Credit: Bruno Muñoz-Oropeza

These are just some of the municipal meetings and civic events for the coming week. More are on the City Calendar and in the city’s Open Meetings Portal.

whitespace

David Murphy, selected as Cambridge Public Schools’ superintendent, seen Oct. 17.

New path to family engagement

School Committee School Climate Subcommittee, 5:30 p.m. Thursday. This hearing chaired by Rachel Weinstein looks at deepening families’ participation in their kids’ education through an approach developed by Karen Mapp from 2010-2013 and since adopted by hundreds of school districts nationwide (and some overseas). Watchable online. 

Democracy Center landmarking

Historical Commission, 6 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Thursday. The board considers a landmark study report for a recommendation to the City Council about the fate of the former Democracy Center at 43-45 Mt. Auburn St., Harvard Square. The addresses include an 1846 double house and 1928 clubhouse addition; the owner, the Foundation for Civic Leadership, closed the meetinghouse and rented office space last year to prepare for eventual renovations, upsetting the groups who relied on it. Also on the agenda is a review of existing two-way bike lanes and related structures on Brattle Street from Mason Street to the Fresh Pond Parkway. Watchable by Zoom videoconferencing.

Wonder comes to Kendall

Board of Zoning Appeal, 6 to 11:30 p.m. Thursday. If ever an eatery made sense for Kendall Square, Wonder is it: This company was founded in 2018 by Marc Lore, who ran e-commerce at Walmart from 2016 to 2021, and has been buying up components of an empire, including the delivery service GrubHub, behind its concept of “a new kind of food hall” that is expected to double in count this year to 90. That means that instead of being able to order one kind of food at or from one location (say, Italian or Thai), diners can select from an estimated 500 options across cuisines (say, rigatoni with chicken satay). This “mix and match your cravings” style is not strictly like the so-called ghost kitchens that sprang up during the Covid pandemic, because Wonder will have a bricks-and-mortar location at Boston Properties’ 319 Main St., formerly part of the Google building at 325 Main St. Watchable by Zoom videoconferencing. 


Tighter budget for education

Joint City Council and School Committee roundtable, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Monday. The bodies come together to discuss tightening budgets. During the Oct. 27 meeting of the City Council where the call for this meeting was introduced, public speakers brought up a surprise payment of an additional $40,000 to a superintendent-search consultant that the public (and some committee members) had been told was getting less than $10,000, and committee member Elizabeth Hudson said the roundtable would be about “discipline,” disappointing people who “want big new raises or new programs.” Watchable by Zoom videoconferencing.


Honoring the city’s veterans

City of Cambridge Veterans Day observance event, 11 a.m. to noon Tuesday. U.S. Army veteran Keven Lambert provides a keynote speech at the Civil War monument on Cambridge Common, near Harvard Square (rain location: the Sheraton Commander Hotel), followed by an informal gathering and free luncheon from noon to 3 p.m. in the Liberty Revolution Ballroom at the Sheraton Commander Hotel, 16 Garden St., next to Cambridge Common.


Vision for the school district

My Brothers Keeper Cambridge, 6 to 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Cambridge Public Schools superintendent David Murphy discusses his vision for the district with moderator Tony Clark. At  the Cambridge Rindge and Latin School’s Fitzgerald Auditorium, 459 Broadway, Mid-Cambridge. Send questions to admin@mbkcambridge.org.


Cambridge Street and Mass. Ave.

Ordinance Committee, 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. Nov. 13. This committee run by vice mayor Marc McGovern continues a hearing from Oct. 30 about zoning petitions for Massachusetts Avenue (including up to 12 stories of residential uses along its length, and up to 18 stories of residential in Porter Square in exchange for increased open space requirements and minimum retail density) and Cambridge Street (including up to eight stories of residential uses along its length, and up to 10 stories in parts of Inman Square; up to 12 in the Webster Avenue and Windsor Street area; and up to 15 stories in the Lechmere area). The committee meets at City Hall, 795 Massachusetts Ave., Central Square. Televised and watchable by Zoom videoconferencing. 

A stronger

Please consider making a financial contribution to maintain, expand and improve Cambridge Day.

We are now a 501(c)3 nonprofit and all donations are tax deductible.

Please consider a recurring contribution.

Leave a comment