Murder Suspect from Belmont Surrenders to Law Enforcement

Olmsted Drive’s Domingo Mendes, who faces a murder charge for killing a popular Waltham High School student on March 20, surrendered to Waltham Police on Thursday, April 17, according to a press release from Middlesex District Attorney Marian Ryan and Waltham Police Chief Keith MacPherson.

Mendes, 22, accompanied by his attorney, turned himself in on an outstanding warrant for murder, possession of a firearm, and conspiracy to violate the drug laws.

He is expected to be arraigned Friday, April 18, in Waltham District Court.

Authorities had previously arrested Taylor Poulin, 21, of Newton, in connection with the shooting.

According to court papers, Mendes is charged with killing Tyler Zanco, a Waltham High senior and wrestling captain, was shot shortly after 10 p.m. in the Gardencrest Apartments parking lot on Middlesex Circle in Waltham during a confrontation in the midst of a drug exchange.

On the Run: Belmont Residents Taking Part in the Boston Marathon

There will be 36,000 runners in the 2014 BAA Marathon and nearly 50 are your neighbors from Belmont.

Monday’s race, the 118th edition of the world’s oldest marathon, will have special meaning for the runners, spectators and the nation as it will be the first since the terrorist attack on April 15, 2013 that killed three and wounded more than 250 who came to watch the race along Boston’s Boylston Street near the finishing line.

Belmont is well represented by those running for charities or a fast time. The three top men to follow are Ryan McCalmon (who is a regular runner of Belmont’s Brendan’s Home Run 5K in June) who finished 43rd in last year’s race with a time of 2:25:13, Roger Donaghy who ran the 2011 Boston in 2:28:56 and Robert Cipriano who will challenge for the 50-54 year old title. Among the top women are Rachel Reardon and Karen Encarnacion.

This year, you can follow the race with a first-ever mobile app with the ability to follow your favorite runner on an interactive map.

  1. Scott Abrams  28628
  2. Anne Antonellis  29322
  3. Cara Brickley  27869
  4. John Carey  6973
  5. Sarkis Chekijian  26012
  6. Robert Cipriano  1224
  7. Kelly Coates  26054
  8. Charlie Conroy  4417
  9. Virginia Cox  27800
  10. Micheal Cragg  28688
  11. David DeMarco  30705
  12. Roger Donaghy  234
  13. Karen Encarnacion  9061
  14. Paul Feloney  31987
  15. Paul Firth  31013
  16. Jonathan Haines  15543
  17. Bill Hees  32677
  18. Christopher Heuisler  25629
  19. Richard Horgan  26739
  20. James Kelleher  31032
  21. Wolfgang Ketterle  1298
  22. Peter Lamb  30096
  23. Russell Leino  2544
  24. Mark Lewis  29145
  25. David MacDonald  26308
  26. Eric Marro  26567
  27. Leslie Mauriello  28526
  28. Ryan McCalmon  123
  29. Carolyn Mehaffey  31044
  30. Karyn Miller-Medzon  24043
  31. Joseph Mullaney  26174
  32. Stephen Najarian  25537
  33. Jodie O’Malley  34131
  34. Carrie Palmer  27035
  35. Oswald Paredes  34479
  36. John Pilkington-Sperry  25692
  37. Becca Pizzi  17013
  38. Rachel Reardon  8355
  39. Kristen Ruane  30976
  40. Jennifer Salucci  34093
  41. Alissa Schreiner  31859
  42. Andrew Schreiner  31860
  43. Emily Seaver  26990
  44. Hannah Swartz  30987
  45. Kimberly Usseglio  27498
  46. James Winter  35585

 

Things to Do Today: Early Release, Brownsberger at Beech Street , Story Time

Today is Good Friday and the beginning of the week-long April recess for the town’s students.

• It’s early release at the six Belmont public schools today: The High School at 10:30 a.m.; Chenery Middle School at 11 p.m. and the elementary school’s at 11:40 p.m. with the exception of the Winn Brook which will release at 11:50 p.m.

State Sen. Will Brownsberger will be at the Beech Street Center at 10 a.m. to meet with residents and hear their concerns.

Come to the Friday pre-school Story Time taking place at the Benton Library (at the corner of Oakley and Old Middlesex) beginning at 10:30 a.m. and led by Denise Patnod. There will be stories and crafts for children 3 to 5. Siblings may attend with adults. Parents or caregivers must be present. Registration is not required.

• Well-loved local musician Liz Buchanan performs original songs and traditional favorites at the Belmont Public Library’s Assembly Room at 10:30 a.m.

• While Monday is Patriots’ Day, it is today in 1775 when Paul Revere and William Dawes began their rides warning the Massachusetts countryside that “the regulars” were on the march.

Goose Busters Program Coming Back to Belmont

When your fields and playgrounds are fouled by fowls, who are you going to call?

Goose busters!

In an effort to control the waste left on Belmont’s fields and common areas by Canada geese, the most common waterfowl species in North America, the Belmont Health Department will be establishing a new, more formalized “off-leash” registration program for residents and their pet pooches, according to members of the Belmont Board of Health at an informational meeting held last week and in subsequent interviews.

A past attempt to register dogs to run on the tows playing fields was less organized or controlled, resulting in an ineffective scheme. The existing “Off-Leash Program for Dogs on Belmont Athletic Fields” run by the Recreation Department is $40 per resident dog for 2014.

“[O]ver the recent years we have found residents made  little or no attempts to actually have their dogs involved in chasing geese,” Belmont’s Health Director Stefan Russakow told the Belmontonian Thursday, April 17.

Under this new initiative, the town’s Recreation Department in conjunction with Belmont’s Animal Control Officer John Maguranis, will create a registration program that will allow dogs to be “off leash” outside their owner’s property.

Under the proposed guidelines (Article 8) for animals that will be voted on by Town Meeting in May, no dogs will be allowed “to run free” without permission from the Board of Health.

One important part of the new program will be determining if those dogs “are good citizens,” said Board Vice Chair Dr. David Alper, that they can be controlled by their owners while on the fields and playgrounds.

According to Russakow, his department will not be issuing ‘licenses’ for off-leash activities on the fields, but creating a laminated card similar to the former “goose buster” card of the past indicating the owner has paid the fee and their pet was evaluated by Maguranis.

The new program “will be looking at activities for dog owners and their animals to increase animal and human health through exercise in the future,” said Russakow.

In fact, Russakow said as a result of the expanded nature of the initiative, his department will not be using the term “goose busters.”

“Any secondary benefit like keeping geese off the fields is a plus,” he said.

Letter to the Editor: Please, Town Meeting, Don’t Shut Down Doggie Day Care

To the editor:
Please urge Town Meeting members to NOT shut down or curtail the business of Crate Escape. My dog has been going to Crate Escape for almost eight years. It allows me to have a busy personal and professional life that would otherwise be impossible. The people who work at Crate Escape are terrific; they know my dog, they care about her, they groom her, they help me buy the right kind of food for her.
In short, they help make me a more responsible and knowledgeable dog owner. The place is very clean, orderly and well-run. It is located in a part of town that I believe is not residential and therefore, the presence of dogs should not be a nuisance for anybody. The owners of Crate Escape are lovely, responsible people.
Please don’t take this wonderful service away.
Judy Foreman
Nationally Syndicated Health Columnist
Brattle Street
Cambridge

Belmont High Darkroom To Be Named for Late Benefactor’s Generosity

In a rare gesture at Belmont schools, the Belmont School Committee unanimously approved a recommendation from Belmont School Superintendent Dr. Thomas Kingston to name the photography darkroom at Belmont High School after Paula Lerner, the award-winning Belmont photographer who donated her extensive photo equipment to the Belmont High arts department before her death in March 2012.

“The administration certainly endorses the request as it is perfectly appropriate commemoration for the considerable contribution that Paula Lerner made to the development of a really compelling program at the High School,” said Kingston in his recommendation.

The request for a memorial plaque bearing Lerner’s name and date of the dedication came from Andrew Roy, the Belmont High teacher who instructs the Photography III Honors class and whose students use the equipment, which, Roy noted, is the “single largest donation to the photography program in [more than] 10 years.”

“There has been so much positive outcome from Ms. Lerner’s generosity and my students have truly benefited in ways far more significant that the material gifts and financial support,” said Roy.

The honors program used a Foundation for Belmont Education grant to create an exhibition of photos in Lerner’s style in the summer of 2013 at the Belmont Media Center in honoring her.

Easter Services in Belmont

All Saints’ Church (Episcopal)
17 Clark St. (on Common Street)
617-484-2228

Thursday, April 17
6:30 p.m. – Agape Meal

Friday, April 18
Noon – Stations of the Cross
7 p.m. – Good Friday Liturgy which will include a dramatic reading of the Passion according to St. John.

Saturday, April 19

8:30 a.m. – Holy Saturday Liturgy

Sunday, April 20
10 a.m.: Festival Holy Eucharist, Rite II (Childcare for children up to age three.)

After the service: coffee hour.

Belmont-Watertown United Methodist Church
421 Common St. (Cushing Square)
617-489- 0730

Thursday, April 17

7:30 p.m.: Maundy Service

Friday, April 18

7 p.m.: Tenebrae Service for Good Friday.

Sunday, April 20

10:30 a.m.: Easter Sunday.

Christ Lutheran Church
597 Belmont Street (on Common Street)
617-484-4352
Cornerstone Baptist Church
54 Brighton St.
617-489-2498

Sunday, April 20
6:30 a.m.: Sunrise Service.

7:30 a.m.: Full Breakfast

9:30 a.m.: Sunday School

10:45 a.m.: Morning Service

6:30 p.m.: Evening Service

Crossroads Evangelical Church
51 Lexington St.
617-489-4959

Sunday morning worship begins at 11 a.m.

First Armenian Church
380 Concord Ave.
617-484-4779

Sunday, April 20

10:30 a.m. Easter services

First Baptist Church of Belmont
129 Lexington Street
(617) 484-1310

Thursday, April 17

6 p.m.: Maundy Thursday Service

Sunday, April 20

10 a.m.: Easter services

First Church in Belmont, Unitarian-Universalist
404 Concord Ave.
617 484-1054

Sunday, April 20

6 a.m.: Easter Sunrise Service at Habitat at 10 Juniper St.

9 a.m. – 10 a.m.: Sunday Service

11 am – 12 pm.: Sunday Service

Payson Park Congregational Church
365 Belmont St.
617-484-1542

Thursday, April 17

6 p.m.: Maundy Thursday Service

Friday, April 18

7 p.m.: Good Friday Service

Sunday, April 20

10:30 a.m.: The Reverend Lael Atkinson preaching and the Cherub Choir and Alleluia & Youth Choirs singing.

Plymouth Congregational Church
582 Pleasant St.
617-484-5257

Thursday, April 17

6:15 p.m.: Maundy Thursday meal

7:30 p.m.: Maundy Thursday service

Sunday, April 20

10:30 a.m. Easter Sunday Service

St. Joseph’s Parish
130 Common St.
617-484-0279

Thursday, April 17

7 p.m.: Liturgy of the Lord’s Supper.

Good Friday, April 18

3 p.m.: Living Stations of the Cross
7 p.m.: Liturgy of the Lord’s Passion at St. Luke

Holy Saturday, April 19

8 p.m.: Easter Vigil

Easter Sunday, April 20

Masses: 8 a.m. in the church and 10 a.m. in both the church and hall.

Saint Luke’s, Belmont
132 Lexington St.
617-484-1996

Good Friday, April 18

3 p.m.: Living Stations of the Cross

Holy Saturday, April 19

Easter Sunday, April 20

Things to Do Today: Book Club for Chenery Kids, Caregivers’ Group, Canterbury Tales

The town is gearing down for the Easter holiday, Patriots’ Day and the spring recess for the town’s schools.

Book Club for 5th and 6th graders will held from 3:15 p.m. to 4 p.m. in the Children’s Work Room of the Belmont Public Library.

Caregivers’ Groups led by Senior Center Director Nava Niv-Vogel is being held at 2 p.m. at the Beech Street Center, 266 Beech St.

 Today is the final full day of school until the April recess: Belmont District Schools get out early tomorrow.

On this day in 1397, Geoffrey Chaucer tells the Canterbury Tales for the first time at the court of Richard II.  Chaucer scholars have also identified this date a decade earlier, in 1387, as the start of the book’s pilgrimage to Canterbury.

 

Belmont Planning, Health Boards to Make Changes to Kennel Rules

The Belmont Planning Board and the Board of Health will be working together to make changes to a pair of Town Meeting articles that, if passed, would force Crate Escape, the doggie day care center located on Brighton Street, to close its doors, leaving 300 customers and 150 dogs – 75 percent from Belmont – without a home of the day.

“The intent [of the articles] were not to effect day care, only overnight kennels,” said the Planning Board’s Elizabeth Allison, who said she will be sitting down with the Health Board’s Vice Chair Dr. David Alper and the town’s Health Director Stefan Russakow to replace the current static number of dogs that can stay in a “kennel.”

“Is this a backdoor way to eliminate doggy day care in town? No,” said Allison at a Planning Board meeting on Tuesday, April 15, at Town Hall.

The two Town Meeting articles, number 8 and 9, updates Belmont’s decade-old animal bylaw to meet state standards and the zoning code on the definition of what is a “kennel”; the current regulations specify a kennel as being an outdoor shelter. Under the existing code, that facility could only hold up to 25 dogs at one time.

Under the new proposed code, the definition of kennel is expanded to include commercial entities such as overnight and extended-stay as well as day care businesses. But the Town Meeting article that would amend the Health Code did not change the maximum number of 25 dogs that could be kept in a licensed location.

According to Crate Escape’s owner Bradley Hastings, he would be forced to close his Belmont site if the articles passed Town Meeting early in May.

In response to Hastings’ concern, the Allison group is considering replacing the 25 dog limit with a formula establishing a square-footage percentage of dogs that can be safely held in an interior site such as Crate Escape.

“We will come up with something to keep [Hastings] here,” said Allison, who said she will be seeking the help of the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals in creating the formula.

Things to Do Today: A ‘Peeps’ Show at the Library, World Book Night, Boys’ Sports

• They are holding a “Peeps” show at the library. But nothing more risqué than placing the lovable marshmallow yellow chicks into scenes as the Belmont Public Library hosts its annual Peeps Diorama Party from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. in the Assembly Room. Peeps shows and contests are gaining in popularity across the country; the esteem Washington Post has held a contest for the past five years with great readers interest.

• Yesterday was the last day to file a federal income tax return but the Massachusetts Department of Revenue has given state filers an extension until midnight this Friday, April 18, because of delays with its electronic filing system.

World Book Night, which will occur on April 23, is an international effort in which members of the public apply to personally hand out 20 copies of a particular book (of 35 titles selected each year by a panel of librarians and booksellers) in their community to teens and adults who are light- or non-readers. Meet other World Book Night book givers and enjoy tea and cookies in the Young Adult Room of the Belmont Public Library from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Interested in being a WBN giver? Stop by & chat with this year’s givers. RSVP 617-993-2877.

• The boys are back: Boys’ Tennis will host Woburn on the High School’s courts at 3:30 p.m. and Boys’ Lacrosse will take on Wilmington on Harris Field at 4:30 p.m.