Broadway’s new bus-only lanes: Better commuting but some concerns

— Photos by Diego Marcano
By Diego Marcano
The new bus lanes enable more and speedier bus trips but have also resulted in fewer parking spaces.
If you didn’t make it to the recent City Hall hearing, you can learn more about it and hear from your neighbors. Check out the Somerville Neighborhood News video and read the story online at somervillemedia.org/snn.
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First graders from the Albert F. Argenziano School at Lincoln Park visited the Truck 1/ Engine 1 fire station on Somerville Avenue to celebrate Fire Prevention Month in October where they learned about putting out fires. Almost 100 youngsters in four classes walked to the firehouse with their teachers Jayne Campos, Olivia Marks, Jane Gardner and Alyssa Baumgarten.
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Phillip Weiss, now Temple B’nai Brith’s religious leader emeritus, spoke Saturday evening, December 14, at a tribute that recognized his 40 years of service to the city’s historic Jewish congregation.
By Penny Schwartz
Some 200 people filled the sanctuary at Temple B’nai Brith, coming together on Saturday evening, December 14, to pay tribute to Phillip Weiss, the Jewish congregation’s revered and beloved spiritual leader who first wandered up the stairs of the synagogue forty years ago looking for a place to worship for Yom Kippur.
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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.)

By Joseph A. Curtatone
Taking a closer look at notable city data – and interesting numbers.
Almost 30 years: Last week the City Council voted to adopt a new zoning ordinance, which is the first major overhaul of the zoning rules since 1990 and it replaced some regulations that had been in place since 1924 when the City first adopted zoning. A lot has changed over the past 30 years, and the zoning code was amended over the years to reflect that. Over the years those one-off changes made for a zoning code that was overly complicated and often made it difficult to do even simple home upgrades. Although the new code comes in at 552 pages, it’s simplified the rules and will make it easier to understand what can and cannot be built in Somerville. It also updates the rules for Somerville’s future. For example, the new code created a Fabrication District for arts and creative enterprises, which will make it easier for artists and makers to open studios and shops.
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By Bob Katzen
The Baker administration announced that sufficient economic growth in 2019 under the terms of a 2002 law will result in tax cuts for millions of Bay State taxpayers in 2020. The cuts would come from a reduction in the Part B individual income tax rate and long-term capital gains tax rate from the current 5.05 percent to 5 percent effective January 1, 2020. The administration said the cuts are estimated to result in an $88 million tax reduction in partial fiscal year 2020 and $185 million in full fiscal year 2021. Estimates are that the average taxpayer would save from $20 to $50 per year. High income earners would save hundreds of dollars.
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Life in the Ville by Jimmy Del Ponte
Before all the electronics and video games that the kids today enjoy, toys were pretty simple.
Today a child’s Christmas list looks very different than back in the day. My sister loved her Chatty Cathy doll and her Easy Bake Oven. One year I got a Mr. Potato Head that you actually used real potatoes or other vegetables with.
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New restrictions aimed at reducing parking problems posed by new residents occupying new developments have been proposed by the Somerville Traffic Commission.
By Jim Clark
The City of Somerville Traffic Commission approved a proposal to restrict the issuance of parking permits to future residents of new development located within walking distance to a rapid transit station of the MBTA’s Red, Orange, or Green Line services at its latest meeting on Thursday, December 12.
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Peter Lancaster’s “The Old and the New” illustrated Somerville’s older culture and how it has been changing, due to gentrification. — Photo by Peter Lancaster
By Shira Laucharoen
Through the image of a chain link fence, we see a scene of congested traffic, lanes of cars crowded on McGrath highway, in the city of Somerville. The photograph captures “only a glimpse of Somerville’s chaotic rat race,” the statement for the picture reads. Taken by student Cassian Ortiz, the representation of a neighborhood scene is part of a photo essay called Legoland, a critique of what the city has become, as a result of gentrification. Another image offers a look at the giant Lego giraffe at Assembly Row.
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A meeting was held at the West Somerville Neighborhood School to discuss improvement plans for its schoolyard.
By Adam Parise
Last Wednesday, December 11, residents and city planners gathered in the cafeteria of the West Somerville Neighborhood School to discuss the layout and design options for the new schoolyard.
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