ORR Boys’ Tennis Reloads with New Coach

Old Rochester Regional’s boys’ tennis has dominated the South Coast Conference for the past four seasons, and they enter this season as the reigning champions once again. While most of the team is returning for the 2018 campaign, for the first time in over a decade the Bulldogs will be without their head coach, Russ Keeler.

But Keeler’s replacement, Mike Beson, is in a good position to take over, having been Keeler’s assistant for the last four seasons.

“It is a completely different kind of focus on the responsibilities,” Beson said. “The first time it really set in was when I told the team cuts were happening Wednesday. So, on Tuesday night, I was racking my brain trying to figure out what to do about the reality of making cuts for the first time ever.

“And then I just ended up not making any cuts and keeping twenty kids,” said Beson.

One unexpected player on the roster is Old Rochester basketball standout senior Bennett Fox, who’s never even tried out for the tennis team before. Though he’s played casually, Fox has never given the sport a real shot, but he has shocked Beson and the team that’s recognized as the powerhouse of the SCC.

“He has pretty quickly [inserted himself] into our starting lineup,” Beson said. “Which is kind of unheard of in tennis for a strong team. We’ve joked and said it a bunch … we wish we could go back in time and get a tennis racket in his hands because he’d be something special. He’s going to be really good this year.”

Beson’s lineup will remain relatively similar at the top, with Sam Pasquill filling in the No. 1 slot in his senior campaign. Though Alex Bilodeau is gone, having graduated from ORR in 2017, his replacement at the No. 2 slot, senior Jahn Pothier, is more than capable of taking over. Junior Ray Williams played second doubles last year and could factor into singles play or first doubles. Geoff Noonan saw some action last season and is expected to contribute throughout.

All this gives Old Rochester as good a chance as any school, if not an even better chance, to win the SCC title, which would be the fifth in as many seasons.

“It’s been a down couple years for the conference as a whole. There’ve been good players, but there haven’t been teams that have been as deep as us,” Beson said. “Though we’re hopeful that teams will be a little bit stronger. We’ve got a good, tough non-league schedule just in case. But we’re optimistic that some teams will be a little bit better. And with Somerset Berkley being new to the league, we have no idea what they’ll be like. We’re optimistic we’ll have some good matchups in the conference.”

In addition to Dartmouth and Duxbury who the Bulldogs played last year – though they’ll visit Duxbury this year rather than host like last season – Old Rochester also added Bishop Feehan and North Plymouth to the non-league schedule in hopes of preparing for the playoffs.

While the postseason seems like a lock for Old Rochester, despite graduating Caleb Jagoda, Max Wolski and Josh Lerman in addition to Bilodeau, the team is still concerning itself with winning the SCC first. The hope is that by focusing on each individual game, they’ll be more than ready for the MIAA tournament when the time comes.

Tabor Academy

Kelly Browne was the recent female recipient of the John Carlton Memorial Trophy for her excellence on the ice for Tabor Academy’s girls’ hockey team. The award is given annually by the Boston Bruins to outstanding boys and girls in Eastern Massachusetts high school or junior hockey “who combine exceptional hockey skills with academic excellence.” The trophy is named after Carlton, a long time Bruins scout and administrator.

Browne finished her career with the Seawolves in spectacular fashion, scoring 27 goals, while logging 13 assists, totaling at 40 points over 22 games in her senior season.

In addition to being named the Independent School League MVP, she was also named the New England Preparatory School Athletic Council’s female hockey player of the year.

Browne was also part of the United States’ Under-18 Women’s National Team that won the gold medal at the IIHF Under-18 Women’s World Championship in Dmitrov, Russia.

Browne plans to continue her career and education at Boston College in the fall.

High School Sports Update

By Nick Friar

 

Ramon L. Lopez

Ramon L. Lopez, 70, of Mattapoisett, died Saturday, March 31, 2018 at Charlton Memorial Hospital in Fall River.

Born in San Sebastian, Puerto Rico, he was the son of the late Isabel (Torres) and Ramon L. Lopes. Mr. Lopez came to New Bedford as a young child and graduated from New Bedford High School. He was a consumer relations manager for Eversource Energy.

Mr. Lopez was a member of UWUA Local 369. He enjoyed hunting and cooking.

He is survived by his longtime companion, Andrea Rose of Mattapoisett; his children, Ramon L. Lopez and Eric Rose of Florida, and Roxanne Lopez-Barros of Maryland; 9 grandchildren, 3 great grandchildren; and his siblings, Ana Castro, Jose Lopez and Janita Rose all of New Bedford.

Relatives and friends are invited to visit at the Chapman, Cole & Gleason Funeral Home, 2599 Cranberry Highway (Rt. 28), Wareham on Saturday, Apr. 7, 2018 from 4 – 6 pm. A prayer service will follow at 6 pm.

Connecting with the Natural World

Join the Wareham Land Trust, Sippican Lands Trust, and Rochester Land Trust for “Connecting with the Natural World Through Art and Education with Artist Peter Stone” at the Marion Art Center (80 Pleasant Street, Marion) on Saturday, April 7from 6:30 – 8:30 pm. Patrons can enjoy beautiful paintings of natural landscapes by artist Peter Stone, who will be presenting his paintings and the inspiration behind them. Organizers say come and connect with other local nature lovers over refreshments and appreciate these works of art at this free event. For more information, visit http://warehamlandtrust.org/connecting-with-the-natural-world-artist-peter-stone/ or contact the Wareham Land Trust at 508-295-0211 or at info@warehamlandtrust.org.

Buzzards Bay Area Habitat for Humanity

Buzzards Bay Area Habitat for Humanity has recently joined hands with those in the community to form a group of builders, subcontractors and donors, all volunteering their time, skills and resources to help a local mother. After the birth of her second child, the mother contracted an aggressive infection that ultimately led to bilateral below-the-knee amputations along with other serious complications. After months of rehabilitation, this mother remains determined to continue with therapy to improve her mobility in hopes of one day being able to keep up with her two young and active children. Habitat for Humanity has stepped in to help renovate the family’s home and will be providing a large accessible bathroom for the mother.

Habitat’s “Brush With Kindness” program allows Habitat to serve local families who are in need of repairs such as weatherization (interior storm windows), painting, fixing up an existing porch, adding a ramp, repairing a roof, or making a home accessible again. For families in need of critical home repairs, Habitat’s Brush With Kindness program may be the solution. To sponsor or nominate a family, please call the Habitat office at 508-758-4517.

Habitat for Humanity homes and Brush With Kindness projects are fully supported by donations. Habitat’s financial resources are limited and they rely upon gifts of land, discounted properties, donations and discounted materials to assure the affordability of the houses that are built and the remodel projects that are completed.

Habitat’s mission is to bring people together to build homes, communities and hope. Please consider partnering with Habitat to help make this project and others a reality for local families in need of our help. To make a donation, please call Habitat’s office at 508-758-4517.

MCC Ham & Bean Supper

Come one, come all to Mattapoisett Congregational Church’s home-cooked Ham & Bean Supper on Saturday,April 21to support this summer’s Mission Trip to The Craddock Center in Cherry Log, Georgia. There will be great food for the whole family and lots of fun and fellowship. Doors open at 5:00 pm and dinner will be served from 5:30 to 6:30 pm. Tickets for the supper are $10 per person and $30 per family. Advance tickets will be sold at upcoming Sunday coffee hours and at the church office. Tickets will also be sold at the door on Saturday, April 21. The event will be held in Reynard Hall at Mattapoisett Congregational Church, 27 Church Street, Mattapoisett. For more information, please call the Church Office at 508-758-2671 or email to mattcongchurch@gmail.com.

The Mission Trip to The Craddock Center (July 7-14) will be supporting Camp Craddock and providing a “camp” experience for children in need. Our mission team will serve as “camp counselors” and lead a variety of activities and experiences for the kids. Activities will include songs, stories, crafts, games and outdoor adventures.

Evaluation=Opportunity

Tabor is engaging in preliminary planning this spring for a year of self-study in preparation for their 10-year Accreditation through the New England Association of Schools & Colleges (NEASC) in the fall of 2019. NEASC works with schools and colleges across New England, including private, technical, parochial, and public schools from pre-K to the doctoral level.

According to their website, NEASC has been around since 1885 working to establish and maintain high standards for schools and colleges. Through their process of self-evaluation and an accreditation visit by peers, their mission is to stimulate constant improvement in education. Divided into four commissions to fine-tune their approach to different types of schools, NEASC uses 15 research-driven standards to test how well a school does what it says it is doing through its mission, programs, governance, and administrative structure and policies.

The first step in this process is a time of self-study where Tabor’s faculty and staff will all be involved in assessing exactly what they do and how and why they do it. “This is an enormous opportunity for reflection and growth, as we will no doubt uncover areas for improvement and opportunities to be more streamlined in our processes. This collation of the status quo, as well as ideas and plans for future improvement is a huge undertaking that will require lots of communication between groups of diverse teams so that we get the clearest view of our current work and the widest input on our future potential,” said Director of Communication Kerry Saltonstall. This stage includes surveying students, parents, and alumni to gather data and information directly from the extended community. The self-study takes about 9-12 months to complete.

After submitting the self-study document, the school will prepare for a fall 2019 visit from an assigned NEASC Visiting Team. These teams are created by NEASC and made up of volunteer professionals from peer schools that bring expertise from many different schools into our process. The teams are populated with experienced teachers and administrators from schools with similar missions. Their job is to read the self-study and then come to campus to see the school in action, asking questions to ensure that the actions reflected in the study are actually happening at the school. The team will then judge whether Tabor is meeting the 15 standards NEASC sets out for accreditation. The team will also make commendations and recommendations to the school.

Tabor’s faculty has been the most active in New England to volunteer as Visiting Team members, with over 20 faculty members serving in the last four years. “Our participation as volunteers on Visiting Teams has been fantastic preparation for this process, as well as wonderful professional development for faculty who regularly bring back great ideas from other schools in the process,” said Saltonstall.

The faculty officially began work on this project on March 20, taking a day just before the beginning of Trimester 3 to get a jump on the Student Program Section, one of the largest parts of the report.

Frank Townsend, the faculty coordinator of this extensive process was encouraged, “The work was engaging and sparked terrific conversation and enthusiasm for the task ahead. I am confident that the full, extended Tabor community will likewise engage wholeheartedly in this process to squeeze out every potential benefit for our great school.”

Entire Mattapoisett Election Uncontested

When one thinks of democracy, the word “choice” might come to mind, and when you approach an election booth, one normally expects to choose either ‘this’ candidate or ‘that’ candidate. But not in Mattapoisett this year as the 2018 Annual Election ballot will list only one choice for each elected position, and in the case of the Planning Board, just an empty space.

Incumbent for Board of Selectmen Paul Silva will face no opposition on May 22 and will win another three-year term on the board, no contest.

Current Assessor Leonard Coppola will retain his three-year position, along with both Mattapoisett School Committee incumbents Carole Sherman Clifford and James Muse, who will each return to the committee for another three years.

Also running uncontested are newcomers William Osier and Elizabeth Sylvia vying for the two seats as Trustees of Public Library for two three-year terms, with Marcia Waldron who will get her first time as a Trustee of Public Library with a one-year term.

John Eklund will keep his position as Town Moderator since his position at the Town Meeting podium was unchallenged, followed by six more incumbents who will each win another election to keep their positions: Albert Menino, Jr. for a three-year term as Water Commissioner; Barry Denham for a three-year term as Highway Surveyor; Russell Bailey for three years on the Board of Health; John Vaughn for a five-year term on the Mattapoisett Housing Authority; and both Jodi Lynn Bauer and John DeCosta, Jr., each for another two years on the Community Preservation Committee.

Planning Board incumbent Gail Carlson pulled nomination papers in January and returned them on March 6, but she has since withdrawn her candidacy.

All candidates have until April 19 to withdraw from the election and be omitted from the election ballot.

The last day for residents to register to vote for this election is April 24.

The 2018 Mattapoisett Annual Election is May 22, with polls at Old Hammondtown School opening at 8:00 am and closing at 8:00 pm.

By Jean Perry

 

Getting Over Underestimating

No one’s perfect. We screw up all the time, even if no one else witnesses it, and even if we refuse to acknowledge it.

We’ve all let someone down at some point in our lives, and when we let ourselves down, it takes guts not to blame it one someone or something else and acknowledge that we screwed up and will try harder next time to never repeat the mistake. And then sometimes in life we exceed our expectations of ourselves, of someone else, or perhaps we blow the mind of another with what we were capable of, and everyone learns something valuable.

Who we are, our relationships, and what we do in this life – the choices, the actions, the reactions – are complicated and their degree of imperfectness depends on our level of maturity at the time.

There certainly are ample opportunities in life to mess up, but none affect me more, none hit me harder, than when I screw up as a parent. My imperfection as a parent is my sensitive spot. I can misspell a name in one of my articles or get the date wrong reporting on a ‘pubic’ meeting instead of a public meeting, and I can sigh and suck it up and remember next time to use the Command F function on my MacBook to search for the word ‘pubic’ before posting.

But when you love someone as much as you love your child, letting them down is the worst. Even in those instances when my son isn’t even aware that I’ve let him down, I’m crushed for him. I take it hard – hard enough sometimes to pull the car over to the Mattapoisett Diner parking lot and give it a good cry like I did back on February 9 on my way home from the office.

It was the day my 14-year-old son was scheduled to be interviewed by Bristol Aggie as part of the admissions process to get into the agricultural vocational high school.

My boy is Autistic, and in every imaginably wonderful way. A delight, and doesn’t everyone who knows him know it? And he loves horses. So when we attended the Bristol Aggie open house last year and then again for a smaller-scale tour back in early February, there was no hiding the excitement in his face. That crooked smile, wide fixated eyes that gleamed watching the students riding the horses in the arena.… It was clear that he wanted to be them.

But is this a good fit for him? Would he have the academic supports he needs? Would he fit in? Would he be happy in a new environment, with new classmates, with new expectations? How would he perform academically in such a highly competitive structure? Would he even get in?

As we walked back from the large animal science section of the bucolic campus during our second tour, I noticed the sheep had just lambed; their wee little babies jumped about with a cuteness that can kill. They frolicked carefree in their new existence, hopping, climbing onto the backs of their mothers and then jumping off and back on again, then stopped to suckle wildly, then with seeming attitude jumped back up again, assertive in their fresh freedom. It was so darned cute I found myself tearing up. I welled up in my eyes. With tears! Please, nobody notice my irrational emotional response to the wholesome scene, I thought, my tense mouth already turning down. I tore a tissue out from my coat pocket and stuffed it back in along with my feelings.

On the ride home, I had doubts about the placement while the boy next to me smiled, enthusiasm intact along with his delightful dreaming of life as a student at Bristol Aggie. But there was work to be done, real effort. He needs letters of recommendation and preparation for his interview, an experience he had never been exposed to. He would be asked questions that quite possibly no one had ever asked him. And I, being his mother and knowing most things about him, haven’t needed to ask him what his interests are (ding, ding, ding, railroad crossings, bridges, VHS tapes, and classical music, and of course, horses) or how one of his teachers would describe him, or what strategies he employs when faced with a challenge. He would need practice with these questions, prepared answers, and a solid understanding of the importance of conveying these ideas in that kind of setting.

I wondered if it was worth the effort since he probably wouldn’t be accepted into the school – not for academic underperformance or lack of interest, but for no other reason than the fact that his verbal communication skills are limited, one of the ways autism can make life on this planet more challenging.

After we got home, I took to the sofa to contemplate my feelings and self-examine. I pondered the aforementioned lamb hysteria, breaking it down. What was the root of those feelings? Where did that crying-over-the-cute-little-lambs thing come from? Sometimes the self needs time to think about it, but sometimes it just answers right away.

“Your baby is going into high school and you’re sad because you can no longer protect him, nurse him, keep him close to you. He’s not your baby anymore and you’re having a hard time letting go.”

Tears. Realization and tears.

Conclusion: this is not about Diego and his ability to “make it,” either into or at Bristol Aggie. It’s about me and my fears, so who am I to make that decision for him? Who am I to say he can’t go to Bristol Aggie?

I wasn’t going to ‘fail’ him on his behalf and without his consent. He deserved the chance to try, unencumbered by my fears.

So we went for it. We got three letters of recommendation, and it was touching to read them clearly written from the heart with a sincere fondness for the boy. But as the interview day approached, I bit my inner lip with anxiety and doubt, and I recoiled from the thought of not being able to sit with him and support him if he faltered. We practiced the likely questions, and getting him to answer was akin to that pulling teeth analogy. I couldn’t get the clear articulate answers out of him, and he fought against the mock interviews. He wanted nothing to do with them and had no interest in practicing for an interview. With a helplessness I couldn’t bear, the night before the big day I helped him type out some short notes to help him remember some of the key aspects of who he is, answers to fall back on if he was to blank out.

He went to school, and I went to work. I worried about him and how he would feel if he got too nervous, if he didn’t know the answer, if he had a hard time formulating his thoughts into words. It made me sick to think about how he might just bomb that interview and walk out of it knowing that he did. And how would he feel after I told him it would be fine and he’d do well before walking into school that morning, only to return home to tell me that I had lied – it didn’t go fine, he didn’t do well.

I couldn’t wait to find out. I emailed the guidance counselor. I told her I was dying to know how the interview went. “My heart’s in knots,” I wrote. Did he bomb it, I asked her. How did he do?

I got the response while already clicking on my seatbelt in the car to leave work for that day, just about to pull out of the parking lot. I stopped. I braced myself. I read the email. I smiled.

“He did AWESOME!” (in all caps) she replied. “He was just adorable, very well spoken, polite, and used his prompts well.”

She said the interviewer praised him for coming in so prepared, “and I could tell she really enjoyed talking with him.”

“Fingers crossed,” she wrote, “I think it would be a good fit for him!”

My heart soared. I drove off feeling so excited, so relieved, so … suddenly and excruciatingly ashamed of myself.

I pulled over. I had to face it. As his mother, I had let my son down.

As a parent of an Autistic child, my fear is that the world will view him a certain way as a result of being labeled Autistic. I feel enraged thinking about a world that will likely underestimate my child, limit his opportunities for contribution and fulfillment because he’s been labeled Autistic, and assume he can’t do it – which is exactly what I, Mom, just did to him.

If I am his mother and I myself unfairly underestimated his potential, how can I expect the world to embrace him, accept him, lift him up as high as he can go when I myself had failed to? I’m supposed to be that one person in the world who is supposed to believe in him and everything he wants to do, support him, and push him towards his dreams knowing that there is at least one person in the world who thinks he is perfect, invincible, incapable of failing. So what happened? How could I let my fear hijack that moment and turn me into exactly what I feared most for my boy?

He doesn’t yet know what I’ve done, and when he one day reads this I hope that he understands and forgives me, knowing that I am self-aware of my failure and that I have learned from my mistake.

Before I pulled back onto the road, I wiped my face dry and vowed to the Universe: “I will never ever underestimate that boy again. Never ever.”

I’ve learned a lot about myself in this life as your mom, Diego, and there has been no greater teacher than you, which is why I have learned my lesson to never again underestimate you, and which is why, I hope, one day the world will learn it, too.

Planning Board Supports Article Banning Recreational Marijuana Dispensaries

It took less than 30 minutes for the few residents at the sparsely attended public hearing held by the Mattapoisett Planning Board on April 2 to let the board know their wishes – ban recreational pot sales in Mattapoisett. The majority in attendance agreed with petitioner George Randall: “Not in Mattapoisett.”

Planning Board Vice Chairman Nathan Ketchell invited Randall, the author of the citizen petition, to speak directly to the assembled before opening the hearing up to public comment.

Randall read an opinion piece published out in Colorado that pointed to the alleged negative impact legalized recreational marijuana sales has had on the community five years after adoption. Reading from the editorial piece, Randall spoke of supposed noxious agricultural fumes, increased motor vehicle accidents, and poor student achievement, holding the editorial as proof that allowing local recreational marijuana sales would harm the community.

Randall told the people, “If we open this door, we won’t be able to close it.” According to Randall, drugs rob young people of their potential to be fully functioning members of the community, and he painted a dire picture of what he imagines the impact of legalized recreational pot sales would look on Mattapoisett’s population.“…This will be devastating to our kids.”

Colby Rottler, Finance Committee and Zoning Board of Appeals member, rose in support of the petition, saying he had studied the issue and was pleased that the Planning Board was taking it on.

“We have a nice town, nice people,” Rottler said. “I don’t think we need this type of business.”

Resident Sandra Dawson agreed, saying, “Think about the young people. I think this is a gateway drug.” She said people didn’t need to buy marijuana in Mattapoisett when they could go to Fairhaven.

There was some confusion among those in attendance who spoke in support of medical marijuana sales, a separate topic for another time and one not being presented by the Planning Board at this meeting or in Randall’s petition. One resident cited her family’s use of medical marijuana over legally prescribed opioids.

Town Administrator Michael Gagne said, “The vote you took in the Fall Town Meeting was for a medical and recreational moratorium. That gives you until December 31, 2018 to address medical sales.” If Town Meeting voters fail to ban or put in place new bylaws by then, he added, sales of both recreational and medical marijuana would be governed by state regulations.

After wrapping up public comments, Ketchell asked the Planning Board members to share their thoughts.

Janice Robbins spoke first, saying, “I don’t like to make decisions based on opinions,” noting that the majority of what Randall had articulated was simply that – opinion, not facts. “We should be making a decision based on fact…. I’m not convinced that we’re proceeding with both points of view.”

Another Planning Board member, Karen Field, said, “I work in health care. Smoking causes lung cancer…. You want to see the reaction to drugs, go to the ER.”

According to Field, people need to be of “strong character” when dealing with pain rather then using drugs as a crutch.

Board member Gail Carlson said she lacked confidence in the state’s vetting and thinks the state’s marijuana regulations are insufficient, saying that the citizens of the community had already spoken.

“People have voted that they don’t want this, so we should honor that,” Carlson said.

Ketchell said the Planning Board had three options: it could recommend Randall’s citizen petition at Town Meeting in May; not recommend the petition; or have no opinion advanced at that time. With Robbins casting a ‘nay’ vote, the motion carried 3-1 to support the petition at Town Meeting.

The Planning Board can now move forward with the issue of medical marijuana sales and distribution in Mattapoisett, a topic they now have some time to review. However, if Randall’s recreational marijuana ban petition fails at Town Meeting, then recreational marijuana sales will have to be revisited.

If a ban is adopted, however, it does not affect Mattapoisett residents’ right to use and consume marijuana, and residents would still be allowed to privately grow their own marijuana in their homes, up to six plants per adult with a maximum of 12.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Planning Board is scheduled for April 16 at 7:00 pm in the town hall conference room.

Mattapoisett Planning Board

By Marilou Newell

 

Mattapoisett Conservation Commission

To the Editor:

I am writing in response to comments expressed in a recent Letter to the Editor wherein libelous statements were made against me personally and my statements have been taken out of the context within which they were made; which have then been interpreted to mean something nefarious and illegal, suggesting the need for the District Attorney or the Attorney General to be called. Really.

The opinion expressed by local resident Beth Underwood reflects ignorance of the Wetlands Protection Act, the Public Hearing Process, and the duty of the local Conservation Commission. Perhaps it would have been wiser to have some understanding of the same before you put pen to paper in ignorance?

If you have any question about the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission’s March 12 meeting, go to the tape; we are on TV and recorded at each meeting. All meetings are recorded and are a matter of public record and available for your viewing pleasure on the Town website. The message that the current Commission wishes to convey is that our process is a transparent and inclusive one and that we seek to be consensus builders.

Moreover, projects which may have significant impacts on our local resource areas, as identified by the Wetlands Protection Act, are also subject to jurisdiction and oversight by State AND Federal authorities such as: MassDEP, EPA, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, MA Fish and Wildlife, MA Division of Marine Fisheries, National Heritage, Endangered Species, MEPA & NEPA just to cite a few of the agencies that review projects BEFORE the local Commission issues the actual Orders of Conditions, which are done with the input of licensed Professional Engineers, Land Surveyors and Wetland Science Professionals as well as our own local Conservation Agent. There is abundant and overlapping oversight by many.

“…condition projects locally…” YES. Unequivocally YES. I said that and what it means is that the current Commission will seek to obtain consensus from the abutters to local projects, such that their concerns are respected and that each Applicant’s design mitigates those concerns to the extent of our local jurisdiction as defined under the Wetlands Protection Act, AFTER review is completed by the aforementioned agencies at the State and Federal level. There are limits, however, to what we can do under the Wetlands Protection Act as a matter of Right and the Rule of Law which protect the Applicant, too. The context of my statement is to keep the conditioning process local and avoid what are known as “Superseding Orders of Conditions,” which are a matter of Right, but which normally do NOT respect local concerns.

The process to appeal any decision that we render exists as an additional check and balance, for anyone with standing that feels otherwise, for appeal to MassDEP and or Superior Court. The Wetlands Protection Act is a LAW designed to protect the resources we all enjoy. It provides for a regulatory process that is thorough, inclusive and respectful of all party’s concerns. Local Applicants in Mattapoisett need to know that the Commission does not exist to say no, we exist to say yes, provided you follow the rule of law.

It is clear from the Letter that was published that the author might want to better understand and learn how the process works before you assassinate the character of five local residents that volunteer their time to support what they believe in and hold dear, which are the Resource Areas that make Mattapoisett Special for ALL of the residents that live here.

Michael King

Chairman, Mattapoisett Conservation Commission

 

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.