Public Hearing Begins for Route 6 Development

The Marion Conservation Commission met on Wednesday, September 10, to grant a Certificate of Compliance as well as conduct a public hearing for Toll Brothers, Incorporated’s proposed residential development at 78 Wareham Road.

            First, a Certificate of Compliance was granted for Laurence E. Reinhard at 17 East Avenue. Before addressing a second Certificate of Compliance request, the public hearing for a Notice of Intent filed by Toll Brothers, Incorporated, began. The developer seeks approval to construct a 48-unit residential development with associated clearing, grading, roadways, utilities, and stormwater-management systems. Chair Matt Shultz stated plans are available at the Town House (annex building, 14 Barnabas Road) for review.

            Toll Brothers recently took up work from the previous contractor, Matt Zuker, who had been granted a Special Permit from the Planning Board for work on a 48-unit, townhouse-style village. The new developer seeks an amendment to the original article: Rather than 12 duplexes and 36 single-family units, all 48 dwellings would be single-family.

            Toll Brothers also now are looking into adding walking trails to the site, following recent conversations with the Planning Board. Those paths were later said to be mulch and unpaved. The representative from Toll Brothers stated, “we’ve gone through a pretty painstaking effort here to try to keep the amount of impervious area at a minimum, as much as possible.”

            It was restated that the development will be linked into the town sewer system. Some questions were raised by the commission over water runoff and environmental impacts, with the representative saying water runoff into the nearby Weweantic River would be slowed with redirection efforts to “minimize the potential for erosion downstream.”

            With Toll Brothers still waiting on comments and the completion of a peer review, the public hearing was continued two weeks out to September 24. The next meeting of the Marion Conservation Commission will be held, likewise, September 24 at 7:00 pm in the Marion Police Department.

Marion Conservation Commission

By Sam Bishop

Parking Key to Gym Approval

The Rochester Zoning Board of Appeals on September 11 granted a Special Permit for a personal fitness training business at 12 Mayflower Lane with conditions directly related to board members’ and abutters’ concerns about the nuisance and traffic the operation might bring to the neighborhood.

            Applicant and homeowner Jorge Rodriguez began the public hearing by noting he had written answers to the concerns his neighbors had expressed when the hearing began on August 28. He will keep his fitness classes in his small garage, and all parking will be off the street, on his driveway or behind his home only if there is a need. Noise will be kept down. Class sizes won’t necessarily be as many as 10, his original ask for his permit.

            Board member Richard Cutler expressed the first concern, that rear parking could trigger the need for a Planning Board site-plan review. Rodriguez quickly agreed there would be no customer parking in back.

            Comments from both opponents and supporters of Rodriguez’s business plan then followed. Neighbor Doug Sims, who had just been appointed as a ZBA associate member but recused himself from his role as a board member to speak as a resident, expressed the strongest objections. While he acknowledged that Rodriguez was a good neighbor, Sims noted this business is a big imposition on the neighborhood. He is still concerned about the increase in traffic and the fact this operation violates terms of the development’s covenant of regulations to which all residents agreed. That covenant excludes businesses. “This is not what we signed up for,” Sims said. ZBA Chair Donald Spirlet noted the panel does not deal with covenants. They are beyond its jurisdiction, he said.

            Another neighbor said he had no problem with the business plan because it would be hard for more than five students at a time to fit into the garage there.

            Ultimately, the Zoning Board approved Rodriguez’s permit with multiple conditions. Customers shall park only along his driveway on existing pavement and not behind the home. Hours of operation will be Monday-Saturday from 8:00 am to 6:00 pm, no Sundays. There will be a five-customer limit per class. The permit will be reviewed in nine months.

            In other action, the board opened a public hearing on variances requested for a plan to build a three-car garage in excess of the permitted 1,000 square feet in the front yard of 447 Neck Road. The hearing, which seeks two variances, was quickly continued to the board’s next meeting because the petitioner’s engineer had not submitted certified plans.

            The next meeting of the Rochester Zoning Board of Appeals will be held on Thursday, September 25 at 7:15 pm at 1 Constitution Way.

Rochester Zoning Board of Appeals

By Michael J. DeCicco

Peter Franceschina

Peter Franceschina did not so much live by his own rules as relish breaking the rules of others.

            His problem with authority was colossal. His appetite for mischief, insatiable. The qualities combined might easily have landed him in trouble had he not found a useful outlet for them — as a journalist in Florida, where he became one of the most dogged and creative investigative reporters of his generation.

            Across thousands of stories filed from the late 1980s to the early 2010s, Peter, who died of liver failure last week at 60, was a relentless challenger of conventional wisdom, a devoted tormenter of crooked officials and a vivid chronicler of the serial killings, hurricanes, scandals, Ponzi schemes and abuses of power that shaped life in Florida at the turn of the 21st century.

            He was also, more quietly, a generous mentor to younger reporters, a loving son and brother and a loyal and caring friend.

            On or off the job, he was stubborn, profane, contrarian and fiercely principled, with zero patience for the dishonest, the petty, the puffed-up or the unkind.

            Screaming around turns in his red Alfa Romeo Spider, top down, hair flying, cigarette dangling from his mouth, he could cut a dashing if sometimes lopsided figure, the result of a hip gone bad after too many days spent windsurfing on the choppy waters of southwest Florida.

            It gave him the rolling gait of a pirate as he moved through the newsroom or down the halls of the county courthouse, armed with a notepad and a red Bic Flair, always in pursuit of his next big story. It rarely took him long to find it.

            Once, he elicited a murder confession while drinking beer in a buddy’s kitchen, cradling the phone in one hand and a bottle of Heineken in the other.

            On another occasion, he was subpoenaed by prosecutors who were furious over his refusal to disclose the whereabouts of an itinerant victim of police corruption.

            Not long after that, they subpoenaed him again over a different story, about the illegal phone tapping of public officials, and he chose to risk jail time rather than give up the name of a confidential source.

            A judge ruled in his favor both times.

            Peter John Franceschina was born in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 3, 1964, the son of Louis Franceschina, a manager for Giant Foods, and his wife Helen, a public health nurse.

            He attended Centennial High School in Columbia, Md., where he was a standout on the lacrosse team, and studied engineering and English literature at the University of Pittsburgh.

            He began his newspaper career at the lowest rung, as a clerk in a remote bureau of the Fort Myers News-Press, in 1987.

            His first story was about politicians smoking pot. Within three years, he was the paper’s star courthouse reporter and on his way to becoming one of its most formidable diggers.

            He avoided press conferences, making no effort to ingratiate himself with the elected leaders, developers and moneymen in power. Instead, he wrote about a former dean of the state legislature who let drug smugglers land planes on his ranch in Glades County; documented the plight of migrant workers in the tomato fields of Immokalee; and penned a series on the wanderings of a serial killer who reached out from jail.

            His trademark was the tight, unadorned sentence, and even his workaday cops items had the power to stop the reader short.

            “Crawl inside the mind of Robert Cline Clay,” began one story about a murder suspect in April 1992. “His passions are aroused by an obsession with young boys, images of violence, torn emotions. He writes breathlessly of handcuffs and love. His desires, he reminds himself, are powerful enough to kill for.”

            When not on deadline or windsurfing, he was usually in the garage. A believer in buying cars he couldn’t afford – at least two Alfa Romeos, a handful of BMWs, including one M3 in striking Estoril Blue – he made up the difference by doing the repairs himself, no matter how complex or intensive.

            His fluency in wrenches, bolts and gaskets and his utter lack of pretension belied an intellect of frightening power. He might have been the only person his friends knew who could change a clutch slave cylinder in the afternoon and then, over stiff drinks, riff on Bukowski, Pynchon and Gaddis late into the night.

            He was also a skilled cook, and his seafood gumbo, pan-seared snapper and expertly sauced scallopini were often better than any restaurant’s around.

            In the early 2000s, he was recruited to the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, one of the largest newspapers in the state, where he covered courts in Palm Beach County.

            When The Boston Globe broke the Catholic Church abuse scandal soon after, he was among the first reporters to document its reach into Florida, and into the Archdiocese of Miami in particular.

            But it was after he was promoted to the paper’s investigations team that he made his biggest mark.

            A master of finding and parsing stacks of arcane records, he worked with other reporters to expose inequities within the cloistered world of the Seminole Tribe of Florida and abuses stemming from the state’s lax regulation of daycares and nursing homes.

            Still, he kept a hand in breaking news, dominating coverage of the $1.2 billion Ponzi scheme perpetrated by a former Florida lawyer, Scott Rothstein.

            Then one day in 2012, as the local news industry was imploding, he became fed up with the endless cuts and the constant more-with-lessisms. He used his company’s generous health plan to get his busted hip fixed and then politely gave it the finger, moving back to Mattapoisett, Mass., where he is survived today by his father, Lou, and brother, Paul.

            He cashed out his 401k and, after months spent scouring business filings and other records, decided to dump a big chunk of it into shares of a company he thought might do well for itself – Nvidia.

            Before long he had taken up the lifestyle of one of his favorite literary characters, the antihero Travis McGee from the novels of John D. MacDonald. Mornings he would don his threadbare T-shirts, old cargo shorts and beat-up loafers, light a Marlboro and spend time wandering the local beaches.

            He painted yachts and historical buildings. Pulled blue crabs from the marshes and ate them. Flirted with the waitresses at Turk’s Seafood around the corner.

            And, without heed to town regulations, he went to war with several stands of white poplar, an invasive species that had cropped up in his backyard to block his views of Buzzards Bay, felling one after another with a whisper-quiet electric chainsaw.

            Seeing the trees come down, one especially testy neighbor turned him in to the conservation commission, leading to a protracted battle and the specter of hefty fines.

            Outraged at the injustice of it all, at the idea of an environmental board punishing the removal of a harmful invader, Peter marshaled his resources. He put in hundreds of hours of botanical research and tracked down an expert witness, an arborist, to testify on his behalf.

            In the end, as always, he prevailed.

            A private service will be held in the future.  For online guestbook please visit www.saundersdwyer.com

Mattapoisett Library Children’s Department

After a very busy summer, we are excited to share our upcoming fall events.

            Next week we have a stress ball workshop for ages 8 and up on Thursday, September 25, from 4:00 pm to 4:30 pm. We will be using colorful balloons to make stress balls, which are perfect for squeezing during anxious or frustrating moments. Due to limited supplies, registration is required. Our Graphic Novel Book Club, for ages 9 and up, is also making a return this week, starting on Friday, September 26, at 3:30 pm.

            To register for our events or for more information, please check out our website, mattapoisettlibrary.org, or give us a call at 508-758-4171. We hope to see you in the library soon. Until then, keep reading.

Friends Meeting Yard Sale Donation Drop-Off

The Mattapoisett Friends Meeting (Quakers) will be holding a yard sale on Saturday, October 11 from 8:00 am to 12:00 pm, and donations will be much appreciated. They are looking for clean, sellable items in good repair including housewares, jewelry, collectibles, small furniture, and clean, ready-to-wear clothing. They are not taking large furniture, large appliances, electronics, or books at this time. Please drop off donations at 103 Marion Rd. (Route 6) on either of the following days:

            Wednesday, September 24 from 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm.

            Saturday, September 27 from 9:00 am to 12:00 pm.

            Monday, September 29 from 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm.

            Saturday, October 4 from 9:00 am 12:00 pm.

            Someone will be in the community hall (the building in the back) to receive you.

            If none of the above times works for you, please email mattquakers@gmail.com in case something can be arranged.

Democracy Belongs to All of Mattapoisett

To the Editor:

            Democracy Belongs to All of Mattapoisett.

            Expanding the Select Board isn’t about politics – it’s about rejecting fear, embracing inclusion, and ensuring every voice is heard.

            The fight over expanding Mattapoisett’s Select Board from three to five members should have been a straightforward story of democracy in action. The measure passed at Town Meeting, cleared the State House, and earned the governor’s signature – a textbook example of local government working as it should.

            Instead, it has been twisted into a spectacle of fearmongering and personal attacks, with a small but loud faction determined to turn a commonsense reform into a culture war.

            “At its core, this isn’t about politics – it’s about whether Mattapoisett will choose representation over exclusion, progress over paralysis.”

            This change is anchored in a crucial democratic truth: broader representation is essential for effective governance. More seats mean more perspectives, more accountability, and decisions that reflect the full spectrum of Mattapoisett’s community.

            Yet a small but vocal faction has chosen to distort this effort. Instead of debating the merits, they’ve resorted to personal attacks against the proposal’s author and her family – accusing them of trying to “rule the kingdom of Mattapoisett” and even warning that the town will become “the new Ptown.”

            The latter is not only absurd – Provincetown is a thriving, inclusive community – but revealing. It says more about the accusers’ fears and prejudices than about any genuine concern for local governance.

            The subtext of these attacks is unmistakable: “You don’t belong.”

            That message is not just offensive – it’s un-American. The family at the center of this storm has lived in Mattapoisett since the early 1970s. They have contributed to the town’s life for decades. They belong every bit as much as anyone else.

            This is not about party politics.

            It’s not Democrat versus Republican.

            It’s not “us” versus “them.”

            “It’s about good governance versus dysfunction. Inclusion versus exclusion. Progress versus fear.”

The only reason this is being politicized is because a small group is afraid—afraid of change, afraid of losing control, afraid of a system that works for everyone, not just a select few. The author stands by this reform, and rightly so. Every resident—regardless of background, identity, or how long they’ve lived there—deserves a voice in shaping Mattapoisett’s future.

            That’s not radical. That’s democracy.Expanding the Select Board is not about consolidating power; it’s about sharing it. It’s about ensuring decisions are made with fairness, transparency, and respect for all.

                        Mattapoisett’s future should not be dictated by fear, misinformation, or exclusion. It should be built on openness, representation, and the belief that the community is strongest when every voice is heard.

            “Show up. Speak out. And make it clear: in Mattapoisett, everyone belongs.”

Sincerely,

Eileen J. Marum

                  The views expressed in the “Letters to the Editor” column are not necessarily those of The Wanderer, its staff or advertisers. The Wanderer will gladly accept any and all correspondence relating to timely and pertinent issues in the great Marion, Mattapoisett and Rochester area, provided they include the author’s name, address and phone number for verification. We cannot publish anonymous, unsigned or unconfirmed submissions. The Wanderer reserves the right to edit, condense and otherwise alter submissions for purposes of clarity and/or spacing considerations. The Wanderer may choose to not run letters that thank businesses, and The Wanderer has the right to edit letters to omit business names. The Wanderer also reserves the right to deny publication of any submitted correspondence. All letters must be typed and submitted directly to: news@wanderer.com.

Highway Building Construction Passes Site Plan

            The third and final phase of the Mattapoisett Highway Department Building on Mendell Road received site-plan approval during the Planning Board’s September 15 meeting.

            Renovations, including OSHA and FEMA improvements, were recognized as absolutely necessary for the “town barn” to remain an acceptable and vital part of municipal services. Yet with an estimated price tag for the long list of mandatory upgrades in the millions of dollars, it was at times a hard sell. Now some seven years since discussions began regarding the building’s needs, the final phase received the green light from the Planning Board.

            The town’s engineering representative since the beginning has been Field Engineering’s Ken Motta. On this night, Motta told the board that everything from floor drains to a new fire service are part of the finished product. He said this final phase contained plans for a 2,222-square-foot addition, primarily new garage space and open spaces for employee breaks and office space.

            The board was reminded that the Spring Town Meeting has approved a bond to cover construction expenses to the tune of $4,000,000. The Select Board recently approved a larger bond from which the Highway project will be funded.

            Highway Surveyor Garrett Bauer said that a combination of certified free cash and the bond are the funding sources.

            Motta said the location of the Highway Barn is a former gravel pit, that stormwater recharge is good with no adverse impact on surrounding properties was anticipated from the new construction. The plan as presented was approved.

            The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Planning Board is scheduled for Monday, October 6.

Mattapoisett Planning Board

By Marilou Newell

Rochester’s Wonderland

            I am sorry if you missed it, because the Woodland Walk for Mushrooms, hosted by the Marion Natural History Museum, took place on Saturday, September 13. The museum invited the public to Shoolman Preserve in Rochester, jointly administered by both Rochester Land Trust and Mattapoisett Land Trust, to hike through the woods and check out the amazing world of fungi. Host of the walk was Adam Korejwa, graduate from UMass Dartmouth and Oregon State University.

            During covid, Korejwa said he became further infatuated with mushrooms and fungi, and hosts events like this one around Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Around 40 people registered to come join the fungi-aficionado, coming from all over the region, not just the Tri-Town. Members of the Boston Mycological Club also made an appearance, ingratiating the public and their mycologist peers with their expertise. As there are so many types of fungi (making up about five times the biomass as all animals), there isn’t a one-size-fits-all for mushrooms. Everyone has their favorites, and many specialize their craft, focusing on a few of the millions of species. Adam explained at the beginning of the walk that there are “millions of undiscovered species of fungi and mushrooms. There is still so much we don’t know!” He joked, “we may discover some on this walk!”

            Korejwa also mentioned that Rochester, and southern New England as a whole, has been experiencing a “significant drought” and “we may not find much.” Luckily, those predictions were incorrect!

            On the roughly 1-mile hike, the party uncovered countless different varieties. Adam encouraged careful examination and collection of the different species. Pick up, look at all around, smell, but maybe don’t taste unless you’re totally sure. Russula, bolete, mycena, various honey, some oysters, and collybia were all spotted frequently, among many others. Adam and the other mycologists explained that mushrooms are just the reproductive organ, and the real organism is the mycelium branching out beneath either into the earth or wet log.

            Luckily a few times on the hike, some of the group spotted some rare ghost pipe mushrooms, or monotropa uniflora. Though it is generally rare, a few different batches were discovered.

            Just before the hike ended back at the parking lot on New Bedford Road, and illusive (and apparently good tasting) Sparassis or “cauliflower mushroom” was spotted just under a tree off the path. What a find!

            Even in drought conditions and on a heavily walked trails, mycelium flourishes and mushrooms sprout seemingly all over. Though there is heavy human impact, they did not seem to mind Saturday afternoon. Though they are many in numbers, as Adam Korejwa said, “we still have a lot to learn.”

Woodland Walk for Mushrooms

By Sam Bishop

Upcoming Events at the Elizabeth Taber Library

Limited spots remain in our free woodcarving workshop on Saturday, September 20, from 10:00 pm to 1:00 pm. All materials are included, call the library to register.

            Did you participate in any of our grant year workshops, or create something in our new makerspace? Consider loaning one of your projects to the library to display in September and join us to celebrate the conclusion of our craft year on Thursday September 25 at 6:00 pm.

            The Cozy Cup Book Club will meet on Wednesday September 24 at 11:00 am to discuss Murder on the Page by Daryl Wood Gerber. Please call the library to register.

            Kids ages 8+ can register for our needle felting class that will be held on Friday, September 19 at 3 PM. Pop-Up Art School will teach the basics of needle felting and participants will needle felt a squirrel. Space is limited, so call the library today to register.

            It’s baby time at the Library. We have a lapsit story time designed for babies 0-24 months on Monday mornings at 10:30 am and our parachute playdate program designed for babies who aren’t yet walking on Tuesday evenings at 6:00 pm. Come meet other families with babies and engage in fun, early literacy activities.

            Mark your calendars – we’ll be hosting author Gwendolyn Wallace for a reading and author talk on Saturday, October 4 at 1:00 pm. Gwendolyn is the author of picture books Joy Takes Root, The Light She Feels Inside, and Dancing with Water. This program is best for kids ages 5+ and their grownups. Students in grades 7-12 are invited to create papercrafts at our YA Open Makerspace Hours, Thursday September 18 from 4:30 pm to 5:30 pm.

            The Elizabeth Taber Library will close as 12 on Friday, October 3 for an all-staff meeting.

            For more information on the Elizabeth Taber Library visit us at www.ElizabethTaberLibrary.org or email the library at ETLibrary@sailsinc.org. 8 Spring Street Marion. 508-748-1252.

Hello from Plumb Library

Welcome to September. After a very busy summer (thank you so much to everyone who helped make our Summer Reading Program a success), we are looking forward to a number of upcoming fall events and programs.

            Fall Storytime with Ms. Fuchsia. Baby Storytime 10:30 am Tuesdays beginning September 30. Perfect for littles from 6-24 months. Sign up for the whole session via the Events Calendar on our website. Session runs from September 30 through November 25. Family Storytime 10:30 am Wednesdays beginning October 1. Great for ages 2-5 years, younger siblings are welcome. Sign up by the week via the Events Calendar on our website. Session runs from October 1 through November 26.

            The Friends of the Library Fall Booksale. 10:00 am to 4:30 pm Friday September 26 and 10:00 am to 1:30 pm Saturday September 27. Books for all ages, puzzles, games, DVDs, CDs, all at bargain prices. Proceeds benefit the Friends of the Library, who help us provide you with programs, special events, guest speakers, special library collections, and more. Donations for the sale can be dropped off during regular Library hours through September 24.

            Boards and Cards: Games for Adults. Are you a grown-up gamer? Join us for a social get-together from 11:00 am to 2:00 pm on Saturday, October 11. Bring a game to share or play one provided by our game masters. If you have a special interest in Magic: The Gathering, you should definitely stop by.

            Want to stay up-to-date on monthly Library happenings? Ask to be added to our Newsletter Email List.

            Library hours: Monday/Thursday 1:00 pm to 8:00 pm; Tuesday/Wednesday 10:00 am to 6:00 pm; Friday 10:00 am to 5:00 pm; Saturday 10:00 am to 2:00 pm; closed on Sundays and Holidays. Contact us: call 508-763-8600 or email at info@plumblibrary.com during regular hours. Check our Events Calendar, Newsletter, Facebook, and Instagram pages for information, upcoming events, and more.

            Library cards are required for checkout. September is Library Card Sign Up Month. If you have lost your card, or it’s damaged, see us for a free replacement all this month.