Summer Produce and Magic at Belmont Farmers Market

These beautiful summer afternoons make for a perfect market day at the Belmont Farmers Market, located in the Belmont Center municipal parking lot at the corner of Channing Road and Cross Street, today, Thursday, July 24 from 2 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
In season this week are apples, basil, beets, blueberries, broccoli, carrots, chard, cherries, cilantro, collards, cucumbers, garlic, kale, leeks, lettuce, mint, mizuna, parsley, peppers, radishes, raspberries, scallions, summer squash, turnips, yu choi and zucchini.
Occasional vendors Coastal Vineyards, Seasoned and Spiced, Sugar + Grain and Wild Acre Inns joins the market’s regulars.
The food truck this week is Jamaica Mi Hungry. Try the curry goat.

In the Events Tent:
• 2 p.m. Music on the Hill Chambers Players: Students from the Powers Music School will be playing a variety of classical, pop, and Irish fiddle tunes on the violin, viola, and cello.  This year, Powers celebrates its 50th anniversary of teaching music to Belmont and the surrounding area.
• 3 p.m. Magic with Ryan Lally: Come see one of the best young magicians in Boston entertain kids and adults alike with his slight of hand.
• 4 p.m. Storytime with Denise Shaver: From the Children’s Department at the Belmont Public Library, Shaver  will lead Storytime with stories and songs about farms and food for children of all ages.
4:30 p.m. Music by Nick Zaino: Zaino is a Boston-based singer/songwriter with a deep appreciation for the roots of American music.

Espresso Lane: Starbucks is Coming to Belmont’s Star Market

In the next six weeks, customers at Belmont’s Star Market at 535 Trapelo Rd. will not only be able to purchase their favorite package of Starbucks-brand coffee beans, they can get an iced vanilla latte on their way out.

According to staff at Star, a small Starbucks Coffee cafe will open in early September in a location near the flower department in the front of the store.

Those in the know said the Starbucks will be a licensed store owned and operated by an approved licensee, the Shaw’s Supermarket group, a 155-store group based in West Bridgewater.

A nearby example of such an arrangement is the Starbucks in the Target store in the Watertown Mall. Other familiar locations include inside airports, shopping food courts, college campuses, hospitals and even cruise ships. Eight years ago, Quincy-based Stop & Shop signed a contract with Starbucks, placing the chain’s licensed stores inside a limited number of supermarkets. 

While several licensed locations are fully operational stores, many are kiosks with a limited number of retail items such pastries or coffee selections.

According to the Starbuck’s website, “[t]hese retail locations are staffed by the licensee’s employees and they follow Starbucks training guidelines including beverage quality, store cleanliness, and creating the Starbucks Experience for our customers.”

“Through these locations, we are able to significantly increase customer accessibility to our products and brand, which, from a shareholder perspective, is also valuable because of the profit it contributes to the organization,” states Starbucks.

Sold in Belmont: Two Families, Condos Lead the Summer Market

A weekly recap of residential properties bought in the past seven days in the “Town of Homes.”

30 Hammond Rd. Colonial (1925), Sold for: $1,100,000. Listed at $975,000. Living area: 2,527 sq.-ft. 9 rooms; 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. On the market: 75 days.

259 School St. Colonial (1926), Sold for: $1,050,000. Listed at $989,000. Living area: 3,282 sq.-ft. 8 rooms; 4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths. On the market: 145 days.

• 44 Chester Rd. Two family (1918), Sold for: $815,000. Listed at $829,000. Living area: 2,488 sq.-ft. 12 rooms; 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. On the market: 102 days.

• 562 Trapelo Rd. #2. Townhouse condominium (2007), Sold for: $574,000. Listed at $574,000. Living area: 2,035 sq.-ft. 6 rooms; 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. On the market: 39 days.

 18 Banks St. Two family (1925), Sold for: $695,000. Listed at $715,000. Living area: 2,473 sq.-ft. 11 rooms; 5 bedrooms, 2 baths. On the market: 52 days.

• 26 Park Rd. Two family (1911), Sold for: $960,000. Listed at $899,900. Living area: 3,750 sq.-ft. 18 rooms; 8 bedrooms, 3 baths. On the market: 62 days.

 73 Hoitt Rd. Ranch (1955), Sold for: $752,500. Listed at $679,000. Living area: 1,412 sq.-ft. 6 rooms; 2 bedrooms, 1 bath. On the market: 50 days.

 126 Sycamore St. Condominium (1900), Sold for: $550,000. Listed at $529,000. Living area: 1,945 sq.-ft. 7 rooms; 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. On the market: 84 days.

 84 Walnut St. Condominium (1919), Sold for: $425,000. Listed at $399,000. Living area: 1,083 sq.-ft. 5 rooms; 3 bedrooms, 1 bath. On the market: 70 days.

 34 Ridge Rd. Condominium (1905), Sold for: $370,000. Listed at $369,000. Living area: 1,450 sq.-ft. 7 rooms; 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. On the market: 79 days.

What to Do Today: Help Sylvie Find Her Underpants the Squirrel Stole

• Here is a silly puppet adventure for families: Sylvie will discover a whole magical world while searching for her stolen underpants taken by a squirrel (!) at the Belmont Public Library from 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. in the Assembly Room. A great show by the troupe They Gotta Be Secret Agents. 

• With so much going on around the world, this might be the week to join Hot Topics, the Beech Street Center’s current events group, taking place at 10 a.m. at 266 Beech St. 

• Heads up: Here is a great evening event for kids 10 and up: Einstein’s Workshop program for Young Adults will be exploring hydraulics on Tuesday, July 29, from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Belmont Public Library’s Assembly Room. Each participant will make and take home their very own hydraulics lift. To register, go online or call 617-993-2870.

U2 Tribute Band at Payson Park Music Festival

Joshua Tree, one of the premier U2 tribute band, makes their annual trek to play Belmont’s Payson Park Music Festival tonight, Wednesday, July 23 at approximately 6:45 p.m. 

Joshua Tree “has gone to great lengths to reproduce the distinct sound of one of the world’s most popular rock bands,” and are dedicated to the entire U2 songbook, including early fan favorites from the 1980-1987 period such as Boy, October, War, The Unforgettable Fire, and The Joshua Tree.

Celebrating a quarter century, the Payson Park Music Festival takes place at Payson Park at the intersection of Payson Road and Elm Street. The concert is free. 

What to Do Today: A Circus in a Suitcase, Teen Techies at the Library

• Circus Minimus is an entire circus that emerges from a single suitcase including a tent, a family of acrobats and much more. Come see this circus “unfold” from 2 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. at the Belmont Public Library’s Assembly Room. 

• The Belmont High School Teen Techs are back at the Belmont Public Library to help residents and patrons who are looking for help with computers, the internet, e-readers, tablets and the hows and whys of the social media world. The crew will be doing their tech wizardry from 11 a.m. to noon in the Young Adult Room. Register online, stop by the reference desk to register in person or call 617-993-2870 to register by phone.

• In 2001, Belmont adopted a vision statement entitled “A Working Vision for Belmont’s Future,” which included several goals for the town. Today, the Vision 21 Implementation Committee is seeking to update the input from residents with a new survey that will highlight which of the Vision’s goals currently are most important to them and which they believe the town should focus its efforts on.  Take the survey here. 

Wishes Do Come True: Town Release List of Streets to be Reconstructed in ’14

They will be dancing on a number of Belmont streets – repaired streets! – later this year as Belmont’s Director of Community Development Glenn Clancy released the list of 11 roads that will be reconstructed and repaved hopefully by the end of the 2014 construction season.

The list – submitted to the Belmont Board of Selectmen at their Monday, July 21 meeting – include a number in eastern Belmont. Work by contractor E.H. Perkins Construction of Waltham will begin in August.

The list includes:

  • Brighton Street: Pleasant Street to the cul-de-sac
  • Knowles Road: Holt Street to the Waltham town line
  • Whitcomb Street: Lexington Stret to the Watertown town line
  • Wellesley Road: Village Hill to Crestview roads
  • Fairview Avenue: Payson Road to School Street
  • Hoitt Road: Newcastle Road to Dean Street
  • Brettwood Road: Common Street to Homer Road and Hastings to Horace roads
  • Radcliffe Road: Scott to Frontage roads
  • Falmouth Street: Fairview Avenue to Belmont Street
  • Concord Avenue: Cambridge city line to Louise Road
  • Unity Avenue: Falmouth Street to Park Road

Clancy said while the town uses a ranking system to determine which roads are to be considered for repair, he said some of the roads on this year’s list would not have made the cut as there are worse roads in town. But due to delays in the Water Divisions  of the Department of Public Works’s capital improvement program, replacement of water mains on dilapidated streets have not taken place and the town will not reconstruct a road if a new main is needed.

Belmont Selectmen Approve Raises for Non-Union Workers

At their Monday, July 21 meeting, the Belmont Board of Selectmen approved a two percent cost of living raise for the 55 town employees not represented by unions.

The vote came after the board meet with Diane Crimmins, the town’s Human Resources Director, in executive session before the night’s meeting.

The action will impact employees such as parking control officers, budget analysts, administrative assistants and the library director, said Crimmins.

“I put in a request for these employees for a cost of living increase each year and I’m happy that [the board] approved it,” Crimmins told the Belmontonian.

“We need to stay current with what comparable towns are paying their employees so we can recruit the talent the town needs,” said Crimmins, who said she calculates the percentage increase after doing research of other municipalities along with the consumer-price index.

Night Moves: Trapelo Road Paving Begins Monday 7 PM

Work on the Trapelo/Belmont Corridor Project goes under the lights next week as the repaving of Trapelo Road from Mill Street to the Belmont Car Wash and the “triangle” encompassing Lexington and Church streets in Waverley Square begins Monday evening, July 28 at 7 p.m.

While the Massachusetts Department of Transportation – the $17 million roadway construction is a state project – and the project contractor were set begin work this week, the Belmont Board of Selectmen Monday, July 21, pushed back the starting date five days to allow residents along the route time to prepare for three days of 12 hours of construction outside their front doors.

According to Tony Barrile, vice president of operations for project contractor Newport Construction of Nashua, NH, the combination of high temperatures, heavy commuter traffic and the narrowness of the roadway would lead to chaotic conditions performing the job during the work day.

Answering questions concerning the MDOT’s request to proceed with night work, Barrile said the new asphalt must cool after being laid forcing traffic on a single lane at certain choke points near the Shaw’s Supermarket on Trapelo Road, impacting rush hour traffic in the morning and afternoon, resulting in lengthy backups and delays.

Switching to a night schedule, “we wouldn’t have to deal with the sheer volume of traffic” that transverse Waverley Square with the added benefit that most of the square’s businesses closed for the day, he said.

Saying that he doesn’t like to work after normal hours, “[i]t’s just so congested there that it makes sense to do it at night,” said Barrile.

While the selectmen were supportive of the time change for the repaving, they were not happy with the DOT’s initial proposal to begin the work on Wednesday, July 23, just two days after their meeting.

 

“There are quite a few residences in that area that will be only given a day notice before construction starts and I have a concern with that,” said Selectman Mark Paolillo.

While conceding construction noise will impact residencies, Glenn Clancy, Belmont’s director of the Office of Community Development, said “the tradeoff goes back to 30,000 vehicles trying to get through there during a work day coupled with the fact that businesses trying to operate during the day; the night work seems to be the best alternative to get the job done quickly.”

But Paolillo said the idea of beginning a major construction work through the night and the early morning, “right outside your house” will not give residents the opportunity to make other arrangements.

Selectmen Chair Andy Rojas offered up a Monday start “that gives us time to adequately to notify residents of the nature of the work.” Along with a series of mitigation suggestions – such as positioning construction lighting so it is directed onto the street and a contact number for residents to call the contractor during construction – the selectmen voted to approve the night time work request.

The five day delay will not have much of an impact on the project’s schedule, said Barrile.

“We’ll continue to work on other items such as sidewalks and paving,” he said. “We just want to have that piece of roadway nice and smooth for a change.”

What to Do Today: Stop Identity Theft at the Beech, Yoga for All

This week’s “Noon Movies for Children” – hosted by the Belmont Public Library at noon in the Assembly Room – will be:

  •    Goodnight Gorilla
  •    Picnic
  •    The Napping House
  •    Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel
  •    Curious George Rides a Bike

• The Belmont Senior Center welcomes the Better Business Bureau for a talk on “Stopping Identity Theft” at 1:15 p.m. at the Beech Street Center, 266 Beech St. The talk will discuss the most common tactics identity thieves are using to steal personal information and the precautionary steps seniors can take to protect themselves from falling victim to fraudulent activity.

 Yoga for everyone at the Beech Street Center from 5:30 p.m. to 6:45 p.m.: join Susan Harris, a registered yoga teacher and associate professor of Nutrition at Tufts University for this Iyengar-inspired class which practices yoga postures slowly and with attention to alignment and safety, adapted to the abilities and needs of individual students. Practice is done with bare feet; mats and props are provided. Cost: $15/class. Non-seniors, beginners and experienced are welcome. This is a non-Council on Aging class held at the Beech Street Center. For more information, call Susan at 617-407-0816.