Tri-Town Schools Wrap Up FY18 Budgets, Calendar

All the numbers are in and all fiscal year 2018 school budgets have been approved, ready for Town Meeting acceptance in May.

The ORR School Committee was still talking about the Old Rochester Regional school district budget, the most contentious, during the March 23 joint meeting of the Tri-Town school committees.

“It wasn’t even level-service with that number,” said ORR School Committee Chairman Tina Rood before moving on from the subject.

The three towns firmly offered only a $320,000 increase for the ORR school budget this year, resulting in the committee increasing the number of School Choice slots to supplement a level-service budget.

The total FY18 operating budget for ORR is $18,093,215 – a $452,242 (2.56%) increase from FY17. The individual town assessments totaling $14,633,215 are as follows: Marion $4,431,698, up $229,287 from FY17; Mattapoisett $5,420,566, up $191,861 from last year; and Rochester $4,780,951, a decrease of $103,907 from FY17. The remainder of the budget is funded by other sources of revenue from the school district, including the increased number of School Choice slots that will add $5,000 in additional revenue for each student entering the district.

“The townspeople support our schools,” said Rood. “They believe in the work that’s being done here, and they expect us to put forth to them what we think is important in our schools.”

The Marion local school district budget is up $68,452, a mere 1.17%, totaling $5,929,108.

Mattapoisett’s budget, which is up $182,417 or 2.69%, totals $6,964,650.

In Rochester, the FY18 budget rose by $138,735, or 2.34%, to $6,076,537.

In all, the three towns spend a total of $37,063,510 on education in Tri-Town.

“All in all,” said School Business Administrator Patrick Spencer, “it’s a lot of money to help our schools and we’ll try to do our best.”

In other matters, the joint school committees voted to accept the school calendar for the 2017-2018 school year. Good Friday next year, March 30, has been scheduled as a day off from school.

The next meeting of the joint school committees is scheduled for Wednesday, May 10, at 6:30 pm in the junior high media room.

By Jean Perry

 

Students vs Staff

The Sippican School gymnasium was lit up the night of Thursday, March 23, for the annual sixth grade versus staff and parents basketball game. The adult team seemed to have fun giving the students a consistently hard time throughout, but in the end, it was the students who triumphed 37-33. Photos by Colin Veitch

 

Marion COA Learning and Leisure Lectures

All lectures begin at 12:45 pm at the Marion Music Hall, 164 Front Street, and are free and open to the community.

Monday, April 3: “Henry David Thoreau: Civil Disobedience.” Henry David Thoreau was an American poet, essayist, philosopher, naturalist and abolitionist. Professor of American Literature at UMass Dartmouth and Marion resident Charles White will present an informal lecture on Henry David Thoreau and his essay Civil Disobedience.

Monday, April 10: “Sippican School Jazz Band.” The philosophy of the music program at Sippican School is to expand each student’s musical education, demonstrate the benefits of consistent effort, instill the need for accountability and team work in each student, and to have FUN. Under the direction of Hannah Moore, we will be treated to an afternoon of music from the talented youth of the Sippican School Jazz Band.

Monday, April 24: “New England Pie: History Under a Crust.” Pie has been a delectable centerpiece of Yankee tables since Europeans first landed on New England’s shores in the seventeenth century. With a satisfying variety of savory and sweet, author Robert Cox takes a bite out of the history of pie and pie-making in the region. From the crackling topmost crust to the bottom layer, explore the origin and evolution of popular ingredients like the Revolutionary roots of the Boston cream.

MAC Adds New Art Class

Fundamentals of Drawing (ages 12-15): Mondays, 3:30 – 5:30 pm at the MAC Studio; April 3 to June 5 (8 weeks)* Note: No class April 17 or May 29; Instructor: Catherine Carter. Learn the basics of drawing from observation and imagination using both graphite and colored pencils. We will focus on shape, value, and composition, creating projects with a realistic, three-dimensional appearance. A class of fun and discovery. The instructor, Catherine Carter, has taught drawing, painting and design at colleges and museums for 15 years. She has a Master of Fine Arts degree in painting from the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth and currently works at Hatch Street Studios in New Bedford. Her artwork may be viewed at her website: CatherineCarterPainting.com. Note: A minimum of 5 students is required. There will be no class on Monday, April 17 or Monday, May 29. Tuition for the class is $180 for MAC members* and $195 for non-members (supplies not included). *Current membership required for discount. The 2016-2017 Membership Year runs August 1, 2016 – July 31, 2017. To register online, you may visit http://www.marionartcenter.org/about/register.

Reptiles Of Massachusetts

There are many misunderstandings between humans and scaled creatures, which has led to problems for the reptiles. Meet some of Massachusetts’ resident reptiles and find out about human threats to their survival. Program date is Friday, April 28, from 7:00 to 8:00 pm at the Marion Natural History Museum, 8 Spring Street, Marion. Cost is $10 for members, $12 for nonmembers, and $5 for children under 12. This program is supported in part by a grant from the Marion Cultural Council, a local agency which is supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency.

Rochester Memorial Budget Set

The Rochester School Committee met on March 23 with a focus on the local school budget.

Superintendent Doug White presented the $6,076,537 FY18 budget, which is a 2.34% or $138,735 increase over FY17. The increases comprise: $115,081 (6.55%) for special education; $21,793 (0.75%) in professional staffing, $7,251 (2.58%) in regular day transportation; and an unspecified ‘other’ category for $7,281, a new line item. Also noted in the details was a negative $12,671 savings in maintenance and utilities.

White said, “Special education is $1,871,771 and regular day $4,204,766.” In 2016, White’s data showed that the school system served 84 students in special education.

Director of Student Services Michael Nelson explained that towns must pay the first $50,000 in special education costs for a student, and then the district is subsequently reimbursed up to 75% for costs in excess of that amount.

White also said the budget reflects a request to fund a .3 part-time health instructor to achieve health directives identified through the Healthy Tri-town Coalition.

Assistant Superintendent Dr. Elise Frangos discussed the importance of early health intervention. “Challenges in student choices start in the elementary grades … choices in friendships, nutrition and how the body works…” she explained. Frangos said it’s too late to start helping students make good choices in the absence of a program at the elementary level. “We found it’s too late by the time they reach junior high.” With the health educator in the elementary grades, she said, “Kids are going to enter the junior high knowing how to make better choices.”

The budget was unanimously passed.

School Principal Derek Medeiros reported that school enrollment in 2016-17 stood at 471 and that he’s seeing an uptick for the coming year.

Regarding the upcoming MCAS testing, Medeiros said the teachers had completed a run-through with the students using Chromebook technology. He felt confident the students would be ready to navigate the testing platform.

School Committee Chairman Tina Rood congratulated the Destination Imagination teams for their fine performances and said that, of the 14 teams in the district, eight were moving on to the state level competitions.

Frangos said that meetings are planned in the coming weeks to introduce parents to the new report card system that begins in the fall. Meetings are scheduled to take place at Sippican School on March 29 at 6:30 pm and at Rochester Memorial School on April 26 at 6:30 pm. Parents may elect to attend any meetings in the district.

The next meeting of the Rochester School Committee is scheduled for April 5 at 4:15 pm at Rochester Memorial School in the main office conference room.

By Marilou Newell

 

ORR Spending May Be Studied

It has been widely reported that those with their finger on the financial pulse of their respective towns have been direct in telling the ORR School Committee members that their budget request was excessive. In turn, the school committee has been equally direct in saying, “We need more.”

However, on March 21, the ORR School Committee did vote to accept a budget increase of $320,000, a sum falling far short of the $800,000 plus they were seeking. The FY18 ORR school budget was set at $18,093,215. Mattapoisett’s share of the total school district budget is $5,420,566 for FY18, with total school aid certified at $987,558.

As the dust settled, Mattapoisett Town Administrator Michael Gagne moved towards focusing on the future – a future he believes holds the rising specter of financial disaster for the Tri-Towns. Thus, the tone was set for the March 23 meeting of the Mattapoisett Finance Committee.

When asked about recent ORR School Committee meetings, Gagne said, “OPEB (other post-employment benefits) to me is probably the biggest problem to come…. It has all the potential to impact bond ratings.” Gagne said that OPEB stands at $21 million for ORR, without one dollar being set aside in a trust fund.

Gagne explained that state and federal regulations allow municipalities to set up OPEB trust funds that can yield as much as five percent in annual interest, a much higher percentage than allowed in other saving plans. “Those trust funds can’t be touched for anything other than paying for OPEB,” he said.

“The retirement pool is getting bigger … people are retiring younger. That means they are not eligible for Medicare so we have to pay the same insurance rate as we would for active employees … that is costly.” And without money set aside to pay these rising costs, Gagne believes there is the potential for financial ruin to the towns.

And as for soaring health insurance costs, Gagne said rates climbed 11 percent this year.

Gagne told the FinCom members that OPEB needs to be a line item in the school budget. “It’s not something whimsical.”

Gagne then asked the support of the committee in seeking the selectmen’s approval to move forward with an ‘operations and fiscal strategic review’ of ORR district spending in partnership with Rochester and Marion.

“I want to do a five-year study of the budget…. Let’s get a professional to come back with some recommendations,” said Gagne. “We need to drill down…. This is the way to get the towns the information they need to make decisions as to where we are going in the future,” Gagne stated. The committee members gave their support.

FinCom member Betty Pennington asked, “Isn’t it the responsibility of the school committee to allocate their money?”

“Yes, they have complete autonomy. They can move money around as they want,” Gagne replied.

Gary Johnson, another committee member, interjected, “But the problem is OPEB and retirement.”

Gagne said that several years ago Mattapoisett had added a line item to fund its municipal OPEB liability. Of the ORR budget, he said, “We need analysis … we can’t go another two years [without savings] … we have got to plan.”

Johnson asked, “Can’t we say, ‘You build an OPEB plan or we’ll do it for you and take it out of your budget?’”

Gagne responded, “Yes.”

When asked about a Proposition 2½ override, Gagne stated, “That would be a Band-Aid … we need to identify the problems, achieve fiscal prudence, and tackle the problem.”

The Tri-Town board of selectmen representative during the ORR school negotiations was Mattapoisett Selectman Paul Silva. In a follow-up, Silva added to the school budget conversation.

Silva said a request to have a bifurcated health insurance plan for new hires had failed to pass. “This year we needed a 50-50 split.” He also expressed concern that the district’s Excess & Deficiencies budget line item, a reserve fund, Silva explained, that is set aside for emergencies and had once held $800,000, had been “drained away” over the years to balance the ORR school budget. “That’s not how that is supposed to be used,” Silva said.

In other FinCom business, Gagne provided the members with an administration budget that includes increases to group health insurance – up $202,000; Medicare tax up $35,000; and workman’s compensation up $21,088. Gagne also said small increases were needed for the tree warden – $2,164 to cover tree maintenance and removals; shellfish propagation – $4,000; and $6,576 for the natural resources department primarily for shellfish policing he said. Ending on a positive note, Gagne pointed to savings in utility expenses to the tune of $20,000.

Meeting with the committee members on this night was new hire Heidi Chuckran, CPA, to discuss the town accounting department budget. Chuckran is the former City of Brockton auditor whose experience and expertise were lauded by Gagne.

Chuckran said that Mattapoisett “is a hidden gem” and that “not many towns fund their OPEB,” a critical area she said.

Chuckran presented a level-funded budget for her department with small upticks in seminars, conferences, and statewide travel. She said these were necessary to maintain her certifications.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Finance Committee is scheduled for March 30 at 6:30 pm in the town hall conference room.

By Marilou Newell

 

Open Mic Night at the MAC

The Marion Art Center on March 25 hosted an Open Mic Night, featuring 11 performers who brought their talent to about 50 in the audience. Photos by Felix Perez

 

James Francis Carr

James Francis Carr, 86, of Marion, Massachusetts and Lakeland, Florida passed away peacefully on Wednesday March 22, 2017. He was the husband of Yucel O. Carr and the son of the late James J. and Yvonne (Bergeron) Carr. He was born in Dorchester, Massachusetts and grew up in Springfield. After serving as a Sergeant in the U.S. Army during the Korean War, Jim attended Boston University where he received his Bachelor’s degree in Communication and Journalism. After graduating from Boston University, he moved to Portsmouth, New Hampshire where he met Yucel. They married in 1958. While in Portsmouth, he worked as a DJ for a local radio station before landing a job at the Portsmouth Herald. In 1965 they moved to Marion, Massachusetts. He was employed by the New Bedford Standard-Times as a writer and editor for many years until his retirement. He was a communicant of St. Rita’s Church and received the Marian Medal: Celebrating Our Humble Servants for his service to the church. He loved the theater and was active in the Portsmouth Players Theater group and the Marion Art Center. He was an avid Boston sports fan and golfer. He coached and umpired youth baseball for several years.

He and his wife enjoyed cruising and traveled to many exotic places.

Survivors include his wife Yucel; three children, Karen DellaCioppa and her husband James of Mattapoisett, Laurie Green and her husband Timothy of Middleboro, and James Carr and his wife Jean of Tewksbury; a sister. Kathryn D’Amato and her husband Neil of Virginia; six grandchildren, Jennifer Ripley, Timothy Green, Andrew Green, Brian Green, Jeffrey Carr, and Emily DellaCioppa; and several nieces and nephews.

His Funeral was held on Monday April 3, 2017 from the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home for Funerals, 50 County Rd., Route 6, Mattapoisett, followed by his Funeral Mass at St. Anthony’s Church, Mattapoisett. Burial was in the Massachusetts National Cemetery, Bourne. Visiting hours were held on Sunday April 2. In lieu of flowers, remembrances may be made to Cornerstone Hospice Foundation, 2445 Lane Park Rd., Tavares, FL 32778 (donate@cshospice.org) or the Alzheimer’s Association, 480 Pleasant St., Watertown, MA 02472 (alz.org). For guestbook, please visit www.saundersdwyer.com.

Joann (Klappholz) Totten

Joann (Klappholz) Totten, 51, of Walpole, MA passed away peacefully on March 25, at her home surrounded by her family following a courageous battle with cancer. Joann was the beloved husband of Glenn Totten and devoted mother to daughters Mei and Lia Totten. Joann is survived by her parents Bruce and Linda Klappholz of Mattapoisett, MA, her brother Douglas Klappholz, his wife Catherine and their children Jakub and Chloe of Vancouver, WA and her mother-in-law Patricia Peterson of Dennisport, MA and many aunts, uncles, cousins and close friends.

Born in Far Rockaway, NY, Joann graduated from Maloney High School (Meriden CT) 1983 and Eastern Connecticut State University (Windham, CT) 1987. She began her career as a Radiation Therapist at Brigham and Women’s Dana Farber Cancer Institute, a field she entered to honor the memory of her grandmother. Joann was dedicated and passionate about her profession and would spend the next 18 years caring for others. She took tremendous pride in the care of her patients and was honored to work with a dedicated team of professionals that shared her passion for giving. Ironically, it would be these same professionals who would come to her aid to help her face her own battle against this disease.

Joann will always be remembered for her courage and dignity, the inspiration she portrayed, and her appreciation for all the caring people who made her journey home a lesson in love and humanity. We will miss her beautiful smile and that special something that she shared with those who knew her.

A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated Friday March 30th at Blessed Sacrament Church, Walpole. Interment at Knollwood Memorial Park, Canton, MA. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to the “Totten Strong Fund” to help with future educational expenses for her daughter’s Mei and Lia. Checks can be made payable to Totten Strong Fund and sent to Rockland Federal Credit Union, 564 Main Street Walpole, MA 02081. For guestbook please visit: thomasfuneralhomes.com.