Sold In Belmont: Town Field-Area Condos Lead Quiet Holiday Sales

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

37 Drew Rd. Single-floor condominium, Sold: $445,000. Listed at $449,000. Living area: 1,030 sq.-ft. 5 rooms; 2 bedrooms, 1 baths. On the market: 54 days.

26 Harris St. #B. Townhouse condominium, Sold: $691,000. Listed at $629,000. Living area: 1,844 sq.-ft. 6 rooms; 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. On the market: 60 days.

422 Pleasant St. Center-entrance Colonial (1932), Sold: $820,000. Listed at $795,000. Living area: 1,030 sq.-ft. 9 rooms; 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. On the market: 69 days.

Nice and Sharp: Knives and Other Appliances Sharpened at Farmers Market

This week, among the growing number of produce and food stuffs, Market Day in Belmont will have Siraco Sharpening Service – been around the area for 61 years – which will reestablish a sharp edge to your knives, blades and gardening tools.

They’ll sharpen them while you shop at this week’s Belmont Farmers Market located in the municipal parking lot in Belmont Center at Cross Street and Channing Road from 2 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.

Along with the regulars, this week the market hosts occasional vendors Turtle Creek Winery from Lincoln, Sara Ran Away with the Spoon, Wild Acre Inns and Seasoned and Spiced.

This week’s food truck is Benny’s Crepe Cafe, from 3 p.m. until the market’s closing.

Performers in the Events Tent


Joe Zarro, the pastor of Belmont’s Plymouth Congregational Church will be performing solo acoustic music, from classic rock to folk from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m.

Chop Chop Magazine will have past and current issues, recipes and a cookbook from 3:00 – 5:00.

Storytime: Librarian Denise Shaver of the Belmont Public Library will be reading stories for preschool and older children from 4 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Tasting: Bellmont Caffe, which recently opened in Belmont Center, will offer samples from 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.

Belmont DPW To Collect Storm Clean Up Through July 11

The Belmont Department of Public Works will periodically collect tree branches that were brought downed from the July 3 storm until Friday, July 11.

The DPW asks that residents and businesses place broken branch ends along the street curb so they can be efficiently chipped by its machine. The DPW cannot collect tree stumps or any tree branch larger than six inches in diameter.

What’s Happening This Week: Starbucks Relocation (Part 3), Jenny the Juggler

• The big meeting this week will occur at the Zoning Board of Appeals on Wednesday, July 9 at 7 p.m. as the board hears from the representatives of the Cushing Village complex in Cushing Square that wants to relocate for just about a year the Starbucks Cafe from its current location in the heart of Cushing Square to a temporary site at the corner of Belmont Street and Trapelo Road. This marks the third time the board will hear from the developer, Chris Starr of Smith Legacy Associates, and from residents who are concerned of parking, traffic and trash. If you stay after this part of the meeting, the board will take up a petition of a Hammond Road resident who wants to install a deck with a hot tub. My word!

• For people who live on School Street, the meeting of the Belmont Historic District Commission on Tuesday, July 8 at 7 p.m. should interest you as the commission will discuss the creation of a School Street Historic District. They will discuss the housing inventory in the proposed area.

Tuesday Noon Movies at the Belmont Public Library on Tuesday, July 8 at noon will include:

  •    Pete’s a Pizza
  •    I Love You Like Crazy Cakes
  •    Three Cheers for Catherine the Great
  •    Pictures for Harold’s Room
  •    Corduroy

Explore Israel through the memories and slides of Grace Taylor, Nava Niv-Vogel, and Dena Ressler at the Beech Street Center, 266 Beech St., on Tuesday, July 8, 1:15 p.m. to 2:15 p.m. Grace will share highlights from her trip and from her visits to the Christian sites. Nava will talk about her last trip this past May, some major places of interest and how they’ve changed since the time she lived there as small child, and Dena will share images of street scenes through the eyes of a newcomer during her first trip there in 2008. Bring your curiosity!

Jenny the JugglerBoston’s only professional female juggler, will be at the Belmont Public Library on Wednesday, July 9 from 2 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. to amaze everyone with her killer skills. You may even leave with a balloon animal!

• Matt Heaton brings music for preschoolers which is full of kid-friendly folk and surf-inspired original songs.  Come see why he is called the Toddlerbilly Troubadour on Thursday, July 10 from 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. at the Belmont Public Library.

• The monthly movie at the Beech Street Center, 266 Beech St., is “Forrest Gump” which will be screened on Friday, July 11, at 1 p.m. The 1994 American epic romantic comedy, which won six Academy Awards, was directed by Robert Zemeckis and stars Tom Hanks, Robin Wright, Gary Sinise, and Sally Field.

Sold in Belmont: A Queen Anne Rules the Week

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

56 Fairmont St. Queen Anne Victorian (1893), Sold: $1,750,000. Listed at $1,799,000. Living area: 3,504 sq.-ft. 11 rooms; 5 bedrooms, 3.5 baths. On the market: 106 days.

337 Common St. Front-entry Colonial (1922), Sold: $868,000. Listed at $759,000. Living area: 1,844 sq.-ft. 8 rooms; 4 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. On the market: 67 days.

45 Winter St. Brick Colonial (1948), Sold: $765,000. Listed at $849,000. Living area: 2,279 sq.-ft. 10 rooms; 4 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. On the market: 81 days.

33-35 Wiley Rd. Two family (1925), Sold: $850,000. Listed at $819,000. Living area: 1,844 sq.-ft. 8 rooms; 4 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. On the market: 64 days.

31 Chester Rd., #2. Two-floor condominium, Sold: $565,000. Listed at $575,000. Living area: 1,788 sq.-ft. 8 rooms; 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. On the market: 77 days.

87 Douglas Rd. Center-enter Garrison Colonial (1938), Sold: $1,151,000. Listed at $999,000. Living area: 2,557 sq.-ft. 8 rooms; 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths. On the market: 67 days.

Stock Up at the Belmont Farmers Market for the 4th Weekend!

The 4th of July just might be a rain out. But with the 5th and 6th expecting to be sunny and warm, why not declare your independence from the kitchen and stock up at the Belmont Farmers Market on fruits and vegetables, cheeses, meats, fish and just about anything you need for a July cook out

The Belmont Farmers’ Market will be open during its regular hours from 2 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. today, Thursday, July 3.

Joining the regular group will be occasional vendors Still River, Sugar + Grain, Soluna Garden Farm and Bedford Blueberry Goat Farm.

As for the food truck, a new vendor, Rhythm ‘n Wraps, is a possibility.

Looking ahead to next week, Siraco Sharpening will be at the market on July 10; so bring whatever needs sharpening.

In the entertainment tent

Bob Leger, 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Guitarist and singer Leger has played bass and toured with many rock and country bands. It’s his third season performing at the Belmont Farmers Market.

Storytime, 4 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Deborah Borsuk of the Belmont Public Library Children’s Department will be reading children’s books about farming and food.

Julia Lenef, 5 p.m. to 5:45 p.m. Julia has played violin since third grade. A Belmont High School graduate, she plays jazz, classical and occasional rock. Julia likes improvising as well as playing composed music. She looks forward to her return to the market for her sixth year.

What to Do Today: Library’s Patriotic Story Time, the Benton is Open ’til 7 PM

• Story Time at the Belmont Public Library will have a 4th of July theme: “Red, White and Blue Storytime.” Celebrate America’s birthday with stories and a craft inspired by the colors of our flag in the Assembly Room from 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.

• Speaking of libraries, the Benton Library, the town’s independent volunteer-run library, will be open from 2 p.m. to 7 p.m. Come by to use the WiFi or just to get out of the heat.

• Town offices will be open until 4 p.m. today.

• If you haven’t heard, the Boston Pops 4th of July concert and fireworks show has been moved to today, July 3, to avoid any impact from Tropical Storm Arthur.

Plymouth Ponders Renting Its Steeple to House Cell Tower

Rev. Joe Zarro has been the spiritual leader of Plymouth Church on Pleasant Street coming on a year in the fall. The Harvard Divinity School grad said that he, his wife and nearly one-year-old son have enjoyed their time in Belmont.

“It’s been a great experience for us,” said Zarro as his family prepares to venture out to Cape Cod for the first time later in the week.

One thing Zarro would like to do increasingly is to spread the church’s message to people in Belmont and the surrounding communities.

“I would like to do more missionary work and outreach,” Zarro told the Belmontonian. But that would require a larger budget to accomplish that and other goals he has on his “to do” list.

Now, Zarro and the Plymouth congregation believe they may have found the answer to their wishes outlined in the sky.
But rather than heavenly intervention, it’s the church’s steeple that could provide the means to strengthen the church’s calling. A pair of telecommunication giants want to use the steeple’s interior as the home for a slew of antennas to boost cellular communications and data in a town with a well-earned reputation of having “spotty” reception for smart phones and other personal devices.

For the church, leasing their property would provide “a meaningful amount of revenue that others in town have benefitted from” that the church could use “to support our lofty goals of our mission,” said Myron Kassaraba, who leads the church’s Cell Antenna Committee.IMG_1428

As the church prepares to decide whether to move forward on an agreement, several neighbors are concerned that the radiation from a cell tower near their homes and looming over where many send children to study and play could prove to be a long-term health risk.

Their colorful posters, plastered on posts and poles in and around Belmont Center, pleaded for the church to “Please keep our neighbors healthy and happy” by saying “No to Cell Towers on Plymouth Church.”
“I think with all the studies so far (on radiation emanating from cell towers), I don’t think there is enough observation especially since it’s a very new technology,” said Marsh Street’s Zhao Gang.

“We only started using cell phones continuously recently so we don’t know if this will be harmful in the future. So it’s better to be on the cautious side,” said Gang.

On Monday, June 30, the church held a public meeting to provide neighbors with information on a possible tower inside the steeple – in fact, there is some talk of replacing the original structure with a fiberglass version.

“We feel that this is an opportunity for the church,” said Kassaraba, who stated the church’s view at the meeting.

Plymouth has been around since 1899 with more than 100 member families, a community run by a church council and a board of trustees, many “who are very active in local, civic and government,” said Kassaraba.

With each church an independent entity and self-funding, the church’s missions – whether in town to its globally aspirations – is dependent on raising available funds.

While Plymouth trustees have yet to propose a cell steeple to the congregation, the funds coming into the church’s coffers could be significant. According to the website wirelessestimator.com, the price of a leasing agreement is based on “location, location, location” and Belmont appears to possess prime residential and cellular property.

“The average cell tower rent is going to vary from county to county and state to state — and they also differ depending on which carrier you are dealing with, they amount of pain they have (bad coverage and tough zoning laws), and their budgets,” states the website of AirWave Management, which negotiates leases for landowners with telecom carriers and tower companies.

On average nationwide, the typical lease is about $1,500 a month or $18,000 annually. But lease rates can vary drastically, “from $400 a month for a paging company on a rural Tennessee site to $3,900 or more for a New England prime highway corridor for a PCS carrier, rates are based upon the location of the tower and the location and size of the antennas and lines as well as the ground space required,” according to the site.

Can you hear me now in Belmont Center?

For AT&T and Verizon – each contacted the church in October 2013 on placing a tower at the church – the area along Pleasant Street which the AT&T representative Peter Cook called by its Massachusetts highway name, Route 60, has been a trouble spot for its customers.

“We do have problems on 60 and in Belmont Center,” said Cook, noting that his company has been “looking for several years for an ideal location to serve a lot of customers and businesses.”

And it’s not that Belmont is bereft of cell towers. The Town of Homes has nine existing cell towers; two in Belmont Center (at Belmont Police headquarters and on top of Belmont Savings Bank), a giant tower adjacent to the new Highland Cemetery on Concord Avenue and one atop of 125 Trapelo Road in Cushing Square which handles the four largest cell providers (AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile and Sprint).

“It’s not as if this is new technology to Belmont,” said Kassaraba.

If the church does decide to move forward, the would only need approval from the Planning Board to secure permission to place the cellular equipment into the steeple.

But for several in attendance, the cell tower on Pleasant Street is unnecessary and potentially harmful to those who will live within the most concentrated areas.

While saying she is for “progress,” for Elfriede Anderson, who has lived for 40 years on Pleasant Street, added “that I am also for health.” She contended that the cellular service is very good around Belmont Center – she conducts a great deal of business overseas with her mobile phone from home – and if the problem is calls being dropped in other parts of town, “they should put [a tower] up there.”

“I don’t think as a congregation that your mission should be above the health of the community,” said Anderson, who has been successfully treated for cancer.

Kassaraba countered by citing international, US and the town’s Health Board to claim that in the 15 years cell phone towers have proliferated, “there have been no adverse health impact.”

“We would not have considered this move if we had concerns of health issues,” said Kassaraba, noting that one is on the roof of a large and populated apartment building at the Hills Estates in east Belmont.

But critics point to a study that reportedly established a direct link between 7,000 cancer deaths in Belo Horizonte, Brazil’s third largest city, with that city’s cell phone network.

Noting that there is a significant number of children who use the church for after-school studying and as a preschool, Annie Wang said that 15 years are likely too short of a time to determine if “many chronic diseases” will be triggered by the radio frequency fields used to transmit the data and calls to personal devices.

“It’s not enough time to determine the potential harm, in particular for children,” said Wang.

Dr. Don Haes, a radiation safety consultant working for the church, said the level of radio fields transmitted from the steeple tower – directed towards Belmont Center and along Pleasant Street – would be, at .08 watts per kilogram, less than 1 percent of what is allowed under current safety guidelines.

While few minds were made up by the end of the meeting, Kassaraba said the church’s objective for the meeting was to show the community “that we want this to be a transparent decision, that we did not want to exclude anyone who has concerns with the process.”

Belmont’s Gun Buy Back Provides Help to Town’s Food Pantry

The first-ever Belmont gun buy back event held on Saturday, May 31 not only took unwanted guns out of homes around town but also provided funds to help feed local residents in need.

An important part of the buy back – sponsored by the Belmont Police Department in partnership with the Middlesex County Sheriff’s Office, Belmont Religious Council and individual Belmont houses of worship – was giving away gift cards to local grocery stores in exchange for the firearms. Donations from residents, local businesses and religious communities raised nearly $5,000 in gift cards.

After the end of the event, the sponsors had $3,117 in surplus gift cards.

Last week, a check for that amount was presented to the Belmont Food Pantry to provide those residents in need of food and sundries who find it hard to make ends meet.

Screen Shot 2014-07-02 at 8.49.34 AM

A check for $3,100 provided to the Belmont Food Pantry from the sponsors of the first-ever Belmont Gun Bay Back event. Bottom L-R: Patty Mihelich and Nancy Morrison Top L-R: Dr. David Alper, Jean Dickinson and Chief Richard McLaughlin

Belmont Savings Serves Homer House a Cupola of Loving Care

The Belmont Savings Bank Foundation recently provided a $2,000 grant to the Belmont Woman’s Club to help restore the cupola on the roof of the historic William Flagg Homer House.

The small dome’s damaged state was first noted in a building survey conducted in 2013, with falling structural elements that could have threatened the safety of visitors to the house. The Foundation provided the grant, which will cover half the cost for the restoration, to prevent further damage and keep the house open to the public.

“The Belmont Savings Foundation is thrilled to be offering our support of this critical restorative project,” said Bob Mahoney, President and CEO of Belmont Savings Bank and an officer on the Belmont Savings Bank Foundation.

“The Homer House is a cornerstone piece of our town’s rich history, which is why we felt compelled to ensure its public programming was being maintained during this period.”

The Belmont Woman’s Club is the steward of the 1853 Homer House, a site associated with 19th-century artist Winslow Homer. Tours of the Homer House continues on Fridays and Saturdays in July and August. On view will be the new Homer House exhibit, “Winslow Homer’s Civil War.”

Screen Shot 2014-07-02 at 8.43.34 AMWrapping of the deteriorated roof was an emergency preservation measure taken after harsh conditions this winter rendered the house unsafe for visitors. Investigation and securing of the roof was overseen by Wolf Architects consulting architect Gary Wolf, and Belmont resident and consulting structural engineer, Arthur MacLeod.  John Veale of Vealco Restoration led his crew in the successful repairs to the Homer House.

Since 2012, the Belmont Savings Bank Foundation has given more than $225,000 to non-profits and educational institutions in Belmont, Watertown, Waltham, Newton and Cambridge. The mission of the Foundation is to provide financial support to non-profit groups, institutions, schools or other organizations operating in the communities in which Belmont Savings Bank operates.

Belmont Savings Bank is a $1.2 billion, full-service Massachusetts savings bank dedicated to quality, convenience, and personalized service.