Accountability posts
Drafts ready to share. Click to copy, then post. Planning Board · Bedford · February 24, 2026.
X / Twitter
Sidewalk snow clearing policy gap — safety near schools, no enforcement mechanism, no action taken
Bedford Planning Board (2/24/26): A board member just learned Bedford has NO requirement for residents to clear sidewalks — despite state law allowing it. This is a safety gap near schools. Board added it to a "future planning d... https://meetingwatch.org/ma/bedford/planning-...
Cottage overlay district transparency — board deliberately moderating public presentation scope before community input
Bedford's cottage overlay district — a zoning change that could reshape neighborhood density — is coming. At 2/24/26 Planning Board, members debated how much detail to show the public first. Decision: show examples from other to... https://meetingwatch.org/ma/bedford/planning-...
Inter-board trust deficit — Planning Board skepticism about Select Board follow-through on governance reforms affecting Planning Board, Library Trustees, and Board of Health
At 2/24/26 Bedford Planning Board, member Chris on governance reform recommendations from the charter/bylaw review committee: "If you want to bet on it ending up someplace useful, I'm happy to take your money." That's a Planning... https://meetingwatch.org/ma/bedford/planning-...
Public engagement opportunity — actionable call to participate before comment period closes
Bedford's comprehensive plan update has collected 678 public input points — more than the entire last plan process — and we're only halfway through. Public comment on vision themes closes March 3. Working sessions April 12 & 18... https://meetingwatch.org/ma/bedford/planning-b...
X thread
🧵 Bedford Planning Board met 2/24/26. Here's what residents should know — including a safety gap near schools, a zoning proposal being carefully managed before it reaches the public, and an elected board member openly doubting t... #MeetingWatch
1/ SIDEWALK SAFETY: A board member revealed they only recently learned Bedford has NO enforcement mechanism requiring residents to clear sidewalks in winter — even though state law allows towns to require it. Bedford has simply...
2/ COTTAGE OVERLAY DISTRICT: A zoning change that could affect neighborhood density and housing mix is in development. At 2/24/26, the board debated presentation strategy — specifically deciding NOT to show Bedford-specific site...
3/ SELECT BOARD SKEPTICISM: The charter and bylaw review committee has recommendations affecting how the Planning Board, Library Trustees, and Board of Health relate to department heads — governance changes with real community i...
4/ VEHICLE BYLAW: A new bylaw covering unregistered, uninspected, and non-operable vehicles is heading toward Town Meeting — but as of 2/24, no one had confirmed whether the Select Board or the Planning Board would present it. T...
5/ WHAT YOU CAN DO NOW: Public comment on Bedford's comprehensive plan vision themes is open through March 3 at the project website. In-person working sessions are April 12 and 18 at Town Hall and Bedford High School. This plan... https://meetingwatch.org/ma/bedford/planning-board/2026-02-24/ #BedfordMA
Here's a rundown of what happened at the Bedford Planning Board meeting on February 24, 2026 — including a few things residents should be paying close attention to. First, a sidewalk safety gap that surprised even a board member: Bedford currently has NO requirement for residents to clear sidewalks in winter. State law allows towns to delegate that responsibility to residents, but Bedford has chosen not to do so. A board member said they only learned this recently and expressed frustration — even volunteering to personally snowblow miles of sidewalk. The concern is especially acute near schools. The board acknowledged it but took no immediate action, noting it for a future long-term planning document with no timeline attached. Second, a zoning proposal is moving toward the public — but carefully. The board is developing a 'cottage overlay district,' a zoning change that could affect neighborhood density and housing mix in Bedford. At this meeting, board members debated how much detail to reveal to the public in the initial presentation, ultimately deciding to show examples from other towns rather than Bedford-specific proposals first. Board member Crowley is scheduled to present at the next meeting. If you care about neighborhood character and how housing density decisions get made, this is one to watch. Third, there's an open question about whether governance reform recommendations from the charter and bylaw review committee — recommendations that affect the Planning Board, Library Trustees, and Board of Health — will go anywhere. Planning Board member Chris said publicly, 'If you want to bet on it ending up someplace useful, I'm happy to take your money,' signaling low confidence that the Select Board will act. No formal steps were taken to press the issue. On a more positive note: Bedford's comprehensive plan update has already gathered more public input than the entire previous plan, with 678 participation points collected and the process only halfway done. Public comment on vision themes closes March 3, and community working sessions are scheduled for April 12 and 18 at Town Hall and Bedford High School. This plan will guide land use, housing, transportation, and economic development for years — your input matters. https://meetingwatch.org/ma/bedford/planning-board/2026-02-24/ #MeetingWatch #BedfordMA