Burlington's May Town Meeting 2026: Conversations to Watch
Shawsheen's troubled budget, a wireless tower fight, no Fourth of July fireworks ā here's what's on the table at Burlington's May 11 Town Meeting.
Shawsheen's troubled budget, a wireless tower fight, no Fourth of July fireworks ā here's what's on the table at Burlington's May 11 Town Meeting.
The Annual Town Meeting for Burlington, MA, features major items such as capital and operational budgets for schools and town departments, changes to animal bylaws, and a crypto ATM ban.
Some open seats remain; others were filled by write-in candidates.
Burlington voters returned Katherine Bond and Jeremy Brooks to the School Committee; a number of new Town Meeting Members are seated.
Burlington's April 11 election has open Town Meeting seats in Precincts 2 and 7. Here's how to run as a write-in ā or vote for one.
Your final list of candidates on the ballot for the Burlington, Massachusetts, 2026 local election
Community
From the first alarm at Lexington and Concord to service in the Continental Army, the story of Burlingtonās militia traces the opening years of the American Revolution.
The United States is celebrating the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence this summer. Here in Massachusetts, the commemoration reminds us of two important facts: First, the American Revolution started just down the road with the Battles of Lexington and Concord; Second, if it hadnāt been for our militia responding in one minute on April 19, 1775, there would not be a Declaration today.
The story of the involvement of Burlingtonās militia in that battle is typically told as follows: Burlington, which was then the second precinct of Woburn, fought with Colonel David Greenās 2nd Regiment of Foot, with the 3rd Company under the command of Captain Joshua Walker. On that day Captain Walker had about 78 men. The company arrived at Lexington Green minutes after the first skirmish of the War, stayed to help with the wounded, and pursued the British to Concord. They established a defensive position on the Concord Road at what would become known as the Bloody Angle. There, eight British soldiers were killed or wounded.
Burlington was involved in another important way that day: The first British prisoners were taken to the Reed saw mill, located at what is now the Burlington Mall parking lot, as James Reed recounted on January 19, 1825: āI also saw a British soldier march up the road, near said meeting-house, and Joshua Reed of Woburn met him, and demanded him to surrender. He then took his arms and equipments from him, and I took charge of him, and took him to my houseā¦ā Reed went on to tell of a handful of other prisoners that were conveyed to his property before being taken to a less prominent location.
By the end of that April day, militia from throughout New England surrounded Boston; the Woburn militia joined their comrades in Charlestown.
On June 15, 1775, the British tried to break the siege, forcing the militia to retreat from the Charlestown peninsula in the battle of Bunker Hill. Although the British technically prevailed, the victory came at a staggering cost of over 1,000 casualties, and the command decided breaking the siege would be too costly.
Two weeks later, George Washington arrived in Cambridge and formally took command of the Continental Army. For the militia, it marked the beginning of a difficult transition. Washington expected a trained army capable of standing toe-to-toe with British regulars. What he found instead were citizen-soldiers whose bonds of familiarityāofficers and enlisted men often being neighborsādid not fit the strict military hierarchy he intended to impose.
The situation shifted in March 1776 when General Henry Knox arrived with artillery hauled from Fort Ticonderoga. The guns were positioned on the heights above Boston, forcing the British to evacuate the city for Halifax. With Boston secured, Washington moved his army to New York City, where the next phase of the war would unfoldāand where some of the Woburn men almost certainly followed.
Military records, fragmentary as they are, hint at that movement. James Bennett, for example, appears repeatedly in the rolls: serving in 1775 with Capt. Joshua Walkerās company after the alarm of April 19; later enlisting under Capt. John Wood in Cambridge; and by June 1776 turning up in New York, where he drew pay and signed receipts for arms. His record suggests he marched with Washingtonās forces and likely participated in the New York and New Jersey campaign of 1776.
Others from the same circle followed similar paths. Capt. Joshua Walker continued into the Continental service, eventually commanding Woburn companies and later serving in detachments ordered toward the Hudson and beyond. James Reed also transitioned from local militia service into Continental regiments, receiving pay and uniform allowances while the army reorganized in the field. Piece by piece, the records show the same pattern: men who began as local militia became part of a shifting national army whose movements carried them far from Massachusetts.
But as the war moved south, the story of these men became harder to follow. Their identity as a single company dissolved into the larger Continental Army. Their individual service survives in scattered entriesāmusters, pay rolls, and receiptsārather than in unified narratives of battle.
Lexington, Concord, and Bunker Hill are in our backyard; we know a lot about those battles and are proud of our forefathers who fought. When the combatants moved south, the war was something happening elsewhere. When it was over we celebrated collectively and welcomed our heroes who came home.
By the time the war finally ended, the outcome was not yet visible from the New England towns where it had begun. That came later, in October 1781, when British forces surrendered to George Washington at Yorktown, effectively ending major combat operations and securing American independence.
The summer edition of Buzz Magazine is almost in your mailbox ā and this one felt different to make.
Committe Members and Superintendent hope this compromose increases learning time and support delivery while allowing a mid-June end date
The complex project can move forward, and "The final result should be beautiful," says Conservation Chair.
Hive members keep the Buzz thriving.
The Economic Development Office continues the work of connecting the people who live, work, and play in Burlington around shared interests.
As BHS art coordinator George Ratkevich heads into retirement, heās not leaving creativity behind ā heās giving it room to breathe.
Burlingtonās new fire chief shares about the unseen work behind the department and the efforts to recruit the next generation of first responders.
A scholarship, an orchestra, and a travel award: Three Burlington residents are being celebrated for following their passions.
Median sale prices are slightly down over 2025, and buyers are exhibiting caution in a market that continues to be uncertain.
Leo Abramov imagined a place where Burlington's LGBTQ+ community could gather, be seen, and feel welcomed. The neighbors he brought together are making sure that vision endures.
Here's how to celebrate with your community this Independence Day.
Burlington's Select Board didn't move to block cannabis home delivery after a new MA law made it the default ā even in towns without dispensaries.
The town's municipal aggregation contract expires this fall. Officials say the program has saved residents $2.6 million ā but locking in the next rate is a trickier call.
The Wellness Committee presented a list of 267 standards to the School Committee for a vote so curriculum planning can begin. Here's what's there and was was tabled for next year.
Burlington's Class of 2026 celebrated Senior Scholarship Night, with more than 100 students recognized and hundreds of thousands of dollars awarded.
Burlington High School is launching MyCAP blocks next fall ā short sessions designed to help students explore careers, build a four-year plan, and graduate with more than a diploma.
Marshall Simonds Middle School's National History Day club is having its best year yet.
Boys' volleyball and boys' tennis both fall in Tuesday's Round of 16, closing the books on a spring that saw four Burlington programs reach the MIAA tournament.
Team 2876 qualified for the post-season and competed against the best robotics programs in New England