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Local government

Wellesley 2026 election results: Incumbents Sullivan Woods, Ulfelder return to Select Board; Panagopoulos, Sullivan to join School Committee

March 3, 2026 by Bob Brown

According to unofficial election results released on Tuesday night, Wellesley Select Board incumbents Beth Sullivan Woods and Tom Ulfelder retained seats for their fourth terms in what was a tense three-candidate race. Contender Marc Charney, seeking to bring a new perspective to a board he said was too set its ways, finished third; he’ll remain chair of the Planning Board.

Sullivan Woods was the top vote getter with 2,624, and won all eight precincts, according to the unofficial results (write-ins and ballots that need to be researched will be added by the end of the week). She was followed by Ulfelder with 1,969 votes and Charney with 1,576.

The incumbents earned new three-year terms on the Select Board, which serves as the town’s chief executive body.

Sullivan Woods in the Select Board race emphasized making sure resident voices are heard on budget and other issues. Ulfelder said his experienced leadership would be valuable as the town faces challenges on the budget, capital spending, and housing and commercial development fronts.

Unlike with the Select Board, none of the four candidates in the only other contested town-wide race—running for two School Committee seats— were incumbents.

The top two vote getters were Costas Panagopoulos with 1,967 and Bob Sullivan with 1,803, both of whom earned three-year seats on the School Committee, which develops and manages school policies, and much more. Panagopoulos led voting in six of 8 precincts, with Sullivan capturing the other two.

Candidates Ayla Lari tallied 1,489 votes and Michael Robert Cave received 703.

Panagopoulos, a PhD, is a political science educator at Northeastern University, while Sullivan has a background in finance and business.

Overall, 20% of registered voters cast ballots (up from 17% last year).

Among the uncontested races, Mark Kaplan remains town moderator, Odessa Sanchez stays on the Housing Authority board, and Stephen Burtt is back with the Board of Assessors. New office holders include Maria Gallo Ashbrook and Aunoy Banerjee on the Board of Library Trustees, Joseph Schott and Melinda Arias-Voci on the Natural Resources Commission, and Susan Ecklund on the Board of Health.

See the complete unofficial results for all town-wide and Town Meeting seats.

Congrats to all who ran for office as well as everyone who voted and helped to run the town election.


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Filed Under: 2026 Town Election, Education, Government

     

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Wellesley Media to air town election results on Tuesday night

March 3, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

Wellesley Media, on Comcast 8, Verizon 40, and WellesleyMedia.org, will present a short show on Tuesday, March 3 at 9pm to announce unofficial election results ahead of when the unofficial results make it to the town website later in the night. This announcement on Wellesley Media will be based on machine-tabulated numbers.

The campaigns station people at each precinct right at 8pm, when the polls close, and copy down the results from the tabulator tape when it prints at each precinct. Another 40%-plus of ballots sent by mail, etc., are pre-processed at Town Hall and will be posted somewhere around 8:30pm.
The Town Clerk typically posts unofficial results sometime after 9pm on election day, with write-in, hand counted, and other such ballots reviewed before official results are published.
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Filed Under: 2026 Town Election

Arts round-up: Amazing Acastock concert is coming; Global film at Babson; Paintings by Dr. Savage; Society of Artists event; Latest from Wellesley Repertory Theatre; Call for creatives

March 3, 2026 by Deborah Brown Leave a Comment

Wellesley is fortunate to have a lively arts scene, with various opportunities to engage with or make art at any given time. Check out a concert, theater performance, or film this month. Here are just a few events happening soon, here and beyond Wellesley.

WHS Performing Arts: Acastock Concert

DATE/TIME: Fri Mar 6, 7pm-9pm
LOCATION: Katherine L. Babson, Jr. Auditorium, Wellesley High School, 50 Rice St.
TICKETS here
DESCRIPTION: This always-popular annual a cappella show is presented by Wellesley High School Performing Arts. Special guest stars contribute to the talent overload the WHS students already bring. Led by WHS director of choral music, Dr. Kevin McDonald.


Babson Global Film Series

EVENT: film screening of Bad River, written and directed by Mary Mazzio
DATE/TIME: Tuesday, March 10, 7:00 P.M.
LOCATION: Carling-Sorenson Theater, Babson College
COST: Free and open to the public. Registration encouraged. Walk-ins welcome.
DESCRIPTION: Narrated by Quannah ChasingHorse and Academy-Award nominee, Edward Norton; and produced by Grant Hill and Allison Abner, Bad River is a new documentary chronicling the Wisconsin-based Bad River Band’s fight for sovereignty.


Council on Aging, art exhibit

DATE/TIME: March – May, during Tolles Parsons Center hours
LOCATION: Tolles Parsons Center, 500 Washington St., Wellesley
DESCRIPTION: Featured artist Dr. Robert Savage is a Wellesley resident who retired in 2016 after a roughly 35-year career in plastic and reconstructive surgery (and teaching and writing). At first he was all about art collecting and art history, but it wasn’t long before Dr. Savage started putting paint to canvas. The self-taught artist concentrates on iconic scenes of New England, especially the Cape and Islands. See our interview with Dr. Savage here.

Robert Savage, artist
Robert Savage, featured artist at the Tolles Parson Center

Wellesley Society of Artists “Inspired By” awards reception and “Who’s Your Muse” panel

DATE/TIME: March 22, 1:30pm
LOCATION: Wellesley Free Library, 530 Washington St.
COST: Free and open to the public.
DESCRIPTION: The awards announcement will be followed by a panel discussion, “Who’s Your Muse?” with WSA members who will discuss how their artwork was inspired by a particular artist’s style or genre. Light refreshments and a chance to chat with local artists Free and open to the public.


EVENT: Theater performance, “To Kill a Mockingbird”
DATES: Feb. 27 – Mar. 22
LOCATION: Umbrella Arts Center, 40 Stow St., Concord, MA
TICKETS: here
DESCRIPTION: Adapted from the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, To Kill a Mockingbird opens in a sleepy Alabama town in the midst of the Great Depression, where Scout and her brother, Jem, live with their widowed father, lawyer Atticus Finch. While the children act out stories and muse about their mysterious neighbor, Boo Radley, the facade of their seemingly peaceful town begins to crack when a young Black man is accused of a terrible crime. Based on the book by Harper Lee. Directed by Scott Edmiston


Wellesley Repertory Theatre to present in-process presentations of Lifted

Wellesley Repertory Theatre will offer in-process presentations of the 7th play of Mfoniso Udofia’s Ufot Family Cycle, Lifted, at several Boston-area spaces in March 2026. These ‘text-in-hand’ presentations inform Udofia’s ongoing writing of this work-in-process.

March 10, 12, 14: Footlight Club
7A Eliot Street, Jamaica Plain

March 24-28: Maso Studio, Huntington Theatre
264 Huntington Avenue, Boston

March 29: Diana Chapman Walsh Alumnae Hall Auditorium, Wellesley College

Tickets can be ordered online.


Natick puts out calls for art

WANTED: Natick Center Cultural District and Public Art Natick are calling for artists to create two-sided banners to adorn 40 street poles throughout Natick Center.
ELIGIBILITY: Any resident of Massachusetts that can accept and cash a check may submit a proposal, but preference will be given to current or former Natick, MA residents. Please review all the particulars here.
PROPOSAL DUE DATE: March 15
STIPEND: $1,000

WANTED: Natick Center Cultural District and Public Art Natick are calling for art for a Natick Center gift card.
STIPEND: $100
PROPOSAL DUE DATE: March 15
More information here.

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Sports

Wellesley Public Schools Athletic Director John Brown retiring in fall of ’26

March 2, 2026 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

John Brown, who has served as athletic director for Wellesley Public Schools for the past 20 years, has announced plans to retire, staying through October.

Brown over the years has celebrated the always high participation rate of students in Wellesley athletic programs, which have racked up 47 state titles during his tenure (see the banners before and since Brown joined WHS).

In November, Brown was recognized with the 2025 MIAA William N. Gaine Jr. Sportsmanship Award, presented annually to an individual who sets an example for promoting sportsmanship in Massachusetts interscholastic athletics.

Brown came to Wellesley in 2006 from Natick High, where he was the baseball coach, and had earlier been a talented player.

The biggest change during his tenure: The rise of club sports. “Club sports is the biggest change because it had changed the landscape of Athletics and not necessarily for the best…,” he said.

Don’t ask Brown to pick a favorite team or moment: “I have so many great memories that it is hard to pick just a few. It wouldn’t be fair to all of the other great things that have happened.”

In his retirement announcement, Brown thanked many people, including those who hired him and have kept him on. And of course he singled out his office partner Mary Anne McDonald.

He also recognized his family for putting up with Brown’s often hectic schedule.

“They understood that holidays, vacations and birthdays needed to be celebrated around Wellesley games and events so that I never missed anything,” he wrote.

“How often can someone say that their hobby and their passion is their job. I would not have traded this for anything. I was able to make my living in sports in a great community,” Brown wrote.

Asked about once he departs Wellesley whether he might be tempted to go back to at least rooting for Natick baseball, he says: “When I left Natick I always said that I would root for them all but twice a year when they played Wellesley and nothing will change. Once a Raider always a Raider!”

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John Brown making an announcement at a Wellesley basketball game

Wellesley Athlete of the Week profiles (sponsored by Deland, Gibson Insurance)

Football coach stepping down after 14 years at Wellesley High

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Filed Under: Sports, Wellesley High School

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Wellesley 2026 Election Guide—Vote Tuesday, March 3rd

March 2, 2026 by Deborah Brown Leave a Comment

Wellesley Town HallWellesley votes during the annual town-wide election on Tuesday, March 3rd, 2026.

Below is information about the election.


Swellesley Q&As with the candidates for contested races

Meet the Wellesley Select Board candidates (in ballot order)

  • Marc Charney
  • Beth Sullivan Woods
  • Tom Ulfelder

Meet the Wellesley School Committee candidates (in ballot order)

  • Bob Sullivan
  • Costas Panagopoulos, PhD
  • Ayla Lari
  • Michael Robert Cave, PhD

Plus:

Candidates discuss green initiatives at Sustainable Wellesley event.

League of Women Voters of Wellesley, Meet the Candidates night.

Charles River Chamber, Wellesley Select Board Candidates’ Debate


Other candidates for town office, in ballot order

MODERATOR—vote for ONE for a one-year term

  • Mark G. Kaplan

BOARD OF ASSESSORS—vote for ONE for a three-year term

  • Stephen R. Burtt

BOARD OF HEALTH—vote for ONE for a three-year term

  • Susan E. Ecklund

WELLESLEY HOUSING AUTHORITY—vote for ONE for a four-year term

  • Odessa M.B. Sanchez

WELLESLEY HOUSING AUTHORITY—vote for ONE for a two-year term

  • Janice G. Coduri

LIBRARY TRUSTEES—vote for not more than TWO for three-year terms

  • Maria Gallo Ashbrook
  • Aunoy Banerjee

NATURAL RESOURCES COMMISSION—vote for not more than TWO for a three-year term

  • Joseph Schott
  • Melinda Arias-Voci

PLANNING BOARD—vote for ONE for a five-year term

  • Edward Chazen

BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS—vote for ONE for a three-year term

  • Jeffery P. Wechsler

BOARD OF PUBLIC WORKS—vote for ONE for a two-year term

  • Michael J. McManus

RECREATION COMMISSION—vote for ONE for a three-year term

  • Ansley Martin, Jr.

How to vote in person on Election Day 2026

Election Day is Tuesday, March 3, 2026. Polls will be open 7am-8pm.

Use the Precinct map to find your voting location.  Some precincts vote at the same location.

  • Precincts A & C: Upham Elementary School, 35 Wynnewood Road—NEW LOCATION
  • Precinct B: Sprague Elementary School, 401 School Street
  • Precincts D & E: Warren Building, 90 Washington Street
  • Precincts F & G: Shipley Center, Dana Hall School, 142 Grove Street
  • Precinct H: Tolles Parsons Center, Council on Aging, 500 Washington Street

Specimen ballots for each precinct can be found here.


Voting by Mail

If you requested a Vote by Mail ballot for this election, ballots must be received at Wellesley Town Hall (525 Washington Street) by 8pm on Election Day. So be aware that at this point, it is too late to send in your Vote by Mail ballot via the United States Postal Service.

Vote by Mail ballots may be dropped in the ballot and payment drop box outside Town Hall, or delivered to the Town Clerk’s office by 8pm on Election Day. Do not drop off Vote by Mail ballots at polling locations.

If you received a Vote by Mail ballot but are not able to return it by Election Day,  you may vote in-person on March 3.  Only the first ballot submitted by any voter will be counted.

Note: The last day to request a Vote by Mail ballot was Feb. 24.

About half of Wellesley voters have submitted ballots by mail in each of the past few years.

For all local election questions, contact the Town Clerk’s office. 


Candidates for Town Meeting 2026

Out of Wellesley’s eight precincts, five of them are contested races. Precinct F is the most competitive, with 15 candidates vying for 10 spots.

Candidates running uncontested for Town Meeting include those in Precincts A (11 candidates for 11 spots); C (11 candidates for 12 spots);  and G (10 candidates for 10 spots).

See the list of all Town Meeting candidates here.


After the dust settles

Wellesley’s 2026 Annual Town Meeting will take place in March and April, beginning on Monday, March 30, 2026, 7pm. in the Wellesley High School auditorium at 50 Rice Street. Meetings are expected to continue on March 31, April  6 and 7, and April 13 and 14 (if needed). The public is welcome to attend Town Meeting.

Read the 2026 Annual Town Meeting Warrant


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Filed Under: 2026 Town Election, Government, Politics

Civic engagement

Wellesley town government meetings for week of March 2, 2026: Town Meeting prep heats up

March 2, 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

A sampling of Wellesley, Mass., meetings and agenda items for the week of March 2, 2026:

Trails Committee (March 2, 7pm, Police Department, 485 Washington St.)

Walks and Events; Marketing updates; Trails Status/Ongoing Projects); Update on new wall blocking John Schuler path

Advisory Committee (March 4, 6:30pm, town hall)

Discuss and Vote Annual Town Meeting Warrant Articles*  • Article 4 – Amend Job Classification Plan • Article 5 – Amend Salary Plan – Pay Schedule • Article 6 – Set Salary of Elected Official • Article 7 – FY26 Budget Supplemental Appropriations • Article 9 – Revolving Funds, Set amounts for FY27 • Article 10 – Stabilization Funds • Article 11 – Water Program • Article 12 – Sewer Program • Article 13 – Stormwater Program • Article 14 – Wellesley Media Contribution • Article 15, Motion 1 – Community Preservation Committee appropriation • Article 16 – WHS Hunnewell Field Irrigation Improvements • Article 17 – Playground Reconstruction • Article 19 – Weston/Linden Intersection Design • Article 20 – DPW Campus/Municipal Service Building Feasibility Study • Article 22 – Authorize Increase in Retirement COLA Base • Article 23 – Add/Modify Personnel Policies • Article 24 – Authorize Water Fund and Sewer Fund Bond Authorization • Article 27 – Authorize Use of Uber/Lyft Funds • Article 29 – Land Swap DPW/NRC/MWRA • Article 30 – HR Board Requirement for Policies • Article 31 – Amend the Flood Plain or Watershed Protection District Bylaw • Article 33 – Rescind or Transfer Debt • Article 36 – Appoint Fire Engineers  *Note: Articles may be discussed and voted out of listed

Advisory Committee (March 5, 6:30pm, town hall)

Continued discussion and voting on Annual Town Meeting warrant articles

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Wellesley sports: High school girls’ alpine skiing impresses at states; Pekowitz sisters compete at curling nationals

March 2, 2026 by Bob Brown Leave a Comment

The Wellesley, Mass., sports news:

Wellesley High school girls’ alpine skiing team impresses at states

 Congratulations to the Wellesley High School girls’ alpine ski team, runner up at the the MIAA state ski championships on Feb. 25 at Wachusett Mountain to Medway High. The Wellesley team was coming off the Mass Bay Ski League East championship for the regular season.

alpine skiing Lucy Matheson, Leah Matheson ( Trophy) and Charlotte Kelley
Wellesley High alpine skiers Lucy Matheson, Leah Matheson and Charlotte Kelley at MIAA state championships (courtesy photo)

 
Charlotte Kelley shined in the giant slalom, taking second place, and the slalom, where she finished seventh.

The team has more than 50 members, who started out the season with training on dry land twice a week and in the snow two days a week, according to coach Cory Tusler, celebrating 20 seasons as a skiing coach.

The team started its races at the start of January, with 12 races for varsity and six for JV.

“It goes fast, we race 200-250 skiers per night,” Tusler said, touting the 4-5 feet of “Mother Nature’s best” snow this season.

Tusler shared special thanks to assistant coaches Liam Gray and David Driver, who skied for Tusler 18 years ago. “I couldn’t do it without them. And a big thanks to John Brown for always being at the Championship Races! No matter how cold it gets. ”


Pekowitz sisters compete at curling nationals

 
usa curling

Wellesley sisters Julia Pekowitz (Wellesley High School ’23, Wellesley College ’27) and Alexa Pekowitz (Wellesley College ’25, University of Minnesota Twin Cities ’29) competed this past week at the USA Curling Women’s Nationals in Charlotte.

Team Pekowitz played plenty of competitive matches during the event, at which it went 3-4. In addition to the Pekowitz sisters, the team included Lila Farwell from Colorado and Kalina Petrova from New Jersey.

The team will also be competing at U21 Nationals in Bismarck,  North Dakota at the end of March.


We welcome sports updates, photos at theswellesleyreport@gmail.com

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Housing

Revised RIO zoning reform proposal to make way to Wellesley Town Meeting

February 27, 2026 by Bob Brown 1 Comment

The Wellesley Planning Board this week voted 3-1 to approve revised motion language for an Annual Town Meeting article that aims to modify the Residential Incentive Overlay (RIO) zoning bylaw that has been such a hot housing-related topic in recent years (see Wellesley Media recording of the Feb. 23 meeting at about the 2-hour, 15-minute mark for this discussion and vote).

The motion, which proposes eliminating single residence districts from the RIO bylaw, is set to be presented under Article 32 at Town Meeting, slated to begin on March 30.

The Select Board earlier this month heard and discussed recommendations from the Planning Board’s RIO Task Force, a group formed in the wake of last spring’s Annual Town Meeting. That segment of the Feb. 10 Select Board meeting (see Wellesley Media recording) grew tense at times, as the Board pushed back on a recommendation regarding the proposed addition of a development agreement requirement to the project approval section of the RIO bylaw.

The RIO Task Force reconvened on Feb. 23 as part of a public hearing and joint meeting with the Planning Board to reconsider its Article 32 motion language, with the development agreement piece clearly off the table at this point.

Doing something about RIO

Opposition to proposed uses of the RIO bylaw, which went on the books in 1998, came to a head in October, 2024, when a pair of proposed multifamily housing developments got shot down at Special Town Meeting. RIOs were also front and center at Annual Town Meeting last April because of a citizen petition that sought to return the RIO bylaw to its original state. As the proponent explained during presentations, the focus of RIOs would again be on allowing multi-unit residential development in commercial areas but not in single residence and general residence districts.

The RIO Task Force was then formed, and has held or been involved in more than a dozen meetings since its first in June.

The Task Force on Feb. 23 over the span of about two hours mulled how to approach the motion language for Article 32 after receiving the Select Board’s feedback. The Task Force members considered removing all zones from the RIO bylaw, essentially making the already infrequently used bylaw no longer an option. They also considered limiting their recommendation to removing only single residence and a few other districts from the bylaw. And finally, they weighed whether to just scrap the whole thing, and go back to work on a proposal that might stand a better chance of passing Select Board and Town Meeting approvals.

Among those supporting the approach of not moving forward with an article at Town Meeting at this time was Peter Welburn, the resident whose citizen petition at Annual Town Meeting last year recommended returning the RIO bylaw to its original state. Welburn said he felt more time was needed to discuss issues with the Select Board, the Planning Board, other stakeholders, and amongst themselves. He said the Task Force might be better off getting something ready for a Special Town Meeting in the fall.

Task Force member Paul Criswell said he’s supportive of doing away with RIOs in single family residence zones. He could come around to getting ridding of RIOs, but would want to know more first about alternatives, such as single-site zoning options.

Task Force member and Precinct D (Lower Falls) representative Kara Reinhardt Block, who was active in discussions about the proposed RIO projects that met their fate at Special Town Meeting in 2024, shared a few number-filled slides during the Feb. 23 meeting to help illustrate her thoughts regarding the Article 32 decision. She’s a proponent of getting rid of the RIO bylaw altogether. She showed that just removing RIO from single residence districts might open Precinct D, with its ample commercially-zoned property abutting single-family homes, to a disproportionate amount of RIO development (especially with many commercial properties changing hands). “There’s a profound inequity in that,” she said, citing the municipal infrastructure and other impacts of new development.

Most members supported either removing all districts or at least single residence districts from the bylaw.

Overall, Task Force members said they’ve learned a lot through the process, which has brought together a group of people with many different views on the subject.

When the Planning Board reconvened, it voted 3-1 on Article 32 motion language that would eliminate single residence zones from the RIO bylaw. Patty Mallett said she wanted to keep the RIO itself around for now, just in case a developer of senior housing might want to use it, so voted in favor of just eliminating the single residence zone from it. Tom Taylor said he saw that option as a straightforward one that would improve the bylaw, so voted that way, too.  Outgoing Planning Board member Kathleen Woodward too supported just eliminating single residence from the bylaw, to relieve some resident stress, but keeping the bylaw on the books as an available tool. Planning Chair Marc Charney wasn’t necessarily opposed to that approach, but voted “no,” to express his preference for removing all zones from the RIO bylaw. That, he said, would keep the bylaw on the books but neuter it. Charney said he just doesn’t see the RIO bylaw getting used as it is in part because there has been so much negative discussion surrounding RIOs in recent years.


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