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The Swellesley Report

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

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Public safety

Roofer injured after falling 30 feet while working on Wellesley home

March 25, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

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Boston MedFlight helicopter at Sprague Field.(Photo courtesy of EE)

 
Emergency crews responded late Tuesday afternoon to Old Colony Road in Wellesley after a roofer fell 30 feet to the ground and suffered serious injuries. He was transported to Sprague Field, from where a Boston MedFlight helicopter took him to a Boston hospital.

According to Wellesley Police, the man landed on his feet and sustained significant trauma throughout his body.

Wellesley Police, Wellesley Fire Department, and Natick Medics responded to the call.

An investigation into site conditions continues.


See something? Send something: theswellesleyreport@gmail.com

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Filed Under: Construction, Fire, Police

     

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Rotary Club of Wellesley runs Repair Café, keeps items out of landfill

March 24, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

Thanks to the Rotary Club of Wellesley for this dispatch from the club’s Repair Café event.

The Rotary Club of Wellesley last Saturday helped keep numerous items out of the landfill at the annual hands-on Repair Café event.

If it’s broke, fix it—stuff Rotary made whole

  • many lamps
  • an electric scooter
  • a paper shredder
  • a blue ray drive
  • 2 cassette players
  • a rice cooker
  • a radio tuner
  • a screen door (complete with road trip)
  • a vacuum cleaner power cord

Thanks to a great effort from volunteer Repair Coaches Fred Bunger, Bill Westerman, James McLaren, Doug Ling, Charlie Tyler, and helpers Edith Paley, Frank Rowbotham, Kip Dole, and Dan Larochelle. The coaches also showed several attendees how to fix the things they brought.

Repair Cafe, Wellesley
Fred Bunger and Martha Pott with a fixed floor lamp.

Wellesley Librarian Marissa Jorgensen brought samples of reference materials, several tools from the Library of Things, and fun puzzles to take home. All the participants had a great time and enjoyed helping each other figure out how to fix things.

Thanks to all those who donated to help fund future Repair Cafés.


Next on Rotary’s plate—dinner

Join Rotary Club at their annual Taste of Wellesley Spring Culinary Fundraiser, an exquisite evening of food, a cash bar, and live music. Sample the best dishes of 17 Wellesley restaurants, catch up with friends, listen to music and relax under the stars! Proceeds will benefit a variety of causes aimed at helping reduce food insecurity in the community.

Tickets here.

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Filed Under: Charity/Fundraising, Clubs

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Theatre

Wellesley High drama students advance to state finals with ‘Fire in the Hole’

March 23, 2026 by Maya Hazarika Leave a Comment

For months, Wellesley High School’s black box theater became a 1920s Appalachian coal-mining town. In the play “Fire in the Hole,” union organizers are hanged, families suffer tragic losses, and the mining company controls nearly every aspect of life. This 30-minute one-act by Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Robert Schenkkan is Wellesley High’s entry in this year’s Massachusetts Educational Theatre Guild (METG) competition, a statewide festival judged over multiple rounds.

Wellesley did advance, moving through the preliminary round at Wellesley High on Feb. 28 and into the semi-finals on March 14, performing alongside programs that had succeeded at their own preliminary sites weeks earlier.

METG works differently from a standard school production. METG companies prepare a single judged performance rather than multiple shows. This puts extra pressure on students and rehearsals, as there’s little room for mistakes. Director Skylar Grossman, who also oversaw last fall’s production of “Legally Blonde: The Musical,” has been working with the company since early winter, with a cast of more than 50 students.

The subject matter added its own layer of difficulty. “Fire in the Hole” is drawn from Schenkkan’s “The Kentucky Cycle,” which won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1992 and was nominated for three Tony Awards. The story follows Mary Ann Rowen, a mother who has lost four sons in the mines. When union organizer Abe Steinman arrives, she must confront betrayal and the challenge of leading her community.

The script is dense with period detail and moral weight, and compressing it into a 30-minute stage production while keeping the emotional logic is the kind of work that asks a great deal from young performers.

Behind the scenes, the technical crew faced their own set of demands, building a period world from the ground up with costumes, set pieces, and sound that had to be read clearly in a single unrepeated performance. Students working in tech and production carried responsibilities that extended well beyond a typical school show, considering creative and logistical sides of the production simultaneously.

This year, Wellesley also hosted the preliminary round for the first time since 2019. Alongside preparing their own entry, students organized and ran a competition site for five other schools. The hosting crew was drawn entirely from students across all four grade levels, none of whom had done it before. Grossman reflected on what that required: “This preliminary round was a standout for WHS… Even with the snow-day setbacks, hosting a successful site and moving on from the preliminary round is a massive feat.”

The weather-related issues he mentioned were significant. A benefit performance scheduled for Feb. 27 was cancelled when a storm closed the school, which meant that when the company finally performed “Fire in the Hole” in front of an audience, that audience included the competition judges. A rescheduled free performance was held on March 13 at Wellesley High, followed by a question-and-answer session with cast and crew, giving the community a chance to see the production after the competitive season had already begun.

The semi-finals, held March 14, brought together programs from preliminary sites across the state, each having already demonstrated enough in their first showing to keep going. For Wellesley, getting there meant navigating a storm cancellation, a hosted competition, and a subject matter that required the cast to inhabit a world and a set of stakes very different from their own.

Despite challenges, Wellesley High’s Dramatic Arts Company excelled and is advancing to the METG finals to be held March 26-28 at John Hancock Hall in Boston.


Interested in sponsoring student interns at Swellesley? Let us know: theswellesleyreport@gmail.com

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Filed Under: Theatre, Wellesley High School

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Open conversation about residents' health needs

What’s Next for Wellesley?

March 23, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

From the Wellesley Health Department:

The Town of Wellesley has been the recipient of Opioid Abatement Funds and expects to continue to receive funds through 2038. To use these funds responsibly, we have solicited feedback from a wide cohort of community stakeholders. The results of that feedback will be used to direct Health Department programming overall as well as the use of Opioid Abatement Funds.

On behalf of the Wellesley Health Department, we would like to invite you to a community forum on March 23, 6-7 PM at the Wellesley Police station (485 Washington St.) to discuss the results of our recent Community Health Needs Assessment, and how we can best use these results to plan for Opioid Abatement Fund Spending. Please see flyer for full event details. The event is free and open to all.

The full report and related documents are linked below: 

  • Introduction and Executive Summary from the Board of Health.
  • Click this link to read the full report!
  • Quick Data Summary Flipbook
  • Data Dashboard

We value resident input and encourage you to share your thoughts, questions, and perspectives as the Town considers next steps. 

Share your thoughts and provide feedback, or call us at 781-489-4407. You can also email us at health@wellesley.ma.gov.

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Filed Under: Health

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Legal Notice

MassDOT to hold in-person public meeting for status update on Routes 27/9 project

March 22, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS

MASSACHUSETTS DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION – HIGHWAY DIVISION

NOTICE OF AN IN-PERSON PUBLIC INFORMATION MEETING

Project File No. 605313

An In-Person Public Information Meeting will be hosted at Wilson Middle School, at 22 Rutledge Road, Natick, MA, 01760, to present a status update for the Route 27 and Route 9 Bridge Replacement and Interchange Improvements in Natick.

WHEN: Thursday, March 26, 2026, 6:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m.

WHERE: Wilson Middle School, 22 Rutledge Road, Natick, MA, 01760

PURPOSE: The purpose of this meeting is to update the public on the status of the bridge replacement project and interchange improvements. MassDOT will present the project background, the schedule and construction phasing, the right-of-way process, project landscaping, public involvement, and next steps. The meeting will include a presentation by the project team followed by a question-and-answer session. All views and comments will be reviewed and considered to the maximum extent possible.

PROJECT: This project will include the replacement of the structurally deficient Bridge No. N-03-020 which carries North Main Street (Route 27) over Worcester Street (Route 9) and consists of the reconfiguration of the interchange to a modified Diverging Diamond Interchange (DDI) configuration. The reconfiguration will provide safety improvements, reduced traffic congestion through the interchange, and improved bicycle and pedestrian facilities using separated shared use paths and sidewalks. The project length is approximately 3,850 feet along Route 9 and 2,120 feet along Route 27. The work will also include transit stops along Route 27 and Route 9 along with reconstructed sidewalks, drainage improvements, traffic signals, retaining walls, utility relocations, signing, roadway lighting, and landscaping.

This meeting is accessible to people with disabilities. MassDOT provides reasonable accommodations and/or language assistance free of charge upon request (e.g., interpreters in American Sign Language and languages other than English, live captioning, videos, assistive listening devices and alternate material formats), as available. For accommodation or language assistance, please contact MassDOT’s Chief Diversity and Civil Rights Officer by phone (857-368-8580), TTD/TTY at (857) 266-0603, fax (857) 368-0602 or by email (MassDOT.CivilRights@dot.state.ma.us). Requests should be made as soon as possible prior to the meeting, and for more difficult to arrange services including sign-language, CART, language translation, or interpretation, requests should be made at least ten business days before the meeting.

This meeting will be posted, or a cancellation announcement posted, on the internet at:
https://www.mass.gov/orgs/highway-division/events

JONATHAN GULLIVER CARRIE LAVALLEE, P.E.
HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATOR CHIEF ENGINEER

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Filed Under: Legal notices, Transportation

Nearby in Natick: Epilogue Books & Wine on the way; Transportation Advisory Committee shares update; Little League ups fundraising game

March 22, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

The latest Natick, Mass., news:

Epilogue Books & Wine on the way

A new business called Epilogue Books & Wine is planned for 21 Summer St., a mixed-use development across from TCAN, the Center for Arts in Natick.

epilogue


Transportation Advisory Committee shares update

2026 goals focus on safer streets, better transit, and making it easier for people to get around town without solely relying on cars.


Little League ups fundraising game with new website

A big part of the league’s solution to needed capital for future projects is a new RallyforNatick website designed to make it much easier to donate—and to keep giving year after year.

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Filed Under: Beyond Wellesley, Natick Report

Rotary Club, Taste of Wellesley

Wellesley town government meetings for week of March 23, 2026: Select Board to discuss state surplus land regs (like MassBay/forest property); Master Plan update

March 21, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

A sampling of Wellesley, Mass., meetings and agenda items for the week of March 23, 2026:

Planning Board (March 23, 6:30pm, online)

Project of Significant Impact (PSI) a. PSI-25-04 – 592 Washington Street – Continued from 2/23/26 b. PSI-26-01 – 26 Washington Street – Continued from 2/23/26 – to be continued to 4/13/26; Master Plan and Area Study Update 

School Committee (March 24, 6:30pm, online)

Discussion/Vote: Appointment of Assistant Superintendent of Student Services; Discussion/Vote: METCO Job Description; Discussion/Vote: JECA Middle School Pathway Exploration Policy; JBB Educational Equity; Discussion: Specialized Van Bid Results; Discussion/Vote: Schools Facility Master Plan Task Force; Executive Session Under G.C. c.30A, §21(A), exemption #3 – Strategy with respect to collective bargaining with the Wellesley Educators Assoc.

Select Board (March 24, 6:30pm, online)

Public Hearing and Vote All Alcohol License for Maugus Café at 300 Washington Street; Vote FY26 Winter Supplemental Request #3;  Discuss and Vote Senior Property Tax Deferral Limit Pending Governor’s Signing of H4143; Discuss Select Board Questions and Comments on Executive Office of Housing & Livable Communities’ Surplus Land Regulations (related to the MassBay/Forest issue); Annual Town Meeting Preparation

Design Review Board (March 25, 6:30pm, online)

RDF; Down Under School of Yoga; Village Bank

Board of Health (March 26, 9am, online)

Director Report (Includes Environment, Social Work and Community Health Departments) a. Community Health Needs Assessment forum review and next steps. b. Summer Camp Preparation c. Public Health Week Preparation

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Filed Under: Government

Sign up now for summer camp in Wellesley (and beyond)

March 20, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

NEOC, WellesleySPONSORED CONTENT: It’s that exciting time of year again—time to register your children for summer camp. Programs officially have their sign-up links ready to go, so now’s the time to jump on things, before spaces fill up.

The Swellesley Report’s Summer Camps page lists over 100 programs from local day camps to overnight adventures.

Thanks to NEOC for their swell sponsorship of our Summer Camps page. NEOC sparks and stokes the excitement, discovery, and fun children have while outside and builds their understanding of nature, where kids explore and play outside at an easy pace, without any technology at all.

Don’t see your camp listed, or want to update your current listing? Contact us at theswellesleyreport@gmail.com

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Filed Under: Camp

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Calendar

Upcoming Wellesley events

Upcoming Events

Mar 25
11:30 am - 1:00 pm

Wellesley Select Board office hours with Beth Sullivan Woods

Mar 26
1:00 pm - 2:00 pm

Faculty midday muse concert at Wellesley College

Mar 26
4:30 pm - 6:00 pm

Wellesley Middle School Drama presents ‘Footloose the Musical: Youth Edition’

Mar 26
6:00 pm - 8:00 pm

Art Wellesley presents reception featuring 50 local artists

Mar 26
6:30 pm - 9:30 pm

2026 World of Wellesley Community Book Read

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