GRAND OPENING – BEAVER BROOK GREENWAY IN LEEDS

SATURDAY, JUNE 22 AT 10:00 (Rain Date – June 23)
You are all invited to the official opening of the Beaver Brook Greenway located on the east side of Haydenville Road (Route 9) across from National Grid. Even if you’ve already checked out the area and the cool wildlife blind, there will be more to see at the June 22nd opening. Permanent, colorful and informative interpretive signs will be located along the trails highlighting points of interest. From the custom made wildlife blind you can look to Beaver Brook and perhaps spot a great heron, otter, or wood duck. Enjoy lemonade and cookies at the picnic table area. The City of Northampton purchased the strip of land in 2010. In the past few years it has been rehabilitated by the Broad Brook Coalition and Leeds Civic Association volunteers. The project has been funded by a Community Preservation Act grant. We hope you, your friends, and your families explore this new little jewel in Leeds.

Roberts Hill

roberts-hill

LEEDS LITTER PICK UP

Spring-Litter-Poster-2019

LCA Meeting Minutes February 26, 2019

February 26, 2019

 

Attendees:

Heidi Stevens

Penny Geis

David Rondina

Jason Johnson

Marc Freedman

Karyn Nelson

 

Treasurer’s Report:

Nov and Dec presented

At next March meeting, she’ll have Jan, Feb and 2018 summary

Report is accepted

 

New president search:

Announcement during pizza party and in next newsletter

Email looking for board members and board officers

LCA email group not Yankee Hill

Post on website

Heidi to reach out to Sue to ask about her resignation and search for new president

Heidi asked for a copy of bylaws

 

Pizza Party

Set – up at 1pm

Heidi will check inventory for paper goods

Marc – check for shopping list from last year

Cheese, pepperoni, vegetarian, hawaiian

Pizza from A1

Ask John Sinton & John Clapp to donate a book to LCA

Penny will shop for supplies

 

Newsletter for March/April

The president search

Jim Mias to write about Heidi’s tree/Wind storm

Litter pick up

Pizza party recap

 

Side track – shed for LCA supplies

Location options

Kelvinator on Water st. or David’s garage

 

Meeting adjourned 8:07

Beat The Winter Blues Leeds Pizza Party – 2020

pizza2020

December 4, 2018 Meeting Minutes

December 04, 2018

 

LCA Meeting

 

Attendees:

Sue Carbin

Heidi Stevens

Marc Freedman

Karyn Nelson

Matt Verson

 

Treasurer’s Report: Karyn

Unofficial report as the bank statement wasn’t available

Next month Karyn will have November, December and End of Year

 

Bench:

Company doesn’t discount for non-profit organizations. Karyn will ask DPW to pucrhase through state purchasing contract (MHEC) and we reimbuse

 

Leeds School Safety Meeting, Dec 11th 6pm

 

John Stinton’s Book talk, Jan 9th, 2019

Set up at 6:00pm

We’ll bring cookies, cider and tables

Heidi to bring cookies

We’ll confirm details at next meeting Jan 8th

 

Land on Kennedy Road

Town is buying 119 acres

Tom Annese new town land manager

 

Robert’s Hill

Joe LaPlant cleaned up the trails of fallen tree trunks on Robert’s Hill

 

Heidi is making initial calls to set up Pizza Party, to not conflict with Leeds Spring Fling

 

Heidi’s researching about the parcel of land on the river with no known owner

Communicating with Wayne Fieden and Daryl of Chartpak

The topic of summer river nuisance was brought up

 

Conservation Commission (ConsCom) is responsible for management of the river.

Someone proposes “Enhancing river visibility”

Cutting out black locust and bittersweet, invasive species

January 08, 2019 Meeting Minutes

Jan 08, 2019

 

Attendees:

Sue Carbin

Heidi Stevens

Penny Geis

Earl Meunier

Marc Freedman

Steve McDonough

 

Topics:

Jon Sinton book talk

David will run slides

Volunteers are asked to show up by 6:00 to help with set-up

 

Holiday Lights:

Electricity is turned off for the season

Need to organize removal

 

Pizza Party:

Possible date – March 02, March 16, March 09

Heidi will call Leeds Country Club to find out date options

 

Jan/Feb Newsletter pieces:

Pizza party

Green tip

Collective piece on Leeds artwork due by Jan 15

 

Leeds Elementary Security Meeting:

Summary ~ Mr Canata’s idea was good in theory, however NPD nixed due to too many unknown elements

 

LCA to consider sponsoring CPR class

Penny to look into it

 

Adjourn at 7:55

First Snow

winter-mill-river

Book reading by local author

Devils-den-book400Devil’s Den to Lickingwater: The Mill River Through Landscape and History

Book reading by local author, John Sinton – January 9, 7:00, Leeds School Music Room Come meet John Sinton, author, historian, and proud “River Rat.” John’s presentation will focus on why our river area was a sacred and central place for the many tribes of the northeast. He’ll show us how the Mill River area was an essential resource for early Anglo American settlers, and will talk about how it powered our first industrialists. John will connect for us how different peoples and cultures have shaped and been shaped by the Mill River and it’s environment. There will be a Q&A after the presentation. More about John Sinton’s new book: It tells the multifaceted tale of the Mill River in West-ern Massachusetts, from its emergence after the glaciers 20,000 years ago to the present. Little escapes Sinton’s voracious historical appetite – the creation of the landscape, the dis-appearance and reappearance of native fish and animals, the Mill River as a Native Ameri-can crossroads, the contrast between English and Native ways of managing the land, the transformations wrought by war, floods and industrial disasters, the extraordinary role of the Mill River in the Industrial Revolution, and exceptional personalities from Sachem Um-panchala to Calvin Coolidge: all this is told through the arc of the Mill River’s history—beloved, abused, diverted, and ultimately reclaimed as an integral part of the landscape. Beautifully written and lavishly illustrated with maps, drawings and other images, Devil’s Den to Lickingwater will serve as an exemplar for readers and authors of local and public history, proving that local history is a reflection of the larger world. Sinton’s unique book is a delight for the eye, the intellect, and the heart. Copies can be purchased at Collective Copies or at the book reading.

LEEDS SCHOOL EMERGENCY RESPONSE MEETING

 Tuesday, December 11th at 6:00 p.m. in the Leeds School Cafetorium 

AN OPEN LETTER TO OUR NEIGHBORS OF LEEDS ELEMENTARY SCHOOL 

Dear friends, 

We are collaborating to reach out to the Leeds community to establish a plan with neighbors should the Leeds Elementary School ever be faced with a serious safety concern. This need stems from discussions happening in schools across the country on how best to react to an active shooter situation in school or on school grounds. 

As you know, this is a tough topic to discuss with children because of the maturity level of the content, as well as the fear it incites. At the Leeds School, we have instructed our students to look to adults for direction and those directions may be, “run!” The obvious question is: run where?, and the obvious answer is: to safety. But where exactly is “safety?” 

That is where you, neighbors, come in. We would like to invite you to become partners in the safety and well-being of the children. We envision that if an active shooter were to infiltrate our community, kids could run into the nearby neighborhood and knock on doors knowing that they are turning to safe locations and that they will be cared for until they can be safely reunited with their primary caregivers. 

Please consider helping us to teach our students to trust our neighbors. Would you be willing to welcome strangers, whose average age is eight, into your homes and be willing to provide them with safety and a brief moment of social and emotional support? 

Together, let’s start this discussion between Leeds Elementary School and you: our neighbors. We look forward to a dialog on how to best meet this need that we hope will never arise. Please join us on Tuesday, December 11th at the Leeds School Cafeteria at 6:00 p.m. to plan with us. 

With thanks, 

Sal Canata, Principal, Leeds Elementary School
Alisa Klein, Ward 7 City Councilor