The Raynham Channel

Raynham Select Board 06/16/2026

23 min · 17 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Raynham Select Board 06/16/2026

Descripción

(Episode Description is AI generated and may be errors in accuracy) A town’s biggest wins often look like small, specific decisions and this Select Board meeting is full of them. We start with the work you can literally drive on: Highway updates on completed road projects, fresh line striping, rubberized chip seal streets, and the follow up steps that protect new pavement. We also talk about the kind of safety fix most people only notice after it is done, replacing a repeatedly damaged asphalt berm with a stronger granite and concrete island that is easier to see and harder to destroy. Then we get into the heart of local support systems with an update on Raynham’s Elderly and Disabled Tax Fund. We explain how donations work, why the town needs a committee and a written policy, and how an application based approach could offer one time property tax relief for low income residents. If you have ever wondered how a well intentioned program becomes something fair, usable, and accountable, this is a clear window into the process and the practical constraints. We also move through key votes and announcements: reappointments, a revised statement about public comment and open meeting law expectations, a Planning Board associate member vacancy, and a preview of building, electrical, and plumbing fee schedule changes. On the operations side, we approve renewals and contracts, support early voting logistics for the September primary and November election, and hear an important update on the public safety building procurement process, including the request for qualifications for contractors on a major project. We close with community recognition, upcoming local events, and timely summer health reminders about triple E and ticks. If you care about roads, taxes, public safety buildings, early voting, or how decisions get made when the cameras are on, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a neighbor, and leave us a review so more residents can follow along and get involved. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2395663/support] https://www.raynhaminfo.com/ [https://www.raynhaminfo.com/] Copyright RAYCAM INC. 2025

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187 episodios

episode Raynham Select Board 06/16/2026 artwork

Raynham Select Board 06/16/2026

(Episode Description is AI generated and may be errors in accuracy) A town’s biggest wins often look like small, specific decisions and this Select Board meeting is full of them. We start with the work you can literally drive on: Highway updates on completed road projects, fresh line striping, rubberized chip seal streets, and the follow up steps that protect new pavement. We also talk about the kind of safety fix most people only notice after it is done, replacing a repeatedly damaged asphalt berm with a stronger granite and concrete island that is easier to see and harder to destroy. Then we get into the heart of local support systems with an update on Raynham’s Elderly and Disabled Tax Fund. We explain how donations work, why the town needs a committee and a written policy, and how an application based approach could offer one time property tax relief for low income residents. If you have ever wondered how a well intentioned program becomes something fair, usable, and accountable, this is a clear window into the process and the practical constraints. We also move through key votes and announcements: reappointments, a revised statement about public comment and open meeting law expectations, a Planning Board associate member vacancy, and a preview of building, electrical, and plumbing fee schedule changes. On the operations side, we approve renewals and contracts, support early voting logistics for the September primary and November election, and hear an important update on the public safety building procurement process, including the request for qualifications for contractors on a major project. We close with community recognition, upcoming local events, and timely summer health reminders about triple E and ticks. If you care about roads, taxes, public safety buildings, early voting, or how decisions get made when the cameras are on, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a neighbor, and leave us a review so more residents can follow along and get involved. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2395663/support] https://www.raynhaminfo.com/ [https://www.raynhaminfo.com/] Copyright RAYCAM INC. 2025

17 de jun de 202623 min
episode Raynham Select Board 05/19/2026 artwork

Raynham Select Board 05/19/2026

(Episode Description is AI generated and may be errors in accuracy) A town can feel “stuck” until you hear the decisions getting made in real time. We sit down with the Raynham board meeting audio and follow the thread from everyday public works to big-ticket infrastructure wins, including a headline-making award: $4.233 million in state funding to fully cover construction for the Pine Street culvert. We talk through why the culvert project is complex, what’s already done on the design side, and how permitting and seasonality shape a realistic construction timeline.  Roadwork planning takes center stage, with detailed updates on Mill Street paving, schedule changes that ripple into traffic flow, and how the Highway Department balances resurfacing needs with community events like the Memorial Day parade. We also break down chip seal resurfacing as a budget-smart approach for side roads, plus the less glamorous but essential work: mowing, ballfield prep, brush pile grinding, and keeping town properties ready for peak season.  The meeting also moves through the governing nuts and bolts that affect daily life in Raynham MA: appointments, license hearings, a vote to allow earlier Sunday opening for a growing brunch crowd, and a required distillery permit rehearing tied to abutter notification rules. On the operations side, we cover contracting for HR and Health Director recruitment, steps to fill police officer vacancies, and new communications clerk roles as dispatch functions consolidate to support faster emergency response.  If you care about local government, municipal budgets, road paving, public safety staffing, or how community traditions get organized, hit subscribe, share the episode with a neighbor, and leave a review with the one topic you want us to dig into next. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2395663/support] https://www.raynhaminfo.com/ [https://www.raynhaminfo.com/] Copyright RAYCAM INC. 2025

10 de jun de 202625 min
episode Conservation Commission 05/20/2026 artwork

Conservation Commission 05/20/2026

(Episode Description is AI generated and may be errors in accuracy) A small mistake in a buffer zone can turn into a big problem fast, and the fix is rarely glamorous. We open with the core mechanics of a Conservation Commission meeting: setting the July through December schedule, voting minutes with proper abstentions, and keeping the public record clean. That structure matters because wetlands permitting lives and dies on documented decisions, clear conditions, and follow through that holds up months or years later.  Then we get into the field reality. We share a site visit update tied to the Brickstone restaurant where debris was placed in the buffer zone, talk through what “clean it up” really means, and set a firm deadline with the possibility of an enforcement order. If you’ve ever wondered how local wetlands protection intersects with construction schedules, opening dates, and contractor handoffs, you’ll hear the practical steps we use to keep erosion and sediment under control.  We also walk through a procedural improvement: a clearer instruction sheet for Orders of Conditions, recording requirements, and certificate of compliance closeouts. Missing recordings create avoidable legal fights and hours of file digging, so we explain why we may hold inspections until proof is on record. Finally, we take up a Wilbur Street request to move a wetland replication area to save a stand of mature trees without reducing the required square footage, and we draw the line between a minor modification and a major redesign when culverts enter the picture.  Subscribe for more real world conservation commission talk, share this with someone navigating wetlands permitting, and leave a review with your take: when should a project get flexibility, and when should enforcement come first? Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2395663/support] https://www.raynhaminfo.com/ [https://www.raynhaminfo.com/] Copyright RAYCAM INC. 2025

10 de jun de 202617 min
episode Raynham Select Board 06/02/2026 artwork

Raynham Select Board 06/02/2026

(Episode Description is AI generated and may be errors in accuracy) A routine agenda turns into a surprisingly rich snapshot of how a town actually runs. We start with the nuts and bolts of governance, including why the meeting is recorded instead of broadcast live, then move quickly into the month’s public safety picture with clear numbers and real-world incidents that shaped May in Raynham, Massachusetts. The police report covers calls for service, arrests, and two standout cases: a shoplifting suspect who drops a backpack with a loaded handgun during a foot chase, and a convenience store robbery where the weapon looks real in the moment even though it later turns out not to be.  From there, we hear the fire department’s run totals for fire and EMS, a reminder that medical calls drive a huge part of local response, plus updates on fire prevention work and training in vacant buildings slated for demolition. We also take votes that keep core services staffed, including part-time communications clerks and additional part-time call firefighters used to recruit and evaluate future full-time candidates.  The conversation then shifts to town operations and accountability: creating a consistent process to acknowledge retirees with a letter from the board, and refining public comment language so residents can be heard while the board stays compliant with Massachusetts Open Meeting Law and avoids debating topics that are not posted on the agenda. We wrap with key approvals tied to HR coverage, insurance renewal, public safety building change orders, Pine Street culvert design and permitting over Bassett Brook, a MassWorks grant application for complete streets work on Paramount Drive, and community highlights like Girl Scouts Silver Award projects focused on children’s hospitals, CPR education, and cyberbullying prevention. If you value practical local government updates, subscribe, share this with a neighbor, and leave a review with the topic you want us to dig into next. Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2395663/support] https://www.raynhaminfo.com/ [https://www.raynhaminfo.com/] Copyright RAYCAM INC. 2025

10 de jun de 202622 min
episode Conservation Commission 06/10/2026 artwork

Conservation Commission 06/10/2026

(Episode Description is AI generated and may be errors in accuracy) A wetlands plan can look perfect on paper and still fall apart the moment a machine shows up on site. We walk through a real Conservation Commission meeting where neighbors, engineers, and contractors all run into the same hard truth: near wetlands, sequencing and documentation matter as much as design. We start with a proposed subdivision at 699 Locust Street, including a new roadway and a stormwater drainage system built around catch basins, detention basins, controlled outfalls, and infiltration choices tied to groundwater and wetland elevations. Abutters press for clarity on buffers, wildlife impacts, and whether any wetland areas will be moved. We explain the difference between regulated wetland resource areas and an isolated depression that does not meet DEP criteria, plus why Natural Heritage review can shape a project before the planning board even takes it up. Then we shift to a Notice of Intent for a 30-by-40 garage on Sandy Hill Street, where a simple build inside the 100-foot buffer triggers a bigger conversation about an existing condition in the 25-foot no-activity zone and what “inheriting a problem” means during permitting. The meeting turns sharper with enforcement orders, including a case where erosion controls appear after excavation and another where work drifts into the buffer and cleanup promises stall. We also approve certificates of compliance, debate a wetland replication site move near Wilbur Street, and preview the town’s move toward online permitting. If you care about local land use, stormwater management, and real-world wetlands compliance, listen through to the end. Subscribe, share this with a neighbor, and leave a review with your take: where should the line be between progress and protection? Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2395663/support] https://www.raynhaminfo.com/ [https://www.raynhaminfo.com/] Copyright RAYCAM INC. 2025

10 de jun de 20261 h 7 min