of questions. Patti Quigley complimented the schools on what she said was a budget featuring any number you could want to find. She asked, after pointing to data about classroom sizes, at what point more school consolidation would be an option. Lussier said that was a difficult question, as class sizes per school vary based on each student cohort. The schools will soon get results of an externally-run enrollment report that will provide more information, though he said the expectation is that elementary school population is expected to remain pretty steady. He spoke of the lack of appetite in town by many to move away from the neighborhood school model. “Right now we really don’t see a pathway that we could consolidate from six to five schools,” he said.

Lussier was also asked about projections for incoming students based on new housing developments in town, and why past projections have been off. The superintendent said projections are based in part on what is seen at neighboring communities. Town Meeting member Don Shepard suggested that perhaps the demographics of families moving into the Wellesley developments differ from those in other communities, and have fewer school-age kids. Lussier said the new enrollment study might have relevant findings on this matter.

Some questions had to be anticipated, as they are raised regularly at Town Meeting or other forums.

Town Meeting member Paul Merry wanted to know where things stand on staff diversity related to student diversity. Lussier said the school system has been focused on this for a while and has had some marginal success, going from about 90% of teachers being white to 88% over the past few years, but with a declining staff and contractural rules in place that protect more senior employees, there are challenges to progress.

Town Meeting member Michael Tobin, after citing declining enrollment, asked about administrative headcount and costs. Lussier explained that “sometimes there can be confusion on what’s an administrative cost,” referring to staff such as math or reading coaches that support teachers but who may not be student facing. “Those kinds of support roles have represented the largest growth in district-wide positions supporting our schools. At a centralized staffing position our numbers are actually very lean compared to our neighboring communities,” he said.

Town Meeting approved the school budget by a vote of Passed 184-10.

Up next on Monday, April 6: Article 22 (Authorize Increase in Retirement Cost of Living Adjustment Base).

Also at Town Meeting

  • A $1.1m free cash transfer to the Board of Public Works as a supplemental appropriation to cover winter maintenance costs was approved via motion 1 under Article 7. This was an extreme winter, with 28 events requiring Department of Public Works action for snow and ice removal.
  • A request for a supplemental $200k appropriation (on top of the budgeted $480k) to cover legal expenses was approved. The state’s proposed housing plans on MassBay property was unexpected by the town, and prompted the Select Board to hire special counsel to assist in legal matters related to this. The Advisory Committee recommended favorable action by a 9-3 vote; Town Meeting members had no comments or questions, and approved motion 2 under Article 7 by voice vote. Moderator Kaplan had made clear there would be no opportunity to debate the pros and cons of the state’s MassBay plan itself.

More: Town Meeting scorecard


Thousands turn to The Swellesley Report daily to keep current on Wellesley:

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Longfellow, Wellesley
Wellesley Kitchen and Home Tour
Wellesley Village Church, Easter

2026 Easter services in Wellesley

April 2, 2026 by Deborah Brown 2 Comments

Easter falls on Sunday, April 5 this year, and a happy one to those who celebrate the holiday. Wellesley has many houses of worship that observe Easter, as well as the solemn holy days leading up to what is considered the most important, fundamental holiday in Christianity.

St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church
79 Denton Rd., 781-235-7310

St. Andrews, Wellesley


Wellesley Hills Congregational Church
207 Washington St., 781-235-4424

Wellesley Hills Congregational Church


Wellesley Congregational (Village) Church
2 Central St., 781-235-1988

Wellesley Village Church, Easter


First Church of Christ, Scientist
8 Rockland St, 781-235-1114

MetroWest Baptist Church
42 Elmwood Rd.    781-235-6025

St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church
79 Denton Rd., 781-235-7310

St. John the Evangelist Parish (Catholic)
9 Glen Rd., 781-235-0045

St. Paul Parish (Catholic)
502 Washington St., 781-235-1060

Unitarian Universalist Society of Wellesley Hills
309 Washington St., 781-235-9423

Wellesley Congregational (Village) Church
2 Central St., 781-235-1988

Wellesley Hills Congregational Church
207 Washington St., 781-235-4424

Wellesley Friends Meeting (Quaker)
26 Benvenue St., 781-237-0268

MORE:

Where to Worship in Wellesley

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Wellesley Hills Congregational Church

Wellesley celebrating National Public Health Week (April 6-10) with slew of activities

April 2, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

The Wellesley Health Department is offering lots of free activities from April 6-10, some in partnership with local businesses, to celebrate National Public Health Week.

Highlights include:

  • Bounce houses for kids at the Warren Playground
  • Chair massage and art therapy at the Wellesley Free Library
  • Guided nature walk/forest bathing with meditation
  • CPR certification
  • Free intro fitness classes at Longfellow
  • Menopause Unlocked! A workshop with Dr. Natalie Pauli from Olive Tree Medical

public health week lineup

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Filed Under: Health

Rotary Club, Taste of Wellesley

Sneak peek: New Wellesley restaurant Charm Ramen & Rice

April 1, 2026 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

Charm Ramen & Rice
Veggie Ramen (Photo by Iris Zhan)

 
The restaurant business is notoriously challenging, but one edge that the new Charm Ramen & Rice in Wellesley Square has out of the chute is that co-owner Ae Trahan has been doing taxes for eateries in Wellesley and beyond for years. She really understands restaurant finances, what works and what doesn’t.

What’s more, she and partners Aum and Auy have taken a deep dive into the Japanese cuisine they will serve at Charm, which begins its reservations-only soft-opening month on April 4 at 555 Washington St., the former longtime location of Lemon Thai. They all headed to California ahead of opening the restaurant to train with an experienced Japanese chef, and he in return paid the restaurant a visit before it opened to ensure the kitchen was set up properly to prepare ramen, gyoza, and other menu selections. The co-owners learned the importance, for example, of how precise measurements really do make a difference in how their food will taste.

Charm, Wellesley

Trahan and team found their Wellesley spot at the start of 2025 and have been readying for their opening since. One not-so-secret weapon for Charm is Trahan’s husband, Paul, a custom carpenter by trade who gutted the space and rebuilt the interior with unique, well, charm. Among the immediate eye-catchers at the nearly 50-seat restaurant, as we saw during a sneak peek in March, are display shelves populated with manga comic book figurines. Trahan says she has so many they plan to sell them to customers at some point.

Charm’s fun decor also features a mural that those in the know realize includes cartoon depictions of the owners’ pre-teen daughters. Trahan’s rascally son also makes a cameo in the painting, launching a paper airplane from above in the work done by one of her kids’ teachers.

All of this provides the backdrop for the food, which can be eaten there or taken out. As the name of the restaurant indicates, Charm serves ramen and rice—a plethora of rice bowls are an option for those on gluten-free diets.

Trahan has visited the Wellesley area frequently to see family, and was struck by a lack of ramen options available. That’s in large part what inspired her to focus Charm on the popular Japanese noodle soup dish. “We all love ramen,” she said about herself and her business partners.

Charm, Wellesley
Aum, Ae, and Auy are excited to bring Charm’s ramen and more to Wellesley.

 
Charm’s menu brims with ramen selections. Our party of three—Mr. & Mrs. Swellesley, plus Wellesley College student and Swellesley contributor Iris Zhan—were served three different ramen bowls. Being picky me, I went with the Simple Ramen, which contained clear chicken broth as well as chicken chashu, sweet corn, nori (seaweed), garlic oil, and a swirly little fish cake (nautomaki). This was a serving of salty (shio) goodness delivered in a bowl donning Charm’s logo (as we learned, “Charm,” means “bowl” in Thai, and the Thai word is embedded in the logo).

My lunch mates gobbled down Tonkotsu Ramen, served in a thick broth with pork chashu, and Veggie Ramen, featuring seasoned tofu. Ramen bowls range in price from about $15-$20.

The ramen bowls were plenty filling, but the Charm team also shared a sampling of more and more appetizers. As something of a gyoza connoisseur, the first thing I did was ask for the pan-fried pork variety, while Iris opted for the veggie/greenish version. I loved the gyoza that Lemon Thai once served, but Charm’s edition was perhaps the best I’ve had, both light and flavorful. Iris loved the veggie option, and was surprised to learn it included cabbage, which they said they’re usually not a fan of.

Trahan made a point that Charm makes its gyoza fresh on site, whereas most such dumplings are bought frozen by restaurants and heated up, leaving them doughy.

Charm Ramen & Rice
Appetizer overload (Photo by Iris Zhan)

 
Other notable appetizers included plump truffle edamame, juicy shrimp shumai, crispy brussels sprouts (just the way Mrs. Swellesley likes them), seaweed salad, and takoyaki, fried octopus balls, and Chashu Buns, small sandwich-like creations packed with pork, vegetables, and sauces. Apps range in price from about $7 to $14.

For dessert, Charm offers a selection of mochi ice cream, including green tea, black sesame, mango, chocolate, and strawberry. Another fun finisher is taiyaki, a warm and crispy fish-shaped pastry with creamy custard inside, and served alongside ice cream.

Charm Ramen & Rice
Mochi ice cream (Photo by Iris Zhan)

 
Charm Ramen & Rice
Taiyaki (Photo by Iris Zhan)

Charm is offering a colorful roster of sodas, teas, an alcoholic beverages. A rainbow of Asian snacks are also displayed at the counter.

The restaurant brings something fresh and new to town, and we expect it to be a hit with locals, including college students.

Charm Ramen & Rice
Snacks and more snacks

 


More: Where to eat in Wellesley (sponsored by black & blue Steak and Crab)

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Wellesley Symphony Orchestra, 2026
Local government

First night of Wellesley Annual Town Meeting features twists & turns

March 31, 2026 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

Wellesley Executive Director Meghan Jop said toward the end of her presentation on Annual Town Meeting’s opening night this week that “Town Meeting is a year-round engagement.” True enough, though there are some things you only see at Town Meeting itself, and we saw them early on.

The game plan at the outset of the March 30 session of the town’s legislative body at Wellesley High School was to bump Article 2 (“receiving reports of the Select Board on the Town-Wide Financial Plan and Five-Year Capital Budget Program”) to Tuesday night. Article 2 would serve as a table setter for Article 8’s motions on fiscal year ’27 town and school budgets, separated this year for the first time in decades.

But Town Meeting member Marlene Allen early in the meeting raised a point of order, citing town bylaw 19.16.2.d, which calls for an oral report on the Town-Wide Financial Plan ahead of Town Meeting considering any appropriation-related articles. She called this year’s edition of the plan “exceptionally informative,” but only useful before appropriations are considered. Kaplan responded to the point of order, which he thanked Allen for giving him a heads up about. But he denied the action requested, determining that Article 2 would remain on the next night’s agenda—a few appropriations-related articles slated to be discussed on Monday would be left open until after the Town-Wide Financial Plan was presented, and then those other articles would be closed.

But this wasn’t over.

Kaplan moved on to Article 3, the consent agenda. This was supposed to be the easy one, even though the consent agenda this year was beefier than usual at more than a dozen motions. Under the consent agenda, whose motions are selected based on them being seemingly straightforward and non-controversial, Town Meeting gets to vote on a bunch of stuff in one fell swoop.

Once in a while, a Town Meeting member will rise to request an item be taken off the consent agenda to allow discussion. This time around, Town Meeting member Michael D’Ortenzio rose to ask that motion 3 (HR Department Supplemental Appropriation) under Article 7 be withdrawn. Then then stayed at the mic and asked, one by one, that a total of 10 motions be removed from the consent agenda for later discussion.

All that prompted Kaplan to announce that an earlier indication from him that he expected Town Meeting to wrap in three nights should be amended, and that members should plan to be available for a fourth session on April 7.

It also led to Select Board Chair Marjorie Freiman moving that Article 3, the consent agenda, be “laid on the table” so that Town Meeting could take up Article 2 on Monday night after all. Town Meeting supported that motion by a 163/23/5 vote, and on to Article 2 it was.

Over the next hour, Freiman, Jop, and David Kornwitz (chair of the Retirement Board) went over the Town-Wide Financial Plan, Five-Year Capital Budget Program, and funding for pensions and other post-employment benefits (OPEB).

Freiman kicked things off, introducing the Town-Wide Financial Plan, which sums up the budget process, presents the current year operating budgets and drivers, and looks ahead to three upcoming budgets. “It is the town’s key financial narrative document,” she said, adding that the town is keeping reserves at higher-than-usual levels given the state of the market.

The plan also lays out numerous significant capital projects requested by boards and committees (school air conditioning, reconstruction of Morses Pond recreational facilities, PFAS remediation, and more) and their impact on debt and tax bills, plus the status of reserves. “We need to be realistic about what we need and what we can afford,” said Freiman, after citing Boston Globe reporting on big override votes in peer communities in the face of rising operating and capital costs. Wellesley has created a Town-wide Capital Planning Committee that beginning this spring will begin work on presenting an annual comprehensive capital planning proposal to the Select Board.

“The Select Board is responsible for informing Town Meeting members fully of the upcoming budget and capital project planning. It is each Town Meeting member’s responsibility to evaluate proposals in a town-wide context over the course of many years, to weigh the merits of each proposal, understand that debt exclusions or overrides may be the only method of funding certain projects or operating expenses, and determine taxpayers’ ability and willingness to fund each one as proposed,” she said. Like Jop later, Freiman stressed that people in town will need to pay attention and get involved in budget-related plans throughout the year.

Jop said creation of the Town-Wide Financial Plan starts right after Annual Town Meeting ends, and then incorporates actual financial results as they become available over the summer. Wellesley has had a strong FY26 financially, thanks in part to strong interest earnings, as it plans for FY27 and beyond. The town is coming to Town Meeting with an overall proposed budget of about $226m that’s balanced and delivering largely level services during a year with many union contracts to seal. While health care costs are a killer, Wellesley is feeling good about its participation in the West Suburban Health Group, which is seeing relatively low rate increases. In out years, Wellesley could be looking at debt exclusions to pay for big capital projects, but also can look forward to declining costs for pensions and OPEB, as Kornwitz detailed during his presentation.

twfp themes

budget snapshot

Wellesley has the “absolute best funded retirement and retiree health systems in the Commonwealth” thanks in large part to town decisions made earlier in the 2000s to pre-fund OPEB, giving it a head start on other municipalities, Kornwitz said. He dove into details of the board’s guiding principles that have paid off over the years, including mitigating major downside investment risk. “We believe it’s okay to sacrifice some upside potential to reduce risk and volatility of the plan, especially as it’s getting closer and closer to full funding…,” he said, adding that “actuarial smoothing techniques” are used to provide stability.

In distilling Kornwitz’s presentation, Jop spoke of how the town in years to come will be able to pull hundreds of healthcare policies from its operating budget to be covered by the OPEB trust.

Jop wrapped up by discussing capital and debt, and detailed more than $2m in planned free cash spending on projects outlined in later articles like the Weston Road and Linden Street intersection redesign and DPW campus/Municipal Service Building feasibility study.

Town Meeting members had just a couple of questions for the presenters, then the motion was approved.

Following the presentations under Article 2, D’Ortenzio returned to the mic and withdrew his consent agenda withdrawals under Article 3. He explained that he made the original withdrawal requests because he had agreed with fellow member Allen’s earlier point of order about Article 2, and thought that the presentations and questions following them on Monday night were helpful.

The consent agenda motion passed by a vote of 173/2/0 after another Town Meeting member requested just one item be removed for later discussion.

Town Meeting ended with a few motions under Articles 5 and 6. In short, town employees, including the town clerk, are getting paid.

More: Town Meeting scorecard


Town Meeting history

Moderator Mark Kaplan started off Town Meeting with a little history lesson about the role town meeting played in the American Revolution, in recognition of the upcoming 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. John Hancock, Kaplan relayed, got his start as moderator of the town meeting—the only form of local government at the time—in Boston. “I certainly didn’t know that and wonder that means for the future for me,” Kaplan quipped. Town meetings had an important influence on the development of the Declaration of Independence.


In Memoriam

An annual practice at Town Meeting is to honor past members and other major town contributors who have died.

Five people—William Charlton, Richard Macintosh, Laurance Fitzmaurice, Nancy Saunders, and Jane Kettendorft—were honored.

honor town officials


Liking the Red Sox’s chances

Moderator Kaplan tested the electronic voting system by asking a test question: Will the Red Sox make it to the World Series? The vote: 104 yes, 77 no, 7 abstaining.

The Sox have their home opener slated for Friday, April 3. No Town Meeting session that day.


Thousands turn to The Swellesley Report daily to keep current on Wellesley:

  • Sign up for our free weekday email newsletter
  • Send us story tips, photos, ideas: theswellesleyreport@gmail.com
  • This is our actual job: Please support our work via a tax-deductible donation
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Filed Under: Government, Town Meeting

Object of the Month

Wellesley Historical Society’s lithograph by Isaac Sprague IV reminds us of spring’s bloom

March 31, 2026 by Morgan Stevenson-Swadling Leave a Comment

The White Bay (Gordonia Pubescens), By Isaac Sprague IV (1811-1895)Lithograph from “Flowers of the Field and Forest,” 1882
The White Bay (Gordonia Pubescens) by Isaac Sprague IV (1811-1895). Lithograph from “Flowers of the Field and Forest,” 1882

 
Sprague is a familiar name in Wellesley: one need only look to the iconic Sprague Memorial Clocktower or the Sprague Elementary School. Isaac Sprague V (1859-1934) was a town benefactor and a highly influential figure in Wellesley’s civic and cultural development, with a deep dedication to education and public access. Sprague served on many town committees and as Town Selectman. He was the president of the Wellesley Club from 1910-1912 and the first ever President of the Wellesley Historical Society, serving from 1925 until his death in 1934.

Influential in a very different capacity was Isaac Sprague IV (1811-1895), father of Wellesley’s beloved benefactor. The elder Sprague was a career artist and botanical illustrator. He famously worked alongside John James Audubon, accompanying him on an 1843 expedition up the Missouri River.

This lithograph depicting the White Bay flower was completed by Isaac Sprague IV and appeared in the 1882 book “Flowers of the Field and Forest,” a collection of Sprague’s watercolors juxtaposed with text penned by the Reverend A.B. Hervey. Also known as Gordinia, White Bay flowers are striking blooms with rounded white petals and a center of yellow stamens that grow forth from large shrubs native to Florida and Georgia.

Accompanying Sprague’s illustration was an excerpt from the William Cullen Bryant poem “Among the Trees,” a romantic exploration of the relationship between humans and nature. In Reverend Hervey’s note on the flower, he revered Sprague’s artistic ability and carefully observant eye, writing that “Mr. Sprague has reproduced the beauty and elegance of the flower so faithfully that I need not attempt a further description of it in words.”

The lithograph was donated by Albion Billings Clapp in 1958. Its frame is original to the donation, though we are not sure when exactly it was created. It has since been restored.

As April’s object of the month, the lithograph reminds us of spring’s bloom and is a pleasant and eye-catching representative of Sprague’s talent. However, the illustration also shows the importance of artists in disseminating scientific knowledge and study of our natural world. “Flowers of the Field and Forest” would have been used as an educational tool at the time of its publication. It is also a fascinating example of Victorian literature and study. The unusual combination of popular poetry, detailed scientific watercolors, and conversationally written scientific fact would be seen as odd in today’s publishing world, but perfectly common 150 years ago!
 


 
Every month, the Wellesley Historical Society highlights an object from its collection. These objects capture Wellesley stories, both those well-known to us and those yet uncovered. Historic artifacts symbolize and convey important narratives, whether that is the hard-working craftsman behind a piece or a written document that shaped the town’s future. As such, the Wellesley Historical Society collections capture the entirety of Wellesley as a town, from significant happenings to sentimental mementos.

Morgan Stevenson-Swadling is Director of Exhibits & Collections at Wellesley Historical Society.

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Filed Under: Art, History

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