7:30 PM
Deborah Brown, Town Moderator, calls the meeting to order.
Very Special Member has a Very Special Birthday today -- Dan Fenn is 95 years -- more than half of his life spent in Town Meeting. Dan was interviewed by the Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate - that interview is HERE.
Town Meeting Member Association (TMMA) Awards Brief recess to acknowledge Marsha Baker's 30 years and Frank Sandy's 50 years (!) for their civic commitment to the Town in Town Meeting.
Back in session.
ARTICLE 2 – REPORTS OF TOWN BOARDS, OFFICERS, AND COMMITTEES This Article remains open throughout Town Meeting and reports may be presented at any Town Meeting session by Boards, Officers, or Committees.
Report of the Planning Board is received and placed on file with the Town Clerk. Planning Board Chair, Richard Canale, presents the report.
Later in tonight's session, it is anticipated that the Report of the Superintendent of Lexington Public Schools will be received and placed on file with the Town Clerk.
If any other reports are filed tonight, this post will be updated.
Personal blog, written from my various perspectives: parent; elected Lexington Town Meeting Member (2006-2021); issues advocate and activist; board member Media Literacy Now (2013-2020), Progressive Democrats of Mass, and Parent Representative on the Massachusetts Board of Elementary and Secondary Education. Older posts go back to Lexington School Committee (2009-2014) and Massachusetts PTA President days (2008-2012). Blog content mine, unless otherwise attributed. All comments moderated.
Showing posts with label Lexington Public Schools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lexington Public Schools. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 28, 2018
Monday, December 29, 2014
Wrap Up: Bridge, Bowman, and Estabrook Elementary Schools
In 2010, the Town of Lexington Public Facilities took advantage of an indoor air quality test offered by the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Results revealed that in two schools (Jonas Clarke Middle School and Estabrook Elementary School), concentrations of polychlorinated biphenyls (known as PCBs) were higher than normal.
Locating the source of PCBs then took considerable sleuthing and further testing. At Clarke, PCBs were found only in window caulking; mitigation was relatively simple to do: remove the caulk, encapsulate the surrounding building masonry, and recaulk windows with non-PCB material.
At Estabrook though, it was an entirely different matter.
Eventually, PCBs were found in all of the floor and ceiling mastic, as well as the window caulk, and in the mastic used to affix both interior and exterior decorative wall panels.

The truly exciting moment came when the Estabrook elementary School opened its new doors to students in February 2014. This past October 2014 there was an official ribbon cutting and celebration for the new Estabrook Elementary School. (All photos by yours truly. Read more about the Estabrook Elementary School Project, including beautiful images of the new school on the DiNisco Design Partnership website).
Locating the source of PCBs then took considerable sleuthing and further testing. At Clarke, PCBs were found only in window caulking; mitigation was relatively simple to do: remove the caulk, encapsulate the surrounding building masonry, and recaulk windows with non-PCB material.
At Estabrook though, it was an entirely different matter.
Eventually, PCBs were found in all of the floor and ceiling mastic, as well as the window caulk, and in the mastic used to affix both interior and exterior decorative wall panels.
In January of 2012, Lexington voters approved a debt exclusion override to appropriate funds for extraordinary repairs to the Bridge and Bowman Elementary Schools and for replacement of the Estabrook School. Later that spring, at Special Town Meeting on April 2, 2012, Town Meeting voted to appropriate money for those repairs. In August, the School Committee was invited to see the new boiler room - an extended space at one far corner of each school. (Bridge and Bowman are identical buildings.)
I snapped the exciting images of the new boiler room (below), complete with shiny new pipes. The new boilers are much more efficient and slightly larger than a standard kitchen refrigerator. Compare that to the previous boilers, which when removed, provided space for two classrooms!


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The new Estabrook Elementary School |
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Estabrook student assembly ... |
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...a full house! |
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L-R: Parent Leader Karen Griffiths, Estabrook PTA co-president; DiNisco Design Partnership Principal Architect Ken DiNisco; DiNisco Design Partnership Project Lead Donna DiNisco |
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Dr. Paul Ash |
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Principal Trach with guests |
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