Mattapoisett Recreation Adult Fall Programs

New this season – Adult Fencing! Join MATTREC and Blackstone Valley fencing instructors for an adult fencing class to be held at the Center School gymnasium on Monday evenings from 7:30 pm – 8:30 pm. Program runs for 8 weeks starting October 15ththrough December 10th. All equipment is provided. Cost is $165 and registration deadline is October 8th.

Drop-in Pickleball is on Tuesday and Thursday evenings from 5:00 pm until sundown and Saturday mornings from 9:00 am – 11:00 am. This is a free, no sign-up necessary program. It is volunteer run and informally structured. 3 courts are set up and organizers will instruct beginners. Rackets and balls are available for use.

Please email Mattapoisett Recreation with any questions at mattrec@mattapoisett.net

Kick off Halloween with a Ghost Hunt at the MPL

On Friday, October 5The S.P.I.R.I.T.S of New England team will return to the Mattapoisett Free Public Library to share chilling evidence from their years of paranormal investigative work. Get behind-the-scenes tales of terror from past confrontations with the supernatural and review the spooky results for yourself.  Ghosts? Poltergeists? EVPs? The S.P.I.R.I.T.S of New England have seen and heard it all.

The paranormal lecture, open to the public, will be held in the Community Meeting Room from 5:00 pm to 6:30 pm. After the lecture, the ghost hunt is on from 8:00 pm until midnight! The actual ghost hunt is limited to 20 people so reserve your place and join the team on a late-night investigation of the Mattapoisett Free Public Library. Use ghost hunting techniques and equipment to see if you can find proof of paranormal activity in the library. For ages 12 and up.

Call the library to make your reservation at 508-758-4171. Have questions? Email Librarian Elizabeth Sherry at sherry@sailsinc.org

Seasonal Flu Clinics

The Marion and Rochester Boards of Health will sponsor the 2018 seasonal flu clinics for all residents. The flu vaccine will be available in the injectable form for ages 2 years old and over, nasal mist for ages 2-18, and the high dose vaccine for ages 65 years and over.

            Those attending the flu clinics are reminded to wear a short sleeve shirt and to bring all insurance and Medicare cards. Vaccinations will be given to all regardless of insurance status or ability to pay.

            Clinics will be held:

Thursday, September 20 – 4:00 pm to 6:00 pm at Sippican School

Tuesday, September 25 – 9:00 am to 12:00 pm at Cushing Community Center

Monday, October 1 – 9:30 am to 11:30 am at Rochester Council on Aging

Monday, October 1 – 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm at Marion Town House

Tuesday, October 2 – 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm at Rochester Council on Aging

Tuesday, October 9 – 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm at Cushing Community Center

Monday, October 15 – 9:30 am to 11:30 am at Rochester Council on Aging

Monday, October 15 – 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm at Marion Town House

Monday, October 22 – 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm at Marion Town House

Thursday, October 25 – 4:00 pm to 6:00 pm at Marion Town House

Sunday, October 28 – 10:30 am to 12:30 pm at First Congregational Church community meeting room behind the General Store

Monday, October 29 – 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm at Marion Town House

Monday, November 5 – 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm at Marion Town House

            Transportation to the clinics can be arranged with the Marion Council on Aging at

508-748-3570 or the Rochester Council on Aging at 508-763-8723.

            Homebound residents may schedule an appointment for a home visit by calling the Marion Board of Health at 508-748-3530 or the Rochester Board of Health at

508-763-5421.

            For more information call the Marion Board of Health at 508-748-3530 or the Rochester Board of Health at 508-763-5421.

Mattapoisett to Purchase Pump-out Boat

Summer has yet to officially close for the season, but Mattapoisett’s Board of Selectmen talked of the urgency of doing everything necessary to ensure that the 2019 boating season finds the town’s water clean with a new pump-out boat.

Town Administrator Mike Gagne reported that with Mattapoisett Boat Yard no longer able to provide mobile pump-out services to both residents and transient boaters to the harbor, the Mattapoisett Marine Advisory Board is recommending that the town purchase their own vessel.

Gagne said that funds from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Clean Vessel Act Program would provide $60,000 towards the boat with the town picking up any additional costs.

Selectman Jordan Collyer asked that Gagne find out the type of boat and associated equipment being used by neighboring towns to take the guesswork out of sourcing the correct vessel.

Gagne said that the town will have to submit their grant request by December 2018 and that he would prepare the documents. He also said that having an additional boat in the harbor on a daily basis would give the Harbormaster “another set of eyes” on the water during the busy boating season.

Gagne also reported that study of the Route 6 corridor by the Massachusetts Department of Transportation and coordinated by the Southeast Regional Planning and Development (SRPD) Commission has gone well. He said that MassDOT had listened to the town’s input, along with input from businesses, regarding current and future needs. Gagne said that Route 6 from its opening until 1972 had performed well for the communities it travels through. He said that use of the roadway had changed since that time, making it necessary to reconsider its future uses. He said that a link on the town’s web page (www.mattapoisett.net)would allow residents to give their comments directly to SRPD.

Regarding the conceptual plans recently rolled out for reconfiguration of sidewalks and parking spaces along Water Street near the entrance to Shipyard Park, Gagne acknowledged some pushback from residents. He said that alternative options are being discussed and new options will be presented in the coming weeks to stakeholders in that area.

Gagne completed his report by sharing that work on the main structure located at the Park Street property, formally known as the Holy Ghost Grounds, was nearly complete with a new roof and other structural improvements to ensure the integrity of the building.

Earlier in the evening, the selectmen met with the new Town Treasurer/Collector Kristie Costa. Before taking care of business, Collyer welcomed Costa to Town Hall. Costa filled the post starting in May and had previously been employed by the Town of Acushnet in a similar capacity.

With pleasantries satisfied, Costa presented the selectmen with three bonds for their approval. The total of the bond package that was picked up during a recent sale by Fidelity Capitol Markets is $2,665,000. The payback figure is $2,809,000, she explained, and a premium roll-back of $146,658 will be used to pay down the loan.

Costa listed the bond amounts and uses as: $2.1 million for sewer pipeline upgrades, $400,000 for fresh water well refurbishments, and $250,000 for roadway improvements.

A sidenote to these financial transactions was the high rating Mattapoisett received from Standard & Poor (S&P) – a solid Triple A, Gagne said.

Gagne said that in the narrative that accompanied the documents, S&P had noted that Mattapoisett had a strong economy, strong management, and overall excellent budget performance. The rating agency also wrote that the town enjoyed a robust liquidity and low overall debt with nearly 70-percent of that scheduled to be paid off in ten years.

Gagne said that all of this pointed to the town’s ability to secure funding for such projects as a new fire station from the lending industry. Collyer said, “It’s nice to see our hard work being recognized.”

Gagne also reported that Phase 1B of the bike path went to bid on September 1. He said that all bids are due by December 2018. “It’s very exciting,” he said with a smile.

In other business, the selectmen met with Dean Blackburn whose father, Arthur Blackburn, was an early founder of the Lions Club in Mattapoisett. Blackburn sought and received approval to pursue design options for a memorial area near the gazebo in Shipyard Park to commemorate his father and other citizens of note from the community.

Regarding bike paths, Selectman Tyler Macallister asked if additional “No Parking” signs could be placed along Mattapoisett Neck Road and that the Police Department enforce the no parking bans along the stretch of road near the bike path entrance. Gagne will follow-up with the Highway and Police Departments.

The selectmen voted to appoint Anthony Tranfaglia as a regular member of the Zoning Board of Appeals.

The selectmen also set the Fall Special Town Meeting date for November 26, and the acceptance of articles for the warrant to begin on October 1. Gagne said that one article being drafted by the Planning Board is a bylaw governing medical marijuana sales in Mattapoisett.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Board of Selectmen is scheduled for September 25 at 6:30 pm in the town hall conference room.

Mattapoisett Board of Selectmen

By Marilou Newell

 

The Real Disneyland

Long before I lived in Mattapoisett, long before I settled into a traditional lifestyle – a lifestyle I longed for but failed at that point to achieve – I was a struggling single mother. As such, vacations were out of the question. Sure, there were fun activities – going to city parks, public beaches or simply reading a story at bedtime to my small, frail little boy – but destination vacations were not part of our reality: a tough reality when you live within driving distance of Disneyland.

We lived in Long Beach, California. The beach, however, was nearly 30 minutes away from our home, making it difficult to allocate limited gasoline resources to a day at the beach. And the beach part of Long Beach had yet to experience its renaissance.

The city in the 1970s was a burnt out, ragtag post-war remnant of itself. It was a gritty Naval base town studded with bars, seedy tattoo parlors, and adult shops. While there were a few signs that investors were looking at the waterfront city with lust, the dirt and discarded waste from decades of neglect hung over Long Beach.

From our little bungalow situated on the idyllic sounding Pacific Avenue I eked out an existence for us. The struggle was very real. With the original Disneyland an hour’s drive away, it might as well have been on the moon. My little boy never asked to go there, but I wanted very much to give him that treat. I wanted him to have the escape only Disneyland could give us both, an escape from grinding worry over rent and groceries, if only for a few hours.

We were lucky in that I had a friend who lived in Anaheim. My gal pal from ‘back home’ didn’t have children to support, but she was a single woman earning low wages while paying high rents in the Golden State. She was struggling, too. One savings grace, she worked for Hyatt Corporation.

My friend called me up one day and said, “I’ve got passes to Disneyland, do you want them?” It was Christmas in July, literally. The catch was that the passes would expire in two days. There wasn’t enough time for her to send them in the mail and she couldn’t bring them to me as her car was on the blink. I’d have to find a way to go and pick them up ASAP.

My own car, a yellow 1969 VW bug, needed mechanical work that I couldn’t afford. But in my mind at that time I also couldn’t afford to pass up the opportunity to give my son a fun day spent in that fantasy mecca we had only experienced through television. I had to get those passes.

From Long Beach to Anaheim where my friend lived was about an hour’s drive, depending on freeway traffic. My gas tank was nearly empty. Even if I managed to scourge up a few dollars-worth of coins from the bottom of my purse and my son’s piggybank, I couldn’t drive to my friend’s apartment, home again, and then the following day return to Anaheim to go to Disneyland. It would have to be one trip out and back. To add to the drama, my friend would only be available to meet me for the handoff between ten o’ clock and eleven o’ clock in the morning that day – Saturday. It was already 8:30 that morning. Freeway traffic would be horrendous.

Freeway traffic is everything you can imagine. Heavy volume, four or more lanes, all aggressively moving forward with little margin for error. They terrified me. As I scrambled around our house searching for a misplaced quarter or even a dime, my son was raiding his little bank. Counting out the money on the kitchen table, we had $2.78. It would have to do.

Before leaving the house to gas up the car and head out on the Long Beach Freeway to the Santa Ana, I packed a medium-sized purse with two peanut butter sandwiches and a jelly jar of water that I then wrapped in aluminum foil. I tossed in two apples for good measure. We were ready to roll, ready for adventure.

In fits and starts the VW chugged along threatening with every mile to leave us stranded on the side of the freeway. But we made it just in time. My friend was waiting outside her apartment complex. As she handed me the passes she surprised us with vouches for free drinks inside the park and a crisp five-dollar bill. “It’s your lucky day,” she said as she picked up my kid for a big smooch and a pat on his head. “Have a good time,” she hollered as she jumped on a bus.

I put the money in my bra for safekeeping; it was too precious to put in my purse that might get stolen. Then we scrambled into the car that I had left running for fear it wouldn’t start again. We had made it. We were happy and laughing and singing along with the Mamas and the Papas.

Most of what we experienced that day inside the happiest place on Earth has faded from my memory. I’m left with snippets. Tiny bits like sitting in the cart as we rode into the tunnel of Small World, the submarine ride of 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea, the teacups, the haunted house, the white bread peanut butter sandwiches, the look of wonder on my son’s face.

There would be other trips to Disneyland courtesy of my friend. Dear heart, she has since passed away. Six years after we had returned to the east coast and I was earning a better living wage, there was the weeklong real destination vacation to Disney World in Florida.

I may remember that Florida trip more vividly: I can’t control what my aging brain will allow for reflection. Yet that first trip to Disneyland with my little boy’s hand firmly holding mine has a special place in my heart even as the images fade away.

In honor of my friend Anne Nightingale who made our dreams come true.

This Mattapoisett Life

By Marilou Newell

 

Florence Eastman Post 280

The monthly meeting of the Florence Eastman Post 280 will be held at the hall at 7:00 pm on Wednesday, September 19. The main topics will be our plans for the Veteran’s Day Ceremony which has to be moved to the 12 of November and the progress of our Foxwoods Fundraiser.

Academic Achievements

Melvin M. Vincent, of Rochester, Massachusetts, has been named to second honors on theClark Universitydean’s list. This selection marks outstanding academic achievement during the Spring 2018 semester. To be eligible for second honors, students must have a grade point average of 3.5 or higher, of a maximum of 4.3 (all A+s).

Mattapoisett Leads ORR Agreement Review

The Towns of Marion, Mattapoisett, and Rochester will be reviewing its regionalization agreement for the Old Rochester school district, and Mattapoisett will be leading the way.

During the September 6 meeting of the Tri-Town Boards of Selectmen, Mattapoisett Town Administrator Michael Gagne announced that grant money provided to the Town of Mattapoisett by the Baker-Polito Administration’s Community Compact program would fund the initiative to review the regional school agreement, something that was discussed during prior meetings with school committees and town officials.

As pointed out by Gagne, the agreement has not been reviewed or revised in 24 years and is in need of modernization.

Gagne said he has been in contact with the Center of Local Government at UMass Boston, which is providing Mattapoisett with a work plan and schedule for early October to get the review underway.

“Their proposal is that they would come up with different options that they would present to the communities for discussion and deliberation and potential for choices,” said Gagne. “Hopefully we can get some answers to … questions that we haven’t had answers to.”

The two other towns would need to provide information as requested, and Superintendent Doug White has already been involved in discussions with Mattapoisett, Gagne stated.

“Excellent,” said Marion Town Administrator Paul Dawson. “So that’s a great thing. That’s wonderful, thank you for that. … This is something I think we’ve all been looking for and looking for a way, a path to get there.”

The selectmen also discussed its contract with ORCTV, which at times grew relatively contentious as Marion Selectman Norm Hills asserted the notion of the three boards exerting more control over the independent non-profit corporation.

The purpose of the meeting with ORCTV Station Director Rob Chiarito was to review information requested by the three towns pertaining to finances and programming, as the three towns are obligated within their contracts with Comcast and Verizon to make quarterly payments to ORCTV. There currently is no updated contract with ORCTV as Mattapoisett has not completed its negotiations with Verizon, and the boards did not meet last November as anticipated when the discussion about ORCTV first came up.

“We’re a kind of quasi-department because the payments come through the towns,” said Chiarito. “The agreement is not with us and the cable company, it’s with you and the cable company.”

Hills, who was not a selectman during the last time the three boards met, said his understanding was that ORCTV made a unilateral decision not to honor its contract with ORR; however, as Chiarito pointed out, there never was a “contract” with ORR.

“Let me correct that. Our agreement was a grant,” said Chiarito, and he urged Hills to review the recording of that meeting. “The grant was never meant to last forever,” he said, rather it was meant to be used as “seed money” for the school districts to establish a school TV production program of their own. “And they never did,” said Chiarito.

Hills said he thought the cable contract stated that ORCTV was supposed to have a contract with ORR. Chiarito told him “no.”

“It just says that we are supposed to provide a channel for education,” said Chiarito.

Another concern, said Hills, is that the towns don’t get to choose their own representatives for ORCTV’s advisory board or its board of directors. Hills referred to the Carver, Marion, Wareham Regional Refuse Disposal District, and compared it to ORCTV, saying, “We should be able to pick who our representatives are.” According to Hills, the selectmen should be in a position “where we know what’s going on and have some control other than just sending money.”

“We are an independent corporation, so I don’t understand why the town should pick the board,” said Chiarito, advising Hills that the towns get to choose the members of their own cable advisory board. The ORCTV boards are comprised of individuals nominated by its public membership and others on the board of directors.

Mattapoisett Selectman Jordan Collyer confirmed that, saying, “We don’t have any say … in accordance with every other corporation that exists in the Commonwealth.”

Collyer pointed to the contract where it states the towns should receive an annual report from ORCTV, and an audit of its operations and finances, and Chiarito said he had turned those into the towns. For Collyer, he stressed that the selectmen were entitled, not to an oversight of ORCTV, but to an understanding of its operations.

ORCTV has been performing annual reviews, not audits, Chiarito specified, saying that the corporation was advised that it would be fiscally irresponsible to spend $8,000 annually on an audit given its revenue.

“We’ve given you the reports every year,” said Chiarito.

For Rochester Town Administrator Suzanne Szyndlar, she wouldn’t agree to less than one full audit every two to three years, saying, “I personally would like to see an audit because we deal with a small non-profit. By the time there is a problem, everybody’s stuck holding the bag and wondering what went wrong.”

Marion Selectman Jon Waterman said he would be more comfortable with an annual audit.

“I don’t question the educational value,” said Waterman about ORCTV’s programming. He just wants to be certain, “Are we getting the best bang for our buck?”

Gagne suggested a peer review of ORCTV to assess efficiency and “to look at the totality of their operation.

“… And understand if – the money they have – is it being effectively used for what we are getting,” said Gagne. “Is it ineffective, is it just the right amount? Are there tweaks, are there industry practices … It’s not a bad idea to take a look at the operation.”

Hills said the contract states that ORCTV would have to fund the endeavor.

“I’m a big person on controls,” said Waterman. “An annual audit makes sense.”

Gagne suggested he, Szyndlar, and Dawson work together to produce a plan by October’s end for a review.

In the meantime, Hartley asked Chiarito to forward minutes of ORCTV’s quarterly meetings, and Chiarito invited anyone to attend them before turning it over to ORR Principal Mike Devoll to comment on ORCTV’s involvement with the high school.

“It’s been a great partnership for the high school,” said Devoll. “It’s what we wanted in an education component to inspire our students … and I’ve been thrilled [with ORCTV’s] willingness to work with schools to educate students. … I’m proud of the work that’s been done.”

Chiarito said the original grant to ORR did not get spread out into the elementary schools, as was the intent. “Now every school in the system is getting instruction,” said Chiarito. “So we do have a plan, and we are executing it, and we’d be happy to share it with anyone who wants to come in.”

Hartley stopped Hills from going any further, saying, “We are in a good place here. We’re gonna stop because we are in a very good place here.”

“I agree,” said Chiarito.

In other matters, Marion Public Health Nurse Kathleen Downey approached the three towns seeking leadership for a regionalized Emergency Dispensing Site at ORR that she was asked to establish back in 2014 by a state agent that has been corresponding with Downey. After a lengthy discussion, the three boards suggested the three boards of health should get involved, and each board of selectmen will approach their respective board of health, share the information with each town, and proceed from there.

Tri-Town Boards of Selectmen

By Jean Perry

 

Books and More Sale

The Friends of Plumb Library will be holding their annual “Books and More” Sale on Saturday, September 15from 9:00 am to 3:00 pm at the Fellowship Hall at the First Congregational Church of Rochester, 11 Constitution Way. There will be books for all ages and interests, plus DVDs, CDs, and games. The Junior Friends will be holding their bake sale at the same time. Volunteers are needed to set up on Friday, September 14 starting at 10:00 am to help set up the sale, and on Saturday, September 15 at 3:00 pm to take the sale down. Volunteers get 50% off their purchases. Contact the library at 508-763-8600 if you are interested.

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. Due to 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 65 Creek Road. The home at 65 Creek Road is an example of a c. 1830s Cape with Greek Revival elements. By 1855, this house was owned by John Briggs, a descendant of a family that first settled on nearby Little Neck in the late 17th century. Over time, the Briggs family ranked among the most prolific in Marion, producing a large number of seafarers. In the 1867 Plymouth County directory, 27 male members of the Briggs family are listed. By 1879, Andrew Jackson, a mariner, lived at this address. Jackson’s estate owned this property by 1903. His widow, Sarah M. Jackson, lived here until around 1920.