Lights, Camera, Magic: Belmont World Film Puts The Spotlight On Family Movies From Around The Globe

Photo:The Scarecrows’ Weddingwill be shown on Sunday, Jan. 25, at Regent Theatre in Arlington.

It’s “Lights, Camera, Magic,” as the Belmont World Film’s 23rd Family Festival runs from Saturday, Jan. 17 thru Saturday, Jan. 24.

The festival will showcase a diverse selection of films from around the world – many making their North American or U.S. premieres – offering young audiences an immersive and culturally rich cinematic experience. It’s a wonderful way to travel the world during Martin Luther King Weekend and beyond.

This year’s lineup includes mostly North American premieres, with more than half of the films adapted from or inspired by classic and contemporary children’s books, a longstanding festival hallmark.

For young readers and those who struggle with reading, a professional voice-over will read subtitles aloud for films in languages other than English, creating an experience much like story time.

FILM SCREENINGS

  • Saturday, Jan. 17, 10:30 a.m.- 5:15 p.m. at West Newton Cinema
  • Sunday, Jan. 18, 10:30 a.m.- 5 p.m. at West Newton Cinema
  • Monday, Jan. 19: 10:30 a.m.- 4:50 p.m. at Brattle Theatre, Cambridge
  • Sunday, Jan. 25, 1 p.m. – 5:15 p.m. at Regent Theatre, Arlington

View all the movies being shown here.

WORKSHOP: Learn to Draw Minions & Hotel Transylvania Characters.

Saturday, Jan. 24, 10:30 a.m.- 5 p.m. at Belmont Media Center, 9 Lexington St.

Here are two highlights:

The Scarecrows’ Wedding,’ Betty O’Barley and Harry O’Hay are devoted scarecrows planning a wedding to remember. A joyful tale about loyalty, love, and learning that the most important thing isn’t a grand gesture – it’s simply being together. Academy Award nominee Sophie Okonedo (Slow HorsesHotel Rwanda) narrates and Jessie Buckley, who won a Golden Globe for Hamnet, and Domhnall Gleeson star.

WE ARE GREENLAND: SOCCER IS FREEDOM: Five young soccer players from Greenland dream of playing for their own country in the World Cup. But before they can step onto the global stage, they must take on a tough challenge of winning the Island Games and convincing the world’s soccer leaders to recognize Greenland as its own team. This inspiring documentary follows a little team that could as they chase a big dream with determination, teamwork, and pride in their sport and home. Sun, Jan 25th, 4:30 PM @ Regent Theatre

‘A Place To Come Together’: Belmont Public Library Grand Opening Weekend Jan. 17-18

Photo: Kathy Keohane, chair of the Board of Library Trustees and Library Director Peter Struzziero climbing the main staircase to the second floor of the new Belmont Public Library.

It’s less than six days before its scheduled grand opening, and the spanking new $39.5 million Belmont Public Library is less than ready for its moment in the spotlight.

The front lobby is a sea of white cardboard boxes holding the library’s book collection. The public computers are in place but not yet up and running. Window shades need to be installed as a wide array of finishing work continues while legacy stained glass windows depicting children’s storybook scenes destined for the Children’s Room have just arrived and are sitting in the outer lobby. So much to do!

But Kathy Koehane said the 40,500 square foot, two-story structure replacing the original circa 1965 building will be ready to welcome an expected overflow crowd of patrons and residents on the holiday weekend starting off with a grand opening at 9 a.m. on Saturday, Jan. 17. [See the list of events here]

It’s a place to come together, to gather. It’s a destination; it’s a place to learn, explore, and connect, and we need that more than ever in today’s world

But what is opening on Saturday is more than a new municipal structure of glass, brick, and mortar, said Keohane. Saturday is the start of the new library’s legacy as the heart of the community.

“It’s a place to come together, to gather,” said Keohane. “It’s a destination; it’s a place to learn, explore, and connect, and we need that more than ever in today’s world, where you can try something new,” she said. Here you can borrow tools for a project, be part of a book group or cooking club, learn a language class, look for a job, or attend a lecture. “It’s so much more than what your grandparents’ library was,” Keohane said.

For close to a quarter century, after a proposal to replace the already threadbare original building with a new facility supported with a Massachusetts Board of Library Commissioners grant across Concord Avenue collapsed due to a lack of town support and resident interest, Keohane and a slew of volunteers made it their mission to galvanize the public for a new structure to house the town’s library, first established in 1868.

The volunteers worked hard to convince a vocal segment of Belmont residents who did not believe the existing aging library needed to be replaced or it simply required a renovation to house the town’s collection. But retreating on the proposal was not an option.

“There was no choice,” said Keohane. “We had to do something. The old building was not safe. It was not suitable. It was not maintainable. This was the right decision. We could design this building to be flexible, to accommodate the current needs of the community, and for years and years to come; the library is much more than books.”

After a decade of work, a new proposal was presented to residents, who approved by a 58 percent to 42 percent margin a debt exclusion in November 2022. A building committee was created with architect Clair Colburn, who has been the president of the Belmont Library Foundation, as its chair, who steered the project so it was completed on time and on budget.

“We have a great building committee, and we are so lucky to have [Colburn] as the chair,” said Keohane. “We’ve had great partnerships with the architects, with the construction team, and with the owner’s project manager. 

“What you hear sometimes was about the stress and the tension. While everybody on this team worked together collaboratively and respectfully, it didn’t mean that we weren’t at odds sometimes. But everybody came together, and we all have such pride in this building and what it means for the community,” said Keohane.

Even after the vote, the town’s support for the library was evident by its fundraising program. “Never before in the history of Belmont has there been the amount of funds raised for a project of this size. So we set an aggressive target. It’s all volunteers who have given $5 million (so far), which has never been done in the history of Belmont. We exceeded that,” said Keohane.

Designed by Boston’s Oudens Ello Architecture, the library is airy and filled with light with its myriad of windows that even on a cloudy Monday, the two-story interior is illuminated. At night and in the mid-winter afternoon, the library is lit by a large light feature.

Patrons will enter into the Belmont Savings Bank Foundation Library Commons, the hub of the new library. It’s also the location of the glass-enclosed Robert McLaughlin Hall, where events, arts performances, lectures, and meetings will take place. 

“I would hope that, like, least once or twice, the School Committee and the Select Board could come here [to hold a meeting],” said Keohane.

Throughout the structure, “[w]e have four conference rooms … that are reservable as are seven quiet study rooms,” said Keohane.

The Commons and other areas can be converted into a larger space as the bookshelves are on casters. “So if we’re having movie club, we can move the shelves and have a performance in here. Everything’s movable.”

The eastern area of the first floor is the Children’s Room, created with three distinct areas designed and equipped for different ages: a Discovery Zone for toddlers and young children where they can find a favorite spot to come sit and read a book; an Exploration Area for older kids to allow for independent study and a dedicated program space. 

Along the sunny side, visitors can view and enter the newly renovated rainwater garden and walking path. A great deal of care was taken during the design phase on landscaping along the Wellington Brook, designed by Cambridge-based STIMSON, noted Keohane.

“What we heard long and loud and clear was the importance of outdoor space, which was reaffirmed and even heightened because of COVID,” she said. “These are all native plants and grasses. There is an amphitheater that can be used as a community outdoor classroom. Where you can have story hour. But this also serves as an overflow area in the event of a 100-year flood. 

“I love the porous pavements throughout that connect to the existing woodland gardens. And all of it is the Americans with Disabilities Act compliant, which it wasn’t in the past,” said Keohane.

Reduced from the initial proposal after a design review, the center staircase retains a visual presence that connects the floors, with bench-like seating that overlooks the Commons.

The second floor is where the teen section and the Belmont Media Center studio are located. The Belmont Historical Society and the library’s own historical collection will be side by side, making for greater availability and coordination. Along the South side are the seven small study rooms that can be reserved, as are the conference rooms.

The east side is the impressive floor-to-ceiling window wall where quiet activities such as reading periodicals or a favorite book occur. There is also an outside balcony that overlooks the Underwood Pool and two of Belmont’s newest municipal buildings: the Belmont Middle and High School and the Belmont Recreation Center.

“[Patrons] want different experiences. So we’ve tried to find something for everybody in this, so you want: the second floor is a quieter, reflective space. You want a louder, more convivial space that’s on the first floor,” said Keohane.

The new building was designed with a strong emphasis on maintenance and upkeep. The floor at the Concord Avenue entry is an unpolished gray stone, not to impress but to endure.

Libraries are never going away. All that we’ve done is we’ve become a place that continues to evolve with the needs of the community

“Look at this floor. It’s not the prettiest, but it’s going to last for 50 years. And that was deliberate. When you go into some of the other spaces, you see carpeting that was deliberately selected because of the wear and tear especially in New England.”

Even the chairs and seating elements were put to the test. “We conducted sitting tests. I think we sat in probably 60 of them. [Struzziero] actually took some of the fitted wall coverings and poured coffee on and wrote on them, and then we tried to get [the stains] out. We thought about how we were going to maintain this,” said Keohane

The new library will also enhance the work of the librarians and staff. 

“We have a great staff in the old building, but they didn’t have the tools that they needed,” said Struzziero. Where there were two public programming spaces in the old building, there are a dozen now. 

“So we can offer everything that we want to offer at the same time. We don’t have to flip a coin between a children’s program and an adult program or the need for a committee meeting from a town group to be held here. We can do everything all at once. Everything that people said that they wished that they could have in their library,” said Struzziero.

“We are more aware the staff is not just checking out books; they’re doing ‘library value added’: interacting, solving problems, answering questions,” he said.

The new library is looking to build a strong connection with Belmont schools – the Belmont Middle and High schools as well as the Wellington Elementary are stone’s throws away.

“They were great partners throughout the project because [the library administration] lived in the Chenery Upper Elementary space for two years. We’ve told them, ‘Call on us!’ We owe them a debt forever. Furthermore, we’ve made it clear that we’re available,” said Struzziero.

Just as Belmont has committed to a building for the next half century, one can find countless articles and commentary that proclaim that the concept of a library is both outdated and of a bygone age in a world of instant communications in a handheld devise. 

Struzziero disagrees.

“The last year before we took down the old building was the highest circulating year in Belmont Public Library history. In 2023, we were the 10th busiest site in Massachusetts, in that old building that didn’t serve the public, that wasn’t ADA compliant,” he said.

“Libraries aren’t going anywhere. They said when TV came out, they said, ‘That’s the end of libraries.’ Then when you could watch movies on VHD cassettes in your home, ‘That’s the end of libraries.’ The Internet came out, ‘Libraries are going away.’ Libraries are never going away. All that we’ve done is we’ve become a place that continues to evolve with the needs of the community. Belmont did the best numbers we’ve ever done just before this project began, and we’re going to smash those numbers going forward.”

Belmont High Hoops: Boys Enters New Year With A New ‘Fun’ Look; A Young Girls Squad Rebuilding Thru Senior Leadership

Photo: Belmont senior All-Star guard Sophia McClendon driving against Arlington.

With both teams introducing new head coaches this season, Belmont High boys and girls basketball have started off the new season attempting to find an identity that will move the

Boys bring fun back to Wenner Field House

After a number of years in which it was looking up from a deep end of the standings, Belmont High Boys’ have entered the 2025-26 season having rediscovered a vibe it hasn’t had for quite a while.

“It’s a team that’s having fun,” said Dan Burns who played and coached at Woburn High before taking his first head coaching post in Belmont. A lot of that fun comes from the style of play Burns has installed with this youngish team.

“Belmont has always had a tradition of playing fast, and getting the ball out of the net. We have the bodies and the skill set to be able to wear teams down, which cause turnovers, which led to easy baskets as we are being able to get out on the break,” said Burns.

“I think we have the ability to really pressure and bother teams, especially on the defensive side,” he noted. “We have all the pieces to make a strong run in the league and that leads to success later in the season.”

Belmont enters 2026 with a 4-3 record as it heads into the heart of the Middlesex League rotation of games beginning in the new year. With the exception of a final of the Adams Holiday Tourney, Belmont has been competitve in each of its five games. The Marauders’ one-point loss, 45-44, to Arlington was a result of Belmont making one of three shots from the charity stripe with a second left in the game. [Belmont fell to Burlington, 78 – 59, on Tuesday, Jan. 6]

Burn’s sends out a young starting five with three juniors and a sophomore joining senior co-captain Andre Chavushian. But Burns notes that he’s ready and willing to empty most of his bench, using 9 to 10 players to play significant roles on the floor.

Leading the offense early in the season has been Chavushian, junior guard William Murphy and sophomore forward Liam Phillips. Add the presence of the team’s big man junior center Braiden Dargon who is adept at blocking out for rebounds on both ends and has rocked the court with some hard blocks. Starter junior guard Theo Sorblom and senior co-captain Charles Tingos have seen their share of minutes so far.

Three Marauders hit double digits in the season opener win vs Watertown. Dargon led the scoring with 17, Murphy (with two threes) coming home with 12, and Chavushian 11, as Tingos and Sorblom came home with nine each. In the opening game of the Adams Holiday Tournament at Concord-Carlisle on Dec. 27, Murphy finished with 21 points and Dargon put up 17 points in the Maruaders’ 69-51 win over Weymouth.

Belmont will visit Lexington on Friday, Jan. 9, before heading home on Tuesday, Jan. 13, against Wilmington.

Girls toughing it out its rebuilding

“That was ugly,” said newly-installed Belmont Girls’ Basketball Head Coach Antonia Macklin after the Marauders had just won its first game of the 2025-6 season, a 43-23 home walk over of a very young Wakefield High squad on Dec. 16.

And it appears the Marauders will have to endure more slugfests as the team finds itself in a rebuilding season under its first year head coach. Macklin – who was a star at Boston’s Jeremiah E. Burke High School before heading off to the University of Iowa where she as a member of the 1993 Hawkeye team that played in the semifinals of the NCAA Final Four – comes to Belmont from Boston’s Holland High School of Technology to take on a challenge of developing a winning program

“We’re a young team. We lost a lot of seniors from last year, so we’re looking to rebuild. But this is a good group as we are returning six varsity players and we have eight new additions who I am excited about.”

“Defense is key. I love playing defense. I played for one of the top coaches in the country and the defense was our thing. I want to see how we look playing man to man and how we look in the zone,” she said.

While praising her team’s overall effort early in the season, Macklin said the players have been wanting to do so much instead of just letting their game flow. “We don’t necessarily have to keep shooting so we can penetrate as well. So those are things that we can work on and practice.”

“But overall, I thought they did a good job,” she noted.

The Marauders’ is led by senior All-Star guard Sophia McClendon. The four-year starter is the team’s “go to player” on the offense end of the court and is a dominate force on defense, with her rebounding and shot blocking ability, swatting away four attempts in Belmont’s loss to Arlington.

Joining McClendon as a veteran varsity presence is junior Becca Christensen, who has been a magnet under the boards, coming down with 13 rebounds against Watertown and 11 vs. Wakefield.

The remaining starters are youngsters playing their first season on varsity, with sophomores Sarah Geller and Reece Bundy in the backcourt and first-year Eleanor Siegert joining Christensen up front. Macklin uses her bench judiciously, able to bring in senior twins (and co-captains) Erin and Leah Attridge, along with forwards junior Stella Ivkovic and first year Gwen Cornett.

“I’m expecting a lot from [our seniors] being on the floor, but also looking for their leadership as well. So they play a major part of us putting this young group together,” said Macklin.

After struggling in the first two weeks of the season winning one of four, the Marauders has taken two of its last three including an opening victory against host Cambridge in the Cambridge Legends Classic on Dec. 29 and a 10 point win against Burlington.

Belmont will be on the road taking on Lexington on Friday, Jan. 9 before returning home on Jan. 13 against Wilmington. Tip off is at 6 p.m.

Belmont Moderator Announces Run For Re-Election

Photo: Belmont Town Moderator Mike Crowley

With a contender ready to place his name on the ballot, Belmont’s town moderator has announced he will be seeking to retain his post in the 2026 Town Election.

“I’m excited to officially announce that I’m running for re-election,” said Mike Crowley, who is seeking consecutive terms as the town’s moderator, who presides over town meetings as well as appoints members to the Warrant Committee. 

Crowley will meet former Select Board member Adam Dash for the one-year position in the town election to be held April 5, 2026.

“Last year, I stepped up to take on this role becauseI believe Belmont deserves a town government where every voice matters. I promised to modernize town meeting, broaden participation, increase transparency, diversify appointments, and bring new voices into town government,” said Crowley’s 

Crowley highlighted his accomplishments, including standardizing the hybrid town meeting, which he said allows participation by a wider range of residents, and backed a Moderator’s Advisory Committee to provide direct member input on improving town meeting. He also pointed to his appointments to the Warrant Committee – including parents and underrepresented voices – to help tackle Belmont’s long-term challenges and recruit new candidates for Town Meeting.

“I’m running for re-election because this progress is only the beginning. With your support, we can keep strengthening Town Meeting and building a Belmont that works for everyone,” said Crowley, a retired US Government official who has served as a Town Meeting member and on the Warrant and School committees.

Brownsberger To Be Challenged For Senate Seat By Boston Resident With Belmont Tiess

Photo: Will Brownsberger

For the first time since winning a special election in 2011, State Sen. Will Brownsberger will have a significant Democratic challenger for his 2nd Suffolk & Middlesex Senate District seat in the upcoming state party primary election in September 2026.

Daniel Lander, a senior policy advisor to Boston Mayor Michele Wu and the chair of Boston’s Ward 21 Democratic Committee that represents Allston, Brighton, and Fenway, has pulled papers to run for the seat Brownsberger has held for the past 15 years.

“The communities of this district are under attack from the Trump Administration. We need a State Senate that stands up for our knowledge economy, brings down costs, and isn’t stuck defending a broken status quo,” said Lander in an opening announcement of his campaign. “I look forward to hearing the concerns and dreams of residents and sharing my vision for an affordable, livable Massachusetts over the months to come.”

The Suffolk and Middlesex District includes most of the Fenway neighborhood and the Allston and Brighton neighborhoods of Boston, Watertown, Belmont, and West Cambridge.

First published in POLITICO’s Massachusetts Playbook newsletter on Dec. 10, Lander campaign is closely linked to a political squabble between Wu and Brownsberger over the mayor’s attempt to shift a more significant amount of property taxes onto businesses, in an attempt to reduce an expected 13 percent tax increase on residential homeowners in fiscal 2026. Brownsberger is one of the legislators working to stave off a vote on Wu’s initiative, which requires legislative approval. Local reporting points to Wu’s support of several candidates to stand against those legislators.

A graduate of Harvard College and the Kennedy School of Government, Lander has led a land audit of Boston that identified locations where hundreds of new affordable homes can be built while reducing red tape by authoring and implementing an executive order to accelerate the permitting process by 50 percent.

A native of Huron Village in West Cambridge, Lander has a strong connection to Belmont, being a member of Temple Beth El Center on Concord Avenue since he was a child. Lander’s father is Eric Lander, geneticist, mathematician, and molecular biologist known for his leadership of the Human Genome Project and as the founding director of the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. 

Usually the bi-annual state party primaries for both of Belmont’s Beacon Hill representatives are pro forma affairs, as the two long-time seat holders have been challenged once in the past decade when Jennifer Fries ran against State Rep. Dave Roger in 2020.

After the last Massachusetts legislative redistricting in 2021 that took effect in 2023, Belmont currently represents 25 percent of the population in the 2nd district, behind Boston (43 percent) and Watertown (32 percent), making for an interesting race if it remains a two-candidate contest. With the incumbent and challenger having natural constituencies, it would likely be that the race could be decided by Watertown voters, although Brownsberger resided in Watertown before moving to the “Town of Homes” in the early 1990s.

One observer noted the primary’s date of Sept. 1 will likely limit the participation of Boston voters in the student-heavy district as it coincides with the first days of classes and moving into dorms and apartments.

Next Act: Dionne Announces Candidancy For State Treasurer In 2026 General Election

Photo: Elizabeth Dionne

Following in the footsteps of her fellow Republican and Belmontian, Mitt Romney, Select Board member Elizabeth Dionne will be seeking to win statewide office in next year’s Massachusetts general election.

In what was becoming a not-so-surprising announcement made Tuesday, Dec. 9, Dionne is challenging incumbent Democratic State Treasurer Deb Goldberg, who many political pundits view as the most vulnerable officeholder on the state ballot in 2026.

In a statement released by Dionne on Tuesday, she said “[l]ike so many other residents of Massachusetts, I have had enough of the corruption, cronyism, and chaos happening in the treasurer’s office. It is time for a change. I will not be the treasurer for the insiders or special interest groups. I will be the taxpayers’ treasurer who answers to the people of Massachusetts.”

Goldberg has encountered controversy with her handling of the state’s Cannabis Control Commission and the 2024 firing of its Chair Shannon O’Brien, who was returned in September of this year to that post by a Suffolk County Superior Court judge.

Dionne also introduced a slogan – “The Taxpayers’ Treasurer” – a campaign website, VoteDionne.com, and a blue and green logo (see below.)

While having a limited experience with elected office – the Wellesley Road resident ran unopposed for the Select Board in 2023 and won election to the Belmont Town Meeting – Dionne has a formidable CV: graduating from Wellesley (BA Political Science), Cambridge (M.Phil., Political Theory), and Stanford Law, she worked at Goodwin Procter and taught constitutional law and political science at Wellesley and Boston College. And politics is in her blood as the daughter of John Harmer, who served in the California State Senate from 1966 to 1974 and for three months was Ronald Reagan’s last lieutenant governor.

Dionne told the Belmontonian she anticipates to run as a “Charlie Baker Republician” referring to the successful two-term Bay State governor whose policies and style led to a 74 percent approval rating according to a 2018 WBUR/MassINC poll, making him the most popular governor in the United States.

As a member of the Belmont Select Board, Dionne pushed the board to emphasize economic expansion with “[a] focus on long-term planning for Belmont’s financial health and infrastructure” she said in October when she announced that she would not seek re-election to the board.

Dionne championed revamping the zoning bylaws to promote a “friendlier” environment for businesses and developers by promoting commercial investment, the passage of the MBTA Communities Act by Town Meeting, and the current effort to pass overlay districts in Belmont Center and along Concord Avenue to spur a mix of retail and residential developments, and allow a hotel along Concord Avenue.

Hot Under The Collar: Special Town Meeting Moving To Make Room For The High School Musical To Town’s Chagrin

Photo: “Chicago” performed by the Belmont High School Performing Arts Company in 2017.

There’s a saying among show business folks: Despite the circumstances, “The show must go on!”

And that adage is being used by the Belmont School Department to allow exclusive use of the Belmont High School theater/auditorium for nearly a month in late winter for rehearsals and performances of the highly anticipated annual high school Spring musical.

That demand by the schools supporting its arts program is forcing the March 4 Special Town Meeting to move out of its “home” at the high school auditorium into a temporary spot at the Chenery Upper Elementary School’s auditorium.

This change of venue did not go over too well with those running the Special Town Meeting that will vote to approve proposed zoning overlay districts for Belmont Center and along Concord Avenue.

“The high school is the home of Town Meeting and I’m really unhappy with how this is playing out, yet again,” said the Select Board’s Elizabeth Dionne, who referred to a past promise in 2024 for the space to be used for a Town Meeting that was pulled back. (That refusal was dropped after Select Board resistance.)

“It feels like we keep getting pushback that is not appropriate,” said Dionne.

“I’m shocked and really unhappy,” said Taylor Yates, Select Board vice chair. “The Select Board has been extremely supportive of the schools and school committee. And we made clear this is one of our top priorities.”

Town Administrator Patrice Garvin was particularly disappointed at the resistance from the schools on sharing the space.

“We made a request four months ago, and [the school department] is unable to honor that because of rehearsals? Not performances, rehearsals,” Garvin said pointedly. 

The Special’s date conflicts with the final week of rehearsals for this year’s Belmont High School Performing Arts Company musical (which has yet to be announced on the BHS PAC website). The musical is the highlight of the theater/arts year, with literally up to 100 students involved as actors, stage management, making costumes, and the backstage crew involved to create the performances. [The performances are scheduled March 12 to 14). The stage will be filled with props and large scenery, and the audio and light systems will be appropriated by the arts department.

The musicians will be located in the orchestra “pit” which requires the removal of panels in front of the stage, which, during Town Meeting, is where the Town Moderator, Select Board, town administrative staff and Town Clerk’s office are positioned.

“It just turns out that the … auditorium is very popular this time of year,” said Board Chair Matt Taylor, noting it would take a day to return the panels to cover the pit and scenery would likely interfere with the screen used for presentations and to report vote tallies.

Because it has never held a hybrid meeting at the location, Belmont Chief Innovation Officer Chris McClure made a Rumsfeldesque observation that “there’s a lot of unknown unknowns” by holding a meeting at the Chenery. He said that the department is “just getting used to the intricacies of the [high school] auditorium.

There are two glaring limitations with holding the “Special’ at the CUE, according to McClure. First, the interior of the school is a “dead” zone for cell service, forcing the meeting to “totally rely on Wi-Fi for connection.” Yet both the town’s IT department and Belmont Media Center, the meeting’s broadcast outlet, were optimistic each could find a workaround to the challenges. 

“Yeah, we’ll make it work,” said McClure. “We got adequate time to do some practice there,” but also cautioned that the meeting “would probably expect a few surprises.”

If additional equipment is required “for that ability to hold Town Meeting” at the CUE, the increased cost should be shouldered by the School Department, said Garvin. McClure said long-term plans are underway to place additional antennas in town-owned buildings and schools due to limited coverage, but “[o]bviously that timetable doesn’t line up with this.” 

But McClure pointed out, “I would just advise against oversolving the problem and making it too complicated” looking to “just shore up the WiFi and maybe provide some extra tech support.”

And if all else fails or the solution is costly to install, McClure suggested the possibility of a return to roll call voting—votes by volunteer “tabulators” who count raised hands on each amendment and article – for this one meeting.

The second limitation, according to Town Moderator Mike Crowley, who attended Monday’s meeting, is the lack of a separate location for meeting members who, whether for health concerns or personal preference, require extra personal space. At the high school, those residents are located in the balcony, where the CUE’s theater is a single-floor design. 

But at the end of the discussion, the Select Board reluctantly approved the Special Town Meeting at the CUE, with either a single or two nights to resolve the zoning changes proposed by the Planning Board.

Even after the vote, the Select Board remained disappointed with the forced change imposed on the town.

“I am surprised at the very small number of people that can dictate when and where Town Meeting happens,” said Yates.

Belmont Takes Thanksgiving Game Tumble, Falling To Watertown, 21-12

Photo: Up for grabs: The failed two-point conversion after Belmont’s second TD.

On a glorious weather day for football – sunny, breezy, and cool – Belmont and Watertown took to the field for the 103rd edition of the annual Thanksgiving day football rivalry held this year at Watertown’s Victory Field.

The last time the Marauders were on their neighbor’s pitch in 2023, Belmont came away with a historic blowout, a decisive 47-0 victory over Watertown capping the team’s first Middlesex League championship in 60 years. But this year would be the last opportunity to secure a much needed “W” as the Marauders had experienced a winless 2025 campaign.

And while the team would equal its high score of the year and kept the Raiders to three TDs, it still wasn’t enough for the Marauders to produce an upset as Watertown took home the winner’s trophy, 21-12.

After a stagnate first quarter in which neither team could produce much offense, Belmont would put together one of its best series of the season: a 13 play, 80 yard drive – all on the ground – that took nearly 10 minutes off the clock. Belmont’s MVP and all-star candidate Casey Regan would bull his way from two yards out into the endzone with seven minutes remaining in the half. The two point conversion attempt – a run up the middle – was a lost cause.

Soon afterwards, Watertown would take the lead within three minutes as senior running back Gabe Oliveira De Mattos swept around Belmont’s right end for a 22-yard touchdown run. The Raider’s extra point kick was true giving Watertown a 7-6 advantage going into the half.

After going three and out after the half time kickoff, luck appeared to go Belmont’s was the punt was “muffed’ by the Raider returner giving the Marauders a second chance to start the second half with an inkling of momentum. But Belmont once again couldn’t do much and Watertown would take its first drive in the second half methodically into Belmont’s end of the field with Patrick McHugh walking it into the endzone from four-yards out. 14-6 Watertown.

Yet give the Marauders credit as Belmont would find its way into the Watertown endzone, with a rare successful pass to midfield. Three plays later, Regan would bounce to the outside to outrace the defensive back 35-yards to the pylon with seven minutes remaining in the game to cut the lead to 14-12. The two point conversion attempt to potentially tie the game was a jump ball that no one could control.

Despite what could have been a major shift in momentum to Belmont never materialized as Watertown grind the ballgame away with a constant barrage of running plays culminating with Oliveira De Mattos’ second running TD of the morning.

Nomination Papers For Town-Wide, Town Meeting Candidates Now Avaliable From Town Clerk

Photo: Nomination papers are here!

For Belmont residents who are looking to make a difference in town goverance, candidate nomination papers for town-wide office and Town Meeting are now avaliable the week of Dec. 1 from the Town Clerk’s Office at Belmont Town Hall, according to Belmont Town Clerk Ellen Cushman.

All candidates must be registered voters of Belmont and US citizens. For those seeking a seat on the eight town-wide offices – there is no minimum on the number of offices a resident can run for – they need to gather at least 50 signatures of registered voters in Belmont. Town Meeting candidates most obtain at least 25 signatures of registered voters in your precinct. Cushman advises candidates to gather at least 10 percent more than the minumum signatures in case some are challenged.

Nomination papers are due back for signature certification by 5 p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026.

Office hours for Town Hall to pick up and drop off papers or ask questions are Mondays from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m., Tuesdays through Thursdays from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., and Fridays from 8 a.m. to Noon.

Got questions? Email quires to townclerk@belmont-ma.gov or call the Clerk’s office at 617-993-2603.

Soft Property Values, Heavy Debt Servicing, Results In Jump In Property Tax Rate As Average Tax Bill Nears $20K

Photo: Belmont Board of Assessors’: (from left) Anthony Leccese, Mark Paolillo, and Daniel Dargon

With property values barely keeping up with inflation and the burden of heavy debt exclusion costs, Belmont property owners will see their Fiscal Year ’26 tax rate increase to $11.51 per thousand dollars from last years rate of $11.36, according to the Board of Assessors’ recommendations approved at the Belmont Select Board’s annual tax classificaton hearing.

The combination of a softening residential real estate prices, the yearly Proposition 2 1/2 increase to the tax levy and the impact of 11 debt exclusions – the Beech Street Senior Center, the Wellington Elementary School, the Underwood Pool, the fire station, five bond segments of the Middle and High School and the library and the sports facility totalling $138.9 million – which makes up approximately 12 percent of the total tax rate will result in the annual tax bill for an “average” Belmont single family residential house nudging up to the $20,000 level, reaching $19,580.

According to the Assessors’ analysis, the average value of a single family house in Belmont is $1,701,064, an increased of $51,700 from fiscal year 2025 when it stood at $1.65 million. The average value of a single family house statewide is $762,345 as of July 2025, according to Lamacchia Realty.

At the Monday, Dec. 1 meeting, Assessor’s Chair Dan Dargon said the appointed board was continuing its long-standing position rejecting seperate, or split, rates for residential and commercial properties, and not adopting a residential exemption for property owners.

Dargon said since commercial, industrial and personal property real estate makes up just 5.3 percent of Belmont’s property base, a split rate would not raise any more in taxes.

“Shifting a tax burden is not going to significantly benefit residences and you can adversely hurt commercial properties,” said Dargon, who said the town would need a commercial base of between 10 to 20 percent before “you start a shift.”

Unlike past years, residential exemptions has garnered the attention of residents and the Select Board. Residential exemption is a local-option property tax reduction that shifts the tax burden from primary-residence owners to owners of secondary homes, investment properties, and higher-valued homes.

As the Board Chair Matt Taylor noted, the exemption allows homeowners to deduct a fix amount off the property’s value, so owner occupied homes with lower accessed values will get more off their taxes, and shifting taxes to larger rental properties and high end homes. For example, a property valued at $850,000 would see a $1,121.66 reduction to their tax bill with a 10 percent exemption, while a property assessed at $2 million will see an increase of nearly $292.

Taylor said as the town encourages transit-oriented housing and condos through the MBTA Communities Act and the Belmont Center Overlay plan, “a homeowner deduction or residential exemption would encourage those apartments to be owner occupied,” which Dargon and Board member Mark Paolillo both agreed was “a really good point.”

But Select Board member Elizabeth Dionne warned of “unattended consequences” of a policy change that pushes the town to build condos and convert apartments units to condominums. “If you increase your number of condos, each would get a significantly larger percentage of the residential exemption so you might actually end up shifting your burden [to higher valued houses] that you didn’t anticipate.”