Burlington's May Town Meeting 2026: Conversations to Watch
Shawsheen's troubled budget, a wireless tower fight, no Fourth of July fireworks β 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 β 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 β or vote for one.
Your final list of candidates on the ballot for the Burlington, Massachusetts, 2026 local election
Community
After two years of planning, approvals, and redesigns, work has officially begun.
The two new turf fields behind Marshall Simonds Middle School are no longer just a plan β they're under construction.
TL;DR
You may have already seen activity on the site as RAD Sports, the contractor on the project, began moving equipment off the field this week. Erosion control measures begin in the coming days.
Burlington Buzz caught up with Jeremy Brooks, School Committee member and chair of the field subcommittee, for a quick update on what's coming and when.
The project will add a full-size field capable of hosting varsity-level soccer and lacrosse, plus a smaller half-field for U10 and younger. A kick wall will sit adjacent to the half-field. Terraced seating and an accessible walkway will lead down from the school to the fields, and a scoreboard will be installed on the back side of the full-size field.
Brooks said the team is pushing for an August 30 to September 15 opening and occupancy window β meaning the fields could be ready for fall sports.
The back two fields will be fenced off as an active construction zone throughout the summer. The front field, Brush Field, will remain open and in use.
Bathrooms at the fields aren't part of this project, but the conversation about adding them in the future is alive. Town Meeting this year approved funding for a feasibility study, and the field committee spent about a half-hour at their last meeting discussing next steps.
The emerging approach: gather community input first β potentially at town events like Trucktober and Celebrate Burlington β before scoping the project. Brooks said he plans to bring that framing back to the School Committee.
One thing that hasn't happened yet: naming the new fields. Brooks said he's open to community suggestions, and he's considering involving middle school students in the process, as well as soliciting input on honoring notable Burlington community members. If you have an idea, you can send it to Brooks directly at jbrooks@bpsk12.org.
This project has been a long time coming β approved by amendment at Town Meeting in May 2024 after an extended debate, then redesigned in 2025 after wetland delineation reduced the available footprint. The revised plan swapped two full-size fields for one full-size and one half-field, shifted the orientation, and added features like the accessible walkway and kick wall. It also came in at a savings over Town Meeting's initial allocation for the project.
If all goes according to plan, Burlington athletes could be playing on the new fields this fall.
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A Burlington tradition since 1991, the BHS All-Night Graduation Party keeps seniors safe and celebrating β but organizers still need chaperones and community support for this year's event.
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Burlington's School Committee voted down a teacher union proposal to extend elementary early release days, sparking frustration ahead of contract talks.
Burlington High School's unified basketball and bowling programs are giving students with and without intellectual disabilities a place to belong.
Sellers have options when cleaning out a home for sale feels overwhelming or unrealistic.
Girls' lacrosse comes out victorious in their first tourney matchup, remaining teams gear up for Round of 32 games.
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Five Burlington programs hold automatic D2 tournament spots, Leila Gilligan shines at the ML Championship, and boys' tennis wraps up the regular season 10β9.
Burlington's Real estate market appears to be moving closer to normalization. Home buyers and sellers should be prepared, realistic, and responsive to market conditions.
Girls' lacrosse won at Chelmsford, baseball dropped a close one at Stoneham, and the ML Championship track meet comes to Burlington Wednesday.
Burlington wrapped up its annual Town Meeting, approving a $5.5M capital budget, banning crypto ATMs, and rejecting a wireless tower proposal.
Baseball topped Wilmington, both tennis programs swept Stoneham, and the Red Devils weathered losses in lacrosse and softball over a busy weekend run.
An expedition takes us deep in the desert on the Sea of Cortez to study an ecosystem β just as a different version of the same story plays out in our own backyard.
Burlington's lacrosse teams fall to unbeaten Winchester Thursday, while baseball, softball, tennis, and volleyball gear up for Friday.
Burlington Town Meeting approved the rest of its $197M budget on night two, with debate centering on a $200K design study for a new Simonds Park.