If you drive past the Baymont by Wyndham Kingston Plymouth Bay, you may notice a rack of colorful bicycles with about a dozen bikes on it.
That's because Baymont, which is currently closed to the public, is a migrant hotel — and the bikes are there as a mode of transportation for the migrants staying there, two hotel employees told NewBostonPost by telephone on Tuesday.
Falmouth town manager Michael Renshaw has announced that the police department's surplus of 26 shotguns will be destroyed rather than used as trade-ins for future guns.
The shotguns have a trade-in value of $4,125, but instead of trading them in the town's police department will give them to the Massachusetts State Police Crime Laboratory in Maynard, which will destroy them at no charge to the town, Renshaw told selectmen.
Renshaw said he is following a revised policy of the town for disposing surplus police firearms. He had the fair market value of the shotguns posted on the town manager's landing page of the town's web site: