Memorial Day Weekend Ceremonies
- SATURDAY May 23: 10:00 a.m. Decorate Veteran's graves with flags. Starting in Calvary Cemetery.
- SUNDAY May 24: 10:00 a.m. Roll Call of all Winchendon veterans who died during a war period. At the United Parish Church, 39 Front Street. Pastor Jason Cox presiding.
- MONDAY May 25: 8:00 a.m. Deceased veterans are honored at Calvary, Riverside and Old Center cemeteries beginning in the Calvary cemetery.
10:00 a.m. Memorial Day parade. We ask all participants to arrive at the Winchendon Fire station (405 Central Street) no later than 9:45 a.m. The parade marches down Central Street, turns onto Front Street, stops at Veteran's Park by Town Hall for ceremonies, marches up School Street to Hyde Park and stops for ceremonies, and then marches down Park Street to G.A.R. Park. Parade watchers are welcome to follow the parade to each stop.
10:45 a.m. (approximately) Memorial Day Ceremony is held at G.A.R. Park (Murdock Avenue and Grove Street).
This Week's Winchendon News
With Passionate Debate, Confusion and Reconsidered Votes, Annual Town Meeting Approves All Three MSBA School Repair Projects
28 Out of 29 Articles Approved in nearly 4-Hour Long Marathon
On Monday, May 18, 374 Winchendon voters checked in for Annual Town Meeting at the Murdock High School gymnasium to decide on 29 warrant articles. All articles except one passed. The issues being decided included the required Town Meeting votes on the three school repair projects which had all passed their ballot votes at the Town Election on May 4 by healthy majorities. Because the Town Meeting approval involved borrowing, these articles all needed to pass by a two-thirds majority for their projects to proceed.
The meeting ran for slightly more than three and half hours, and was marked by some confusion and frustration about the voting process. The wireless "clickers" were used for voting, as they have been in Winchendon for more than ten years. This year, there was some difficulty getting the voting result software and the verbal prompts for voters to cast their votes to synchronize. This led to at least one vote being retaken with a different result, as well as a lot of conferring among the Town Moderator, Town Counsel and the town IT manager up front.
The audio system was set to a higher volume than some past meetings, which sometimes startled speakers. Two volunteers were ready to take cordless microphones to voters in chairs or the bleachers so that people wishing to comment didn't all have to come down front and line up by a standing mic. A large screen in front displaying the text of the article before voters, the voting results, and anything else needed (such as presentations) was duplicated on large TV screens at the sides and back of the gym. Live captioning was displayed on a screen to the side of the gym up front, but the screen was not elevated very far off the floor.
This year, for the first time, voting results were displayed as actual numbers instead of only in percentages.
Because voters were still checking in, Town Moderator Glenn LaRochelle called the meeting to order at 7:13 p.m. The Pledge of Allegiance was taken to the flag hanging from the ceiling directly overhead.
Article 1 was the annual report of the Finance Committee to Town Meeting on the financial state of the town. FinCom Chair Tom Kane began by going over the source of the town's revenues: 90 percent comes from state aid and local real estate taxes. The increase in state aid is less than 1 percent this year, and property tax revenue is limited to a 2.5 percent increase by Proposition 2-1/2. On the expenses side, Mr. Kane said, "Fixed costs are the costs that the town pays for services by outside vendors. Health insurance, retirement contributions, school transportation are the three largest line items that we have in the budget. The increases of these three fixed costs alone is equal to the increase of the state aid and real estate tax combined. Other costs that are fixed include Monty Tech tuitions, school choice tuitions, property liability insurance increases, tax increases. Altogether, fixed costs make up about 30 percent of the overall budget. Ten years ago they made up less than 25 percent of the budget." Mr. Kane said that this year the town was using $634,994 in Free Cash to balance the budget, and the FinCom supported that, "however, it's not sustainable." They urged the Town Manager and boards "to initiate discussions on strategies to increase revenue and/or reduce expenses early in the FY 28 budget season."
Following the report, voters approved accepting the report, 259 in favor and 38 opposed.
Voters approved Article 2, creating a Revolving Fund for the Economic Development Task Force, 271 in favor and 80 opposed; Article 3, authorizing the spending limits for all the various revolving accounts, 245 in favor and 101 opposed; and Article 4, funding the Senior Tax Workoff program for $11,000, 311 in favor, 43 opposed.
Article 5, $27,500 in support for the Winchendon Community Action Committee (CAC), an independent non-profit organization, which now includes The HUB community center and bowling alley, was approved with 243 in favor and 33 opposed after some discussion. A voter rose to ask if the amount was the same as last year (yes), and CAC Director Miranda Jennings came forward with a quick summary of some of the many programs and benefits the CAC offers to the town, many of them free of charge.
Article 6 was the town's FY 2027 budget. The first voter to come forward to comment was Yvonne Senecal, who said, "I move to amend Article 6 by reducing the total appropriation for the general government operating budget of the town for Fiscal Year beginning July 1, 2026 by $1,400,000 from $20,770,350 to $19,370,350 with the intent that this reduction not be applied to the Senior Center or the Beals Memorial Library, thereby protecting the combined funding of $290,600." The motion was immediately seconded by voters.
Moderator LaRochelle said, "I'd like to ask for a clarification on which items you would like to cut." Ms. Senecal responded, "It is not my intention to take the place of any of the town governments that make the decisions on knowing where this money comes from. My goal is to reduce 6.7 percent of the total that's assessed by the town on our property values and personal property tax. So I would leave it to the Town Manager and to the fiscal departments to decide where the cost would best be made."
After some conferring, Town Counsel Timothy Zessin said, "In my opinion, only Town Meeting has the authority to appropriate funds for specific items in the budget. Each item listed on the warrant is a separate appropriation, so in order for the motion to be proper, it has to specify which line items are being proposed to be cut, otherwise the vote is improper in my opinion."
Board of Selectmen member Audrey LaBrie said that when she first saw the discussion on social media, months ago, about a grassroots movement to pass a $1.4 million Prop. 2-1/2 underride, she had posted asking them "to tell us specifically what they want, what would be cut. When we asked for the override, we provided very specific information about where the money would go, what it would be spent on, what departments would be impacted if it did not pass, and I asked that they present that same information to the voters here at Town Meeting, so they can make an intelligent, knowledgeable discussion and vote as to where this money would come from. There was never any response to my request for that information."
Voter James Early rose to ask what happened to the payments the town was supposed to be getting per truckload from the W.L. French landfill capping project. Town Manager Bill McKinney said that the payments have been coming in and go into the general fund (i.e. Free Cash). Voter Rick Lucier came forward to say that voters should have a detailed line item budget like the one made available earlier in the year rather than the department summary budget in the warrant which doesn't show specific things like salaries that have large changes. Mr. McKinney explained that salary numbers can be deceptive--some of this year's salaries show two years of contracted increases because the increases were deferred by last year's override, for example. New hires and changes in a position's scope can affect the amount, also. The Department of Public Works now has an engineering intern.
Board of Selectmen member Erika Eitland said that the town budget before voters is "a bare bones budget" and asking every department to make more cuts will be difficult. Many expenses are fixed and can't be cut, leaving a few to take much bigger hits. School Committee member Karen Kast said that all the departments have already made cuts--the police department cut about 10 percent. Voter Rick Ward came forward to ask whether, if the amendment now said to cut 6.7 percent from all departments, did that include the Senior Center and library?
A vote was called on the amendment, and the amendment failed with 61 in favor, 156 opposed.
The Moderator then went through the budget department by department, with voters calling "Hold" for departments they wanted to debate. Most departments got a "Hold." A voter then rose to ask if voters had actually asked to go through the budget line-by-line, saying they should just vote on the budget. Another voter said some of the departments had big increases and should be looked at. Ms. LaBrie said that the budget process lasts for months and includes multiple meetings and hearings, with documents posted on the town website. "I would hope that the questions you have are specific and pointed, and please don't ask questions that we've answered already three or four or five times during our meetings and our public hearings," she said.
Voter Peter Greenan rose to say he was "formally requesting that we vote line by line" and asking for a second (although he had not made a motion). Moderator LaRochelle said there was already a motion on the floor, the main motion for the budget, and he was calling the vote on it. Article 6 passed with 133 in favor, 69 opposed, and Moderator LaRochelle called for a motion on Article 7.
There was an outcry, with demands to re-do the vote on Article 6 because people didn't understand the call to vote. A vote was taken on whether or not to repeat the main vote, which was approved, 196 in favor, 54 opposed. The vote was taken again, and by the second vote, Article 6 passed with 240 in favor, 120 opposed.
Article 7, the Water Department Enterprise Fund, evoked several minutes of discussion, with questions about letters sent out advising ratepayers of possible lead in their pipes, and questions about the 23 percent increase in water rates. Questions were asked about how the water billing was done, and a voter asked if the 23 percent could be spread out over several years and not be a single large increase all at once. After 13 minutes, a voter called the question, and Article 7 passed with 211 in favor, 103 opposed.
Article 8, the Wastewater Enterprise Fund, passed with 225 in favor, 109 opposed. Article 9, the Transfer Station Enterprise Budget, passed with 255 in favor, 109 opposed. Article 10, the PEG Media Enterprise Fund, passed with 174 in favor, 76 opposed. There was minimal discussion about these three articles, although a voter predicted that businesses using town water and sewer would have to raise prices, and voter Tina Santos said, "I find it funny that if you're not a water user, sewer user, or transfer station user, the town has to vote for this as a whole, but us little users get stuck with the price or increases."
Article 11, the School Department FY 2027 budget, passed without any discussion at all, 226 in favor, 121 opposed.
Article 12, the town's assessment for Montachusett Regional Vocational Technical School, $646,000, evoked a question from Ms. LaBrie about whether Winchendon's alloted number of spots in the school was changing. Monty Tech superintendent Tom Brown was present and asked permission to speak, as he is not a Winchendon resident. He explained how the towns are alloted seats, and that basically Winchendon's quota is not changing. Article 12 passed with 287 in favor, 69 opposed.
Article 13, borrowing $500,000 to order a new ambulance, passed with 259 in favor, 91 opposed. It required a two-thirds vote. Fire Chief Tom Smith responded to a question by saying that the older ambulance will be kept "as a mechanical spare" to help minimize lost service time.
Article 14, using $100,000 in Wastewater Enterprise Funds Retained Earnings (i.e. surplus) to pay for a feasability study on extending the sewer line to the old Glenallen Mills property on Glenallen Street, evoked numerous questions. Members of the FinCom and Capital Planning Committee explained that they didn't recommend the article because they hadn't gotten enough information about it in time to make an informed judgment. Board of Selectmen Chair Andrew Beauvais said that things with the property owner were moving forward quickly. The article passed with 232 in favor, 116 opposed.
Article 15, using unspent funds for current projects, passed with 250 in favor, 68 opposed. Article 16, authorizing the Police Department to spend state 911 Grant funds for a new cruiser and HVAC upgrades at the police station, passed with 292 in favor, 46 opposed.
With Town Meeting having run for nearly two hours, the first of the MSBA Accelerated School Repair articles came to the floor. Article 17 asked voters to approve repairs to Murdock Middle High School. Michael Ulichney, the Project Manager assigned by the MSBA, and project architect Jason Knutson from CGKV Architects came forward to give a presentation on all three projects, something they have done at least three times over the past couple of months. After the 15-minute presentation, voters rose with a number of questions and comments, about the repairs and the amount of debt the town would be taking on. Ms. Eitland said, "I think it's an important point that you're making about debt, and I think one thing that's really important, though, is that when we think about projects in town, we can either be proactive or we can be reactive, and I find that this is an opportunity where we have the data, that the studies have been done, and we know that if we invest now, we could be saving literally $20 million in the future, because MSBA is giving us that money. Also to just be mindful of, is that MSBA can give up to 80 percent of a project. We are getting 77.53 percent. That is unheard of across the state. Like, we have won the lottery when it comes to a school building."
There were questions about regionalization, and whether we would not be able to sell or repurpose a building for ten years if we repaired it now as a school. School Committee Chair Michael Barbaro said that the buildings just had to be used in some way for education, and reminded voters that the town had traded the old Marvin School with The Winchendon School for the Community Park. Mr. Ulichney explained that no one of the buildings was in any worse shape than the rest, that costs would be overseen strictly by the MSBA, and that the materials used were under a cost limit (meaning that slate roofs for the schools, for example, were not on the table). The project expenses will be audited every month. After almost 40 minutes of presentation and discussion, the motion was officially read. Article 17 passed by two-thirds with 211 in favor, 93 opposed.
Article 18, to repair Memorial Elementary, passed by two-thirds with 229 in favor and 106 opposed. However, Article 19, to repair Toy Town Elementary, received a vote of 207 in favor, 113 opposed--a very healthy majority, but technically short of two-thirds, and 15 fewer total votes than were cast for Article 18.
Moderator LaRochelle started to move on to Article 20, but Ms. Jennings came forward to urgently plea for the vote on Article 19 to be retaken. "I am a mother of two children in this district, and a proud employee of this town, and a very proud citizen of this town. And we pride ourselves in working together, we are shooting ourselves in the foot if we don't vote on this tonight, and pay an extra $14 on average a month. Would people pay that for our children? This is for our children. All of us, at one point, were children. I hope we had adults that looked out for us just as we are going to look out for our children. If we don't do this tonight, we are going to pay four or five times the amount, our children are going to have to pay four or five times the amount for their education. We are constantly talking about improving education in this town, and this is one of the best ways to do it, including regionalization, if we want to do that, because nobody's going to regionalize with a district that doesn't invest in their school buildings. So, I would strongly encourage you to reconsider that amount, because I know it's a lot, and trust me, I work every day with people who are on very tight budgets. We will work together and find a way to help you if you cannot afford that. We have the resources in this town to help each other."
This led to a fervent discussion about repairing Toy Town, investing in the town, avoiding empty buildings and the legality of calling a new vote. It was pointed out that this Town Meeting had already called to repeat a vote. Moderator LaRochelle called a vote to reconsider the motion, and it was approved with 209 in favor, 97 opposed. The vote on Article 19 was called again, and this time it received the required two-thirds, with 214 in favor, 92 opposed.
Article 20, to transfer $200,000 into the Stabilization Fund, passed with 176 in favor and 41 opposed. Article 21, to transfer $100,000 into the OPEB Trust Fund, passed with 173 in favor and 42 opposed. Article 22, to transfer $50,000 into the Separation Benefits account, passed with 174 in favor, 39 opposed. Article 23, to fund $400,000 of the Snow and Ice account overages for FY26, passed with 169 in favor, 33 opposed. Article 24, to approve $160,000, which will be reimbursed by the MSBA now that the school projects have been approved, for the project designs, was passed with 171 in favor and 35 opposed. Article 25, to clear a FEMA deficit in the amount of $50,000 before the state just takes it next year, passed with 176 in favor and 36 opposed.
The smooth flow toward adjournment hit a roadblock with Article 26, which asked voters to approve returning $568,705 in inadvertently overlooked and unused Circuit Breaker reimbursement money from the state for Special Education to the schools from the town's General Fund (i.e. Free Cash, where unused and overlooked money goes by default). This article evoked more passionate debate. The amount was just about all that was left in Free Cash after all the preceding articles that had passed, so returning it to the school district would zero out Free Cash. Primarily because of this, the FinCom and Board of Selectmen had voted not to recommend the article, as did the Chair of the School Committee. Several voters rose to defend the article, saying it was the schools' money to begin with. Others rose to say the town needed to keep funds in Free Cash. The vote was called, and Article 26 failed, with 57 in favor, 150 opposed. It was the only article that did not pass.
The next two articles were both passed over. Article 27, to authorize the Board of Selectmen to negotiate on acquiring land for the Blair Square redesign, was deemed not ready for a vote, Mr. Beauvais said. Article 28, the Citizens' Petition to ask if voters were in favor of a $1.4 million underride, was passed over by motion of its sponsors.
The final article, Article 29, was a Citizens' Petition that simply asked the Board of Selectmen to "take property based action" on certain (rather vague) violations found with properties in town. The sponsor said he had a 13-slide presentation to show, but given the late hour, he wouldn't ask for that. The discussion turned into a shouting match across the entire width of the gymnasium between the sponsor and a voter who identified himself as a rental property owner. The actual basis of the article remained unclear, but all it really asked was that the boards enforce the laws already on the books. Voters approved it with 110 in favor and 71 opposed.
Moderator LaRochelle called for a motion to adjourn at about 10:53 p.m.
The entire video of Town Meeting may be viewed on WinchendonTV at https://winchendon.cablecast.tv/internetchannel/show/389?site=1
Murdock Middle High School's 2nd Annual Arts Fest Expands to Toy Town
Plaster Masks by Senior Olivia H.
Photo by Jill Sackett
Art Teacher Katie Walsh and student artist Jude Woodrum pose in front of his ceramic work
Photo by Jill Sackett
More students...more inclusion...and a chance to see the Murdock Public School system's music program from beginner through senior musicians. After a successful debut last year, the Murdock Middle High School reprised its Arts Festival on May 13, 2026. The ambitious event was led by Murdock Art Teacher Katie Walsh, Murdock Music Teacher Mia Stenberg, and Toy Town Music Teacher Zach Frederick.
The Festival kicked off with an art exhibit set up throughout the second floor of the high school. An impressive variety of student art, ranging from paintings, sketches, paper-mache and ceramics lined the hallways. Ms. Walsh was on hand to answer questions and direct visitors. She enthusiastically noted "Having an artistic voice is so important. Sometimes at this age students aren't as eager to use their verbal voice--this gives them another way to show their creativity."
Perhaps unique to Murdock, a good deal of art was painted directly on the hallway walls in mural fashion. Some murals were dedicated to different graduating classes, giving students an opportunity to leave behind a bit of artistic legacy. The end result was a network of very colorful and engaging corridors.
Another display featured the Winchendon Banner Project. Students in Illustration and Design, in collaboration with HEAL Winchendon, created banner art to beautify the streets of Winchendon. Students were asked to reflect on what they appreciate most about our town, and their hopes and dreams for its future. Their bold designs used a variety of media, and a. number will be chosen for banner fabrication. Keep an eye out later this year for the appearance of these new, eye-catching banners.
The Festival wrapped up with a music concert held in the auditorium, which was filled to capacity with parents and students alike. Mr. Frederick kicked things off with the 22-member 4th grade band. The youngsters played classic beginner band pieces such as "London Bridge" and "Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star." The 26-member 5th grade band then took the stage. Their more advanced pieces included Beethoven's "Ode to Joy" and "When the Saints Go Marching In." These young musicians form the bedrock music program that will hopefully grow in numbers as they matriculate to middle and high School.
Ms. Stenberg then took the stage for music featuring the middle and high school students. The 12-member middle school band played the theme from "Star Wars," a slow movement from Beethoven's 7th Symphony, and finished with "Mechanical Monsters," full of special sound effects. The 7-member high school band took us back to Star Wars with the "Cantina Band," followed by "Ritual Dance." They then jazzed it up with Michael Jackson's "Beat It," and closed with "Chariots of Fire."
The middle and high school choirs carried the second half of the concert. The eight middle schoolers sang the whimsical "If I Were a Cat" and the traditional tune "Chumbara." The 16-member high school choir sang the contemplative "When I Close My Eyes," the soothing "Seal Lullaby" and a rendition of "Agnus Dei." They closed with Sam Cooke's "A Change is Gonna Come." The choirs combined forces to perform two final numbers: "I See the Light: from the popular musical "Tangled," and Katy Perry's "Roar."
Throughout the evening different student musicians took turns at the microphone, introducing and providing a short background on each piece. Thus, our young people got to practice a little public speaking along with making music.
All in all, it was a fitting showcase for the Murdock Public Schools art and music program, and it was encouraging to see the community turn out in support of these budding young artists.
Ms. Stenberg Conducts the High School Choir
Photo by Jill Sackett

Mr. Frederick and the 4th Graders Play to a Packed Auditorium
Photo by Jill Sackett
Banner Project Entries
Photos by Jill Sackett


