Honor the Flag

To the Editor:

I have noticed many flags this week and weeks past being flown in a worn or ripped state. The U.S. Flag Code states that “the flag, when it is in such condition that it is no longer a fitting emblem for display, should be destroyed in a dignified way, preferably by burning.” Each year on Veterans Day, the Boys Scouts have a flag burning ceremony. They collect flags all year long and have a box outside of the Mattapoisett Library to place the worn flag. Please take a moment to look at your flag and replace if worn. If flying the flag is important to you, show it the respect it deserves.

Thank you,

Lisa Hill, Mattapoisett

 

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.

CPR Class

Learn how to save life. Restaurant crews, retail workers, school teachers and staff, spouses, parents, babysitters, everyone should get trained. Most people who experience cardiac arrest or choking at home, work, or in a public location need immediate help from someone on the scene. Be ready. Sign up for the Heartsaver CPR AED and Choke Save class on Monday, April 2 from 6:00 to 9:00 pm. Cost is $35 or $45 if you want a card. Located at COA entrance at Center School, 17 Barstow Street, Mattapoisett. Register by calling 508-758-4110 or by e-mailing to: coadirector@mattapoiset.net.

Eunice C. (Mullen) ‘Rosie the Riveter’ Manduca

Eunice C. (Mullen) ‘Rosie the Riveter’ Manduca: January 22, 1924 – March 4, 2018. The following is an excerpt from a piece Eunice wrote on her 80th birthday for the ‘Rosie the Riveter’ exhibit at the Smithsonian in Washington D.C.

“As a graduate of Boston Girl’s High in 1942, I planned to enter Nursing School at Boston’s Mass General Hospital, but when a recruiter addressed our class and emphasized the urgent need for defense workers to help in the war effort my plan changed. Instead I took the Civil Service Exam and was assigned to the Watertown Arsenal as a machine operator and then to the Navy Yard in Charlestown.

I had never seen an overhead crane before I arrived at the Arsenal and quickly became fascinated by the monsters which were used to move enormous gun barrels from one huge lathe to another or to trucks for transport to other buildings. The crane was a doubled steel beam that spanned the entire shop area and ran on railroad tracks at a height of 40 feet for the entire length of the building (about 2000 feet). To get to the cab I had to climb a straight steel ladder on the side of one of the support beams and then climb over a couple of steel girders to get to the ladder that went down into the cab. At the age of 18 years it was exciting! At my present age of 80, it would be terrifying!

As with any job that may involve life-threatening decisions, it’s very important that the crane operator and rigger work well together. The rigger is the worker on the floor who connects with cables and ropes, any heavy pieces so they can be safely moved. Because of the noise level at the Navy Yard my rigger and I developed a system of hand signals and became an outstanding team. After working together for six months, my favorite rigger, Salvatore Manduca, was called into the Navy. We waited until the war was over to get married on August 30, 1945.

As servicemen returned from the war, women were happy to return to their traditional jobs of raising children, but were always proud of their ‘Rosie the Riveter” days. My nursing career kept getting postponed as seven babies arrived.

All who took part in the ‘Rosie the Riveter’ jobs in the 1940’s certainly demonstrated the ability of females to successfully step into positions that were previously thought to require male brawn. I like to think that the dedication and enthusiasm that we brought to the work at that time was the beginning of female emancipation. Today, 65 years later, no one is surprised that many women are capable of handling a full time job – from a factory worker to a major business executive, to a nurse, and still be a capable and loving mother, cook and housekeeper.”

Eunice was an avid sailor and horsewoman. Some of her activities included: School committee/Upper Cape Tech, League of Women Voters, Coast Guard Auxiliary, Habitat for Humanity, Sippican Women’s Club and Tobey Hospital Volunteers. In 2002 she was “Marion Woman of the Year.”

In lieu of flowers, may we suggest donations to the Rosie the Riveter Trust or Alzheimer’s Association at 480 Pleasant St., Watertown, MA 02472.

Her visiting hours will be held on Saturday April 7th from 9-11:30 am at the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home for Funerals, 50 County Road, Route 6, Mattapoisett. For directions and guestbook, please visit www.saundersdwyer.com.

District Reinforces Safety at Sippican School

Marion Police Chief John Garcia is working more closely with Sippican School Principal Lyn Rivet and school staff on reinforcing security at the school, which Rivet detailed for the Marion School Committee on Wednesday, February 28.

The school has already implemented a stricter policy for visitors to the school, requiring them to present identification before being permitted access. For larger events, the school will continue to require visitors to RSVP and provide IDs upon entry. Visitors may not enter with pocketbooks, bags, or backpacks, and anyone dropping off bags of school supplies will be instructed to leave them with administration at the main office for pick up.

All Tri-Town school districts are implementing School-Check-In to scan the licenses and identifications of visitors, and a stick-on tag will be printed for visitors to display while inside the buildings.

Rivet said she met with Chief Garcia that day, as well as the Tuesday prior when she said she “bounced ideas off” the chief to yield new ways of integrating a police presence within the school with a visibility that is positive for the students.

“I appreciated his openness,” Rivet said. “And as an immediate extending of new collaboration, parents and children can expect to have a lot more visibility in the building at lunch times and at recess times.”

The chief, Rivet said, “…Wants to be part of the school.”

“He expects to see [the officers] playing games with the children at recess,” said Rivet, “so families can look forward to that. I think that will be a wonderful visibility.”

Superintendent Doug White said he has met with Rivet recently at school about playground safety and security and how to manage that space more effectively. White said he would be returning to the committee later with further details on security strategies during a future executive session.

“On Friday, all schools discussed current strategies dealing with a person who may get into our building or someone who doesn’t belong there … or an active shooter,” White said. “There’s more to be done by all of us to make sure that we’re all on the same page, so we’re working towards making sure that all of our schools are safe.”

Furthermore, said White, Garcia is working towards providing “assurance of safety of all our buildings.”

White added that parents who may be concerned about their children, including behavioral concerns, should contact the principal, the school psychologist, or even the school nurse.

“Thank you for all the work that you’ve been doing … to make sure that this continues to be a wonderful and safe place to come to school every day,” School Committee Chairman Christine Marcolini said.

In budget news, just ahead of meeting with the Marion Finance Committee later that evening, School Business Administrator Patrick Spencer told the committee they would be presenting FinCom with a fiscal year 2019 budget of $6,058,000 – an increase of $129,000 or 2.09% from the FY18 budget of $5,929,000.

The main thrusts of the FY19 budget, as Spencer put it, are the areas of social/emotional development and technology – “Two areas that we’re trying to move forward,” said Spencer. This part of the budget includes adding .4 to the integrated teaching position, plus another .2 to the physical education position “to enhance the health program and well-round the physical education program.”

“This will also help to ensure that the children are getting the response to intervention that they need,” said Rivet. “Children will also be getting the academic services that they need … instead of missing a trimester.” Some students, said Rivet, are not receiving health education because they are receiving other needed services during that time.

The district is also responsible for funding the Bristol County Agricultural High School tuition for students who attend from outside that school’s district. The district is budgeting for three students to attend Bristol Aggie next year, although that number could go up or down. The rest of the increases fall under staff contractual agreements.

“The budget is a really good one,” said Marcolini. “I think it’s solid and it’s what we need at this point.”

The next meeting of the Marion School Committee is scheduled for April 11 at 6:30 pm at Sippican School.

Marion School Committee

By Jean Perry

 

Everyone’s Irish at Open Table

Celebrate St. Patrick’s Day a little early at Open Table on Friday, March 9 at the Mattapoisett Congregational Church! The menu is a surprise but it will be something delicious, likely something green, as in vegetables, since it is also the Lenten season. There is no charge, although donations are gratefully accepted. At Open Table, it’s all about the food, fun and fellowship. Doors open at 4:30 pm and the meal will be served at 5:00 pm. This is a community-wide event and everyone is welcome.

Michael Jolliffe

Michael Jolliffe died peacefully March 1. He was 81. Born in Scotland, June 19, 1936, he grew up in England and graduated with honors in engineering from Imperial College, London.

Early in his career when he worked for Ove Arup on the engineering design for the Sydney Opera House, he invented the single span pre-stressed concrete beams that allowed long open expanses with no need for support columns.

Michael moved to the USA in 1957. He joined Zaldastani Associates, Consulting Engineers, in Boston, later becoming President. Through the years Michael worked both in the Middle East and nationally. In the 1960s he was the structural engineer for the control tower and central parking at Logan Airport, and the renovation of Harvard Stadium. Notable other work included air rights projects at Copley Place, the Hancock Garage over the turnpike, and Back Bay station, allowing for the creation of a park over the Orange Line that knits together the Back Bay and the South End.

In retirement, Michael served on the board of Wheelock College and the New Bedford Art Museum. Michael and his wife Ruth designed and built an innovative and energy-efficient titanium-clad house, including the gardens surrounding it, on the south coast of Massachusetts. Together they wrote a book Bluefish, How to Build a Wonderful House.

In addition to his wife Ruth, Michael is survived by his three sons; Hylton, his wife Mimi, and their children, Zoe and Rye, of Jamaica Plain, MA; Oliver, his wife Camilla, of Los Angeles, CA; and Reeve; his step-children, Jeremy Evans, his wife Jennifer and their two sons, Bennett and Fitch of Hampstead, NH, and Amanda Bircher, her husband Jeremy, of Wyoming. He is also survived by first wife Sarah, his sister Destine, of Woodbridge, England, and his brother Terence, his wife Nora, of Loupiac, France and their two children, and a niece and nephew and two great-nephews.

A funeral service will be held at Grace Episcopal Church, 422 County Street, New Bedford, Saturday, March 17 at 11 a.m.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Grace Church Restoration Fund, 133 School Street, New Bedford, 02742 and The Alzheimer’s Association, Attn: Team Brave Hearts, 309 Waverley Oaks Road, Waltham, MA 02452.

From the Mattapoisett Town Clerk

Mattapoisett Census/Dog Licensing: The Town of Mattapoisett mailed out their 2018 Census forms in January. If you have not returned your form yet, please do so as soon as possible. According to Massachusetts General Laws, if you fail to return your census form your voter status may be changed to inactive. On the bottom of the census is a form for dog licensing. If you enclose a payment, a current rabies certificate and a self- addressed stamped envelope, your dog license will be mailed to you. Dogs must be licensed on or before March 31, 2018. If you did not receive a census form in the mail, please contact the Town Clerk’s Office at 508-758-4100 ext. 2.

Mattapoisett Town Election Info: Nomination papers are available for the Mattapoisett Town Election at the Town Clerk’s Office. There are many offices on the ballot this year including Selectman, Assessor, Mattapoisett School Committee, Trustee of Public Library, Moderator, Water & Sewer Commissioner, Highway Surveyor, Board of Health, Planning Board, Mattapoisett Housing Authority and Community Preservation Committee. The last day to obtain nomination papers is Friday, March 30, 2018. The Town Election will be held on Tuesday, May 22, 2018. If you have any questions, please call the Town Clerk’s Office at 508-758-4100 ext. 2.

Elks Student of the Month

The Elks of Wareham and New Bedford, Lodge No. 1548 sponsors the Elks Student of the Month and Student of the Year Awards for students enrolled in local area high schools. The criteria used in nominating a student includes a student who excels in scholarship, citizenship, performing arts, fine arts, hobbies, athletics, church, school and community service, industry and farming.

We congratulate senior Sophie Gurney of Mattapoisett for being selected as Student of the Month for January by the Old Rochester Regional High School faculty and staff.

Sophie deserves the honor of student of the month, as it is her mission to learn. She always does her best work and displays excellent effort in both academics and athletics. She is well liked by her classmates and by her teammates. She is a strong leader both on and off the field. Her friendly disposition also serves as a positive in the classroom and she motivates others to model this attitude as well. She compliments and praises acts of kindness because she, herself, lives each day by demonstrating kindness towards others. Sophie also volunteers in a local homeless shelter, tutoring elementary school students once or twice a week. She is that student who would be most likely to write a thank you card, no matter how big the gift or gesture was.

Trash Trouble Mounting in Marion

As the Carver, Marion, Wareham Regional Refuse Disposal District Committee studies the impact of the last five or so years of mismanagement of the district’s finances and facilities, members are finding that the former district executive director left them with a lot more to ‘dill’ with than just a financial pickle.

During the CMWRRDD Committee’s February 28 meeting, there were more disclosures of mismanagement during the last several years of ex-executive director Ray Pickles’ contract with the district. There was also confusion over contract benefits for retiring employee Eddie Florindo, whom committee member and former-DPW Superintendent Rob Zora defended by suggesting the district pay Florindo for sick time accrued beyond the scope of the contract.

With so many files and documents still unaccounted for after Pickles’ departure, the committee is unsure of how many accrued sick days and vacation time Florindo is entitled to. Furthermore, the committee believes Pickles may have “cherry-picked” aspects of the three individual towns’ employee union contracts years back, for example, when the Town of Wareham changed its health benefits cost-share ratio. Carver Town Administrator Michael Milanoski pointed out that Pickles chose not to adopt those changes in CMWRRDD employee contracts.

“That’s kind of a problem,” said committee Chairman Stephen Cushing.

In the middle of that discussion, Zora pulled out a file he said Pickles had given to him around two weeks ago, raising some eyebrows.

“I talked to Ray,” Marion Town Administrator Paul Dawson said. “I asked him if he was in possession of any other files from the district.” Pickles told him no, Dawson stated.

Milanoski added, “We requested in writing that we need all district files, and all of a sudden this appears?”

Zora couldn’t explain it, saying only, “He may have run into it…”

What’s more, Pickles acted against the committee’s order when he issued Florindo a check back in December in the amount of $19,000 for a retirement-related payment; furthermore, the proper taxes were not deducted from the payment.

During the meeting, Milanoski said, “The board directed Ray to not cut any checks and he went out there and he ordered a check to be cut. We asked him not to cut a check … and he cut the check without the board’s knowledge.”

There was also talk about how no employee files with documented vacation and sick time were found after Pickles was let go, and the committee now hopes that the district’s payroll vendor will have some records of sick time and vacation time used to figure out how much sick and vacation time Florindo is owed. According to Zora, Florindo used up all his sick time and all that remained was vacation days.

Zora asked if the committee ever notified Florindo that he could only accrue so many vacation days before losing them, which Milanoski commented should be no more than 30 days, also adding that it is not the district’s responsibility to inform employees of what is already stated in their contract.

“How can the board sit here and penalize an employee?” asked Zora, adding that Florindo was a loyal employee of several decades. “I have a huge problem with that.…

This is an individual who probably never looked at his contract at all, worked here for forty- something years.… This board should do the right thing and pay him what’s on the books – what he [did] not use….”

Zora asked that the committee “let things slide” because, if Florindo had taken all of his vacation time, the Town would have had to pay another employee more for overtime. He said the committee should not “gyp” Florindo, which angered Milanoski.

“To say that the district is gonna ‘gyp’ somebody is the wrong statement to be using in a public session,” said Milanoski, as Zora tried interrupting him. “Can I finish?” He continued, “No one is talking about gypping anybody.” He said the committee would review what documents are available and pay Florindo what he is lawfully owed. “To say that we’re gonna ‘gyp’ someone is wrong,” said Milanoski.

“Keep in mind,” Milanoski added, “you’re basically bankrupt, so I don’t know where you’re gonna pay him from…. There’s a lot of bills that need to be paid,” such as OPEB and pension liabilities, said Milanoski, “So we don’t have money to throw away.…”

“At the end of the day, you’ll get your vote as a board member,” Milanoski said to Zora.

“Well, I just don’t want to see that happen … and I just have a right to voice my opinion as a member of this board,” said Zora. *

Some of the money used to reimburse Florindo for unused vacation would come from taxpayer money, said Milanoski, “So we need to do calculations and bring them back to the board to justify whatever the number.…”

And if that wasn’t enough, committee member Dave Menard gave an overview of his observations of the district’s three garbage facilities: the Carver landfill, and the two transfer stations in Rochester and at Benson Brook/Marion. Benson Brook was so bad the committee may have to shut it down.

“It’s a free-for-all,” Menard described the Marion disposal facility. “It’s poorly managed – they all are.” Menard said he saw vehicles without stickers entering and using the facility and trailers and other large equipment randomly scattered throughout the site.

Milanoski said in his own observations, he saw significant liability in the way things are set up and run at Benson Brook, prompting him to request that the committee authorize the three towns’ town administrators to devise an operations and management plan that could result in either fewer transfer station days or a consolidation of the multiple facilities.

“They’re not safe the way they’re structured right now,” said Milanoski, adding that the facilities are also running “too costly.” “There’s a liability the way they’re structured right now.”

Milanoski also observed several newer, large pieces of equipment at Benson Brook, including a new backhoe and excavator, possibly purchased without the committee’s approval.

“We’re not financially solvent,” Milanoski said. “A district of this size doesn’t need to have all this equipment. A lot of money has been spent on some equipment that is probably one of the many elements that has put us in this … [financial] situation.”

Furthermore, large quantities of animal waste are being dumped at the Rochester site; and at the Marion site, other prohibited items such as toilets, kitchen sinks, and old cabinets have been dumped, while outside contractors have been using the transfer station for dumping truckloads of wood chips, debris, and other materials without authorization to do so.

“We can no longer just accept the contractors from other towns … on the backs of the taxpayers,” Milanoski said.

Resident brush disposal is not being overseen effectively, the committee agreed.

Marion Selectman and committee member Norm Hills questioned the urgency of the liability issue, asking, “Do we need to stop people from going in there now?”

Dawson suggested addressing the matter sooner rather than later, saying, “Some containers walk up to stairs.… We’ve had falls in the past there before. It’s only a matter of time before it happens again.… Obviously, safety and liability issues are paramount.”

“It’s the right step to do,” Milanoski said. “There’s no doubt about it.”

As a result, two gates will be installed at the site – one at the transfer station entrance and another that will block access after the station entrance, where contractors appear to be illegally dumping. Currently, two temporary barriers are in place to deter further illegal dumping.

The committee also addressed so-called “volunteers,” for lack of a better word, said Dawson – “A couple of women from Wareham who are dictating the rules to anybody who walks in there” at the swap shed at Benson Brook. “It’s become a real thorn in everyone’s side down there,” Dawson continued, saying that even transfer station employees are “afraid” to talk to the women who have assumed the position of guardians of the swap shop. “It can’t go on.”

Since the meeting, the swap shop has been closed and it appears it will not re-open.

Before adjourning, the committee looked ahead to the future, speculating that perhaps they may need to add a fourth town to the district – Rochester – that also faces the imminent expiration of trash agreement with Covanta.

Rochester Selectman Brad Morse attended the meeting but did not participate, saying he was only there to listen and observe. The committee acknowledged his presence, and Cushing commented that it would be useful to include Rochester in the dialogue from now on. Morse said he agreed and would be approaching the Rochester Board of Selectmen on the matter during its March 5 meeting.

The committee authorized the three towns’ town administrators to devise a plan for the transfer stations and then notify the public of any transfer station closures. An update on this matter was added to the Marion Board of Selectmen’s agenda for the March 6 meeting. (See that article in this week’s edition of The Wanderer for details and the board’s comments.)

In other matters, the committee will select an auditing firm during its next meeting to conduct a forensic audit of the last five years. The committee has concluded that Pickles had not performed an annual audit as required since 2012.

The next meeting of the CMWRRDD Committee is scheduled for March 28 at 5:00 pm at the Marion Police Station conference room.

 

*Zora remains on the CMWRRDD Committee, although he is no longer employed by the Town of Marion and is no longer a resident of Marion. In a follow-up with Dawson, who claimed he was unaware that Zora had moved out of Marion, he said that Zora was appointed to the committee when he was appointed as Marion’s DPW superintendent. He said the Town’s committee policy would allow a non-resident to serve on a regulatory board until their term is up June 30 and “ride out the remainder of the year.”

Carver, Marion, Wareham Regional Refuse Disposal District Committee

By Jean Perry

 

We Will Not Be Arming Our Teachers, Principal Says

Safety in schools is an important topic currently being discussed all over the country, and it is also something that is being taken seriously at Old Rochester Regional High School.

Last week, the entire high school staff was called down for a pair of meetings that highlighted the current state of security at ORR and steps that can and will be taken to improve it.

There were a few immediate changes that could be seen throughout the final days of the week.

“We’re asking classrooms to remain in the locked position (with doors locked from the hallways) to better facilitate a lockdown, should the situation arise,” Principal Mike Devoll said. “Students also need to be held to a greater accountability of where they are in the building, as they always should be.”

School Librarian Allison Barker gave an example of how the tighter procedures work.

“Students are supposed to have passes for coming to the library during their study or just for printing,” said Barker. “They also sign-in on library computers when they stay for study so we have a list of who is in the library.”

A couple of students who were encountered walking the halls at that time, like senior Alice Bednarczyk – students of the post-Columbine era – are a bit more skeptical towards some of the implementations.

“I think personally, we as students shouldn’t have to be worried about our own safety when trying to receive our education, so now it feels like we’re all going to be shut up because it’s become such a consuming thing,” Bednarczyk said. “With the locked doors on classrooms, I now have to knock to get back into the classroom so I have to both ask to leave and come back in.”

“And if something happens when you are in the bathroom or in the halls during passing times, then you can’t get to safety in any classroom if they are locked,” senior Noah Paknis added.

Of course, these aren’t the only security features that ORRHS is putting into place to increase the overall safety and security of students at school.

“We had a meeting Friday morning with the police chiefs from all three towns about an active student shooter situation,” Devoll said on the strengthening safety procedures. “We’ve developed a schedule for ALICE training. We’ve re-evaluated our full-site evacuation policy – how to bus students off campus, how to reunite with families.”

Devoll stressed, “We will not be arming our teachers.”

“We have an armed school resource officer in the building,” said Devoll. “We also are looking to have a consistent barricade method (since doors open both ways), and the glass school vestibule (front doors) is being redone with bulletproof glass this summer.”

At least one student, the freshman class president Lucy Zhang, said she is still more concerned with her grades than her safety at ORR.

“Our school runs multiple drills such as the ALICE drills. Now teachers are required to lock doors, students can only be in hallways with passes, and I’m pretty sure we have cameras at every entrance,” says Zhang. “I don’t know if all the school’s safety measures will guarantee no deaths if the unfortunate event of a school shooting occurs, but it will definitely prevent the loss of more lives.”

ORR Update

By Jo Caynon