‘Seahorsing’Around Before Harbor Days

There’s a sense of excitement in Mattapoisett during the week of Harbor Days each year. On Saturday, the tent was up at Shipyard Park, and tables and chairs were still stacked, waiting for someone to set them up for their first use.

The Aardvark was out and about town this weekend waving at passersby, strolling through Shipyard Park, and stopping by to say hello to Salty the Seahorse and to ‘seahorse around’ and frolic in Dunseith Park, excited about Harbor Days, especially since he will finally get his chance to experience the splendor of Harbor Days for himself instead of just reading about it in The Wanderer. The Aardvark this year will be making intermittent appearances throughout the weekend during Harbor days (weather permitting, of course, since aardvarks hate hot weather).

This year, all of us at The Wanderer will also have the chance to join in on the fun instead of just doing what we always do, ‘wandering’ around looking for that great shot and taking notes about all the fun everybody else is having.

The Wanderer will have its own booth at the Harbor Days craft fair this Saturday and Sunday, July 16-17, from 9:00 am to 6:00 pm. Come by and spin The Wanderer ‘Wheel of Fortune’ we will have set up and win Wanderer merchandise and prizes! We’ll be donating all of our proceeds to the Mattapoisett Lions Club at the end of the weekend!

So stop over, say hello and meet The Wanderer staff who work hard all year bringing you Tri-Town news and event announcements and, if you happen to ‘Find the Aardvark,’ take a selfie and post it to our Facebook page for more chances to win prizes.

Happy Harbor Days, everyone!

By Jean Perry

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Raccoon Tests Positive for Rabies

A raccoon that attacked a resident in Mattapoisett on Friday, July 8, subsequently tested positive for rabies on Monday.

Animal Control Officer Kathy Massey, assisted by Kelly Massey, Fairhaven ACO, captured the raccoon after a long chase that started at the Mattapoisett Library where a large group of children was ushered inside for safety, and led the animal control officers through the village and finally up a tree on the corner of Beacon Street and Marion Road, but not before the creature attacked a resident out gardening in her yard.

“That’s the first time I’ve ever seen a raccoon act like that,” said Kathy Massey during a Monday phone conversation.

How she described what happened on Friday was nothing less than Kafkaesque.

“We didn’t know where this thing went,” said Massey. “But it was acting sick…. Lethargic, dopey.”

And unless it is springtime and the raccoon is looking for food to feed its young, the raccoon wasn’t supposed to be out walking about in broad daylight.

“I said, there’s something wrong with this thing,” Massey said. It looked scraggly and sickly. “It was the eyes…” She said she knew the raccoon was rabid just by looking into its eyes that fluttered and shifted back and forth like.

Massey heard a woman scream from her yard and followed the sound to where she witnessed the raccoon attacking the woman and then running off. The woman was stunned and bleeding from her wounds.

“On her inner leg, she had the perfect mark of a raccoon print that clawed straight down her leg,” as Massey described it. The woman immediately began treatment for rabies. It was apparent that the animal was rabid, said Massey.

The chase resumed and led Massey to a tree not too far from the attack.

For the record, said Massey, regardless of reports that she “climbed” up the tree to capture the violent and diseased creature, there was no tree climbing.

“I went up a ladder and looked into the tree,” said Massey. “Please let people know I did not climb a tree.”

Once captured after what Massey said felt like an hours-long pursuit, the raccoon was euthanized and the head sent to a lab in Jamaica Plain and tested for rabies. The results were indeed positive.

“Sometimes you can tell just by looking at them,” said Massey. “I’ll just never forget they eyes. Squiggly, like she’s not even there….”

By Jean Perry

 

Board Approves One of Two Tree City Signs

“We have enough signs already,” commented Conservation Commission Chairman Rosemary Smith from the back of the room when it came time for the Board of Selectmen on July 11 to approve the hanging of two Tree City USA signs given by the Arbor Day Foundation.

Selectmen must have heard her because, when Smith suggested only one sign be hung and the other be kept as a back-up, all three selectmen agreed.

Selectman Brad Morse suggested hanging one at the entrance to the Town Forest by Old Colony RVTHS, which was approved by the two other selectmen.

Topping the agenda that night was conservation, with Conservation Agent Laurell Farinon on hand to present selectmen with copies of the newly revised second edition of the town’s Explore Rochester guide to Rochester’s open spaces and the walking trails featured at each property.

As Farinon pointed out, the first edition was released back in 2014 and, since then, three new properties have been added, and the name of the Olde Field Farm property was renamed the Shoolman Preserve.

“We applied for a grant from A.D. Makepeace,” said Farinon, which helped fund the revised edition.

Other changes to the guide include a general layout change, as well as a spiral binding that Farinon called “more user-friendly.”

Copies of the latest edition of the Explore Rochester guide are available at the Town Hall Annex, and the Rochester Land Trust will have them available during the Rochester Country Fair.

In other matters, the board approved the appointment of Jana Cavanaugh back to the Board of Assessors. Cavanaugh retired from the board back in early June at the same time she retired from her position as a teacher at Rochester Memorial School in order to receive her pension. She has now been reappointed this new fiscal year and will serve on the board of Assessors until April of 2017 when she will have to run for election.

This was the first Board of Selectmen meeting for new Town Administrator/CFO Suzanne Szyndlar, currently the part-time accountant for the Towns of Rochester and Mattapoisett.

Szyndlar is the first female town administrator in the Town of Rochester since the position was first created.

The next meeting of the Rochester Board of Selectmen is scheduled for July 25 at 7:00 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

By Jean Perry

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Academic Achievements

Emma Nizzari, an English major from Mattapoisett, has been named to the spring 2016 Dean’s List at Mount Ida College in Newton, MA for achieving a GPA of 3.33 or higher.

Meghan Pachico of Marion was named to the Emmanuel College Dean’s List for the spring 2016 semester. To earn a spot on the Dean’s List, students must achieve a grade point average of 3.5 or higher for a 16-credit semester.

Carolyn Foley, Mattapoisett resident, has achieved Dean’s list status for both the fall and spring semesters at Virginia Tech. She is majoring in dietetics.

American International College has named 448 students to the spring 2016 Dean’s List. Dean’s List students are full-time students with a grade point average between 3.3 and 4.0. Included on this list were Sarah Coucci of Mattapoisett and Mikayla Demanche of Rochester.

Nicholas M. Nadeau of Mattapoisett received a Bachelor of Arts degree in International Studies from Virginia Military Institute on May 16. Graduating honors include Army Commission and With Distinction. Cadet Nadeau’ parent is Ms. Leanne M. Nadeau.

Just over 700 students at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute were named to the Dean’s List for the spring 2016 semester. The Dean’s List recognizes full-time students who maintain grade-point averages of a minimum of 3.0 out of a possible 4.0 and have no grades below “C.” Included on this list were Carson Coelho, of Mattapoisett, studying Mechanical Engineering, and Edward Costa, of Mattapoisett, studying Chemical Engineering.

Benjamin DeMello received Dean’s List honors from University of Maine for spring 2016, completing 12 or more credit hours in the semester and earning a grade point average of 3.5 or higher.

Heidi Catherine Schneider of Mattapoisett received a Bachelor of Science summa cum laude in Nursing from Norwich University at the May 14 commencement ceremony held in NU’s Shapiro Field House.

Marion Cemetery Commission

To All Marion Residents:

The Marion Cemetery Commission recently met to review our policies and procedures, as well as review each cemetery for any issues that may have arisen. Maintenance has definitely become an issue and many shrubs are now overgrown and obscure the headstones. When this happens, the Commission reserves the right to prune or remove these overgrown shrubs. The once small spruces that families like to plant often become too large for the headstone. Each planting area cannot exceed the width of the headstone and only 12 inches out from it. Plastic flowers, pinwheels and ornaments will be removed. Bird feeders have also become a nuisance, staining neighboring headstones and are no longer allowed.

In addition, a $200 perpetual care fee has been approved as of July 1(not for plots purchased before this date). This is a one-time fee upon purchase of the plot (not per burial) in any of the town’s cemeteries except the Point Road Memorial Forest, which has an endowment for this purchase. The Town has the responsibility for the care of its cemeteries, and when families are no longer around to care for gravesites, it falls to the town to do so. So we need this fee to cover those costs. We are also reviewing needed repair on older gravesites and will be getting estimates for that work. If you have any questions, please contact the Marion DPW. Thank you, Margie Baldwin, Helen Hills, James Lionberger, Joel Watters.

Margie Baldwin, Marion Cemetery Commission

 

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.

Hollywood Resident Opposes Aquaculture Site

“I beg to differ,” stated James Spader, Marion resident and well-known Hollywood actor when the public comment phase of the hearing of Shea Doonan’s application for an aquaculture license off Meadow Island was opened.

Doonan said that he had searched throughout the coastline of Marion for the right location to place an aquaculture operation and none was better than waters off Meadow Island.

“I own Meadow Island,” Spader told the Marion Board of Selectmen on the night of July 12. “We’ve enjoyed Meadow Island, paid taxes on it for decades,” he continued, “…this will impact Meadow Island.”

Spader told the board that navigation, along with swimming and small boat recreation, will be affected by having an industrial operation between Meadow Island and Planting Island. He went on to say that Marion would not positively benefit from having an aquaculture industry in this sensitive location.

“I look at the community, and I wonder how this project enhances the community in any way,” he said. Spader said that fish farming has been proven to have a negative impact on the environment.

Then his comments became more personal.

“We owned the island so it could look like it does forever.” Speaking of the proposed project he said, “In the morning, I’ve got to wake up and look at that all day and all night and so will all the rest of the people in that cove.” Spader added, “I’m very, very concerned about this.”

He told the selectmen that Marion was about housing, living, boating and 30 minutes prior to the meeting, “I was staring at this spot watching racing.”

Spader was reminded that the harbor and waterways do not belong to Marion but to the Commonwealth for the use of all persons. Doonan said, “There will be navigational issues, but it will be placed closer to Planting Island well north of the channel.”

Harbormaster Isaac Perry said, “It will have an impact on navigation, but it is a good compromise.”

Resident Bill Washburn asked, “What income does Marion get out of this?” Perry replied, “Twelve dollars and fifty cents,” the cost of a permit fee – costs established by the state.

“Marine Fisheries has Okayed it, then it goes to the DEP and has to run the gamut, Army Corps of Engineers and Natural Heritage,” said Perry.

Selectman Stephen Cushing told Spader, “This is step one in a fairly long process, not a done deal.”

“I do have some concerns about navigation,” said Chairman Jody Dickerson.

Doonan responded, “I looked everywhere. It was the one place where I could put this.”

Spader asked again, “What can it bring to the greater community? I don’t think there’s a burden on the town to bring in industry…. The town has the power to say no,” he concluded.

Town Counsel John Witten said, ‘’There’s always an appeals process.” He suggested the board could wait to make their decision.

“I don’t think it’s the best location,” said Dickerson.

Cushing said, “I don’t think it detracts from boating. We have to make a decision based on fact.” He was in favor of allowing the application to move through the process to the next step, involving various state agency approvals.

With only two members present for the hearing, the selectmen cast votes that cancelled each other out. It was decided that a new hearing would be held on August 16 at 7:05 pm, at which time Selectmen Steve Gonsalves would be available to hear the new application and assist in rendering a decision.

Another matter garnering most of the evening’s meeting time was Ladd Thorne’s appeal of the harbormaster’s revocation of his mooring permit.

Arthur Kreiger of Anderson Kreiger represented Thorne while Witten represented the interests of the town.

Kreiger laid out a chronology of events that ultimately lead to Thorne becoming delinquent in paying the mooring fee, setting in motion the revocation of his permit. Kreiger pointed to the town’s not following their own regulations by sending the second notice regular mail versus the established certified mail.

Perry said he had inquired at town hall and learned that about five years ago the town stopped using certified mail due to costs.

Kreiger said that several domestic matters within the Thornes’ home interfered with their timely response and also pointed to the fact that the town had used an incorrect address for at least one of the mailings, if not more.

Perry defended his action by saying that the Thornes missed the appeals date, that there are 10 other permit holders in the same situation as the Thornes, and that he needed to proceed following the town’s protocol in fairness to all concerned.

Once again, the two sitting selectmen were not in harmony but due to procedures in how the votes could be cast, the decision was not to reinstate Thorne’s permit. They did agree to allow Thorne to keep his boat on the mooring until August 1, giving Kreiger time to appeal their decision to the Department of Environmental Protection.

Before the hearing was closed, Perry added, “One of the Thornes’ sons is third on the mooring waiting list,” indicating that the family would have a mooring rather soon even with the loss of the one in question.

The next meeting of the Marion Board of Selectmen is scheduled for August 16 at 7:00 pm at the Marion Town House.

By Marilou Newell

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Marion Natural History Museum

The Marion Natural History Museum, located at 8 Spring Street, will be open on Saturdays from July 9 to July 30 from 10:00 am to 12:00 pm. Along with an impressive Lego collection and puppet theater, we will have a fun project scheduled for each Saturday. Stop in on July 9 to see “who can build the best robot” using Legos and other materials. Stop in on July 16 to make a jellyfish water bottle; please bring a 1- or 2-liter bottle for this activity. Keep checking our website for future activities and our upcoming summer programs. Hope to see you soon.

Opening Our Living Treasure Chest

Taryn MacGregor – 18, athletic, and on her Christmas break from college – never thought anything could derail her happy-go-lucky life. That notion was all but snuffed out the moment her car collided with a concrete flower pot along Route 18 in downtown New Bedford. In an instant, she learned a profound lesson: life comes with nothing guaranteed – not even your next breath or next step.

It’s been one tough winter for the Fairhaven teenager, who might have easily died last December 20 in the post-midnight wreckage. The impact left her with a brain bleed, multiple fractures of the pelvis, a broken collarbone, and a broken neck. What came next was a string of difficult obstacles, like hobbling on crutches for weeks in a rehabilitation hospital, dealing with confusion, fighting the inability to move, and enduring the obvious pains associated with her injuries.

Even so, Taryn’s overall recovery has been a testament to great resiliency– to the point where, in just a few months, she is almost fully restored. This is a far different outcome from the fearsome scars and paralysis she witnessed in other young patients in the hospital. To her credit, she has grasped that reality and intends to do something influential and positive with her new lease on life.

To start, she has joined Lift-in-Love, a team behind the second annual area Serve-A-Thon, a fundraiser benefitting the Salvation Army and Mobile Loaves & Fishes to be held on Saturday, September 10, 2016. She’ll be lending a hand to raise funds for the organizations whose primary function is to lighten the struggles of the many hundreds of men, women, and children among us in need of the daily basics most of us take for granted.

How exactly does this work? The Serve-a-Thon invites everyone to participate in a way that helps promote the community and use their service or gift as a money-sponsored activity to benefit the Salvation Army and Mobile Loaves & Fishes. It is structured to allow people to contribute their labor in assorted community projects such as beautifying an historic park in Fairhaven, assembling or wrapping toys and clothes for kids in need in Acushnet, offering a hand to a litter-free neighborhood effort in New Bedford, working at the YMCA farm for a morning or afternoon in Dartmouth, or lending individual gifts from a living treasure chest that consists of every imaginable talent spread across our region.

Taryn MacGregor will exercise her particular treasure by joining her mom in a financially-sponsored cycling ride along the 10-mile Fairhaven-Mattapoisett bike trail. Everyone has a gift. What’s yours? Maybe fixing a car, painting a picture, racing a bike, singing a song, dribbling a basketball, reciting a poem, or fixing a computer. Think about it. Aha. See you have one and it’s shareable through our community treasure chest.

No matter your gift, you can join the cause and become a contributing factor. Simply decide what you are going to do and get others to sponsor you; then on Saturday, September 10, 2016, put action to that fund-raising decision. Perhaps the living treasure chest will contain tap dancing, dog walking, housecleaning, painting, carpentry, a cooking class or plumbing … Whatever the case may be, the idea is to pair these talents and services with accompanying contributions from friends, family, neighbors, or businesses who readily support the cause. Simple as can be.

Participating in the Serve-a-Thon is a great way to open our eyes to the needs around us and a very practical way to address them directly. We all have a unique gift to share. When your gift is allowed to shine for the greater good of others, it is the type of thing that uplifts and promotes all concerned. That is where things could get very interesting, for sharing our living treasures has in it the potential to transform a region, especially if it becomes an area life style.

During last year’s Serve-a-Thon, a journalism class was offered in the basement of St. Francis of Assisi Church, an individual cleaned the Mobile Loaves & Fishes vehicle, bird houses were built and sold, and a contractor labored for free at a widow’s home.

Try it yourself. It’s only for a few hours on one day. You’ll be surprised at how many ripples result. See for yourself.

Participation packets are available at the Salvation Army in New Bedford. For more information, please visit www.Lift-in-Love.org or Lift-in-Love Facebook Page or call Major BethEllen Parkhurst at 508-997-6561.

A Public Rally will be held on Saturday, July 23, 2016 at 11:00 am at the Salvation Army facility at 619 Purchase Street in New Bedford. Please join us!

By Ken Hartnett & Steven J. Bouley

 

Town to Tighten Management of Facilities

Three years ago, the Marion Board of Selectmen appointed Shaun Cormier as the town’s director of facilities with the intention of eventually consolidating the management of the various town-owned buildings and structures. On June 29 during a special morning meeting of the selectmen, they decided it was time to do just that.

“At that time, the board felt that it was a very important decision to have our main assets under one control or one oversight,” said Chairman Jody Dickerson. “And I think that was one of the board’s best decisions that we’ve done … but there have been some issues and we thought it was about time we decide where we’re going to go with it,” adding that the board never specified which buildings Cormier would be responsible for and which buildings department heads such as the police chief, fire chief, and DPW superintendent must manage.

Although Cormier has done a fine job keeping up with the management of the facilities, repairs, upgrades, inspections, and maintenance, say selectmen, department heads agree better communication is needed to assist Cormier in his position, as well as more manpower and a bigger facilities maintenance budget.

Town Administrator Paul Dawson asked for board guidance on how to finally accomplish a cohesive facilities maintenance plan.

“Do we begin to consolidate all the building maintenance type line items in all the various town budgets … into one budget and then that allows Shaun … to then begin some real capital forecasting and planning in terms of how we’re going to maintain our facilities moving forward,” Dawson said.

DPW Superintendent Rob Zora questioned whether Cormier already had enough on his plate, asking how the board could accommodate Cormier in his efficiency without overloading him.

“I see his frustration,” said Zora. He suggested Cormier needed more “manpower,” adding, “Because you’re really adding the workload that’s really going to push him over the edge. He’s definitely going to need a bigger budget…. He is like a one-man band right now….”

The board looked over a two-page list of town-owned facilities that went beyond the most obvious DPW building, town house, and fire and police stations, to include Washburn Park structures among others.

“There are facilities that aren’t even in this town that belong to us,” said Selectman Stephen Cushing.

Dickerson pointed out that, unfortunately, facilities is often the first budget that gets cut back.

When asked, Cormier said two crews of two workers would be ideal moving forward. Dawson said the board should lay out a facility plan and the anticipated costs associated with additional employees to present to the Finance Committee and ultimately town meeting.

“When you present a cohesive plan,” said Dawson, “they will support you.”

Police Chief Lincoln Miller said Cormier is always on top of facility needs at the police station, commenting that the system in place, as far as the police station goes, “I think it’s worked very well.”

Fire Chief Brian Jackvony agreed, but suggested the selectmen allow for some “flexibility” between department heads and Cormier, which might give opportunities for both parties to save taxpayers money by comparing quotes for capital projects, such as a recent water heater installation that Jackvony was able to arrange for a quote less than the one Cormier provided.

“I don’t think we want to handcuff any one department,” said Cushing.
Another issue, said Zora, was communication.

“Sometimes I think that I’m in a different town,” said Zora. “And I think communication is huge.” He suggested more frequent meetings so he feels less “out of the loop.”

Selectman Steve Gonsalves concurred.

“They key to all of this is communication,” said Gonsalves. “I feel if that happens, it’s going to avoid what [Zora] said. It’s so simple, yet so complicated…. It won’t take a lot of time but it will end a lot of headaches.”

Dawson said the board should establish a facilities committee of sorts to discuss line items and keep communication open.

“It really is going to mean communication,” said Finance Director Judith Mooney. “It’s not going to be as simple as taking out of a line item and putting in facilities.”

The next meeting of the Marion Board of Selectmen is scheduled for July 12 at 7:00 pm at the Marion Police Station conference room.

By Jean Perry

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UCCRTS 4th Quarter Honor Roll

Christopher Rogers of Marion, Delaney Gosse of Marion, and Jackson St. Don, also of Marion received High Honors for the fourth quarter honor roll at Upper Cape Cod Regional Technical School.