Estimated 3,000 view AHS wings, and many interviewed are impressed
- Details
- By Alisha Gandhi
- Category: School news
- Hits: 8
Residents tour new AHS wing April 30. / Alisha Gandhi photo
Phase I of the new Arlington High School opened its doors to the public for the first time Saturday April 30, and an estimated 3,000 attendees explored the new Performing Arts and STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Mathematics) wings, which opened to students a month earlier.
View more photos >>
Those taking the tour interviewed by YourArlington expressed near-unanimous appreciation for the abundance of light in the new building. Jenifer Tidwell and Rich Carreiro agreed that the, “natural light is one of the best features” of the new wings.
They were not alone in their sentiment. Eleven year old Zoe, compares the new wing to a museum, crediting the “really nice lighting and a lot of windows.”
In addition, attendee Joseph Curro Jr., the former Select Board and School Committee member, thought that the brightness would likely be “helpful to the learning experience.”
The lighting in the new building was definitely a hit -- but was it worth the price tag?
Raitt leaving Arlington to lead regional planning agency
- Details
- By Joan Roman, Bob Sprague
- Category: Planning
- Hits: 11
Raitt
Jennifer Raitt, director of planning and community development since 2016, has accepted the position of executive director of Northern Middlesex Council of Governments, regional planning agency and metropolitan planning organization based in Lowell.
Town Manager Adam Chapdelaine, who made the announcement, is leaving June 17. Raitt's last day is expected to be June 3.
“Jenny has been with the town for just over six years, and over the course of her tenure she and her team have produced a prodigious amount of plans, which have resulted in the implementation of substantial improvements throughout Arlington,” Chapdelaine said in a May 3 town news release.
“Her work on housing, climate, arts and culture, conservation, historic preservation, economic development and transportation will benefit Arlington for years to come. I am very grateful for her excellent work and service to the town.”
Revised ARPA framework approved
- Details
- By Susan Gilbert
- Category: Selectboard summaries
- Hits: 4
The Select Board voted, 4-0, with John Hurd absent, on Wednesday, April 20, to adopt the revised ARPA framework proposed by Town Manager Adam Chapdelaine.
To see these revisions, click here >> See all documents under this agenda item here >>
After the Select Board’s October 2021 endorsement of a framework, ARPA approved the final federal guidelines, “which allowed us to use up to $10 million to benefit the general fund in accounting for revenue loss that the town experienced over the course of the pandemic. We’ve since finalized the numbers in a lot of key areas,” said Chapdelaine. Specifically:
Housing authority leadership welcomes first Latina
- Details
- By Melanie Gilbert
- Category: Housing Authority
- Hits: 3
Mayra Cruz, new assistant executive director
'Really excited to bring her on board.'
-- Jack Nagle
As board elects all males
For the first time since its founding in 1948, the Arlington Housing Authority (AHA) has hired a Latina to an executive-level leadership position. The board of commissioners welcomed Mayra Cruz as the new assistant executive director at its April 21 board meeting.
“[Mayra] has extensive experience in housing authorities, which includes Boston and Cambridge,” said Executive Director Jack Nagle. “We’re really excited to bring her on board to work toward our goals and initiatives.”
Cruz joins the housing authority at a time when it is embarking on extensive and expensive building renovation and rehabilitation projects across its aging senior and family-housing portfolio.
NEWS DISHES: Sabzi in East Arlington closes
- Details
- By various sources
- Category: Restaurant news
- Hits: 4
Dishing up some Arlington restaurant-related news morsels:
Sabzi, the Mass. Ave. restaurant in East Arlington featuring Persian fare, has shut down.
Marc Hurwitz, who published Boston Restaurant Talk, ), reported the closing. A Facebook post from Sabzi said, "The size of our little restaurant just could not adequately sustain itself given the many pandemic hurdles and the ongoing staffing shortages. It has been a true privilege to serve this community. We have made many good friends and will forever treasure this experience."
Page 11 of 11