SLT Post-Thanksgiving Dog Walk

Walk off that post-Thanksgiving stuffing and turkey and get some fresh air with man’s best friend – your dog! Join Yelena Sheynin, Sippican Lands Trust’s Head Steward, for our fifth annual Dog Walk on Sunday, November 26 at 10:00 am at our White Eagle property.

All dogs and owners are welcome. Dogs must be leashed and under the owner’s control at all time.

The event begins at our White Eagle property kiosk. White Eagle is located off of Route 6 in Marion. Take Parlowtown Road across from the town cemetery and follow road until you reach the cul-de-sac. Bear left onto the dirt road and follow past the abandoned cranberry bog on your right. Parking is available directly past the bog and along the dirt roadside. The kiosk is a short walk beyond.

The walk is free and no registration is required. Only the worst weather will cancel an SLT walk. If a walk is canceled, then information will be posted to SLT’s website and Facebook page. For directions or further information, visit sippicanlandstrust.org or call Sippican Lands Trust at 508-748-3080.

Tobacco Regulations

Dear Editor:

First, let me thank you for consistently covering the Marion Board of Health’s (BOH) proposal to expand tobacco regulations, including the banning of flavored products like menthol cigarettes to adults while, at the same time, leaving non-menthol/non-flavored cigarettes for sale. The adult public needs to know that their rights are in jeopardy and that the BOH is proposing regulations that treat some adults differently than others.

CRR wants to make you aware that we will be reaching out to adults in Marion to directly engage them in the conversation that has been underway at the BOH for over a year. A direct mail piece will be sent to adult Marion residents, asking them to tell the BOH about their concern for losing their rights on what could be a very slippery slope for all adult decision making. CRR believes that the age-of-majority is a critical legal and social concept in our state and our democracy. We also believe that there are standards for treating legal, adult-only products, and that those standards should apply equally to all legal products with similar health profiles. In addition to the mailing, there will also be an online petition for gathering signatures and information placed in social media. For a community that recently voted to legalize marijuana, CRR believes adults in Marion need to fully understand the threat to their rights and the BOH must hear more directly from the community.

We also wish to note that CRR did not bring up the “race card” as some BOH members have suggested in your paper. Rather, the BOH did so when they proposed their regulations which treat consumers differently based on their product preference. CRR does find it disturbing, as testimony from others have pointed out in public hearings, that the BOH seeks to isolate products preferred by minorities and the LGBTQ community while they preserve nearly identical products used predominantly by the white community.

While the BOH claims they do not intend to segregate consumers, they are indeed doing so. Furthermore, comments attempting to dismiss the social and racial implications of the proposed regulations from individuals like Chris Bathin, director of the Tobacco Control Resource Center at the Public Health Institute, openly recognize that the BOH proposals do not address tobacco possession (and thereby do nothing to keep minors who possess cigarettes from using them). Mr. Bathin tries to minimize the experience-based reality presented by minority law enforcement at the public hearings while he also fails to acknowledge the subtle fact that a ban on minority preferred products implicitly tell those consumers that they are not welcome to shop in Marion stores – a fact we as retailers find troubling. Consequently, CRR feels compelled to reiterate that we welcome and serve ALL who come into our shops, and we will do all we can to offer them the products they seek.

While we applaud the desire to make fully informed decisions, CRR sincerely hopes that the BOH will soon recognize that the longer they drag out their decision making on their proposed tobacco regulations, the more they create an unpredictable environment that harms a retailer’s ability to serve the community. We believe it would be much more effective to work with retailers to educate the entire community about tobacco, rather than penalize adults, and we stand ready to help with that process. With the 100% compliance rate maintained by local retailers for all tobacco regulations over the last five years, one would think retailers have proven themselves to be worthy partners when it comes to the desire to prevent minors from accessing tobacco while preserving adults’ rights. Now it’s the BOH’s turn.

Please do not hesitate to contact me if I can answer any additional questions.

Sincerely,

Dennis Lane, Executive Director

Coalition for Responsible Retailing

 

The views expressed in the “Letters to the Editor” column are not necessarily those of The Wanderer, its staff or advertisers. The Wanderer will gladly accept any and all correspondence relating to timely and pertinent issues in the great Marion, Mattapoisett and Rochester area, provided they include the author’s name, address and phone number for verification. We cannot publish anonymous, unsigned or unconfirmed submissions. The Wanderer reserves the right to edit, condense and otherwise alter submissions for purposes of clarity and/or spacing considerations. The Wanderer may choose to not run letters that thank businesses, and The Wanderer has the right to edit letters to omit business names. The Wanderer also reserves the right to deny publication of any submitted correspondence.

Bourne Wareham Art Association

The Bourne Wareham Art Association will hold its next meeting on Tuesday, November 21 at BBs Bar & Grille, Function Room, 2424 Cranberry Highway, Wareham, 6:00 to 8:00 pm.

Following a brief business meeting to discuss the December 1-3 Art Show and Sale, Sarah Brown will demonstrate soft pastel painting. She has been painting in pastels for around eight years and studied in workshops in Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Sarah will show various techniques that she has acquired to improve your paintings. Sarah has been awarded several prizes in competitive shows and done several demos, most recently at Elizabeth Taber Library in Marion. She teaches pastels at her Marion studio.

The Bourne-Wareham Art Association will be presenting their Annual Holiday Art Sale on Friday, December 1 through Sunday, December 3 at the Wareham Historical Society’s Methodist Meetinghouse, 495 Main Street, Wareham.

Commencing with an opening reception on Friday night at 5:00 pm, the BWAA members will be selling their original artwork and crafts through Sunday afternoon at 4:00 pm. On display will be oil, acrylic, and watercolor paintings, pastel paintings, photography, prints, and handmade craft items – all for sale at reasonable prices. Additionally, BWAA members will be on hand to discuss their creations and provide tips for artists in our community.

A portion of all sales over the weekend will go to BWAA’s annual Scholastic Art Award Fund. This fund supports the awards given each spring to two high school seniors pursuing advanced degrees in accredited schools after graduation. This tradition of giving back to the artistic community has been going on for over 50 years and continues in 2018.

The Holiday Art Sale hours are Friday, 5:00 to 9:00 pm, Saturday and Sunday, 10:00 am to 4:00 pm. The public is welcome throughout the weekend.

Veterans Day a Celebration For Those Who Serve

Old Hammondtown School’s cafetorium was filled nearly to capacity as the community came out in force to celebrate veterans on Friday, November 10.

After the Mattapoisett Police Color Guard presented the colors, American Legion Florence Eastman Post 280 Commander Michael Lamoureux led the Pledge of Allegiance, and the post’s Chaplain Richard Langhoff led everyone in prayer, Mattapoisett’s native Miss Massachusetts Jillian Zucco gave a pitch-perfect rendition of the National Anthem.

Representative and Mattapoisett resident William Straus said that what we have learned about veterans is just how “…difficult adjusting after serving can be.…” He said we must all “express our gratitude to those who have served,” and added, “…that we can and should think of ways to help our veterans.” Straus’ comments were followed by Old Hammondtown School’s band performing “You’re a Grand Old Flag.”

Selectman Tyler Macallister talked about Mattapoisett’s support of veterans and active duty service members as witnessed by those who attended the day’s event, while Tri-Town Veterans’ Agent, veteran, and post member Barry Denham said, “As I get older and look out at all these young people, I realize that they will be the veterans of the future.” He said he hoped that 60 years from now, “Veterans Day is as important as it is today.”

The Showstoppers sang a tender song titled “American Tears,” followed by an annual tradition – George Randall’s extemporaneous reciting of the Gettysburg Address.

Randall’s father learned the speech over a century ago, and he taught it to his son, George, who has carried on the tradition ever since. Lamoureux wondered aloud, “I don’t know who is going to do this after you, George.”

Center School’s chorus sang “This Land Is Your Land,” followed by a violin solo by the petite violinist Miss Tessa Ripley who performed “American Patrol.”

Guest speaker Dr. James Hickey, retired U.S. Navy commander, was introduced and invited to the podium where he spoke about the impact one person can have on society. He said that those who serve are “a tribute to our great nation and our ability to gather.”

“I’ve been around the world,” said Hickey. “Not all have the right.”

Hickey said he wanted to talk about veterans and those who serve today, not his career. He said World War I was supposed to be the end of such conflicts – ‘the war to end all wars’ – but there have been many more that have followed.

“The common element was the men and women who served in uniform honorably,” Hickey said. “Most came home. Some did not.”

Hickey explained for the benefit of the children in attendance the difference between Memorial Day and Veterans Day, a day that was championed by Raymond Weeks, a WWII veteran.

Weeks successfully petitioned the federal government to expand Armistice Day into what we now know as Veterans Day back in 1947. For his efforts, he received the Presidential Citizens Medal, second only to the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

“One person can make a difference,” Hickey said.

Quoting from President John F. Kennedy’s famous January 20, 1961 Inaugural Address when he uttered the unforgettable phrase “…ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country,” Hickey reminded those in attendance that Kennedy’s speech went on to say, “My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man.”

Hickey said that only through service would humankind know freedom.

Hickey went on to say that it was easy to focus on heroes, yet behind all those heroes were thousands of others who served with honor.

“Many millions have simply done their jobs for us,” said Hickey, adding that we must not lose sight that the “mission is not complete,” “the torch has been passed,” “the young must stand ready.”

Hickey concluded his comments by quoting Winston Churchill who is credited with saying, “We sleep soundly in our beds because rough men stand ready in the night to visit violence on those who would do us harm.” Before leaving the podium he added, “We are a beacon to people around the world.”

Zucco and the Showstoppers closed out the observances with a harmonious singing of “God Bless America,” followed by a retiring of the colors.

Mattapoisett Boy Scout Troop 53 completed the day’s events with a ceremony at Dunseith Gardens where they retired some 500 flags by the standards of the U.S. Flag Code – by burning, after it has been folded to code. This solemn, but necessary, ceremony has been performed by Troop 53 for several years. If ever you have a flag that needs to be retired, you may place it in the box located in front of Mattapoisett Town Hall.

By Marilou Newell

‘Undocumented’

Seventeen years ago, Priscilla Gamboa arrived in the United States as a babe in arms. She attended kindergarten, graduated from high school, and is now studying at Bristol Community College. She is a “Dreamer” – one of the approximately 8,000 people classified as Deferred Act for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) in Massachusetts.

On November 8, Gamboa shared her personal story at a presentation hosted by a partnership of the Tri-Town League of Women Voters and the Elizabeth Taber Public Library held in the Marion Music Hall.

Gamboa was part of a panel discussing immigration issues that included Executive Director of the Immigrants’ Assistance Center in New Bedford Helena DaSilva Hughes, Executive Director of the Community Economic Development Center (CEDC) of New Bedford Corinn Williams, and Rolando David Oliva of the Temporary Protected Status Committee.

“DACA allowed us to work and go to school, but now we are in limbo,” Gamboa said as her dark expressive eyes held back tears. She said that since the Trump Administration recently cancelled the Obama-era act, the stress of uncertainty is high. Gamboa’s time in the U.S. ends in 18 months.

“I don’t know what’s going happen,” said Gamboa.

That was the theme that each presenter expressed: the theme of uncertainty.

In the absence of an immigration policy that could help the undocumented, the stress from uncertainty is weighing heavily on thousands of families.

Hughes, whose family emigrated here from Portugal through a sponsorship program when she was a child, has been working with immigrants in the area for decades, but she said the current political climate makes it increasingly difficult. “Since the election, we’ve had an increase of two thousand people seeking services.”

Hughes said the Immigrants’ Assistance Center helps people in transition with such services as translations, the health care system, legal matters, and ways to achieve legal immigration status.

Hughes explained that the situation of undocumented workers in New Bedford was fully exposed ten years ago when a factory in the city was raided after it was discovered that nearly all the workers were illegal aliens. Most of those workers were women, many pregnant, many with children at home.

That single event, she said, helped to shape the services her organization provides today.

“We tell [undocumented working] parents they have to have a plan in case they are taken away,” Hughes said. “They have to have a citizen or someone legal that they trust who can take care of the children in case they get picked up.”

On the bright side, Hughes said that many people holding green cards and are in the U.S. lawfully with permanent residency status are now seeking citizenship.

“We’ve had five hundred new cases of people wanting to become citizens because they are scared of what might happen to their green cards,” Hughes said.

Recognizing the need to provide more services to the children of undocumented workers – children who may themselves be undocumented – Hughes has launched a program that brings students from Tabor Academy who are studying Spanish into the New Bedford school system to help non-English speaking students with conversational English. Several of those Tabor students were in attendance on this night.

Williams said the CEDC also works with undocumented people and talked about the positive economic influence immigrants have had, especially in areas of New Bedford that have been blighted for years.

“We work at the grassroots level providing English classes and helping them start businesses,” she said. According to Williams, the majority of people seeking services from the CEDC are migrating from the Cape Verdean islands, Mexico, and South America. “New arrivals are injecting new life into New Bedford,” she believes.

Williams said the CEDC “creates opportunities for new immigrants, helping them build lives, buy homes, navigate systems.”

“There is hope,” said Williams. “I see people starting new lives.”

Oliva, who not only works on the TPS Committee, has himself held temporary protected status for years. Speaking Spanish and translated through Gamboa, he said, “The program has been around for twenty years, but now it’s under fire.”

“It’s not being renewed,” he said. “That caused us to organize.”

The TPS program has allowed people from Nicaragua, Honduras, and El Salvador to enter the country legally for 18-month periods due to internal conflicts and catastrophic natural disasters. Every 18 months the immigrant must request an extension. Those extension applications come with a $495 fee. This program was also recently slated for discontinuation.

Oliva said families who have been here for years have established homes, started families, and worked within the economic structure and laws of the communities they live in, yet they now face deportation.

“The kids can stay if they are legal, but the parents will have to go back. It will split up families,” he said. Oliva said that many of the countries that immigrants would be forced to return to have high crime rates, gangs, and no job opportunities.

It is a myth that immigrants receive public benefits, said Williams. They are not eligible for food stamps or other government funded programs, she stated, and oftentimes undocumented workers suffer from “wage theft” where employers don’t pay overtime.

“The workers have fear – they don’t say anything.” She said that because of the types of jobs immigrants are willing to take, those jobs tend to be the most dangerous; thus, the number of injuries is high in this population. “They live in the shadows facing these issues,” she said.

Hughes said undocumented people “have no path to getting a green card.”

“We need immigration reform to give them a legal pathway,” said Hughes.

The current estimates put the number of undocumented people in the U.S. around 12 million.

Hughes also said most undocumented people originally entered the country legally but then overstayed their visitor status versus people who arrived illegally.

“We are a country of laws,” Hughes stressed, saying that immigration reform is what she hopes to achieve, urging the audience to contact their representatives in the legislature.

For more information, contact the Immigrants’ Assistance Center at 58 Crapo Street, New Bedford, www.ImmigrantsAssistanceCenter.org ; the Community Economic Development Center, www.cedcnewbedford.org, 1285 Acushnet Avenue, New Bedford; or UMass Immigration Law Clinic, www.umassd.edu/law/clinics/immigration-law.

By Marilou Newell

 

The Noise On Noises Off!

It’s that time of year once again! This weekend, the ORRHS Drama Club is proud to present their 2017 fall production, Noises Off!

This year’s annual production is a comedy centered around the shenanigans of a dysfunctional show cast throughout their six-week run. Over the three acts, the audience sees the evolution – or rather, disintegration – of the fictional cast’s relationships and of their play.

“Act One is the longest as it shows the cast the rehearsal before opening night, and sets up all the background information you need to know about each character,” explained Alice Bednarczyk. She plays Belinda Blair, a cheerful yet gossipy actress. “Act Two takes place a month after Act One, and the entire set is turned around so you see all the mayhem occurring between the characters ‘backstage.’

“Act Two has minimal talking from most of the characters, hence the name ‘Noises Off.’” She continued, “Act Three takes place three months after Act One, where everyone hates each other and everything that could possibly get messed up, gets messed up.”

Because of the limited number of parts in Noises Off, there are two separate casts performing the show over the four-day period.

On Thursday and Saturday, the cast consists of Alice Bednarczyk, Bethany Cabral, Luke Couto, Lauren Gonsalves, Isaac Hartley, Christian Hotte, Grace Mastroianni, Kate Marsden, Elise Mello, and Chris Savino.

On Friday night and Sunday’s matinee, the cast is Nick Claudio, Lucas Faulkner, Elle Gendreau, Paul Kippenberger, Cuyler Matthieu, Katie MacLean, Julia Melloni, Ceci Prefontaine, Jack Roussell, and Andrew Steele.

Both casts of this quirky production are represented in this week’s quirky cover of The Wanderer.

“I’m so thrilled for this show because it’s unlike any other,” said Lauren Gonsalves. “Both casts are extremely talented and find new ways to play out the jokes every night, so that even though we see the same scenes over and over, the whole club is still dying of laughter every time.”

Gonsavles continued, “I really think that audiences will be shocked by how hilarious a high school drama club can be. Even regular visitors will be buying tickets for every night.”

Drama Club President Chris Savino said, “I think the show is hilarious. I sit and watch my fellow cast mates perform, and I am always dying of laughter. I think the cast is perfect.”

“Everyone works so well together,” Savino said, “and by the end of this process, we have become very tightknit and we all know each other’s strengths and weaknesses after this amazing rehearsal process, and we help each other learn off of that. It has been the most amazing show of my high school experience so far and I can’t wait for everyone to see it.”

Noises Off! runs Thursday, November 16 ,through Saturday, November 18, at 7:30 pm, with a matinee performance at 2:00 pm on Sunday, November 19. Tickets are $10 for students and seniors, and $12 for the general public. They can be purchased at the Marion General Store in Marion, Pen and Pendulum in Mattapoisett, and Plumb Corner Market in Rochester. ORRHS students can also purchase $5 student tickets in the cafeteria this Friday.

By Jo Caynon

Soap Box Derby

Marion Cub Scouts Pack 32 is having a Soap Box Derby on Holmes Street in Marion on Saturday, November 18 from 9:00 am to 1:00 pm with a rain date of Sunday, November 19.

Scouts will be racing our homemade Soap Box Derby Cars down Holmes Street in Marion. From 9:00 am – 12:00 pm, our scouts will be racing but from 12:00 – 1:00 pm, we will open up the street to family members, potential scouts, scouts in the area and other community members to race down Holmes Street. This is a great opportunity to meet Marion Cub Scouts and their families, to try out our carts or just cheer on the boys! There is still time for boys in Kindergarten to Grade 5 to join us. Remember in the summer of 2018, Cub Scouts will welcome females in our pack. This is a great chance to see what Cub Scouts is all about.

House Fire on Meadowbrook Lane

At approximately 06:47, the Mattapoisett Dispatch Center received a 911 call reporting a structure fire at 28 Meadowbrook Lane. The Mattapoisett Fire department was dispatched with a working fire assignment. The Chief Andrew Murray arrived on scene and reported heavy fire showing from the residence. The Chief immediately called for a second alarm fire assignment bringing in mutual aid companies from Fairhaven, Marion, and Rochester to the scene. Acushnet Fire was called in to cover the station and remainder of the town during the fire. The fire took four engine companies and thirty firefighters from four communities to get under control in approximately thirty minutes. Water had to be shuttled in from the closest hydrant which was over two miles away. Extensive overhaul was completed to assure there wasn’t any fire extension. Fire crews remained on scene for the majority of the day assisting the homeowner and investigating the cause. The fire is under investigation at this time. No injuries were reported. Damages are estimated to be around three hundred thousand dollars. The Red Cross was called in to help the two displaced residents.

Mattapoisett Fire Depatment Press Release

Photos Courtesy Fairhaven Fire Depatment

Robert E. Wenstrom

Robert E. Wenstrom, 89, of Mattapoisett died November 13, 2017 at St. Luke’s Hospital surrounded by his family after a courageous battle with kidney disease.

He was the husband of the late Martha D. (Delano) Wenstrom, with whom he shared 61 years of marriage.

Born in New Bedford, the son of the late Harold E. and Helen E. (Tinkham) Wenstrom, he lived in Mattapoisett most of his life.

Mr. Wenstrom began his forestry career with the Massachusetts Division of Forests and Parks, Department of Natural Resources in 1954 when he was assigned to Myles Standish Forest. He then worked at Shawme-Crowell State Forest before retiring as senior supervisor from Massasoit State Park. Mr. Wenstrom was also a volunteer fire fighter with the Mattapoisett Fire Department.

He was a member of the Machaucum Club.

In retirement, he enjoyed vacationing in Maine with his wife. He enjoyed spending time with friends on the Mattapoisett town wharf. Mr. Wenstrom also enjoyed spending time with his family, fishing, biking and walking.
He served in the U.S. Navy during World War II and was a member of the Florence Eastman American Legion in Mattapoisett.

Survivors include his 2 daughters, Laurie Niemiec of Mattapoisett and Pamela Archambault and her husband Paul of Fairhaven; 3 grandchildren, Nichole Sullivan, Heather Beaulieu and Kellie Archambault; and 2 great-grandchildren, Kaia and Bria.

He was the brother of the late Richard Wenstrom and Olive Groves.

His visiting hours will be held on Saturday, November 18th from 1-4 PM with a prayer service at 3:15 PM in the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home for Funerals, 50 County Rd., Route 6, Mattapoisett. Burial will be private. In lieu of flowers, remembrances may be made to the Wounded Warrior Project, P.O. Box 758516 Topeka, KS 66675. For directions and guestbook. please visit www.saundersdwyer.com.

Richard J. Mello

Richard J. Mello, age 76 of New Bedford, passed away on Wednesday, June 28, 2017 at Massachusetts General Hospital. He was the beloved husband of Patricia (Arruda) and son of the late Evangeline (Prenda) and Joseph Mello.

Mr. Mello was born in New Bedford, MA. He graduated from New Bedford High School as well as Southeastern Massachusetts University where he obtained a degree in education. He was an art teacher at the Rochester, Marion and Mattapoisett Elementary Schools for 10 years and also taught art at ORR Jr. High School for 30 years.

He is survived by his wife Patricia; son, Jason and his wife, Nicole; daughter, Sara; 2 granddaughters, Alexis and Brooke; a sister, Beverly and her husband, Larry Fields; 3 nephews, Jeff Fields, Rick Fields and Adam Mello. He was also the brother of the late Elizabeth Mello.

According to his wishes, he was cremated. A memorial service will be held in the ORR auditorium on Sunday, Dec 3rd from 1-3pm.