Tri-County Symphonic Band

The Tri-County Symphonic Band, under the direction of Philip Sanborn, continues its concert season with an exciting blend of music for a program called “March Mania” with featured soloists The Resurgam Saxophone Quartet. The concert is at 3:00 pm on Sunday, March 18 at the Fireman Performing Arts Center on the campus of Tabor Academy, 235 Front Street, Marion. Tickets are priced at $15 (students $5, children 12 and under are free) and may be purchased at The Bookstall in Marion, The Symphony Music Shop in North Dartmouth, and online through brownpapertickets.com. Any remaining tickets will be sold at the door the day of the concert. For more detailed information, visit http://tricountysymphonicband.org.

Sippican Historical Society

In 1998, the Sippican Historical Society commissioned an architectural survey of Marion’s historic homes and buildings. The survey was funded one-half by the Sippican Historical Society and one-half by the Massachusetts Historical Commission. Because of the limits of funding, not all of the historic buildings were surveyed, but over 100 were catalogued and photographed. The results of the survey are in digital form on the Massachusetts Historical Commission’s website and in four binders in the Sippican Historical Society’s office (and at the Marion Town Clerk’s office). Marion (Old Rochester) is one of the oldest towns in the United States, and the Sippican Historical Society maintains an extensive collection of documentation on its historic buildings. The Sippican Historical Society will preview one building a week so that the residents of Marion can understand more about its unique historical architecture. This installment features Stonycroft at 14 West Drive.

Stonycroft at 14 West Drive exemplifies the shingle style at its most picturesque. It was designed by the architectural firm of Coolidge and Carlson and built in 1895 for Brookline resident A.W. Bliss, whose leather business was located in the heart of Boston’s leather district. Its landscaping complements an architectural design that delicately balances rustic and formal qualities. Exterior and interior photographs of the Bliss House appeared in the October 29, 1919 edition of the American Architect, showing Craftsman style furniture within. It also showed rustic interiors with low ceilings, exposed timbers, and both stone and brick fireplaces.

Bufflehead Sea Ducks

This diminutive black and white diving duck – the bufflehead sea duck – spends most of the winter bobbing up and down along the icy edges of Little Bay. It is named for a large white puffy head in proportion to a black tiny body as the similar profile of a buffalo. A buoyant and elusive bird on the water, they avoid being spotted by abruptly diving to vanish out of sight and much later resurface in another location. They also are able to take vertical flight directly up from the surface unlike other diving ducks that require a long running start to become airborne. This makes them unpredictable to follow for bird watching, rapidly relocating in movement from one place to another.

The pink legs and feet used to swim and dive are visible in flight against a white body patch that wraps around the back of the head toward the body and also crosses the entire inner wing, as illustrated. If within hearing distance, they can be identified by a chattering and squeaky growling call. They easily spend half their lives underwater, made possible by prominent nasal passages on the bill to actively discharge an outflow of the buildup of a high sodium underwater salt content.

For safety, they submerge in groups and leave lookouts on the surface to warn of the approach of predators such as the local peregrine falcon that in this area is a frequent flyer patrolling the coastlines to suddenly swoop at high speeds while they are busy feeding below.

Buffleheads dine on aquatic insects, larvae, snails, small fish, and shrimp.

During courtship the males, in typical macho fashion, try to impress females with exotic behavior, swimming ahead of them while bobbing their heads perhaps to promise a positive productive potential to their mating.

They breed along forested shorelines where conifers mix with hardwoods and, like the wood duck, will nest in the hole of a tree. The bufflehead, however, is small enough to frequently move into an unoccupied northern flicker nest.

Like the wood duck, the bufflehead ducklings leave the nest within one to two days of hatching, jumping down one by one in rapid succession as far as 20 feet while furtively flapping un-feathered wings to bounce harmlessly off the ground and waddle off towards the water.

Now in the last days of winter, their migration northward is just over the horizon toward arctic-bordered shorelines above the Hudson Bay for reproduction. At the first dawn of spring, the curtain of winter season seabird entertainment from the front row seats of our living room windows will have already come down. The star performers will have quietly and unceremoniously eloped without permission or even saying good-bye.

By George B. Emmons

BOH Weeds Through Pot Regulation Options

With a marijuana moratorium in place, the Marion Board of Health finds itself at its leisure when it comes to drafting up local regulations for adult non-medical marijuana use establishments. Unlike some Massachusetts municipalities crafting ‘placeholder’ draft regulations in time for April 1 when the Massachusetts Cannabis Control Commission (CCC) starts accepting marijuana establishment applications, Marion has until the end of this year to implement theirs. Still, Board of Health members are eager to get a glimpse of what their options are pertaining to regulation and enforcement of the sale of marijuana.

Cheryl Sbarra, senior staff attorney and director of the Tobacco Cessation and Prevention Program and Chronic Disease Prevention Program for the Massachusetts Association of Health Boards, once again assisted the board on February 27 by introducing a tentative regulation placeholder template some municipalities without a moratorium are looking at. The placeholder was drafted by a working group in which Sbarra is a member.

Sbarra said what she presented to the board that day is somewhat of a checklist “menu” that boards of health could pick from, and included in that “menu” are some regulations similar to those of tobacco already in place.

Some of these options are expected as standard: food code enforcement for edible marijuana products; a section for calculating a fee structure along with permitting costs; the restriction of smoking or ‘vaping’ marijuana on establishments that sell marijuana; and banning vending machines, coupons, and free samples.

Some of the options that could be considered ‘unreasonable,’ difficult to enforce, or that exceed the state’s own regulations, however, were marked with an asterisk pending a determination of legality.

One such asterisked policy option, for example, is “No person shall cultivate marijuana without first obtaining a Home Cultivation Permit from the … Board of Health.”

“[We’re] not sure at this point whether boards of health would have the legal authority to do this … or the means to enforce it,” Sbarra said. That option could ultimately be deemed off the table once the state releases its regulations, as well as other marked options like increasing the minimum legal sales age from 21 to 25 and banning flavored combustible or ‘vaped’ marijuana products, similar to the board’s agenda with flavored nicotine products.

“Anything deemed unlawful can just be taken out,” said Sbarra. A “severability clause” was included in the template for just that purpose. “Normally [a municipality] can be stricter (than the state), but with this specific law … locals are preempted from doing other things.”

The Board of Health would likely maintain the authority to set the hours of operation, which Sbarra recommended involving the Police Department when discussing such aspects of the regulation.

Enforcement of the regulations, Sbarra told the board, is critical. “You have lots of discretion in ways you can enforce it,” which, she added, would be similar to tobacco and nicotine enforcement, with perhaps more substantial penalties for violations. A violation for selling tobacco to a minor, for example, could cost a retailer $100. “And I just think that’s not proper for marijuana establishments,” said Sbarra. “To me, [one hundred dollars] is not enough of a penalty.”

The board could consider hearings to suspend licenses, revoking licenses, and steeper fines that could even be as high as $1,000.

“I think that’s really an important piece to this,” said Sbarra. Much thought should go into structuring fines, she added.

Again, Sbarra emphasized, “This is a placeholder because we don’t know all the answers. This is new to us, but this can always be amended.”

Sbarra said Marion was the first town to review this placeholder, apart from the towns and cities involved with Sbarra in the working group drafting it.

The CCC is expected to approve and release its final regulations on adult-use non-medical marijuana on March 15, but Marion is under no pressure to produce its local zoning and public health bylaws in time for the April 1 date.

“This will be our Number One priority and goal,” Board of Health Chairman John Howard stated.

Planning Board Chairman Eileen Marum was also present, and she told the Board of Health that she would be presenting town counsel with a preliminary draft of the Planning Board’s zoning bylaw the next day.

“…And maybe we can get this zoning bylaw passed in May (Town Meeting),” said Marum. “I don’t know, it’s gonna be tight; it’s gonna be close.”

The next meeting of the Marion Board of Health is scheduled for March 13 at 4:30 pm at the Marion Town House.

Marion Board of Health

By Jean Perry

 

120 Front Street Still an Open Question

At the previous Marion Zoning Board of Appeals meeting on January 18, applicant Christian Loranger had been asked by the board to provide it with a timeline of his ownership of and activities relating to his property at 120 Front Street. The purpose of the timeline was to provide information to help the ZBA establish whether the non-conforming use of the property, a two-family house, had been lost due to either abandonment or non-use, which is the current ruling of Zoning Enforcement Officer Scott Shippey. On February 22, Loranger arrived at the Town House with a thick packet of emails and a summary of his correspondence with the Town, his engineers, realtors, neighbors, and architects.

“In the interest of time,” Loranger began, “You know how I feel about the bylaws…” and therefore, he wanted to skip straight to the timeline.

The timeline was divided into two sections – a summary of dates, which were backed up by emails, and then the emails themselves. Loranger painstakingly reviewed the dates since he acquired the property in 2013, including his Conservation Commission hearings, his purchase of the parcel of land located on Pitcher Street, among others.

Loranger contends that he visited the Conservation Commission office in March 2014 and was told by “a woman running the office that he didn’t need to worry about wetlands.” He went on to say that he pursued and eventually purchased land behind his property located on Pitcher Street, a process that took over two years.

He highlighted the ConCom’s denial of his Notice of Intent application in July of 2016, which he then appealed to the DEP, which also denied his permit. Loranger finally received his Order of Conditions (OOC) in September 2017. During this time, Loranger was apparently also in discussions with then Fire Chief Thomas Joyce about using the house for fire training exercises. Eventually, the idea was scrapped, which Shippey thought was due to the house being in close proximity to other structures and an inability to safely contain the fire.

ZBA Chairman Marc Leblanc asked Loranger about his architects. “In 2014, you hired a new architect to design a home – was it a two-family?” to which Loranger replied that it was a two-family structure.

Conservation Commission Chairman Cynthia Callow, present at the meeting, said, “It has been a long process with Mr. Loranger on 120 Front Street. We did deny [Notice of Intent] at first, and the DEP affirmed our decision. The second plan, we approved.” Callow could not remember why the first NOI was denied, but suggested it had to do with a retaining wall too close to the wetlands. She added that Loranger does not hold a superseding OOC from the DEP, as was mistakenly claimed, saying that Loranger has not paid the DEP for the appeal process. She also noted that the commission would be visiting the site due to a report of dumping in the wetlands on the property.

Norman Hills, selectman and ex-Conservation Commission member, took issue with the report that the commission had told Loranger “not to touch a blade of grass or stick on that property,” implying that the commission had somehow contributed to delaying his project. In his written statement, Hills defended the commission, writing that at no time did the ConCom tell Loranger not to cut his grass, etc., adding, “Nothing has prevented him from doing routine maintenance of the property.… I would note during that postulated time … Mr. Loranger somehow managed to cut down every tree on the property.” Hills concluded, saying that Loranger owned the property for three years prior to applying for an NOI.

Loranger clarified that he believed it was the DEP who had told him not to touch a blade of grass on his property.

Looking over Loranger’s data, ZBA member Kate Mahoney underscored the dilemma before the board, saying, “[We are] grappling with the concept of abandonment – if something is being done, what looks like to be at a lagging pace, is that use?”

At this point, Town Counsel Barbara Huggins Carboni weighed in. “The board looks at the whole period of time, asking has there been any abandonment or non-use? If you see activities relating to constructing a new home – that is part of your consideration.”

Carboni pointed out that action or non-action, coupled with “intent not to abandon” and with “activities not to abandon,” were factors the board took into consideration. Carboni underscored that, with the idea of abandonment, intent was important.

Shippey clarified that the property was used as a two-family prior to a fire in 2010, before Loranger’s ownership, but since the fire Shippey had performed one inspection at the house, an insulation inspection on January 3, 2012. There was no Certificate of Occupancy issued since that time. The permits pulled after the fire weren’t completed, and no work had been performed.

In November 2013, Loranger asked that the previous owner’s building permit be extended. A discussion ensued about the validity of the construction permits held by the previous owner. Leblanc argued that because there were open permits when Loranger bought the property, that indicates it is still being used as a two-family.

When ownership changes, the permit becomes null and void, Shippey stated. The clock starts with the new ownership; therefore, according to Shippey, the permit held by the previous owner as a two-family structure has no bearing on the new permit. The last permit pulled by the previous owner was in January 2012.

Leblanc and alternate member Tad Wollenhaupt followed the timeline for the previous owner’s permit (January 2012) to the first contact by Loranger (February 2013) to the closing on the parcel (November 2013) to Loranger contacting the building office for a new building permit application (January 2014). This timeline, Leblanc suggested, showed good faith in the owners moving forward on the home being a two-family structure. However, Carboni pointed out again, the question is about whether use continued or not – not about good faith.

“Just because the purchaser thought in good faith that [it is a two-family structure] doesn’t decide it is in use as a two-family.” The state of mind of an owner or purchaser, Carboni added, does not control or decide continued use.

Loranger said he submitted a construction permit to Shippey on January 14, 2014, and that the permit was returned to him on January 22. Neither he nor Shippey have a written record of the permit application. Shippey couldn’t recall returning the permit to Loranger, but he was quick to clarify it was not a denial.

“I would have written him a denial so that he could appeal – that is his due process,” Shippey said. If Shippey had returned the permit, it may have been because of a lack of information.

Mahoney had trouble understanding Loranger’s response to the return of his permit, saying, “You go through all this work and it is returned to you and then there’s no activity. Doesn’t look like there is any urgency after the denial.”

Loranger said he looked at the bylaws and decided that “…My property was grandfathered and I don’t need to go down this road – I had attorneys that agreed with me.”

Loranger said he had documentation of this, but felt like this path was beating a dead horse.

“All that I’ve been asked about, I’ve shown [the board. You’re] handpicking what you don’t think I’m telling the truth about.”

Mahoney replied that she was not handpicking but would have expected more of a response to the returned permit. ZBA member Betsy Dunn put the issue to bed with a curt “He says the building permit was returned to him, so he did.”

This brought the board to the crux of the issue: the determination of either abandonment or non-use for two years. The zoning bylaw says abandonment or non-use of a two-family for two years or more shall lose its protected status. In her memo to the board dated January 18, Carboni noted that the two concepts are not interchangeable and that the board may find a nonconforming use to be “extinguished by either abandonment or by non-use, or by both.”

Hills defended Shippey’s denial of the permit based on his conclusion of the loss of the non-conforming use, saying the Town relies on Shippey’s knowledge. “Scott knows the building code. He’s the expert.”

Wollenhaupt said he didn’t see abandonment of the use at all, adding “But I possibly see non-use.”

Leblanc asked if non-use is applicable if the structure is uninhabitable.

Carboni responded, “I think you’ve hit the hard part of the case – the issue of non-use is difficult. The court has said that the mere vacancy of a dwelling does not in and of itself determine non-use…. This does give the board some room because the concept of non-use is not well defined.”

If the board suggests the dwelling was uninhabitable, it can take that into consideration.

With a bit of exasperation, Leblanc asked the board what they were looking for, saying, “We are bouncing the ball back and forth – we are looking to overturn or uphold…” the decision.

Mahoney suggested the board continue the hearing so that they may “think.”

The board has 90 days after closing the hearing to issue a decision.

At one point, a neighbor rose to speak in favor of closing the public hearing and a positive vote for Loranger. Sandria Parsons, 24 South Street, urged the board to take some time this evening to deliberate and assess the information. “It’s only 8:40 pm. Can you take twenty minutes to look over your notes to make a decision for this man to build his home? I’m eager for a home for the Loranger family.… It’s hard for me to believe there’s more to say. I kinda think this man has given you all you asked for in the last three meetings.”

Parsons argued that Loranger wants to build a home with a mother-in-law apartment, “…Not a second apartment to rent.” Shippey said Loranger can, by right, build a single-family home on the lot and apply for an accessory apartment for family members.

Mahoney reiterated that the board should continue the hearing, seeing no disadvantage of continuing since they were not going to decide the issue this evening. The public hearing for 120 Front Street was continued to March 15. Leblanc said the board should put it to bed at that meeting.

            The next meeting of the Marion Zoning Board of Appeals is scheduled for March 15 at 7:30 pm at the Marion Town House.

Marion Zoning Board of Appeals

By Sarah French Storer

 

Golden Lane: An Afternoon of Irish Traditional Music

Just in time for St. Patrick’s Day! Come to the Mattapoisett Free Public Library on Sunday, March 11 from 2:00 – 3:00 pm for a free performance by the Irish music group Golden Lane. The group is based in southeast MA and features lively Irish traditional dance music (jigs, reels, etc.) as well as songs in English and Gaelic. The group encourages questions from the audience. Performers play on the fiddle, uilleann pipes, bodhrán (drum), whistle, and banjo.

Please register for this event (reservations appreciated but walk-ins welcome) by calling 508-758-4171 or emailing rsmith@sailsinc.org and provide the number of people attending and contact information. The Library is located at 7 Barstow Street and is handicapped accessible.

Mattapoisett Woman’s Club Scholarship

Mattapoisett Woman’s Club is pleased to offer two $2,500.00 scholarship awards to Mattapoisett residents who are high school seniors, graduating June 2018.

In addition there will be a $1,000.00 scholarship granted to a Mattapoisett resident who is reentering the academic world after graduation and is in pursuit of a post secondary degree. Contact information below.

The Mattapoisett Woman’s Club is a philanthropic organization that plans and executes fund raising events to help generate the revenue for these scholarships and other charitable donations. In offering these scholarships, the club supports educational leadership and helps to support the community whom has partnered with the club in its fundraising efforts.

For High School seniors the scholarship application will be available in the Guidance offices at the local high schools, preparatory schools, or from the Woman’s Club. Deadline for returning the completed application is April 30, 2018.

The following schools where the applications are available are: Old Rochester Regional High School, Bishop Stang High School, Old Colony Vocational Tech High School, Tabor Academy, Bristol County Agricultural High School

Final deadline for returning completed applications April 30, 2018, no one will be considered after this date.

If you have any further questions you may contact the Mattapoisett Woman’s Club at P.O. Box 1444, Mattapoisett, MA 02739.

Disappointing Report on Herring Count

As if things couldn’t get worse for herring trying to migrate up the Mattapoisett River system – overfishing in and around Block Island, global warming, and natural predators –according to Rochester Herring Inspector David Watling and Mattapoisett Herring Inspector Bob Martin, herring numbers continue to decline.

“There is no good news,” Watling told the Mattapoisett Board of Selectmen on February 27. “Last year, we counted twenty-four thousand fish. This time, it’s eighteen thousand.”

Watling said Middleboro had also reported shockingly low fish counts. “They went from about a million to something like one hundred fifty thousand.”

Martin and Watling plan to soon install a meter/counter at the fish ladder located on Route 6 and River Road. The counts presented on this night came from a meter located in Rochester.

Also coming before the selectmen were Michele Cinquegram and David Zimmerman of Verizon to conclude previous discussions with the selectmen about problematic double poles along Route 6 and other locations in the town.

After sharing the good news that poles brought to Verizon’s attention have now been vacated and ready for removal by Eversource, both Cinquegram and Zimmerman spoke to the communication issues between the two utilities that contributed to Verizon’s slow response in removing their equipment from poles slated for removal.

Zimmerman said that if Eversource didn’t advise all the utilities utilizing their poles that something needed to be done, he would have no way of knowing if Verizon equipment needed removal.

Cinquegram concurred, saying that a lack of timely accurate data entry into a shared computer platform that allows various utilities to be notified when poles needed attention was an ongoing problem.

Selectman Paul Silva asked the Verizon representatives to send a letter to Eversource advising that the poles were ready for removal and to instruct them about the need for proper filling of holes to avoid cave-ins and/or other pedestrian hazards.

Zimmerman presented a graph that illustrated all the poles in the community and which utilities were using them for their service distribution. Zimmerman continued to explain the inconsistencies Verizon experiences due to the lack of information from Eversource.

“I find it troubling that the utility isn’t updating the database,” said Town Administrator Michael Gagne.

Silva said, “It’s not our problem.” He then looked at the Verizon staff members and said, “It’s part of your partnership.”

Gagne said, “I don’t want to beat a dead horse, but Eversource didn’t update the database. They dropped the ball.”

The selectmen decided to ask Eversource to attend a meeting to discuss the matter further.

On a lighter note, Gagne said, “Everyone keeps asking about the ‘funny’ bikes on the porch.” He said that he and cycling activist Bonne DeSousa have been discussing the need for more transportation options throughout the community, especially during the boating season.     The ‘funny’ bikes in question are ‘VBikes,’ a ride-share program that allows people to borrow a bike from a docking station simply by downloading an app onto their cell phones, which then releases the bike via a GPS-like system. For $1 per hour, a person can use the bike.

Gagne said a survey will be posted on the Town’s website to solicit feedback from the community on where the bikes should be located and any other ideas around the rideshare program or other transportation needs. He said the bikes could be placed on both public and private property, depending on the needs of the community. He suggested that locations such as marinas might be considered.

Gagne also reported on a comprehensive Flood Hazard Mitigation Plan that is currently under review. He said the draft document is available on the Town’s website and asked for public comment. Gagne said this was a critical document and, when completed, would be submitted to FEMA. He said it would be one tool used by FEMA when storm-related grants are applied for.

On the related theme of rising sea levels, Gagne said a public one-day long event is in the planning stages with Coastal Zone Management to discuss a Municipal Vulnerability Program.

Gagne said the conference would give residents the opportunity to more fully appreciate and understand the impact associated with rising sea levels. The program will delve into all aspects of rising waters from social, to economic, to infrastructure, and population migrations. Gagne said that with residents’ assistance he’ll collect data on the impact of rising sea levels on Mattapoisett, ranking needs – again – with an eye towards securing grants.

Wrapping up his report, Gagne announced the annual cat and dog rabies clinic will be held on Sunday, March 4, at the Mattapoisett Fire Station from 10:00 am to noon. Cost per animal is $15. All dogs much be leashed and all cats must be crated.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Board of Selectmen is scheduled for March 13 at 6:30 pm in the Mattapoisett Town Hall conference room.

Mattapoisett Board of Selectmen

By Marilou Newell

 

Sippican Woman’s Club

Members and guests are invited to our monthly meeting at The Sippican Woman’s Club, 152 Front Street, Marion, on Friday, March 9 at 12:30 pm. Our program speaker will be Deb Ewing who will speak about The Turtle Garden established to restore the diamondback terrapin’s nesting habitat at The Cove on Hammetts Creek in Marion.

As Cove Association residents, both Landis Major and Deb Ewing enthusiastically embraced the work initiated by Don Lewis, AKA The Turtle Guy and his wife Sue Wieber Nourse to protect the once-endangered reptile, the diamondback terrapin. Volunteers like Landis and Deb and others work diligently to protect the turtles’ eggs and hatchlings from predators like foxes, coyotes, raccoons, gulls, crows, snakes, ants, etc.

In the 1900s, the species was once considered a delicacy to eat and was hunted almost to extinction. The numbers also decreased due to the development of coastal areas and, more recently, wounds from the propellers on motorboats. Another common cause of death is the unintentional trapping of the turtles under crabbing and lobster nets. This placed the terrapins on the endangered list. Deb Ewing will talk about the terrapin’s habitat, egg laying, diet, predators, hibernation, etc. Work done by volunteers like Landis and Deb has aided in changing the conservation status of this turtle from Endangered to Special Concern.

The Sippican Woman’s Club meets on the second Friday of the month (September through March) at 12:30 pm, with a finger-food luncheon followed by a business meeting at 1:00 pm and program at 1:30 pm. The meetings are held at The Sippican Woman’s Club, Handy’s Tavern, 152 Front Street, Marion. Parking is available at Island Wharf Road parking lot. Guests may RSVP to Info@SippicanWomansClub.org. For membership information, contact Jeanne Lake at 508-748-0619 or visit our website, www.sippicanwomansclub.org.

Old Colony Finishes Off Memorable Week

Old Colony triumphed last week with two vocational titles and another 1,000-point scorer, adding more hardware to its increasingly crowded trophy case with girls’ basketball winning and repeating as State Vocational Small School Tournament champions and the boys bouncing back from last year’s six-point loss to Franklin County to earn a Vocational Tournament title of their own.

On top of that, it gives both teams momentum heading into the MIAA Division 4 South Sectional Tournament.

“We’ve definitely hit our stride,” Old Colony boys’ basketball coach Matt Trahan said. “It’s a season of tests. Early on, we had a fairly tough schedule between Diman and Case and a number of other teams up early. Then, later on in the season, we went on a road stint where we played on the road for five games. That was kind of put there on purpose, and I really think we found ourselves. Just knowing you can play good teams on the road and win makes a difference.”

This, said Trahan, has made them a better team.

With the boys peaking at the opportune time, they were able to make easy work of Blue Hills in the Vocational Championship game, winning 71-56. Jake Jason led with 31 points, while Zach Soucy scored 23. This was yet another win for the Cougars that shows they can contend in the MIAA tournament, having taken down the second seed in the Div. 4 South Sectional, Blue Hills, by double digits.

Trahan knows most teams will try to stop Jason more than anyone else. But the Cougars believe their offense has become more diverse, and solely focusing on Jason will be only so effective.

“The coaches in the league have done their very best (against us),” Trahan said. “Jake is certainly a weapon, but Jake’s at the point where you’ve got other people stepping up and his passing game has come so far this year. He’s looking to set up people as much as he’s looking to take that mid-range jump shot or that three. They’re going to try to address him. I just think throughout the game he’ll find his shot.”

On the girls’ side, they were able to put away Norfolk Aggie, the same team the Cougars beat last year. Abby Cioper scored 24 points in the 55-35 win for Old Colony, a day after she’d eclipsed the 1,000-point mark in the State Vocational Small School Tournament semifinal win over Franklin Tech.

“I’ve seen her play since she was in seventh grade and we were obviously very excited that she decided to come to Old Colony,” said Trahan, who is also the school’s athletic director. “To see that culmination of all her trials and tribulations, and to get to the point that she is at, you throw the Mayflower and the Vocational (titles) and then in the midst of all that she scores her thousandth point … it’s just great to see the maturity over a four-year period for her.”

Trahan continued, “We couldn’t be more happy that she’s going to be added to the (thousand-point scorer) list. Great kid, works hard. And you know what … she’s hung in there. She’s battled injuries and never really let that thousand-point title float over her head. She’s just played the game and played well.”

Old Rochester Regional High School

In Saturday’s All-State meet at the Reggie Lewis Center, ORR’s Mikayla Chandler won the shot-put adaptive with a 19-11.25 throw and was the runner-up in the 55 adaptive with a 10.90 finish.

On the boys’ side of track and field, Harry Smith came in ninth in the 55 hurdles with a 7.97 time.

ORR boys’ basketball enters the MIAA Division 3 South Sectional Tournament as the fifth seed, taking on No. 12 Norwell in the first round. The girls earned the second seed in the MIAA Division 2 South Sectional tournament and open up against No. 15 Pembroke.

Ice hockey earned the fourth seed in Division 2 and host Taunton first.

Tabor Academy

Tabor Academy boys’ basketball finished the regular season with a 59-58 win over Worcester Academy. The Seawolves went 8-6 in the Independent Schools League, 13-7 overall. They finished with the eighth best overall record in the conference, though their league record was better than the seventh-place team, Middlesex.

Girls’ basketball went undefeated in the conference, winning all 12 games. They finished third overall in the conference, going 17-2, winning the last game of the regular season 60-42 against Northfield Mount Hermon.

High School Sports Update

By Nick Friar