MATTREC

To the Editor:

I must preface this letter by saying I am not writing as a representative of any church or organized group. I am writing as a grandmother who is saddened by a recognition that over the years, sports and other activities are carving into our Sunday morning church services.

I am willing to wager there are very few women my age who are bigger fans of organized sports than I. This includes sports for people of all ages. I am also very positively impressed with the programs MATTREC is providing for the children of our town. Participating is not my problem.

What I do find fault with is the scheduling of Flag Football on Sunday morning.

For many years, church services have been held at 10:00 am on Sunday morning. These services include worship as well as church school.

Could you please consider changing the time of your Sunday morning Flag Football so our kids won’t have to make a choice? If you could schedule your games a half hour earlier, our kids could make it back to Mattapoisett at 10:00 o’clock. We won’t mind at all if they are a bit dirty. We will look at it as good clean dirt.

Thank you,

Claire Keene, Mattapoisett

 

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.

A Swan’s Best Friend

Phyllis Washburn, Marion resident and author, told the heartwarming, tender story of how she and her husband Ralph met a swan and began a journey they could not have anticipated. Their relationship with Sam the Swan has been captured forever in her book Good Morning Sam.

Washburn spoke on August 29 after the Marion Council on Aging luncheon as part of an ongoing series of after-lunch lectures sponsored by the COA at the Marion Music Hall.

The Washburns started out simply enjoying nature and observing the animals, quietly, gently along the salt marshes, coves and inlets on the shore of Sippican Harbor. Over time, Ralph and Phyllis Washburn would become the best friend a swan could ever have.

She said that in 1985, “Ralph was doing some work in the harbor and was told about the swan.” The swan had already been given the name Sam by the time Ralph met him and fed him crackers. Ralph said to his wife excitedly, “You’ve got to see this swan!”

The Washburns hadn’t planned to visit daily, but they were enchanted by the giant bird’s splendor and willingness to allow their advances. They began to bring him bread, slowly earning the mute swan’s trust. “We fed him bread occasionally, then twice a day, then got him to go up on the beach,” she said in a voice as soft as a whisper. Washburn said that she even baked cornbread for Sam. “It was Ralph’s favorite breakfast, too,” she added with humor.

During that first winter of what would become a 14-year adventure, “We coaxed him out of the water and fed him,” Washburn said. As time went by, the Washburns would find themselves feeding Sam twice a day everyday. “He’d always come back at mealtime,” she chuckled, and then added, “The fourteen years we spent with Sam were pure joy, on our part, and on his part, too, I think.”

Sam, they would learn, had a damaged wing and could not fly; therefore, since he was stuck in Sippican Harbor, Sam made his living from nature’s bounty and now through the generosity of two devoted humans.

“One winter he disappeared,” Washburn told the audience. “We called the police and asked them to keep an eye out because it was hunting season.” As fate would have it, the police were notified of a swan in the Weweantic River that appeared injured.

The intrepid couple sought him out calling to him. Lo and behold, the swan responded. For two weeks, the Washburns returned daily to the river feeding Sam and monitoring his condition. They were anxious to find a way to get him back into Sippican Harbor, as they knew the Weweantic often froze over in the winter. They were worried Sam would be frozen, too.

One day, when they went to the river to feed Sam, he was gone. “He had managed to get back to Marion,” Washburn sighed with relief as if it had happened yesterday.

Washburn describes their experience of befriending Sam as a “blessing,” one that they experienced because of their willingness to “meet nature where it is…”

Ralph, a photographer, took pictures of Sam and other swans that came in and out of his long life. Phyllis simply started out writing expanded captions for those pictures. She also kept a journal documenting their experiences with Sam. After a while, and with some encouragement, Phyllis began studying and writing at a Cape Cod writers group in Hyannis. After four years, she was prepared to write the story of Sam.

During her discussion, Washburn took her audience through the trials of protecting Sam during Hurricane Bob, providing shelter for him in their backyard when old age threatened to drown him, and welcoming the occasional female partner when Sam was fortunate enough to catch one’s eye for a season.

“[Sam’s] life ended in our backyard,” Washburn said wistfully. As difficult as that must have been, the Washburns always felt “it was a fantastic adventure.” With Sam gone, the female who had also come to live on their property as his partner was now alone. This female they had named Little One. After Sam’s passing, Little One “called and called for him.” To ease the lady’s sorrow, the Washburns got her a black duck for company. “The duck bossed her around,” Washburn remembered with a smile. Little One stayed with the Washburns for nine years.

Washburn said that she and Ralph “still look for swans in the harbor every spring.” She lamented, however, that due to the harbor being congested with boats, swans are now less likely to nest along the shores.

As her discussion drew to a close, Washburn shared that after Sam died, “I heard a swan and looked up but no swan was there. I think that was Sam telling us he was in God’s kingdom now and flying again.”

You can visit Washburn’s website at www.ourswans.com and watch their YouTube video titled “Mute Swans and Humans,” and order a copy of the book.

By Marilou Newell

Washburn

It’s Just Like Riding A Bike

It was surprising to see among her possessions a bicycle. Gardening supplies, antique furniture, lamps, chairs, side tables, boxes of bric-a-brac and a brand new bicycle stuffed into a large storage unit.

She had sold her beloved hundred-year-old farmhouse on the hill, had cast about for a place to land, and to her dismay eventually found herself in senior housing. The small studio apartment was far from adequate to re-home her restless soul, never mind her numerous belongings.

We had come to consolidate the bits and pieces of her tangible assets from two storage units down to one. She had to touch these pieces and talk about when, where, and how each had been added to the collection. She had to remember a life, her life.

My friend has been sick a long time. It will take her away sooner rather than later now. Her inner fortitude versus her physical wherewithal is why she is still standing, standing in this storage unit.

Things have become rather difficult of late. Added to her chronic health problems are intermittent infections that cripple her ambition to simply live another day. Yet, she fights on as only the tragically ill can do in a battle she will not survive.

And there is the bicycle. It is a brand new beauty for sure. I ask, “Who did you buy the bike for,” believing as I did that she couldn’t have purchased it for herself. My god, she couldn’t have thought riding a bike was possible with an oxygen tank.

“For myself, of course,” she replies with a not-too-friendly smirk that telegraphs how stupid I am for even asking the question. I say no more but think, “I know all about bikes.”

Dad had wanted a bike. Long past owning and operating a motor vehicle, he wanted a bike so he could get to his fishing boat, to the banks and grocery stores he owned, to his home where his new wife was waiting for him. The elaborate tapestry his brain had woven over the past few years was complex with finite details. He would ride and be mobile again. He and he alone would dictate his comings and goings, not a failing body or a well-meaning daughter.

I told him repeatedly that his knees weren’t capable of peddling a bike, but he knew otherwise. So strong was his confabulated belief system that his inability to walk unaided or dress himself meant nothing. When opportunity presented itself in the form of a grandson who could be manipulated to aid in his scheme, he jumped at the chance.

“Give me a ride to Benny’s, I need to get some supplies,” he told the unwitting co-conspirator. He even managed to spirit the checkbook out of its hiding place, getting his grandson to help him fill it out. Now he had a bike.

The next day, he pushed the bike to the fire station to pump air into the tires. The young firemen insisted he wear a helmet and produced one for him. A size or two too small, Dad placed the helmet on his head and pushed the bike back home.

Later that afternoon, I received a call at my office from one of Dad’s neighbors. The caller was concerned. Dad was sitting outside his home on a snowdrift wearing a bike helmet and holding onto a new bike. I said, “I’ll be there in twenty minutes.”

As I turned the corner, I could see him still sitting there. He was smiling. He may have been speaking to the people who regularly visited his imagination, maybe even his new wife.

“What are you doing, Dad,” I say as I walk towards him. I say, “You have to get up Dad.” I put my hand out, “Come in the house. I’ll make you a cup of coffee.” He responds, “OK, but I’m pretty tired from riding this bike.”

Once inside, I insist that he change out of his wet clothing, helping him to do so. He doesn’t know how they got wet. I tell him because he was sitting on the snow bank for at least an hour. “Nay, I was riding that bike,” he responds.

The bike became a symbol of our struggle between his unrelenting desire to be free and live a life of purposeful activities and my desire to try and keep him safe. I would eventually win the hollow victory.

Back to the present, my friend and I manage to consolidate her possessions – including her bike – into one unit.

Maybe for her that bicycle is her symbol of freedom. Maybe just owning it is enough. Maybe she imagines riding it with her beloved dogs looping along, young and strong and so alive in memory. Maybe she sees her husband waiting at a crossroad just up ahead, a crossroad she’s pedaling towards on a bicycle she rides in dreams.

By Marilou Newell

 

Rochester Gets Electric Car Grant

Rochester Town Administrator Suzanne Szyndlar announced on August 22 that the Department of Environmental Protection has awarded the Town of Rochester a grant to acquire three electric vehicles and charging stations under the Massachusetts Electric Vehicle Incentive Program.

The grant provides up to $7,500 per battery electric vehicle and up to $10,500 per charging station. The grant will cover a three-year lease on the vehicles at no cost to the Town.

Members of the Rochester Board of Selectmen received the good news during its August 22 meeting and briefly discussed the matter.

The Massachusetts Electric Vehicle Incentive Program serves to encourage a demand for electric vehicles in Massachusetts “and to help the Commonwealth meet its air quality and Global Warming Solutions Act goals,” as Szyndlar read from a letter from the DEP.

The Town will go out to bid for the three vehicles and will accept the lowest offer from regional electric car dealers.

Szyndlar said that once the town-owned buildings are assessed for voltage and electric charging station viability, she would issue a recommendation to selectmen on where to house the charging stations.

Also during the meeting, Conservation Agent Laurell Farinon told selectmen that the Town would need to once again file with the Department of Environmental Protection for a waiver to the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) regulations pertaining to stormwater discharge systems and culverts in town.

Farinon said that back in 2003, the town applied for and was successfully granted the waiver, meaning the Town was not subject to updated DEP regulations regarding stormwater discharge systems. A number of other Massachusetts towns either received waivers or were exempt as well.

Now, with further updated NPDES regulations, Farinon said the town is up again for another waiver request.

“We’re confident … that we can apply for and make the argument that we do not need to be part of this program,” said Farinon.

The Board of Selectmen voted unanimously to allow Farinon to work with the town administrator on drafting the waiver request.

In other matters, for the first time since 2013, the town will be seeing a significant increase in its health insurance premiums with its insurance provider, Mayflower Municipal Health Group.

Szyndlar said, to the board’s chagrin, that the town will receive a 15% rate hike this fiscal year.

Szyndlar said that for four years, the town has enjoyed only a minor increase to the tune of less than 1% due to some long-term planning and use of reserve funds.

“It probably would have been better to do small increments,” said Szyndlar, “rather than hit the reserves…”

This increase trend will likely continue into the future, Szyndlar stated.

“It’s a big jump,” said Board of Selectmen Chairman Naida Parker.

Selectman Richard Nunes said that these types of rate hikes only serve to prompt municipalities to look elsewhere for health insurance coverage.

Szyndlar commented that the municipal health insurance rates for the Town of Rochester are still considerably lower than those of surrounding towns at this point in time.

“We’re better off riding this out and attending the meetings and being educated and seeing where this can go,” Szyndlar said.

The next meeting of the Rochester Board of Selectmen is scheduled for September 19 at 6:30 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

By Jean Perry

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George A. Kirby, III

George A. Kirby, III, age 72, of Rochester, passed away peacefully in his sleep on Saturday, August 27th, at his home. He was the husband of 52 years to Janice A. Kirby.

George was born in Rochester, the son of George A. Kirby II and Ruth S. (Hartley). He was a graduate of New Bedford Vocational High School. George worked side by side with his family at George Kirby, Jr. Paint Co. for over 55 years. George loved his family. He loved life often with a loud laugh, enjoyed riding his motorcycle, was a pinball wizard, voracious reader and a car enthusiast.

Along with his wife, survivors include his sons, George IV and wife Shari of Rochester and Dean Adam of Rochester; daughter, Michelle and husband Andy of Ecuador and Kathy Brady and her husband Matt of Auburn, MA whom he raised; he is also survived by four grandchildren, George, V and his wife Ali, Zachary, Sam, and Grace; his sisters, Meryden Kirby husband Bruce Hartshorn , Ruth-Ann Flynn husband Charlie as well as his in laws, Jim Stringer and his wife Marie, Dan Stringer and his wife Linda, and Cheryl Stringer along with several nieces and nephews.

Calling hours are Wednesday, from 4-7pm, in the Fairhaven Funeral Home, 117 Main St., Fairhaven. Cremation will follow and a Memorial Service will be held Saturday, September 10, 2016, at 10:00am, in the First Congregational Church of Rochester, 11 Constitution Way. Interment will be private.

Paul R. Callan

Attorney Paul R. Callan, of Mattapoisett, formerly of Middleborough, died peacefully at his home surrounded by his loving family on August 27, 2016. He was 83.

Paul was the devoted husband of Mary K. (Rudolph) Callan, and the loving father of 4 children who survive him: Paul F. Callan of San Diego, CA; Susan E. Callan and her husband, Stephen Morris, of Falmouth; Claire A. Callan of Falmouth; and Mary A. Callan of Boston. He is also survived by his 8 grandchildren: Jessica, Alyssa, Brianne, Ashley, Michael, Olivia, Conor, and Maeve; 8 great-grandchildren; his sister-in-law and brother-in-law, Ann and Terry Sparrow; and several nieces and nephews. He was the brother of the late Ann (Callan) O’Connell.

Born and raised in Middleborough, Paul was the son of the late Honorable Luke Francis Callan and Bertha (Gibney) Callan. He was graduated from Middleborough High School in 1950, and from Bates College in 1954, and served in the US Army during the Korean Conflict. He married the love of his life, Mary, in 1957. After graduating from Boston University Law School in 1959, Paul practiced law with Judge Callan until his death, and then continued to operate a successful law practice in Middleborough for over 40 years. He was chief counsel for Mayflower Bank, and served on its Board of Directors. He served on the Board of Directors of the Hannah BG Shaw Home in Middleborough for over 50 years, and was involved in many community and civic organizations.

Paul was an avid sports fan, and especially fond of collegiate athletics. He was rarely seen without his cap bearing the insignia of Notre Dame—perhaps his favorite place on earth (other than home)–which he referred to as “God’s Country”. His family and several lucky friends were fortunate enough to “experience” a Notre Dame football game with Paul. He was instrumental in the organization of the Youth Football program in Middleborough.

Paul was a communicant of St. Anthony’s Church in Mattapoisett.

In lieu of flowers, remembrances may be made to the Hannah BG Shaw Home 299 Wareham Street, Middleboro, MA 02346, or to Community Nurse Home Care/Hospice 62 Center Street, Fairhaven, MA 02719.
His Funeral Mass will be held on Friday, September 2nd at 10 AM in St. Anthony’s Church, 22 Barstow St., Mattapoisett. Visiting hours will be on Thursday from 3-7 PM in the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home For Funerals, 50 County Rd. (Rt. 6) Mattapoisett. For directions and guestbook, please visit www.saundersdwyer.com

REGAIN Addiction Support Group

The REGAIN addiction support group ministry originated from the experiences of individuals feeling led to serve in poor inner-city churches of Southeastern Massachusetts. Finding there was an incredible need for resources, prayer, love and compassion, this 501(c)(3) faith-based ministry was founded. REGAIN does not provide any addiction recovery services for the addict. Its purpose is to form a support network for families and individuals affected by the addiction of a loved one. This is accomplished by helping people REGAIN hope, healing, trust, and power over their lives from the support of others living with the same struggles and difficulties. The REGAIN addiction support group SM meetings are faith-based, observing a no-blame, no-shame policy with all conversations respectfully kept confidential. There is no cost for attending and regional resource materials are provided on recovery programs, family services, education, and faith-based options. Topic demonstrations and trainings are hosted frequently, and prayer is available and voluntary for those needing comfort and strength.

Current REGAIN addiction support group SM meeting location: Mattapoisett. (For residents of Mattapoisett, Marion, and Rochester) Council on Aging Room (Center School Building), 17 Barstow Street, Mattapoisett on the 1st and 3rd Tuesday from 6:00 – 7:30 pm.

For more information: 774-328-6196, e-mail healing@regainsupport.com, Facebook: regain addiction support group.

Rochester Country Fair a Success

Did you hear it? Tractor engines revving, rock and roll resonating for miles, cows mooing, goat bah-ing or whatever it is that they say….

Did you see it? Axes flying, clouds of dust rising, dudes with long bushy beards and the rural splendor of overalls and John Deere tee shirts.…

Did you smell it? The onions and peppers and Italian sausage, the fried fair food, and the scent of hay mixed with diesel engine fumes. Ah, the magic of the Rochester Country Fair….

This year the weather, although still quite warm, was clear and dry, giving fair-goers an opportunity to take it all in and enjoy the annual event unencumbered.

From Thursday, August 18, until Sunday, August 21, Rochester was alive with the sounds, sights, and smells of good, old, traditional country fun.

Some new events this year were a hit, said Rochester Country Fair Committee Co-Chair Julie Koczera, especially the dog agility presentation on Saturday and the addition of two cage fighting events during the Saturday night wrestling.

The ‘fight’ between The Aardvark and Buck Chuck was great fun, said Koczera, who said the teaming up of The Wanderer and the fair and The Aardvark and Buck Chuck added “a lot of smiles” to this year’s event.

“With The Aardvark and the staff walking round handing out stuff … it definitely added to the fair,” said Koczera. “Anytime you guys want to come back, that’s great.”

She said kids and families especially enjoyed the sight of the two characters together by the kids’ events on Saturday and the squeaky aardvarks handed out by The Aardvark.

“The fair was very successful,” said Koczera. “We added a lot of new events. It brought out a lot of new faces this year, along with the people and families in our community that come out every year.”

Attendance over the weekend, which was assisted by the clear weather forecast, was close to about 5,000, said Koczera.

“The weather was better than last year, but still hot and dry,” said Koczera. “But you can’t control the weather conditions.”

Trying and adding new things every year is what keeps the fair from getting stale, as Koczera put it. Switching the main concert event to Friday night and holding the wrestling events on Saturday night instead is something the fair committee will continue next year, saying it worked out better this way.

“So this year’s fair really was a success,” said Koczera. “I had people come up to me and say, ‘This is my child’s favorite weekend of the summer.’ You really work so hard all year and you get there and you’re like, oh, I’m so tired, and then you have kids coming in with their frogs and coming up to you telling you that it’s their favorite weekend. That’s rewarding in itself.”

By Jean Perry

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Grange Fair Celebrates an Agricultural Past

For a town recognized for its pride in its agricultural heritage, the Rochester Grange Fair remained surprisingly quiet on Saturday, where small groups of people milled around the warm upper floor of the Rochester Grange Hall.

They were the lucky ones, considering the displays in front of them. Brightly colored flowers decorated the small stage. Mouthwatering vegetables covered tables and filled old Radio Flyers. Spread out along the edges of the room, handmade quilts, knitted blankets, and local paintings perched on folding tables.

“The National Grange itself was started after the Civil War,” explained Grange Secretary Susan Lafleur, referring to the national organizing body which runs all town grange halls. “It was originally for farmers. It was meant to be an aid to them.”

As the Massachusetts State Grange website explains, The Grange is meant “to unite private citizens in improving the economic and social position of the nation’s farm population.”

In the earliest days of the fair, Lafleur explained, every aspect of agriculture was celebrated at Rochester’s Grange Fair. Livestock would have been judged and prizes handed out. Matched pairs of draft horses would pull logs, sweating and blowing under a late-summer sun. Today, the livestock can’t be shown; state mandates and restrictions have forbidden a large part of the fair.

Nevertheless, the other half of the fair remains traditional. It’s fascinating to find such a historical style of fair, conducted in much of the same fashion as it would have been in 1910.

In the Rochester Grange, dusty afternoon sunlight peered through the tall windows of the hall. It spilled onto wooden boards worn down by a century’s worth of footsteps. Several different categories of local wares were judged, including plated and canned vegetables, baked goods, photographs, floral arrangements, and cut flowers. Some of the baked goods were offered for sale; chocolate chip brownies and muffins, cranberry bread and banana bread all proved too tempting to resist.

The judged categories gave an indication as to what was important to a truly agricultural town in the past.

When the fair began in the early twentieth century, farmers were looking for a source of extra support. Living in a small farming-centered town, an agricultural fair was as much a social occasion as it was a friendly competition.

Winning a prize also meant winning a few dollars, which would have gone a long way. Those traditional monetary prizes are still available today; a vegetable display will earn $6 to the winner, $5 to second place, and $4 to third place. Individual presentations of the other categories net $4 for the winner, $3 for the runner-up, and $2 to third place. Even today, a handy green thumb or local artist could walk away with a handful of cash. Ribbons were awarded by the Rochester Grange.

Purple ribbons also fluttered on several displays. These ribbons were bestowed by the Massachusetts Grange, which still aids in the running of local agricultural fairs to this day. There are still several agricultural fairs nearby. Lafleur noted that the Middleborough Grange Fair will be held on Saturday, August 27.

Displays at the fair change with the year and with participation from the town and local areas.

“Every year is different,” said Lafleur. “Last year, we had enough flowers to fill the room; this year there’s not so many. It’s the same with the vegetables, although I don’t know if the season was great for them overall. We have more crafts than we did, more photography. We had a number of new people this year, which was good,” she added. “We always encourage that.”

By Andrea Ray

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Property Clean-up Within Boundary Lines

During the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission’s meeting on August 22, the owner of a soon-to-reopen new restaurant located at 79 Fairhaven Road (Route 6), Nabah Mougabber, came before the commissioners saying, “We own beyond where we have cut.”

Abutter Fred Wyze and his family located at 3 River Road had complained to the commission during the July 25 meeting that Mougabber had cleared brush and trees, some of which Wyze contended were on his property, and thus eliminated the natural shielding of a view of the back of the restaurant, shielding they had enjoyed for years.

Chairman Bob Rogers suggested to Mougabber that he have the restaurant property’s boundary lines delineated and to file a Request for Determination of Applicability since the entire property was within jurisdictional areas, mainly flood zone and the Mattapoisett River.

On this night, Mougabber was back with an update. He said that he has had the property surveyed and learned that property lines were beyond areas where brush clearing had taken place.

“We own beyond where we cut,” Mougabber explained. He said that vines were killing what trees were actually behind the building and that, “We want to make it nice and neat for the neighborhood.”

Mougabber lamented negative comments he and his family had received via Facebook postings. He said, “I’ll let that slide. If it keeps up, they will hear from my lawyer.”

Mougabber said, “We’re not asking too much,” regarding his right to clean up the property in question. He also said that apparently the other restaurant situated next to his had also completed some brush clearing and that activity, not his, had used heavy equipment for more extensive clearing. Mougabber asked the commission for guidance.

“What’s our right? What can I do and not do?” He continued, “We didn’t touch anybody’s property,” Mougabber told the commissioners. “We now know we own more than what we thought.”

Rogers said, “Disputes between neighbors we try to stay out of,” and he told Mougabber there was a process for that outside the Conservation Commission. Rogers also said that, moving forward, Mougabber should contact the Conservation Commission whenever work was to take place on the property to ensure compliance with wetlands regulations.

Mougabber’s RDA received a Negative 3 determination, meaning no Notice of Intent is required.

Other business conducted included a Negative 3 determination for Marjorie Coldwell’s RDA filing for construction of a non-structural concrete slab under an existing raised cottage located at 21 Beach Road.

Roger Tenglin, 124 Aucoot Road, received a Negative 2 determination for the removal of a cabin.

Forrest Neal, 16 Brandt Island Road, met with the commission regarding his RDA filing for the construction of a shed. He received a Negative 3.

The Preserve at Bay Club represented by Jason Youngquist of Outback Engineering requested and received approval for changes to the plan of record for two home sites located on Fieldstone Drive. Original plans changed to slightly larger structures with no impact on previously issued Order of Conditions.

Also on the Bay Club acreage, David McIntire’s request for extensions to existing orders of conditions for lots 78A through 90 at Shagbark Circle was continued for two weeks to give him time to have wetlands flagging re-established.

A new plan of record was accepted from Blue Wave Capital for modest edits that included possible intermittent streams and other wetland features at the future solar array site located on Crystal Spring Road.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission is scheduled for September 12 at 6:30 pm in the town hall conference room.

By Marilou Newell

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