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The top dogs in show for Wellesley in 2023 are…

August 14, 2023 by Hannah Langenfeld

The saying “a dog is a person’s best friend” is not overrated for many people and families worldwide, with Wellesley not being an exception. The names of these fur babies are important, since it’s how you praise, love, call and scold your dog throughout the day. Dog owners also have a preference for the breed of dog they have, which dictates a lot from the level of adorable-ness to the color of their fur coat.

So without further ado, here is Swellesley’s annual report of the top dog names and breeds in town. The data cited in this article is based on the pet registration information given to the town clerk’s office of Wellesley, which was then shared with Swellesley via a spreadsheet (embedded below).

The most common primary breed of dog owned in Wellesley is the Labrador Retriever, and it seems that many other familiar breeds have been walking and running around Wellesley, too. However, so many different breeds were registered with the town, including the Chinese Shar-Pei, Glen of Imaal Terrier, Xoloitzcuintli and Alaskan Malamute.

The number one most common name for dogs was a tie between Charlie and Bella, even when you include variations of Charlee, Charles, Charley and then Belle (last year, the top name was Luna). A few other fun names on the registration list included Albus Dumbledore, Atticus Finch, Bamboo, Cappuccino, and Captain Biscotti.

All dogs over 6 months old residing in Wellesley must be licensed by the Town Clerk. New licenses are available each year from Jan. 1-March 31, and must be renewed annually to avoid a fine. Wellesley’s dog license fee rose from $20 to $25 this year, and the spay/neutered dog license increased from $12 to $15

Here are some photos of Wellesley resident dogs and puppies, below.

 

Dogs
Callie and Harper Anderson, your friendliest neighborhood bunny chasers
This is Wilma, the English mastiff. She is three years old. And there is Enzo the French bulldog who is two years old. They live together, and they are best buddies!
Best buds Enzo, a 2-year-old French bulldog, and Wilma, a 3-year-old English mastiff
Cricket, cocker spaniel, age 14. Beloved neighborhood mascot; enjoys entertaining in the backyard on lovely summer evenings.
Cricket, cocker spaniel, age 14. Beloved neighborhood mascot; enjoys entertaining in the backyard on lovely summer evenings.
Cleo, cocker spaniel, age 10. A smiling girl who loves hugs from friends, and unwrapping presents at anyone’s birthday party (especially her own).
Cleo, cocker spaniel, age 10. A smiling girl who loves hugs from friends, and unwrapping presents at anyone’s birthday party (especially her own).
Mabel and Grey
French Bulldogs Mabel (1.5yo) and Grey (3yo). They live in Wellesley Square & can often be seen window shopping along Central Street.
Phoebe (yellow) and Otis (black), both rescues, getting driven around to play in the woods in our dog car
Phoebe (yellow) and Otis (black), both rescues, getting driven around to play in the woods in the family’s dog car.

[gview file=”https://media.theswellesleyreport.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/14110033/2023-Wellesley-dog-names-and-breeds-.xlsx”]

Filed Under: Animals

     

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Developers recast reduced 8 Cliff Road condo plan as 489 Worcester St. project in latest pitch

August 8, 2023 by Hannah Langenfeld

Two representatives for the proposed 489 Worcester St. condo development, formerly known as the 8 Cliff Rd. project, shared updates at the Wellesley Planning Board meeting on July 24 (about 25 minutes in to Wellesley Media recording).

One slide from the updated housing plan presentation

 

According to the production slideshow presented by developer Victor Sheen, one of the major changes is that there will be 48 housing units as opposed to the previously planned 69. Eight will be deemed affordable housing. Another major change to the plan will be the preservation of the 4 and 14 Cliff Rd. single-family homes. Sheen said this will hopefully keep the historic nature of the neighborhood.

As a result of critiques about traffic flow, Sheen and his colleague Peter Holland responded to the working group and Select Board input by relocating the front of the building and drop-off point to the South or Rte. 9 portion of the land. Sheen said that with two full-time access points to the building, this should decrease the amount of traffic which primarily goes through the adjacent Bradford Road. As a result of adding garages with internal-access for the units, Sheen said during the presentation that two-thirds of traffic will be redirected to Rte. 9 and the remaining third will be on Cliff Road.

Despite these changes, some Wellesley residents had remaining concerns about the plan.

Gregg Griner, who lives on Bradford Road, spoke at the Planning Board meeting during the Q&A forum portion. Griner pointed out his personal doubts about the traffic assessment provided during the meeting, explaining that many people—including himself—do not take the commuter rail train because it is not conducive to their work hours. Griner said that redirecting an increased amount of traffic to a Rte. 9 entrance which only allows for driving west, is a safety concern because of  more speeding off of Cliff Road.

Other concerns brought up by the Planning Board and residents, was how much the construction and chemicals from the build-out will disrupt the nearby wetlands, the blasting of the rocks on the cliff, and how the design of the new garage car lot and aesthetics of the building will look from Rte. 9.

To address those concerns, Sheen said that the development team has added a Cliff Road landscape buffer with a space of open land between the building and wetlands. The proposed building site will also be 170 feet back from Cliff Road.

The town has emphasized that the development plan is in the preliminary stages, and encouraged residents to submit questions and suggestions or concerns by email, and to subscribe to the 489 Worcester St News Flash for emailed updates on the development project.

The Historic District Commission also touched on the project about 90 minutes into its Aug. 1 meeting.

More: Wellesley’s Cliff Estates gets its turn with proposed condo development (May, 2023)

Early stage 8 Cliff Road housing proposal meets strong resistance from Wellesley neighbors (June, 2023)

Filed Under: Construction, Houses

Wellesley cyclists geared up for Pan-Mass Challenge

August 5, 2023 by Hannah Langenfeld

Ready, set and ride! The Pan-Mass Challenge officially began at the Babson College starting line this Saturday, with many passionate bikers ready to ride after intense training and fundraising for the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and its research.

pmc logoLori Vener Johnston is a Wellesley resident who is riding in the PMC as part of ‘Team Launch,” a group of nine women who have been riding together for the past 12 years.

According to Johnston, each of her teammates have deeply personal stories, connections and reasons for riding in the PMC, with three of the women being breast cancer survivors. Johnston added that Launch is unique in part because it is rare to have a team that is all women.

In her interview with Swellesley,  Johnston shared that she initially became involved with the PMC to support one of her teammates who co-founded a Dana-Farber program which helps young mothers by providing resources outside of medical care. Johnston emphasized that overall, she and every member of Launch are riding to support people in cancer treatment and other survivors.

“We have all lost family members and friends. One of our teammates lost her son to a brain tumour, and she is riding to honour the care that he got. It starts with a simple reason, and then you start to ride and are amazed by the people you meet,” Johnston said. “From the doctors who work millions of hours, to the people who donate money. You don’t expect the stories you hear. Cancer sucks and this is just a way to make it better.”

A “pedal partner” is a child at Dana-Farber who is in treatment and will accompany teams and other PMC riders to give support. Johnston said that this year, Launch is riding with a pedal partner named Abigail, a five-year-old girl with Neuroblastoma who is now cancer-free.

“She is living proof that the money people before us raised, funded research that saved her life. That is why we ride,” Johnston said.

According to the PMC, there are 105 riders who are Wellesley residents participating in the Challenge. With every dollar of the fundraiser going directly to Dana-Farber cancer research and treatment, riders and volunteers from 43 states and 8 countries will participate in the PMC Ride Weekend festivities to show support.

Another Wellesley-based PMC team is “Hannah’s Bandanas,” led and started by Karen and Jeff Packman, after their daughter Hannah was diagnosed with Leukaemia at a young age and is now a cancer survivor.

Ben Smith is in his second year riding with Hannah’s Bandanas, and shared in his interview that he became involved with riding after his significant other Betsy Kessler’s spouse and big PMC rider, Andy, passed from Laryngeal cancer. Smith also said that his wife died in a hiking avalanche in 2018 while on a family vacation in New Hampshire.

“We consider ourselves the luckiest-unlucky people, Betsy and I, in that we have endured tragedy but at the same time connected with somebody with a similar life experience and similar values,” Smith said. “It’s been really life saving and really great.”

Smith said that his first year participating in the PMC was as a co-rider in the support van which gives cyclists aid if they need water, food or logistical help with their bikes; then last year, he signed up to ride.

Smith said that the community and care that he has found in the PMC community has been incredible, and that he and Betsy’s friend groups have generously helped their fundraising goals.

“It is a great way to fundraise, because you’re doing something healthy and supporting all of the people that have cancer, will have cancer and also trying to hopefully provide resources to do the research that is needed,” Smith said. “I would encourage everyone to get involved. It is a very community oriented way to do something supportive that is extremely worthwhile. It has been an honor and a pleasure to ride with my team, other riders and the volunteers along the way.”

The PMC has allowed riders to set up profiles about themselves and/or their bike teams to share their reasons for participating and so people can donate or sign up to be volunteers.

”If you asked me 12 years ago, I never ever would have thought I am riding 12 years later, and none of us have plans to stop riding any time soon,” Johnston said. “We feel so fortunate to support each other. We all believe in the cause, all have history and we really keep each other going.”

Here’s the PMC list of riders from Wellesley:

Alicia Abad
Neeraj Aggarwal
Laurel Archibald
Richard Askin
Conrad Balejko
James Beauregard
Scott Bender
Zach Bender
Nichole Bernier
Ian Blasco
Moe Blaustein
Jesse Boehm
Angela Braman
Will Braman
Grant Brown
Sarah Bua
John Bueker
Jeff Carney
John Carney
Rory Carney
Jarrett Collins
Louis Corticelli
Stephanie Coughlan
Dan Cullaty
Katharine Cunningham
James DeCaprio
John DiCola
Bonni DiMatteo
Bob Dolan
Paul Enderle
Timothy Ernst
Jonathan Ettinger
Wendy Fischman
Ben Fischman
John Giannuzzi
William Godfrey
Thomas Goemaat
Richard Green
Barbara Gross
Robin Hall
Christopher Harding
Taylor Hart
Robert Hazard
Fred Hoff
Wendy Horn
Jamie Howe
Lisa Hughes
Sara Johnson
Hugh Johnston
Lori Johnston
Ken Jones
Brian Kavoogian
Charlotte Kelsey
Brian Kinney
Paul Laviolette
Stephen Leonard
Bob Leonhardt
Mark Lepper
Kyle Levine
Susan Levine
Katherine Macdonald
Kevin Macdonald
Glen Magpiong
Bill Maynard
Sean Milano
Peter Monsen
Mike Mordas
Henry Muggia
Andrew Muggia
Gerard Mulrooney
Steven Nocka
Chris O’Connell
John O’Connell
Matthew Olton
Laura Olton
Ian ONeal
James Palacino
John Power
Patti Quigley
Roger Randall
Peter Reinemann
Lindsey Renner
Anne Rickard Jackowitz
Stephen Rosen
Thomas Rosenbloom
Jessica Ross
Elizabeth Rucci
Michael Ryan
Eric Scharmer
Andrew Schiller
Randy Schneider
Steven Shanks
Alex Silberman
Howard Singer
Benjamin Smith
George Stathis
Garrick Stewart
Katie Stewart
Andrew Wagner
Richard Walsh
Matthew Ward
Laura Wilkins
Nancy Williamson
Kathleen Woodward
Michael Young


Feel free to share your PMC pics with us:  theswellesleyreport@gmail.com

Filed Under: Charity/Fundraising

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Family-run Kids Backing Kids continues to support children in-need around Wellesley and beyond

August 1, 2023 by Hannah Langenfeld

For Wellesley High alumna Grace Rodrigue and her two sisters, Olivia and Simone, volunteering and being able to give back to their community is deeply personal and fundamental to supporting children who are economically disadvantaged. In an interview with Swellesley, Grace shared that her father understood first-hand what it was like to grow up as a child in poverty and on food stamps, which is partly why he became involved and was named President and Director of Kids Backing Kids.

Grace Rodrigue with her two sisters, Olivia and Simone

Kids Backing Kids is a non-profit, independent organization that was co-founded by the Rodrigue sisters during the coronavirus pandemic in 2020 when it became clear how much COVID-19 was impacting children and families. According to the KBK website, the original concept was to help children who could not afford school supplies, receive them, and it quickly grew to become more: educating other kids in Wellesley about important problems children are experiencing such as food insecurity and homelessness.

KBK does more than its annual Back to School Supply Drive, which gives kids a new backpack with supplies, snacks and other school-material resources, by holding a holiday gift drive during the Winter and a diaper drive, where people can donate items for infants and new mothers. According to Grace, the organization has now branched out to helping students in Needham, Newton and Dorchester.

KBK also has many volunteer opportunities that engage people of all ages and backgrounds. For kids in grades 5 to 8, they can be a ‘Backpack Stuffer’ which is a more casual commitment, and for high schoolers, they can become “Community Speakers”—a higher level of commitment that allows them to learn about and then speak on topics (childhood poverty, food insecurity, homelessness, or trauma) in front of large groups.

KBK also has a selective mentorship program for kids in grades 10 to 12, in which they select four students to be paired with a mentor on the executive team for one year, to learn about how a non-profit organization operates and to be a part of something they care about.

“We like to include our community and surrounding communities as much as possible because we want other kids to get the experience of helping kids their age,” Grace said. “We want to raise awareness of these social issues and hopefully inspire change in the future with future generations. So we always have an interactive part in our drives where kids and families and anyone can volunteer to help in any sort of way.”

More: Wellesley’s charitable and community action groups

Filed Under: Charity/Fundraising, Volunteering

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Global Flora Conservatory at Wellesley College highlights botanical diversity

July 24, 2023 by Hannah Langenfeld

The Baobab (Adansonia digitata) is also known as “the tree of life” and grows in Madagascar and southern Africa. Its lifespan can be up to 1,500 years, with its name originating from the Arabic word for fruit, according to a label in the Global Flora Conservatory, which sits on the nearly 22 acres of Wellesley College’s botanical gardens. This healing plant is only one of many prickly cacti, trees and various plants currently living in the greenhouse.

Global Flora Wellesley College

The greenhouse project won international recogntion for sustainability at the  LafargeHolcim Design Awards while under construction in 2018. In an overview of Global Flora, introductory comments about the vision for Global Flora to be sustainable and scientifically interdisciplinary were written by Botanic Garden Director Kristina Jones.

Jones wrote that the project would not seek to curate plants with livable conditions that are ‘energy demanding’ to recreate and that the botanic garden staff would “think of energy and water as systems that interact with each other and with the organisms, and make these systems as accessible as possible for monitoring and study.”

Global Flora Wellesley College

Global Flora was completed and opened in 2019 and also accompanied a student-led class project to examine “the roles that plants and the natural sciences have played in colonial histories across six continents and several islands.” For this class, students learned from native guest speakers, read texts written by Indigenous anthropologists and scientists and were able to study the college’s botanic garden. Global Flora shut down due to the coronavirus pandemic in 2020 but re-opened to the public on Tuesdays for a portion of this summer.

When visitors first walk into the conservatory, the first level of the greenhouse has a paved walkway leading to a second level which loops back to the entrance. From plants on the wall in addition to fully in-ground plants, the dry and wet biomes of Global Flora seem to be successfully keeping alive a range of diverse plants in an artificial natural habitat. 

Global Flora Wellesley College

Signs with QR codes that visitors may scan to learn more information about the different plant life in Global Flora help people connect and learn about horticulture and botanics, while interactive activities for children such as coloring and writing down suggestions on what they would like to see added to Global Flora, make the trip appropriate for all ages.

The Global Flora Conservatory exhibit will be open to the public in the Wellesley College Botanic Garden until July 28, then re-open in the fall. Admission is free.

Global Flora Wellesley College


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

Filed Under: Gardens, Wellesley College

Wellesley High students commit to inclusivity with ‘Flags of Representation’

July 13, 2023 by Hannah Langenfeld

When entering the Wellesley High School cafeteria, you’ll see 252 miniature print-out flags lining the walls, each flag representing various places around the world and highlighting different cultures and identities. Prior to this past school year, those flags were not there, only having appeared after three WHS students decided to take action.

Rising WHS senior Ivy Wang was sitting with her friend of Indian descent in the cafeteria at the end of her sophomore year when they both noticed that neither of their country’s flags was hanging from the cafeteria ceiling.

Ivy Wang putting up flags

 

Wang, who said she is Taiwanese, wondered why only a few countries’ flags were hung and others were not. She went to the principal in November, and he supported her in undertaking a project to put up all of the flags that represented the student body.

Sharon Gray, the Coordinator for Public Engagement for Wellesley Public Schools, wrote in an email to Swellesley that when the new WHS opened in 2012, there were 16 flag holders to display the flags of all countries where current students were born—since then, flags have been rearranged and switched out annually to reflect changes in the WHS student population.

WHS Principal Dr. Jamie Chisum said that he is appreciative of Wang’s “creative solution” to hang up more flags, especially since he has long wished there was more room. “We can never get enough flags up,” Chisum said.

Wang said she started this project out of personal experience and to help other students who may not feel seen, but that her small committee still encountered initial challenges such as the pure logistics of space, numbers and world politics.

“I’ve always thought this would be more of an art project but it had more math to it than art. We had to find all the flags that represented the students, and it was more than just countries. For example, Taiwan I don’t think is recognized as a country by the UN, but it’s still its own separate culture so that got complicated,” Wang said. “… Also, the pillars in the cafeteria are not circular, they were rectangular. So we had to find out how many flags were on the long side, how many flags on the short side, what the border length is and how big the flags would be.”

Nica Alimzhanov, a rising junior at WHS, was co-vice chair of the flag project. She also handled photo editing, and creation of the flag vinyl stickers and printouts. 

Alimzhanov said that she also wanted to help increase representation, especially when she realized her nation’s flag, Russia, was not displayed.

“It was great to see everybody’s nationalities being in the cafeteria, and it just becomes a much more welcoming place. I got to see my heritage up there,” Alimzhanov said. “I had even students come up to me and say, ‘Oh, have you put up the Swedish flag?’ for example, and I’d point them to where it was and it’d be a bright moment of their day for a little bit, and I think it was really rewarding.”

Wang also said that the flags they put up were more than just the flags of countries, emphasizing accessibility and diversity.

“When we talk about the flags that we put up we say ‘flags of representation.’ Because it’s more than just countries,” Wang said. “So we had the American Indian Movement flag, the Disability Pride flag, as well as the Black Lives Matter flag and Pride flag that we that was already up in the cafeteria.”

Alimzhanov said that before they settled on printed-out miniature flags, there were many iterations of what the flags would end up looking like.

“Originally, our idea was actually maybe even hand painting all of the flags in collaboration with Mr. [Brian] Reddy and his after-school art club, but just in terms of time constraints and the actual organization of having to hand paint 252 flags, we thought it would be much more budget-friendly and doable to do high-quality resolution pictures,” Alimzhanov said. “Then I individually photoshopped each one into the correct size on multiple pieces of paper that we then later printed out and then put up.”

Sydney Baugh, a rising junior at WHS, worked on the project as well.

“It was mostly student-driven. We worked a lot of outside-of-school hours… and there were tons of teachers who encouraged us through the project,” Baugh said. “One of them is Christine Carpenter. She came up to us and thanked us for the work that we were doing. I would say it was the encouragement from staff and other students that was very helpful.”

Baugh said that she is excited to see more student feedback when school is back in session, and that she hopes to further the goals of making students and faculty feel represented in the Wellesley Public School system through future projects.

“It was a big task to take on and it took a very long time,” Baugh said, “but I’m very proud of us and I think that what we set out to do at the beginning of the project was achieved.”


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Filed Under: Embracing diversity, Wellesley High School

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Early stage 8 Cliff Road housing proposal meets strong resistance from Wellesley neighbors

June 22, 2023 by Hannah Langenfeld

8 Cliff Road Meeting

In a crowded Wellesley High School cafeteria full of passionate residents—there were tears, there was anger, there was an on-the-spot election campaign launched for a Town Meeting seat—the town earlier this week hosted a public meeting to present the 8 Cliff Road housing development project to the community.

(See a Wellesley Media recording of the meeting embedded below.)

The initial plan for the condo development, at the intersection of Cliff Road and Rte. 9, would aggregate three parcels of land at 489 Worcester St., 4 Cliff Rd., and 14 Cliff Rd., into a 168,000 square foot parcel to be renamed 8 Cliff Road. This development conceptually includes 60 market rate units and 9 affordable rate ones, and has been discussed in recent months at Select Board and Wellesley Housing Development Corp. meetings.

 

14 cliff road
Proposal would incorporate 14 Cliff Rd. property

 

Wellesley Executive Director Meghan Jop began the nearly 3-hour meeting on June 15 by giving a presentation that explained the standard process of any proposed development to potentially be approved for construction. According to the Frequently Asked Questions sheet handed out during the meeting, the development team is looking “for denser development” of multi-family housing units in an area of single-family homes.

Two members of the 8 Cliff Road development team, Victor Sheen and Peter Holland, spoke about their preliminary plan and listened to resident concerns. It was heavily emphasized by the developers and the town that the project was still in the “concept phase” with many more hurdles to jump before being approved. 

“The town through the Select Board, Planning Board, or Zoning Board has also not made any determinations regarding support for the project at this point,” Jop wrote in an email to Swellesley following the meeting.

During the meeting, Sheen said that two of the reasons for proposing 8 Cliff Road were to build an option for older residents to downsize and to support the Wellesley Housing Production Plan and Unified Plan goals. These goals include increasing housing in high-transit locations (“MBTA communities”) and supporting and welcoming “a diversity of people and households”.

“In terms of how this project meets the current housing plan, and then the unified plan, we believe it checks most of the boxes if not all of the boxes that the town has identified, through a public process, as their priorities and goals,” Sheen said in a follow-up interview. Sheen, whose earlier projects in town include multifamily developments on Linden Street and Weston Road, said during the meeting that the development team will consider changes to the number of proposed units, traffic patterns, and more based on community feedback.

Despite the preliminary nature of the project, many residents in attendance were against the development itself and raised concerns about how it could increase traffic congestion and destroy historic preservation. One resident also warned that this could be just the beginning of big changes to the neighborhood—she said her family has been approached separately by a developer interested in purchasing their home for another multi-unit project.

Dan Chiasson, who lives on Cliff Road near the proposed development site, was one of these people. 

“The houses that face the road on Cliff, number 5, number 11, number 4, and number 14, really make up a distinct historic and scenic landscape, and to take down two out of the four will completely ruin that appeal,” Chiasson said in a post-meeting interview. He added that what he dubbed as the “cheesy Epcot like ‘tribute to Europe’” design, would also look and feel out of place.

Resident Ann Rappaport, an active town government member, said during the meeting that even though the town is committed to “preserving its historic character” in the Unified Plan, approving the 8 Cliff Road proposal would be a “travesty to the historic fabric” of the town in addition to undercutting the value of the other current historic homes. 

Sheen said that since the meeting, the team has begun to modify its plan to potentially preserve 14 Cliff Road and that an analysis of how to preserve other existing historic homes are underway. 

Many of the residents who got up to speak during the Q&A expressed distrust of the Select Board and developers. This stemmed mainly from not being told about the proposal earlier, and what they viewed as a lack of communication on the part of the development team.

Wendy Garber, a resident who has attended past meetings on the topic, said that despite multiple attempts from neighbors on Cliff Road and other town residents to contact the developers and ask questions via written comments, they received nothing back. 

“I don’t mean for this to be adversarial, but I think you need to be able to sit and hear our concerns because we have not had an opportunity to voice them,” Garber said. “ I think town boards need to understand that people in the town are concerned about this, we do not want to be told what to do, we want to have a say in this, and that is how this town is supposed to work.”

Holland and Sheen said during the meeting that they had emailed and spoken with neighbors from Cliff Road on many occasions.

Other meeting attendees brought up concerns that the safety of children living in the Cliff Road neighborhood would be compromised by increased traffic and speeding from Route 9 and intersecting roads. They also disagreed with the results of a Preliminary Traffic Impact Assessment submitted by the development team to the town.

Ann-Mara Lanza, a Select Board member and co-founder of the Building a Better Wellesley advocacy group, emphasized that it was still early but the town would eventually also do its own traffic assessment. It has not been done because the project needs to be better defined first, she said.

Some residents expressed support of the development proposal, including resident Andrew Burnet Mikula, a steering committee member for Building a Better Wellesley.

“I’d certainly like to see something built here, and I think the current plan is better than nothing. The most important reason why is this: there are a lot of people who already live in Wellesley whose housing needs aren’t being met right now,” Mikula said in a post-meeting follow-up.

Lanza said that she understood the frustrations of residents about 8 Cliff Road, but acknowledged from the Select Board perspective, every time there is a project proposed people support Wellesley’s housing goals, but do not want the traffic and changes that come with it.

“It isn’t like any of these concerns are unreasonable,” Lanza said. “But the question is, if we as a community support these goals, then we as a community have to figure out where we’re willing to build the housing to help.”


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Filed Under: Construction, Real estate

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Hannah Langenfeld joins Swellesley as summer intern

June 21, 2023 by Hannah Langenfeld

Hello, all! My name is Hannah Langenfeld and I will be an intern writing for The Swellesley Report this summer.

Hannah Bio Photo
Hannah Langenfeld

I grew up in Newton, graduating from Newton North High School in 2021. I now reside in Natick and Boston, and I am a rising junior at American University in Washington, D.C., majoring in journalism with a minor in international relations.

I have been a staff writer and an editor for the Life section of my university paper, The Eagle, since my freshman year, and this past May became an investigative reporter.

I am ready to cover housing issues and city government during my time with Swellesley and am grateful to Truly’s ice cream shop and readers for sponsoring the internship program. I want to be an international journalist after graduation and I believe that working for local news and immersing myself in the community will be a great and rewarding experience.

Being a reporter is a privilege and I’m excited to get started.

Filed Under: Media

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  • Wellesley: A timely reminder to spring ahead this weekend
  • Keeping up with Wellesley golf professional Michael Thorbjornsen
  • Nearby in Natick: 219 apartments pitched next to train station; Veteran Service Officer retiring; Neighbors against car wash
  • Business Buzz: Grand openings for Down Under School of Yoga, Wonder's many-restaurants-in-one & Inn at Fireside Tavern

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Recent Comments

  • Bob Brown on Business Buzz: Grand openings for Down Under School of Yoga, Wonder’s many-restaurants-in-one & Inn at Fireside Tavern
  • Donna Engler on Business Buzz: Grand openings for Down Under School of Yoga, Wonder’s many-restaurants-in-one & Inn at Fireside Tavern
  • Once A Raider on Wellesley Public Schools Athletic Director John Brown retiring in fall of ’26
  • Andrew Mikula on Revised RIO zoning reform proposal to make way to Wellesley Town Meeting
  • Donna Maria Ticchi on Art Working Group to put final touches on Wellesley Town Hall renovation

Calendar

Upcoming Wellesley events

Upcoming Events

Mar 11
8:00 am - 5:00 pm

Cello recital at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church

Mar 11
7:00 pm - 7:45 pm

OPENING NIGHT, Wellesley Theatre Project presents: “Disney Aristocats, KIDS”

Mar 13
12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

Office hours with Wellesley Select Board member Kenny Largess

Mar 13
7:00 pm - 8:00 pm

Wellesley High School Dramatic Arts Company presents “Fire in the Hole”

Mar 14
8:30 am - 11:30 am

Natick Community Organic Farm Maple Magic Pancake Breakfast

View Calendar

Links we like

  • Danny's Place
  • Great Runs
  • Tech-Tamer
  • Universal Hub
  • Wellesley Sports Discussion Facebook Group

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