Night work activity expected to increase through April 2022
Work Schedules are subject to change based on weather, track access, workforce availability, supply-chain issues, and other factors.
With the GLX Union Branch now in service and carrying passengers between Lechmere Station and Union Square Station on a regular schedule, the project continues to target a summer 2022 opening of the Medford Branch from East Somerville Station to Medford/Tufts Station.
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Somerville’s yard waste pickup begins Tuesday, April 19. That week’s collection is on a one-day delay due to the Patriots’ Day Holiday on Monday, April 18, so put all trash, recycling, and yard waste out one day later than you normally would. A full yard waste calendar is available at somervillema.gov/yardwaste and will be in the Environmental Service Guide, which will be mailed to all households later this month.
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A Somerville Police officer suffered a non-life-threatening injury via an unintentional discharge of the officer’s duty weapon causing injury.
The incident occurred at approximately 4:00 p.m. on April 6. The injured officer was transported to an area hospital where the officer was treated and released. The officer is expected to make a full recovery. No one else was injured.
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On Tuesday, April 5, at approximately 7:07 p.m., Somerville Police received 911 calls for shots fired at 10a Memorial Rd. Upon arrival, police discovered ballistic evidence in the form of shell casings on Memorial Rd. The investigation revealed a red or maroon Subaru turned on to Memorial Rd. from Temple St. and an occupant from the vehicle fired shots at a group of victims standing in front of 10a Memorial Rd.
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By Molly Rains
After extensive planning, several public forums, and plenty of speculation, the impending redevelopment of Davis Square has become very real for some Somerville business owners. Although exact timelines for construction have yet to be announced, businesses have begun to move out of the buildings slated for redevelopment, marking a time of transition for the iconic Somerville plaza.
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By State Senator Pat Jehlen
We celebrate not just the opening of the first GLX stations, but the decades of community activism that made it possible:
The mothers who tried to block the construction of I-93, the neighbors who fought and succeeded in stopping the construction of the Inner Belt through our neighborhood, the Conservation Law Foundation which sued to get the commitment to the GLX as part of I-93 mitigation and then again when it was threatened, the hundreds of activists who filled the Somerville High School auditorium twice when the project was about to be canceled, the advocates who persisted with STEP, the Friends of the Community Path, and the Medford Green Line Neighborhood Alliance, as well as the elected leaders recognized today.
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(The opinions and views expressed in the commentaries and letters to the Editor of The Somerville Times belong solely to the authors and do not reflect the views or opinions of The Somerville Times, its staff or publishers)
Dear Somerville Times,
This is a response to Jason Mackey’s letter dated March 23, headed “do not establish a local historic district at 125 Highland Ave.”
I can tell your readers that the Historic Commission did not take Mr. Mackey’s advice. They did, in fact, vote to establish the address as a local historic district. Now the matter goes before the City Council.
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