Category Archives: Lowell

Downtown Neighborhood Vision Session 1

The City of Lowell hired consultants from the Goody Clancy and associates to hold discussion sessions to try to improve the links between downtown and the surrounding neighborhoods.
The first session will be held:

April 23rd, 6:30 – 8:30 PM
Lowell High School Cafeteria

Refreshments will be provided by Brew’d Awakenings

Topics:
Affordable Housing
New development and how it can improve the ciy
Share your ideas about downtown opportunities and challenges
Economic Development
Arts & culture
Improving Access

Downtown Lowell Sub Committee Meeting
Residents/Bar & Restaurant Owners
City Hall, Mayor’s Reception Hall,
375 Merrimack Street


Wednesday April 22, 2009
7:00 P.M. to 8:00 P.M.

AGENDA
Downtown Patrol Updates
Downtown Crime Activities Report
Open Discussion

JAZZ NIGHT

Smooth Jazz at Tabocas Steak House

Stanley Swann’s Lowell’s Third Saturday Night’s Smooth Jazz features vocalist and spoken word artist Valerie Stephens, with Frank Wilkins, piano, David Eure, violin, Daniel Day, bass, and Stanley Swann, drums.


Tabocas Steak House. 26 Andover St., Lowell, Sat., March 28, 7:30-11:30 pm. Cover is $10. For more information visit www.tabocassteakhouse.com or www.myspace.com/stanleycswanniii

UML COMMUNITY DISCUSSION SERIES

COMMUNITY DISCUSSION SERIES AT UML

Six Tuesday Evenings, from 7:00 – 8:30 p.m.
Coburn Hall, Room 205 (2nd Floor)
(On the corner of Broadway and Wilder Streets, on UMass/ Lowell’s South Campus)

Tuesday, March 24 – Karon Bergeron, Greater Lowell Chamber of Commerce
“Downtown Businesses and Student Involvement”

Tuesday, March 31 – Victoria Fahlberg, ONE Lowell
“Minority Representation and the Voting System”

Tuesday, April 7 – Lynnda Ignacio & Paul Belley, Pawtucketville Citizen Council
“Preventing the Threat of Local Flooding”
(two presentations)
Christine Tabak, Merrimack River Watershed Council
“Developing Public Awareness about Water Quality”

Tuesday, April 21 – Elaine Pantano, Riverside Community Council
“How Can We Create a Trash-Free Neighborhood?”

Tuesday, April 28 – Taya Dixon Mullane, Lower Highlands Neighborhood Group
“Building Neighborhood Participation and Trust”

Tuesday, May 5 – Diane Waddell, Living Waters Ministry of Hope
“Helping the Homeless outside the Shelters”

Our discussion format: All presenters will describe a specific community problem dealing with their topic. Written problem statements will be available ahead of time on request. At the discussion sessions, the emphasis will be on generating the best practical responses to that problem from audience members.

All are welcome to attend and contribute their ideas. Please spread the word!

For questions, or further information, please contact Dr. Bill Berkowitz, Dept. of Psychology, UMass/Lowell, (978) 934-3655, Bill_Berkowitz@uml.edu.

LDNA

Links to topics from our meeting

The presentation is on line at the Green Building Commission’s Web Site.
Visit: http://greenbuilding.lowellma.gov/ It is on the Home page under Updates.
http://greenbuilding.lowellma.gov/resources/Lowell%20Healthy%20Homes%20Presentation%2020091.pdf

The talk hand out information is available at TURI
For more information on toxics and TURI:
Visit: www.turi.org/community

The other information –

Pamela Howland’s knitting group
http://www.meetup.com/The-Lowell-Knitting-Meetup-Group/

For more information on the Downtown Entrepreneurs Group send an email to me, greenesh@comcast.net and I will put you in contact with the organizers.

Green Drinks meets every second Tuesday of the month at 5:30 at Lowell Beer Works.

Sign up for the list serve. Instructions are posted here (scroll down a little):
http://www.greendrinks.org/index.php?country=USA&city=Lowell,%20MA

Or they can just send an email to:
green-drinks-join@lists.thecsl.org

The story of “Stuff”!
http://www.storyofstuff.com/

Correction: The Stitch & Bitch is tentatively on the 3rd Wednesday of each month. Details are usually posted on https://www.ravelry.com/

Déjà vu all over again…

I missed this one myself, but thankfully someone sent this SUN editorial to me…In all fairness; I would never want to miss an opportunity to be in agreement with the SUN. I would however, like to add my own 2 cents by including a point I sent in a letter to the License Commission:

Bar owners have not lost any business by finding a way to compromise with the neighbors. Why in the world doesn’t Ms. Lucier attend the quarterly meetings with LPD, LDNA and Bar/ Restaurant owners? Although they do send a “representative”; every other bar owner/license holder attends the meetings. Just show up; listen to what people have to so say, including, and especially, other bar owners who also have to deal with all the issues that come with owning a bar in our neighborhood. It’s a mixed-use neighborhood, you can’t make everyone happy, but we’ve come a long way and learned from each other.

I suppose it goes without saying that the Dubliner “lives in a glass house”, they might want to consider getting some curtains…I could tell someone was drinking a “Bud Light” at the bar if I was sitting on the bench across the street…
And I would be remiss if I did not mention that the License Commssion is bascially a “court-of-law”, their decisions are based on evidence presented…as if the police department hasn’t presented enough evidence against this bar…maybe we just sit on the bench across the street and take few photos.

The SUN says the rest…

Last leniency
The Lowell Sun
Updated: 12/08/2008 08:26:50 AM EST
Lowell License Commissioner Brian Akashian should be commended for the strong action he recommended against the Dubliner bar in downtown Lowell.
Dubliner owner Thomas Economou was arrested in July on charges of paying for sexual conduct, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, distribution of class B drugs, selling liquor to an intoxicated person and obstruction of a liquor inspection. Last month, Economou admitted to sufficient facts to charges of assault and battery with a dangerous weapon and paying for sexual conduct, and was placed on probation for a year.
Police testified that they found two men drinking in the bar, using cocaine in the bar, and Economou in the downstairs bathroom with a prostitute at 5 a.m. on July 24. That is shocking activity that deserves harsh disciplinary action.
And it wasn’t the first time the Dubliner ran afoul of both the law and its liquor-license requirements. On Oct. 10, Lowell police spotted three employees drinking at the bar after closing time. The employees denied the allegations, but commissioners rolled back the bar’s hours from 2 a.m. to 11 p.m. for 14 days. The bar also had its hours rolled back for a week in early October for over-serving a patron.
The latest incident was the most egregious by far, with the owner not only present but actively involved in the illegal behavior.
Certainly, we understand License Commissioner Ray Weicker’s concerns regarding the income of the bar’s employees, but the bar has thumbed its nose at Lowell’s regulations and laws too often.
Thus, we believe Akashian was correct to push for the strongest disciplinary measures. He wanted a three-week closure, but Weicker argued against it, saying it would penalize employees at Christmastime.
It’s important to recognize that some employees have been involved in some of the unlawful actions cited, so that should lessen concern for their financial well-being.
Ultimately, Akashian and Weicker agreed to slap the Dubliner with a three-week suspension, with one week to serve (which began yesterday) and two weeks held in suspension for one year. This should be the last time the troubled bar is granted leniency. Any new infractions must result in the strongest disciplinary measures allowed.

Lowell Film Collaborative

The Lowell Film Collaborative and Moses Greeley Parker Lectures Present:

‘Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus’
Sunday, December 7th
Lowell National Park Visitor Center246 Market Street
2 p.m. / Live Performance by Appalachian Still
3 p.m. / Film Screening
You’re officially invited to a thought-provoking road trip through the American South: a world of churches, prisons, coal mines, truck stops, juke joints, swamps and mountains. Along the way, you’ll encounter various musicians inspired by these unique places and hear a collage of stories and testimonies, almost invariably of sudden death, sin or redemption, Heaven or Hell — with no middle ground. Joining you on this southern exploration is alt-country singer Jim White, who reflects upon exactly what it is about this baffling place that inspires musicians and writers, at the same time working through his own preoccupations with his muse — or, as he puts it, “trying to find the gold tooth in God’s crooked smile.”

The Greek Cooking Show

The Brush Art Gallery and Studios presents The Greek Cooking Show with Eleni and her sister Kiki. Two sisters, two nights one kitchen?December 8, 2008 6 pm to 9Menu: Tyrokafteri. Lentil Soup. Stifado. Baklava.December 15, 2008 6 pm to 9 Menu: Skordalia. Avgolemono Soup. Dolmathes (grape leaves). Kourabiethes.Live demonstration including stories about Eleni’s and Kiki’s lives in Kalamata Greece. Following the demonstration is a tasting for all!Silent Auction: Bid for Private Greek Cooking Lesson with Eleni in your home for up to six guests! Registration is required. Minimum of 20, Maximum of 35.Class Fee: $35.00 for each classDeadline: November 29th.

About the sisters, Eleni and Kiki…
Kiki, with over 16 years of authentic Greek cooking experience, owns and operates Evzon Greek American Restaurant, 83 Parkhurst Road (Drum Hill), Chelmsford, MA 01824, 978-454-2552. EvzonGreekGourmet@gmail.com Eleni is a fashion designer who owns and operates Eleni Fashions & Tailoring, 41 Bridge Street, Lowell, MA. 978-459-0307. elenifashion@gmail.com. Questions? E-mail
events@thebrush.orgwww.thebrush.org

Electric Car

I was happy to get the story below from my “car guy”; mostly because it means there are people who actually build cars who are thinking about better products… I also really like the idea of the “sharing” garage. It would be great to have a bigger vehicle only when you really need one. As a person who has always driven a small car I appreciate the possibilities of some new options.

I think we should get a few of these too: The Luas http://www.luas.ie/index.php ; I admit my prejudice; I love trains and would be thrilled to see more light rails like this in American cities that do not have adequate public transportation. I will mention one draw-back; these things are “SILENT” this is not a track you would want to run across…Yikes! The word, “SPLAT” comes to mind…

This is also were I throw my two-cents in for expanding our trolley from Gallagher Terminal to LeLacheur Park. Would people who live downtown or halfway up Broadway or Fletcher walk to Dutton to catch the Trolley to Gallagher? I really think they would.

Here’s a piece from SUN on-line…excellent step in the right direction.

N.H.-to-Boston bus run starts Monday
LONDONDERRY, N.H. (AP) — The inaugural run of an express bus service from New Hampshire to Boston is being launched Monday.
Commuters can catch the Boston Express at Exits 2, 4 and 5 off Interstate 93. Boston Express is a public-private partnership between the state and two bus companies — C&J Lines and Concord Coach Lines.
The express service from Manchester, Londonderry and Salem will be to Boston’s South Station and Logan Airport.

Nissan to sell electric car, batteries not included
James B. Treece Automotive News November 14, 2008 – 12:01 am ET
DETROIT — Carlos Tavares, Nissan Motor Co.’s executive vice president for product planning and design, held out a vision of a future where consumers buy electric vehicles separately from the batteries, and share access to cars.

“At Nissan, we believe that one day, zero emissions will be a precondition of entry in the automotive business,” he told the Automotive News Green Car Conference and Exhibition today. A dramatic shift in vehicle ownership patterns will accompany that move away from internal combustion engines, he said. “Our grandchildren may never believe we owned cars, not to mention that they had tailpipes,” Tavares said.

Nissan plans to launch its first all-electric vehicle in select markets in 2010. It will roll out globally in 2012. Nissan expects its electric vehicle to have “pricing similar to a conventional car,” before adding in the cost of the battery. The battery lease will be separate — similar to fees charged today for in-vehicle concierge services such as OnStar. There will be “no additional inconvenience for the consumer,” he said. “Buy the car, sign the battery lease.” The buyer then will drive off from the dealership in a car with batteries installed. The total cost of ownership over the vehicle’s life cycle, he said, will be lower than that of owning a car that requires gasoline.

He also said that consumers may eventually get away from owning their own vehicles, choosing instead to pay for access to a garage of vehicles shared with other consumers. “The sense of proprietary ownership is very strong today, but could shift to the pleasure of owning access” to a variety of vehicles in a shared garage, he said. For example, a driver might have a commuter car for weekdays, and access to a minivan for family vacations and to a sports car for occasional fun.

“It’s not very far,” he said, from owning a timeshare in a vacation home.

SOURCE: AUTOMOTIVE NEWS

Green Drinks Lowell

November Gathering Wednesday 11/12,
Green Drinks Lowell is held at the new Lowell Beer Works at 201 Cabot Street in Lowell , MA every second Tuesday of the month. (Lowell Beer Works is now located downstairs from the Brewery Exchange). Find us in the Private Function room or ask for us at the hostess stand. People gather from 5:30 until 7:30 or later. Consultants, students, trades people, and other interested citizens gather each month to share ideas and concerns.
http://www.greendrinks.org/index.php?country=USA&city=Lowell,%20MA
See our web page at http://www.lahey.org for a full directory of Lahey sites, staff, services and career opportunities.