Gateway Youth Hockey

The Gateway Gladiators Mite C team took to the ice on Saturday and came out on top of YD, 17-11. A week after only mustering one goal, the Gladiators turned up the offense a little bit. Kaden Silva got the scoring going early in the game, and the rest of the team followed his lead. Tomas doCanto led all scorers with five goals and two assists, while Silva had four goals and one assist. Also scoring on the day were Desmond Murphy (3G), Will Manning (3G, 1A), and Caden Kosboski (2G). The rest of the team chipped in with assists on scoring plays: Andrew Soucy (4), Keeghan Hewak (2), Jake Lovendale (2), and Kaylie Silva (1). Robert Murphy Jr. played outstanding in net, making 32 saves on the day.

High Energy Mounting Against Marijuana

The Marion Board of Health and the “more mature” members of the Planning Board are joining forces on the recreational adult use marijuana front, pushing forward together with the Zoning Board of Appeals to get voters to approve a temporary moratorium on commercial marijuana establishments.

Planning Board Chairman Eileen Marum and Town Planner Gil Hilario attended the Board of Health’s January 9 meeting to introduce the board to the Commonwealth’s recent release of a draft regulation on marijuana distribution, ahead of the official deadline for a finalized regulation on March 15.

Marum informed the Board of Health that the Town’s Medical Marijuana Zoning Bylaw will be repealed on December 31, 2018, adding that oversight of marijuana distribution and sales will fall under the recently established Cannabis Control Commission.

“It’s imperative to get together to protect our citizens and make sure we don’t have any diversions of marijuana that could trickle down,” Marum said. “We’re just looking to get a moratorium so that some marijuana establishment wouldn’t be able to come in to the community and use our land or any of our structures … to put in their marijuana business, whether it be the propagation, harvesting, selling, whatever.”

Marum indicated that the entire Planning Board is not in favor of a moratorium, or of banning marijuana establishments, in Marion. Some members, she said, are “kind of enthusiastic about having marijuana.”

“Some of the more mature people on the Planning Board are not so enthusiastic,” said Marum. “They don’t think it’s a very good idea.”

According to the 2016 Annual Town Report, there was only an 11-vote split in the Marion voters’ approval of legalizing recreational marijuana: 1,626 in favor and 1,615 opposed.

Which is nuts, said Board of Health member Betsy Dunn, but she conceded that when it comes to a special town meeting, “We have to do what the Town says.”

An 11-vote advantage – “That isn’t very much,” said Marum. “But a win’s a win,” she added. “That just goes to show how the town is split – and people may change their minds.”

The Planning Board has scheduled a public hearing pertaining to a tentative moratorium on marijuana establishments for February 5 at 7:00 pm at the Marion Town House, and joining the board will be members of the Board of Health and ZBA to discuss what direction the Town would like to go in terms of a draft of its own.

“Bear in mind that … you can’t do too much, because this is still a draft,” said Marum pointing to the Commonwealth’s December 21 draft, “but we can make our own draft. We can start to think about what we want in our own bylaw.”

Hilario mentioned some of the common approaches some other towns are pursuing, including simply modifying the town’s existing medical marijuana bylaw to include recreational marijuana facilities.

“It’s too early to say,” said Hilario. “More research is needed. It’s too premature.”

Marum told the board that while jurisdiction over recreational marijuana facilities falls under the Planning Board and not the Board of Health, “As the chair of the Planning Board, I would like input from the Board of Health. I think it’s very, very important. It’s going to touch everyone in the community and it’s going to impact their health … and you’re going to be coming at it from a health perspective.”

Having said that, Board of Health member Jason Reynolds proposed that the Board of Health table its discussion on banning menthol cigarettes and flavored tobacco until the spring in order to focus the board’s efforts on recreational marijuana.

“I want to be able to give this our time and energy, but we’re up against a real deadline when it comes to marijuana, so I think we should focus on that, and when that is done, we can take up the flavored tobacco issue,” said Reynolds.

Agreed, said Dunn and Board of Health Chairman John Howard.

Under the advisement of 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, the board decided to remove flavored tobacco from its future meeting agendas under the ‘discussion’ and ‘old business’ sections unless the board actually intends to discuss it.

Before that happened, though, Nicholas John from the R Street Institute addressed the board one final time, advocating for the use of non-combustible nicotine products such as e-cigarettes and vapor devices as smoking cessation products for adults trying to quit smoking traditional combustible cigarettes.

John again urged the board to embrace smokeless nicotine products as a smoking cessation strategy rather than opposing them and advocating prescription drugs for quitting smoking.

“People should be able to make the decision to use and have access to the products that work best for them,” said John. “Pushing people to pills … is not a sound approach to public health, and I sincerely urge this board to consider the value in e-cigarettes and certain vapor products…”

Once the discussion closed, Howard suggested, “It will be reopened some time later, so in the meantime, no votes…”

The next meeting of the Marion Board of Health is scheduled for January 23 at 4:30 pm at the Marion Town House.

Marion Board of Health

By Jean Perry

 

Guardians and Little Angels Dance

On Monday, a group of the select Old Rochester Regional High School AmbassadORs met with principal and club leader Mike Devoll during their Bulldog Block. These students in particular are the brains and driving force behind the upcoming “Guardians and Little Angels” dance.

From 6:00 to 8:00 pm on Saturday, January 20, young girls and an older male guardian (such as dads, uncles, or neighbors) are invited to come to Old Rochester Regional High School for a night of fun dancing.

The dance is open to girls in pre-school through Grade 5 and welcomes attendees from outside the Tri-Town as well.

“Our dance is two weeks away, and we’ve already had amazing feedback from the community,” Devoll said to the group at the beginning of their meeting. “I hope this is a big event, and that it becomes bigger in future years. I’m all about starting new traditions.”

The meeting brainstorm resulted in a list of specific details for the dance, including forming decoration committees and organizing further portions of the event.

One group of upperclassmen AmbassadORs convened in a corner and began making a list of decorations they would purchase later on, while a smaller group added more fun songs to the ever-growing dance playlist.

“We’re excited to be holding and planning an event that involves the surrounding community around Old Rochester,” said senior MacKenzie Drew.

Drew is one of the five AmbassadORs on the group’s Plenipotentiary Committee, and was involved with creating the flyers for the dance that are on the school’s Facebook page and around town.

“It’s going to be a memorable event that will be around for years to come,” said Drew.

Finalized at the meeting were several ideas that had been submitted by both parents from the community and from AmbassadORs. A photo booth will be at the dance for attendees to capture the fun memories of the night. The AmbassadORs, who will also be on hand in formal dress, will be staffing a refreshments table with water and baked goods available for purchase.

Tickets are $15 for one guardian and child, and $5 for each additional child. They are available in Marion at the General Store, Sippican School, and Serendipity; in Mattapoisett at Center School, ORRHS, and Isabelle’s; and in Rochester at Rochester Memorial School and Plumb Corner.

Tickets will also be available at the door during the dance.

ORR Update

By Jo Caynon

 

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 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. The first building to be previewed is located at 21 Main Street.

The oldest dwelling in Marion, dating to the 1690s, stands at 21 Main Street. This modest wooden shingle half cape was built for a member of the Ryder family. This historic home is important not only because it is Marion’s oldest surviving home, but also because it typifies the town center’s most widely represented and historic residential style: the Cape Cod cottage. These compact houses were ideally suited for the harsh New England climate and could easily be enlarged to meet the changing needs of families. In fact, few Massachusetts town centers possess the charm and historic character of Marion’s Wharf Village.

ORR Hockey Copes After Its Best Season

It’s not exactly easy to move on from losing one of the best players in the state, no matter what sport you’re talking about. But losing two? That’s asking a lot. Three? Well, that’s what Old Rochester/Fairhaven boys’ ice hockey is dealing with this season after graduating Noah Strawn and Sam Henrie, who led the state with 96 and 74 points, respectively, last year, along with Landon Goguen, who led all defensemen with 59 points, eighth overall in Massachusetts.

“You don’t lose those players and it not affect your team,” Old Rochester/Fairhaven coach Eric Labonte said.

At first, it wasn’t an easy adjustment, but the Bulldogs have turned things around and just in time to dominate league play, sitting 4-0 in the South Coast Conference (5-3 overall) heading into the matchup with Bourne.

But this is still not the 2016-2017 Bulldogs team that played at the TD Garden in Boston, nor will it be, solely because their identity has completely changed this year.

Last year, the team was built off the high skill level of Strawn, Henrie and Goguen. Although Tayber Labonte is ranked No. 11 in the state in points with 17, this 2017-2018 Bulldogs team runs more on hustle and effort – a much scrappier bunch as a whole.

“We’ve been working on different things,” Coach Labonte said. “We’ve been struggling with some of the skills in the game, trying to improve our passing and our receiving. Doing a lot of that in practice.”

Labonte is similar to the style of players that riddled the Bulldogs’ roster last year – having played third line – in that he relies heavily on skill, whereas his line-mate and the team’s No. 2 scorer, Ryan Raphael with 12 points, is a better representation of what the team is this year: someone who’s going to scratch and claw every second of the game to earn the win.

“Ryan’s not going to wow you with his offensive game,” Coach Labonte said. “But he’s that first kid that’s going to make contact on the forecheck. He’s going to do all the grinding. Ryan is that person that is a physical presence on our team and allows Tayber to freelance, basically. And he’s been producing. He’s a good leader and a good player for us.”

Although their record isn’t bad – and actually as good as it can be in the SCC – there is still room to grow. They haven’t quite met their preseason expectations, so one can only imagine the damage they’ll do once everything clicks.

“As of right now, I would say we haven’t exceeded my expectations,” Labonte said. “We’ve been working diligently in practice on skill. I think this team has a lot more to offer. And I think our practices have been designed to work on skill, giving and receiving passes – things we’ve been struggling on all year. I think the effort is there on a nightly basis by and large, but the execution hasn’t been pretty for us this year.”

Old Colony

Savanna Halle continues to impress the girls’ basketball crowd, scoring 22 points in Old Colony’s 55-36 win over Cape Cod Tech on Monday.

The freshman already set another career-high with the 22-point game, having been previously set at 20 points.

While she’s burst on the scene in a big way, Abby Cioper continues to be rock-steady for the Cougars, scoring 17 in the win. The tandem combined for six three-pointers in the win, three apiece.

On the boys’ side, the Cougars dropped to 3-3 after losing 79-73 to Cape Cod Tech on Monday. Zach Soucy and Jake Jason both had big scoring nights, dropping 28 and 29 points, respectively.

Tabor Academy

            Boys’ squash suffered its first loss of the 2018 portion of the schedule, falling 5-2 to Deerfield Academy.

Aly Hussein continues to be the driving force as the Seawolves’ top player, taking down an opponent he’d previously beaten at the U.S. Junior Open in December.

Omar Kiwan, Tabor’s No. 2, had the team’s only other win.

            Boys’ basketball improved to 6-1 on the year after a 78-60 win over St. Sebastian’s on Saturday. Local talent Noah Fernandes led all scorers with 27 points, while Chris Herren had 24 points.

High School Sports Update

By Nick Friar

 

Academic Achievements

Julianne Nolte of Mattapoisett was named to the Dean’s List at Lehigh University in the fall 2017 semester. Dean’s List status is awarded to students who earned a scholastic average of 3.6 or better while carrying at least 12 hours of regularly graded courses.

Rochester Council On Aging

The Rochester Council on Aging announces the following upcoming meetings:

Bonjour. Conversational French I & II will meet on Friday, January 12 from 9:30 – 11:30 am.

On Wednesday, January 17, there will be a FRIENDS Meeting at 10:00 am and free blood pressure clinic at 10:30 am.

Tri-Town Spared Fallout From ‘Bomb Cyclone’

It was described as a skull-crushing storm by the national press, with an arctic blast so fierce that the ‘bomb cyclone’ was dubbed a ‘bombgenesis’ by meteorologists, and spread across social media like an atomic blitz.

On Thursday, January 4, the eastern coastline of Massachusetts and Cape Cod became Ground Zero with snow, flooding, and driving winds. However, Tri-Town was relatively spared most of the fallout, experiencing some rain, heavy wet snow, and winds knocking down arced, snow-caked power lines followed by a flash freeze.

Blizzard warnings went out Wednesday, and schools announced their closures before bedtime Wednesday night. Snow totals for our region were somewhat inflated compared to what actually fell – throughout this part of Plymouth County ranging from 5.8 inches in Rochester to over 6 inches in Acushnet and up to 13 in Middleboro.

The closest documented wind gusts Thursday were in Fairhaven at 46 miles per hour, not quite the blizzard strength winds that were forecasted, but power outages were almost immediate.

Marion opened up its emergency shelter at Sippican School as a warming center around 3:00 pm on Thursday, as 20 percent of Marion residences experienced power loss. It was then shut down two hours later at 5:00 pm when power was restored to the majority of Marion residences.

The storm was raging in the area just after noontime on Thursday, as power outages began to pop up as trees downed power lines. Eversource quickly dispatched its workers and restored power to most customers in Rochester and Marion.

“It was probably the best response we’ve seen in a while from Eversource,” said Rochester Police Chief Paul Magee.

But by 4:30 pm, Mattapoisett still saw over 1,800 customers without power, about 41 percent of Eversource customers.

There was one major accident on Interstate 195 West late morning on Thursday, with a vehicle striking a tree and three injured people taken to the hospital. Another Interstate 195 accident in the afternoon was minor.

Chief Magee said accidents were at a minimum during the storm, with only one vehicle reported to have slid off Walnut Plain Road.

“Traffic and accidents were pretty much off the table,” said Magee. “Most calls were just mainly trees and wires down.”

Magee credited the low number of accidents during the storm to schools, municipal offices, and businesses closing for the day, keeping people off the roads.

But then came the frigid cold temperatures that quickly soared down upon the heavy, wet snow that caked the roads, making some secondary roads nearly impassable.

Most accidents, said Magee, have occurred since the storm ended and road conditions deteriorated further after the sudden drop in air temperature, totaling eight between the end of the storm and Monday.

“That’s obviously high,” Magee said. “People are traveling too fast for the existing road conditions.” Not that they are speeding, he said, but that some roads were still in poor condition, coated with a thick layer of ice.

“There’s nothing [the Highway Department] could do about it. They’ve done everything they can, putting down sand and salt,” said Magee.

Along the Tri-Town coast, sub-zero night temperatures and below-freezing day temps finally solidified an already steadily chilling Buzzards Bay until it finally climbed above the freezing point on Monday, beginning the thaw that should stretch into next week, with warmer temperatures in the 50s predicted for the weekend along with some rain.

As of Thursday, January 11, there are exactly 67 days until spring.

By Jean Perry

Feet, Don’t Fail Me Now

Well, the results are in and I may now count myself firmly planted in the baby-boomer population whose aging joints are calling it quits and demanding attention – as in medical intervention.

Why I never expected to suffer in this way speaks more to my abject fear of all things medical rather than to my ignorance of the impact of aging. I am a very bad patient.

I should be glad there is the possibility of a slightly intrusive tweaking of a ball joint followed by a few weeks of physical therapy relieving me of the constant pain I now experience from the hip bone connected to the thigh bone. But I am not.

I cling foolishly to a fantasy where I wake up and it will have been a bad dream. But nope, this is for real.

I already know I will hate it if and when one of my gal pals says something like, “Time to pull up your big girl panties…” Where the heck did that phrase come from?! My panties may be bigger than they once were, but not that big!

All those decades I spent walking my legs off in order to stay physically fit and keep the DNA that would toss pounds onto my frame if I even looked at a slice of pizza were also slowly, with glacial exactitude, wearing out cartilage. Add to that some rotten trick of biology that makes bones clog up like an artery. I’ve been handed a one-two punch.

The royal we – as in me, myself, and I – are not happy.

This phase of life, at least for me, could easily be referred to as the gloaming. Not sun-drenched salad days or sun-setting golden years – something in-between, like another uncomfortable latency phase, only with gray hair.

Here’s where I have to remind myself to count blessings and reflect on how very lucky I am. Having perspective is mature, and I can pull that on more easily than big panties.

By the time my parents reached my age, their joints were seizing up. Dad should have had a knee replacement but that miracle of modern medicine wasn’t yet available to the average mere mortal, and besides, I doubt very much if Dad would have willingly gone under the knife. I get my anti-medical intervention gene from him by the way. He, in stereotypical guy fashion, simply avoided doctors.

Ma had her share of aches and pains and began her nose-diving career around the age of 70. She hurt a knee that never quite felt right again, and then both ankles disjointed and required surgery. She broke her collarbone in a fall, and at least once smashed her face. Although she moaned a great deal when she was still able to stand and pivot, she bore it all with amazing grace. She was brave.

As I lay in the MRI tube of doom tamping down my claustrophobia, I channeled my parents. I thought about Ma and her ability to face really scary stuff with the attitude, “…It can’t be helped.” Her ability to resign herself to whatever was happening served her well in the last decade of her life. That’s not to say she wasn’t really pissed off, because that would be a bit too much rewriting of history. She was the enraged hornet until acceptance rode in on its white charger.

Dad’s modus operandi was like the movie Finding Nemo where the character Dory sings, “…Just keep swimming…” He plowed ahead regardless of physical or mental limitations, including moving heavy appliances and TVs well into his early 80s. His “got to earn a living” streak simply wouldn’t allow him to put the brakes on and accept that his body’s tank was nearing empty. His knees fused together in painful bone-on-bone fashion, but he still put his own pants on every morning.

They were the poster images for a picture whose caption could easily read “TOUGH OLD BIRDS.”

I am made of weaker stuff. I didn’t suffer through the Depression-era or WWII. I was given food and shelter aplenty. If I didn’t want to eat the crust on store-bought bread, Ma would cut it off and eat it. If I was sick, I stayed home in a cozy room on the sofa being attended to by the family doctor and a mother hell-bent on returning me to health. Dad fetched the bowls of ice cream as Ma mopped my feverish brow. Spoiled and privileged in the 1950s bountiful fashion was I.

Now I find the memory of their fortitude comforting. If they could endure all that came their way, so can I. I’m working hard on being able to resign myself to whatever fate is planning, after all “… it can’t be helped.” I’ll be repeating the mantra “Feet, don’t fail me now…” I think Ma and Dad would appreciate that sentiment.

This Mattapoisett Life

By Marilou Newell

Robert M. Xifaras

Robert M. Xifaras of Mattapoisett died in an automobile accident on Friday, January 5, 2018. He was born and raised in New Bedford and lived and worked there for most of his life, moving to Mattapoisett two years ago.

Bobby, as he was affectionately called, was a graduate of the class of New Bedford High School, Class of 1980, the University of Rhode Island and Suffolk Law School. He was a practicing criminal defense trial attorney in New Bedford, MA for close to three decades. He passionately defended his clients with a special advocacy that was uniquely “X”. To know Bobby was to love him. He truly embodied love, he was a “brother” to all and a friend to anyone and everyone in need. His beautiful smile, special swagger, kindness and level of caring, especially for those who needed it most, are unequalled and he will be missed by a great many people.

He spent several years in the X-Tones, a local band that featured original songs, many penned by Bobby. He was a talented song writer and musician and those years were some of his fondest. He was also a certified diver and after many years away from the sport was able, recently, to dive in the beautiful blue waters of Mexico, which brought him great joy. When he wasn’t working, or playing his guitar, he was reading and often could be found with his dog-eared copy of Walden and Other Writings by Henry David Thoreau, a huge influence in his life. He was also deeply proud of his Greek heritage and embraced the beauty of the culture and was looking forward to visiting Athens and Rhodes in May.

His children were the light of his life and he was incredibly proud of their many accomplishments. He imparted beauty, music, poetry, kindness, education and a sense of social justice in all of them. They are the embodiment of all that was good in his life; his special light will shine through his daughters forever.

He was the son of the Beatrice (Keshian) Xifaras of New Bedford and the late Michael Xifaras. He is survived by his brothers, William Xifaras and his wife Christine (Foster), his Godson Michael and niece Angela of Acushnet, George Xifaras and Rae Martin of Burlingame, CA and his sister Carol Soenksen of New Bedford. He also leaves four beautiful daughters, Jolie Marie of New York, New York, Alexandra Beatrice of Boston and Athena Elysee and Electra Ann Xifaras of Fairhaven. In addition, he leaves behind the love of his life, Kelly Walsh who is heartbroken at his death. Bobby also had a special place in his heart for his “5th daughter”, Callista “Callie O’Malley” Remillard. He also leaves behind many close cousins and countless friends that he touched.

His Funeral Service will be held at St. George Greek Orthodox Church, 186 Cross Rd., Dartmouth on Friday, January 12th at 10 AM. Burial will follow in Pine Grove Cemetery. Visiting hours will be Thursday from 4-8 PM at the Saunders-Dwyer Home for Funerals, 495 Park St., New Bedford. For directions and guestbook, visit www.saundersdwyer.com.