Town Election - Monday, May 4, 2026
8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m, Old Murdock Senior Center (all precincts), 52 Murdock Ave
Annual Town Meeting - Monday, May 18, 2026
7:00 p.m., Murdock High School, 3 Memorial Dr
Candidates' Night
Tuesday, April 28, 2026, 6:00 p.m., in Town Hall 2nd floor auditorium, 109 Front St
Public Hearing on the Annual Town Meeting Warrant
Wednesday, April 29, 2026, 7:00 p.m., in Town Hall 2nd floor auditorium, 109 Front St
MSBA Public Information Session (School Building Projects)
Thursday, April 30, 2026, 6:00 p.m., in Town Hall 2nd floor auditorium, 109 Front St
This Week's Winchendon News
Winchendon FD and Multiple Other Towns Respond to Fire on Brown Street
Photo by Ricci Ruschioni
Photo by Ricci RuschioniIn a press release, the Winchendon Fire Department reported:
On April 21, 2026 at 23:17 the Winchendon Dispatch Center received a 911 call from the resident at 23-25 Brown Street reporting a fire in his apartment. The caller reported that the building was evacuated but there were still several cats inside.The Winchendon American Legion Auxiliary Unit #193 is reaching out for assistance for the displaced families. Monique T. Connor, President of the Winchendon Auxiliary and Chair of the Winchendon Emergency Fund, posted, "The Winchendon Emergency Fund has been established. Although we do not have enough funds to help not just one family but four, we are pushing through and have four different campaigns, one for each family. There will not be a limit at this time on how long we will have them up. So please if you can give to them you can spread out your donations instead of all at once. We also will take checks made out to the Winchendon Emergency Fund (WEF) and send to PO Box 123, Winchendon MA, 01475 with a name or Apt # in the memo so we can get it to the correct family."
The initial arriving crew of only three Winchendon Fire members immediately verified that all occupants were out of the three story, five apartment building. Once life safety was confirmed, crews attempted to gain access to the second story apartment but were met with extensive heat and smoke conditions.
Upon arrival of Tower 1 and Chief officers, a full first alarm assignment was requested. Lines were pulled and an aggressive attack on the second floor was conducted. A second alarm assignment was then requested, bringing in additional personnel and apparatus. Due to the age and structural format of the building, crews were facing an uphill battle with fires quickly finding various voids throughout the entire structure. Crews were able to access third floor apartments to aid in extinguishment.
As off-duty Winchendon Fire personnel began arriving, as well as the second alarm companies, they were able to ventilate the roof giving some relief to interior crews from the heat. Secondary searches were conducted with three pets being located and removed from the building and returned to the tenants. Investigators from the District 8 Fire Investigation Unit and members of the and members of the Massachusetts Fire Marshal's Office. As of this press release the fire was still under investigation with preliminary findings showing nothing suspicious in nature.
Assisting on scene were Gardner Fire, Templeton Fire, Ashburnham Fire, Westminster Fire, Rindge Fire, Jaffrey Fire, Athol Fire and Fitzwilliam Fire. Rindge Fire also provided station coverage and responded to two separate emergency calls simultaneous to our structure fire. Woods Ambulance responded to a medical call in Winchendon during the incident.
One firefighter was transported from the fire scene by Gardner EMS with a non-life-threatening leg injury. Templeton Fire received three patient refusals from the tenants of the second-floor fire apartment with one of the tenants transporting themselves to Heywood Hospital via private vehicle with burn injuries.
Thank you to the Winchendon Police, Winchendon Dispatch, Winchendon Animal Control, Winchendon Emergency Management Director, Winchendon Building Inspector and the Winchendon Water Department for their assistance.
As of press time, there were Zeffy funds set up for three of the four families:
www.zeffy.com/en-US/donation-form/lauren-coddere-brown-st-apt--3
www.zeffy.com/en-US/donation-form/simonds-family-brown-st-apt--2
www.zeffy.com/en-US/donation-form/caitlin-ayers-brown-st-apt4
For updates, see the Auxiliary's Facebook page at www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61575269596435
Town Election Ballot Questions 1, 2 and 3 - What They Mean
At the May 4 town election, Winchendon voters will be asked to vote on three school repair projects: one for Toy Town Elementary School, one for Memorial Elementary School, and one for Murdock Middle High School. The projects have been accepted into a state program through the Massachusetts School Building Authority (MSBA) Accelerated Repair Program, which is expected to pay 77.53 percent of eligible costs.
Each school building is a separate project and must be approved separately by voters. If two questions pass and one does not, only the two buildings that are approved will move forward to a vote at Annual Town Meeting.
The ballot questions ask voters to approve borrowing an amount which will increase the total tax levy more than allowed under Proposition 2-1/2. This is called a debt exclusion. A debt exclusion temporarily increases the maximum tax levy allowed under Proposition 2-1/2. After the debt is retired, the increase in the tax levy is removed. The length of the loan will be decided when the town borrows the funds.
Under the rules of the program and Proposition 2-1/2, the town is required to approve spending the full amount of the repairs even though more than three-fourths of the costs are expected to be reimbursed to the town. Each project needs to go out to bid. Only the amount actually needed will be borrowed.
Each project that is approved in the ballot vote on May 4 must then be voted on separately at Annual Town Meeting on May 18. For a school's repairs to go forward, that school's project must pass at both the ballot vote on May 4 and the Annual Town Meeting vote on May 18.
For each ballot question, a YES vote means yes, the town may go over the Proposition 2-1/2 limit for that project. The ballot questions do not have dollar amounts. The project funding will be voted on at Town Meeting.
A NO vote means the project for that school will not go forward and will not be voted on at Town Meeting.
THE THREE PROJECTS
Toy Town Elementary
- Replace the roof.
- Upgrade accessibility to current code and to be ADA-compliant, including repairing the wheelchair lift.
Memorial Elementary
- Replace the roof.
- Replace windows and doors.
- Upgrade accessibility to current code and to be ADA-compliant.
Murdock Middle High School
- Replace the roof.
For more information about the school repair projects and the MSBA Accelerated Repair Program, see https://www.winchendonk12.org/o/wps/page/msba-accelerated-repair-program on the Winchendon School District's website.
Winchendon Commission on Disabilities Gives Presentation to BOS

From left, Pam Smith, Katrina Fleming and Miranda Jennings of the Winchendon Commission on Disabilities address the BOS
Photo copyright Town of Winchendon
Commission members Pam Smith, Katrina Fleming and Miranda Jennings came forward for the presentation. After they introduced themselves, Ms. Jennings explained that the Commission has done a survey and wanted to share some of the initial feedback they've gotten from town residents.
"A little bit about who we are," Ms. Jennings went on. "We are the Commission on Disabilities. Our role is to advise Winchendon on the needs of our local disability community so that we can ensure accessibility and inclusion for people with disabilities, which really entails ensuring inclusion for everybody in our programs, services and facilities. Our Commission must have five or more members appointed by all of you, including at least one person with a disability and one person with an immediate family member of a person with a disability, as well as a town representative, who would be myself." The other two members are Renee Eldredge and Nicole Fleming.
Ms. Jennings continued, "We want to ensure that our municipal services are accessible, but not just municipal services, also our businesses and local agencies and organizations. We're here to advocate for people and to raise awareness. So we've already had the library, for example, approach us to request a letter of support to do redo the little, teeny, tiny bathroom upstairs to make that ADA [Americans with Disabilities Act] accessible. So they came and talked with us to get our advice and a letter of support." They'd also worked with Planning Coordinator Nicole Roberts on getting handicap parking spaces in the Dunkin' parking lot re-lined. Ms. Fleming added that the Commission is applying for grants that can help local businesses improve their accessibility.
Moving to the survey results, Ms. Jennings began with the question, "Have you ever been unable to participate in programs or activities because they were not accessible due to a physical, vision, hearing or cognitive impairment?" 47.1 percent of respondents said Yes. 35.3 percent said No and 17.6 percent said "not applicable." Ms. Jennings said, "So that was a substantial amount of people we're looking at where those barriers are. Town events was one of the main ones, and local businesses was another one."
Asked where they had encountered barriers to access, survey respondants checked Town Events (35.3 percent), "Other" (35.3 percent), Local Businesses (23.5 percent), The YMCA (23.5 percent), the Library (23.5 percent), Town Hall (17.6 percent), Schools (17.6 percent), the Senior Center (17.6 percent), Housing (17.6 percent) and Parks (11.8 percent).
Some specific comments that respondents made included:
- Difficulty hearing speakers at public meetings, even when microphones are used
- Inconsistent functionality of crosswalk signals on Central Street
- Inability to attend evening Town Meetings due to vision loss and/or inability to drive after dark
- Lack of transportation options
- Sidewalk and visibility challenges
- Locations too far to walk safely Memorial School stairs not suitable for young Pre-K students accessing second floor services YMCA and school playgrounds not fully inclusive (wood chips limiting wheelchair and mobility device access) Public meetings occasionally held in non-ADA compliant locations Children with disabilities experiencing anxiety or hehavioral challenges in crowded or noisy environments (e.g. swimming programs, retail spaces)
Asked "Do you know who to contact in Winchendon to request an accommodation or discuss accessibility concerns?", 58.8 percent of respondents said No. Only 17.6 percent said yes and the rest were unsure. "So we're glad we're around," Ms. Jennings said, "and Nicole Roberts is our ADA appointed person for the town. So I think we need to get the word out there more. We did start a Facebook page, and we're on the [town] website, so hopefully we'll be known as a friendly face that people can come to if they have concerns or want to request accommodations."
The key takeaways from the survey, Ms. Jennings said, are "47 percent reported experiencing accessibility barriers. 59 percent don't know who to contact. Public right-of-ways, sidewalks, crosswalks, curb cuts were a main priority, including at businesses. We don't have a grocery store in town, but it's very hard to access the one that is on Central Street [Not Just Produced]. You can't get in there if you're in a wheelchair. [Owner Beth Hunt] does do a great job offering a side entrance, but you can't get in the front door, same with a lot of the businesses there. So that's something we're looking at. We know that's not town property, so that's not on the town to do, but how can we support businesses to do to do those improvements?"
Ms. Fleming said, "We applied to Robinson Broadhurst. We're waiting to find out about getting a grant so that we could actually assist some of the businesses in our town that have asked for help, maybe getting. a ramp. They would apply to us, and then we would help with that. Another thing is that we're setting up an informational time where you're going to be able to learn about service dogs and therapy dogs and the differences between them, and we're offering that also to local businesses so they understand the questions that they can actually ask. Because a lot of people don't know what questions they can ask of a service dog versus a therapy dog, and what their rights are. As a business owner, our Vice President actually has a service dog, and so she would be the one conducting that, and explaining all that, and also explaining the difference between the [Police Department] K-9 in town and a service dog and a therapy dog, because people get a little confused as to what the rights are. We're also working with the library to look at some of the programs that they have. [Assistant Library Director] Alexis Chanthachack has been doing a lot of wonderful things that we want to be part of."
Ms. Smith said, "We're also trying to organize a social group for people with and without disabilities on Saturday morning at the bowling alley, to bowl, get together, do things, puzzles and whatever else, whatever they want to do. So hopefully that'll be starting up soon too."
The Commission also had a speaker from Seven Hills come to an open two-hour meeting at Sippin' Serendipity for people with questions about younger persons, age 14 to 22, who were transitioning out of the school-based programs, and what resources were available to them.
Board member Audrey LaBrie asked if there were specific town events that were mentioned as problematical. Ms. Jennings said most comments were about Town Meeting, both transportation to get there, and hearing the speakers.
"We do have closed captions when we have the Town Meetings, but we have to make sure people know that that's where you need to go sit, that there's an area for that," Ms. Fleming said. "I don't think everybody knows that. I know I was at an event at the high school, and there was someone that could not walk the distance down to the auditorium, and we really didn't have anything there to offer them. There was no wheelchair or anything. Somebody put her in a wheelie chair and tried to do that, so it's being aware of those things. We do have an older population here in town, and we need to make sure that those things are able to be accessible."
Ms. LaBrie also asked if the Commission was coordinating with the school Special Education teachers. Ms. Fleming said absolutely, they were. Ms. Jennings said that Superintendent Charlotte King attended the Community Partnership Breakfast and heard the Commission's presentation there, but she agreed, "That's a great idea. We should continue connecting with them."
Board member Erika Eitland asked if the town could look into the cost of having a second screen so the captioning at Town Meeting would be visible to more of the room. She also asked if there was any way to have an "absentee ballot" type of thing for Town Meeting. Mr. McKinney said that this was not possible because Town Meeting attendees need to be able to participate in debate and vote on amendments. "Anything could happen at a Town Meeting," he said.
Ms. Eitland continued, "July is Disability Pride Month. And I'm curious, what can we do as the BOS and working together with maybe the School Committee or others to bring attention to it. Because I think the goal is to move beyond just accessibility, but being able to ensure that people feel included and supported. This doesn't have to cost more money. It's just about us bringing attention to your point, which was, people don't even know where somebody can make an accommodation for them."
Board member Tiffany Newton said, "In my work, we have been working with a woman, she's a consultant who works on inclusion and people with disabilities. Just recently, she presented at something that I was at and she mentioned how she'll come and do a community presentation to help communities become more aware about how to not only be inclusive, but creating belonging, not just inclusion."
Ms. Jennings said it would be great for all of the town staff to have a training on that, as well as having one for the community.
Ms. Eitland said, "My next point is, a lot of these improvements that you're talking about, improving accessibility, sidewalks, right of way. In past conversations with Representative Zlotnik, he had made a comment that those are great projects for earmarks. And so I think it's one of these things, where is that something where we can get ahead of it and find a very specific project? Is it Town Meeting? What part of it can we do to make sure that things are at least ADA accessible?"
Finally, Ms. Eitland said, what could they do to improve the knowledge gap, by which 60 percent of residents have no idea where to go if they have an accessibility need?
Various suggestions were made, including getting attention to the Commission's web page and Facebook page, distributing flyers with QR codes to those, putting something on WinchendonTV and having brochures and flyers available at Town Meeting.
There was also some discussion about providing transportation to Town Meeting via the Community Connector, and having child care available for people who needed it in order to attend. Ms. LaBrie suggested that they might speak to Stephanie Rondeau to see if some of the MMHS students would be available to staff child care.
Winchendon Commission on Disabilities web page:
https://www.townofwinchendon.com/408/Commission-on-Disabilities
Winchendon Commission on Disabilities Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61586958982464
Winchendon's ADA official, Nicole Roberts, is the Planning and Land Use Coordinator and works in the Building Department office in Town Hall.
Examples of Accessibility Improvements in Winchendon
Accessible Public Buildings and Facilities
- Elevator installed at Town Hall
- Senior Center (Old Murdock)
- CAC/The HUB
- Beals Library
- YMCA
- Bowling Alley
- Police Department
- Schools
- Community Park
- Bike path
- Comfort Room (accessible bathroom)
- Schools accommodating individual student needs
- Memorial School adding outlined curbing, stairs and transitions for vision-impaired individuals
- Live captions provided during Town Meetings
- Board of Selectmen reminding speakers to use microphones
- Public meetings held in accessible locations (Library with elevator)
- Walking trails at parks
- Curb cuts/ramps on Central Street improving wheelchair mobility
- Movies at Winchendon Community Park
- Restaurants that provide accessible, less crowded environments
- More accessible programming for children
- Ensuring all public meeting locations are ADA compliant
Community Recommendations for Improving Accessibility in Winchendon
Transportation Access
- Expand local transportation options with frequent, reliable routes through town.
- Provide evening service (until at least 11:00 pm) and seven-day coverage.
- Address barriers for older adults who cannot drive after dark, particularly for participation in Town Meetings and voting.
- Repair sidewalks connecting neighborhoods (Broadview, Ipswich Drive) to Maple Street and the town center.
- Improve road conditions.
- Ensure all town buildings are ADA compliant.
- Increase accessible and properly designed handicapped parking spaces, especially those accommodating side-loading wheelchair vehicles.
- Build a new fire station that provides appropriate accommodations for female staff.
- Improve accessibility in public lots and facilities.
- Consider mobility supports such as scooters.
- Provide amplification devices at public speaking engagements and make them available for loan at the library.
- Recognise that not all disabilities are visible or physical when designing programs and services.
- Expand adaptive programming for youth with disabilities.
- Create safe,supporting environments for caregivers whose accessibility needs are also increasing.
- Actively listen to residents' recommendations and implement improvements wherever possible.
Supt. King Updates School Committee On Discussions with Bus Company
During her update to the School Committee at their meeting on Thursday, April 16, Superintendent Charlotte King reported on the district's discussion with school bus company NRT.
Supt. King began, "Last meeting, we discussed that a meeting with NRT was coming up to discuss transportation and the possibility of looking at condensing some routes so that we could go from ten buses to nine buses, and to analyze our in-district Special Ed transportation to see if there was any flexibility for some cost savings. I have a little bit of information to report to you.
"We don't have final numbers. We did receive from NRT this week a proposal for going from ten buses to nine buses, and what that might look like. It would increase bus routes from approximately five to nine minutes, depending on the route. It does not put any of them over the one hour limit. They would all remain under one hour. We are still calculating the cost savings of that, and we should have a full update at the next meeting.
"They also discussed going from minivans to mini-buses, which hold more students for the in-district Special Ed transportation. When you move from a minivan to a mini-bus, because it is bigger, that would include a monitor, so we have to factor in that cost, but it would be a pretty significant savings. What we've been asked to do with NRT is do a site visit at the Gardner office so that we can see a mini-bus and get on it and actually look at it and determine if it's going to be the right fit for what our students need. So I will be able to do that before our next meeting, and we'll be able to report back to you."
NRT is also launching an app for their service, Supt. King said. "Other districts have been doing it for a little bit, but it's an app where we can track the buses live, so that we'll be able to know in real time where they are, which will really help us to kind of assist with parent phone calls, looking for wondering about late buses. We can actually see if the bus has already gone by that stop, or if the bus is on its way to that stop. So it really will help us improve our communication with families. We're looking forward to hearing more about that, and looking forward to its launch. It will involve, obviously, a little bit of training on our end. They'll upload all of our stops into their system, and then we'll be trained on our end.
"It is a possibility, that we have to figure out, once we're trained, what level we can allow the parents to see, so the parents can track from home the large yellow buses. This would not track the in-district Special Ed transportation, but typically that is not something that is shared out with parents just because it's very specific and it would breach confidentiality. So that's really exciting, and I think that will really give parents a lot of peace of mind and trust with the with the bus company."
This would help with phone calls from parents in the winter when buses are delayed. The app would track each bus in real time so staff in the offices could answer questions that came in.
Committee member Greg Vine said he loves the idea, but he wonders what the cost will be. Supt. King said she thought it was part of the service, but they would check that out.
Committee member Karen Kast said, "Just going back to, you said increase bus routes five to nine minutes. I want to just emphasize that would be in good weather."
Supt. King said, "Yes, the other thing to think about, and I think that's also taking into consideration that not everybody would be routed, that's routed currently, and so that may not be the case. So it could be a a little less than that, I wouldn't, obviously, guarantee that. But, right, that's best case scenario."
Committee Chair Mike Barbaro said, "Yeah, but that is something that's been asked of us, and we are addressing it. And so if this can be something that that helps alleviate some of the cost, we're doing our due diligence to work with the Town Manager and the other boards that have concerns about our busing. So I think this is a good first step. And if the mini-buses work out, which are, Special Ed transportation is everywhere, insane. So if we can bring the cost down again, it helps everybody."
Supt. King agreed, "And it sounds like it would improve, not only the cost, but the efficiency, and that could be very important for our students on Special Ed transportation. So we want to do our due diligence, as you said, and check out those mini-buses and make sure it's a good fit and that we feel comfortable with that before we make any sort of commitment. I'll be able to bring that to you at the next meeting."
May is Movie Month at the Beals Library
It's Lights, Camera, Action at the Beals Memorial Library in Winchendon during the month of May. Not only with movie showings for all ages and interests on the Library's BIG screen, but also for the movies you bring home to watch on your own screen. For every for every DVD or Blu-ray video you borrow, or every film you come to the Library to watch, the Beals will be handing out golden tickets that can be redeemed for chances to win two tickets to the Gardner Cinema.
The screenings begin with a Family Movie Matinee on Saturday, May 2 at 11:00 a.m., when the Library shows The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants. SpongeBob and his Bikini Bottom friends set sail in their biggest, all-new, can't miss cinematic event ever. Desperate to be a big guy, SpongeBob sets out to prove his bravery to Mr. Krabs by following The Flying Dutchman--a mysterious swashbuckling ghost pirate--on a seafaring comedy-adventure that takes him to the deepest depths of the deep sea, where no Sponge has gone before. Rated PG. Runtime: 88 minutes.
On Wednesday, May 13 at 3:00 p.m., the Library will be showing the 1973 classic American Graffiti starring Ron Howard and Richard Dreyfuss. On the last day of summer vacation in 1962, friends Curt, Steve, Terry, and John cruise the streets of small-town California while a mysterious disc jockey (Wolfman Jack) spins classic rock'n'roll tunes. It's the last night before their grown-up lives begin, and Steve's high-school sweetheart, a hot-to-trot blonde, a bratty adolescent and a disappearing angel in a Thunderbird provide all the excitement they can handle.
The third showing of the month on Thursday, May 21 at 6:00 p.m. is Hamnet staring the Academy Award winner for Best Actress, Jessie Buckley. William Shakespeare and his wife, Agnes, celebrate the birth of their son, Hamnet. However, when tragedy strikes and Hamnet dies at a young age, it inspires Shakespeare to write his timeless masterpiece "Hamlet." Rated PG-13. Runtime: 125 minutes.
The final film screening of the Month is the 2026 Academy Award winning documentary, Mr. Nobody Against Putin, on Thursday, May 28 at 6:00 p.m. A Russian teacher secretly documents his small town school's transformation into a war recruitment center during the Ukraine invasion, revealing the ethical dilemmas educators face amid propaganda and militarization. Rated PG-13. Runtime: 90 minutes.
The Beals Memorial Library is located at 50 Pleasant Street in Winchendon. All movies at the library are free and open to the public! For more information, contact the library at 978-297-0300 or visit their website at bealslibrary.org.
Winchendon Candidates Set for 2026 Town Election
Candidates have been confirmed for the 2026 Town Election, which will take place on Monday, May 4. The following Winchendon citizens have stepped up to run for seats on elected town boards:
Melissa Blanchard
Barbara Zisk
School Committee (two open seats)
Alissa Campbell
Michael Gaynor
Karen Kast-McBride
Yvonne Senecal
Monique Connor
Board of Health, 2-year term (one open seat)
Barbara Zisk
Board of Health, 1 year term (one open seat)
Paula Whitaker
Housing Authority
Nancy Romanowski



