Category Archives: events

Upcoming events: Community Dialog and state budget talk

HOUSE WAYS AND MEANS CHAIR CHARLES MURPHY VISITING BELMONT
State Representative Will Brownsberger and the Belmont Citizen Herald are hosting an evening discussion with House Ways and Means and Chairman Charles Murphy on Tuesday, October 13 at 7PM in the Selectmen’s Room in Belmont Town Hall.  This will be a great opportunity to get an inside perspective on the state budget situation, which many analysts predict will be even worse next year than it has been this year.  The discussion will be informal and allow ample opportunity for questions and answers.
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Tuesday, October 27, 2009.
YOU ARE INVITED!
COMMUNITY DIALOGUE
Belmont Public  Schools
Field House at Belmont High School
4:30 PM – 8:00 PM
The Community Dialogue is an opportunity for all townspeople to help guide the future planning efforts of the Belmont Public Schools. Community members, students, parents, teachers and school staff, civic and business leaders, and elected officials will be encouraged to sponsor and participate in dialogues.  Dialogues are self-directed and focused on topics of educational and organizational importance to Belmont.
For more information or to RSVP, call 617-993-5401

Hey all. Apologies for a long hiatus on posting to B2. I wanted to write this evening to inform the B2 readership about two important events to put on your calendars. The first is a very important opportunity to discuss (and help shape) the future of our public schools at a community dialog hosted by the Belmont Public Schools on October 27 at the Field House at Belmont High School. The entire community is invited to participate in this: parents, school administration and staff, civic and business leaders and elected officials. There’s a great presentation from Superintendent Entwistle  available on the BPS Web site that explains the program. In short: participants will take part in both some directed “big topic” discussions on issues important to the future of our public schools, and then in short (50 minute) self-directed dialogs on educational and organizational topics suggested by participants themselves. This isn’t some empty “team building” exercise — the output of these sessions will be operationalized by the BPS leadership team and will help inform an 18 month improvement plan adopted by the School Department.

Take part in a Community Dialog on the future of the Public Schools

Take part in a Community Dialog on the future of the Public Schools

The dialog runs from 4:30 to 8:30 pm on the 27th, with a short break for dinner at around 5:00pm. The first Session begins at 5:35 pm.  and the second at 6:30 pm.  You must RSVP for the Dialog to attend. Call 617-993-5401 or by sending an e-mail to Cathy Grant - CGrant (at) belmont.k12.ma.us!!

The second event is an opportunity to speak with Massachusetts House Ways and Means Chairman Charlie Murphy. He’ll be dropping in to Belmont on October 13 for a conversation with residents at 7:00pm in the Selectmen’s room in Belmont Town Hall. Murphy will be accompanied by State Representative Will Brownsberger. The Belmont Citizen Herald and Brownsberger are co-sponsoring the discussion, which is sure to hit on the State’s precarious finances and the impact that will likely have on local aide to Belmont and other towns.

One Book, One Belmont: Wrapping up an exciting year

On September 9, 2009, the Belmont Public Library launched the second year of the One Book, One Belmont program with Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: A Year of Food Life, written by best-selling author Barbara Kingsolver, husband Steven L. Hopp, and daughter Camille Kingsolver. The book chronicles the family’s move to a farm in rural Virginia and the succeeding year in which they committed to eating only food grown on their farm or bought locally. The One Book, One Belmont program began last year with Three Cups of Tea: One Man’s Mission to Promote Peace . . . One School at a Time. The program’s success included 800 people attending an author event at Belmont High School.

Beginning in Seattle in 1998, One Book, One Read programs seek to connect readers across entire communities by reading the same book. Since then One Book, One Read programs have stretched across the United States, from Alabama through Wyoming. Different communities can also read the same book, and this year just in Massachusetts, Groton, Northampton, and Williamstown have also selected Animal, Vegetable, Miracle.

The One Book, One Belmont program follows the goals of other One Book, One Read programs to build community and to promote reading. In 2009, the One Book, One Belmont program also celebrates the town’s 150th anniversary with a book reflecting Belmont’s agricultural history. “From 1859 to the mid-twentieth century,” the Belmont Public Library writes, “Belmont was a town of farms, dotted with greenhouses full of flowers, fields bursting with fruits and vegetables, and pastures grazed by the first Holstein cattle imported to the United States.”

Continuing until October 8th, One Book, One Belmont has featured an array of events with more to come:  a composting workshop on Sept. 30 at the Habitat Wildlife Sanctuary at 3:00, 3:45 and 4:30 (ages 5 and up), a screening of  HomeGrown, a documentary presented by Belmont World Film on October 5, and a One Book One Belmont Day at the Farmer’s Market on October 8 with guest chef appearances at 2:00 PM, 3:00PM and 4:00PM.  More details about One Book, One Belmont—including event details—are available on the One Book, One Belmont Web site.

When the blue Belmont Public Library One Book, One Belmont banners come down around town after October 8th, you will know that the planning committee will soon be meeting again once a month to review titles for next year’s book.

The New School of School Committee

A note to the community that tomorrow (Tuesday) evening at 7:30 in the Chenery Middle School Community Room, the School Committee will be holding the first of a series of School Committee Workshops. These are a new format for Belmont School Committee and are intended to provide a different forum to discuss big picture issues, questions or concerns that face our schools (and our community). The agenda for tomorrow evening’s meeting is posted on the BPS Web site here. I’m really excited about the new Workshop format, as it creates an opportunity for a more open-ended dialog with the community about our shared values and priorities than is possible given the amount of important regular business that fills up most School Committee meetings. There will be a number of these throughout the year focused on different topics.

I hope you’ll take the time to come out to tomorrow night’s meeting at the Community Room at CMS and/or tune in and watch!  I hope to see you tomorrow evening.