MATTREC Summer Clinics & Programs

Competitive Basketball Training Clinic will be held July 11-15 from 9:00 am – 12:00 pm at ORR High School Gymnasium. This clinic is geared towards competitive travel/AAU level basketball players in Grades 4-8. The clinic will be run by Brian Rudolph, a former Division 1 basketball player at Loyola University & former Cabo Verde International Team point guard and current New Bedford High School JV coach. The clinic will focus on ball handling, footwork, shooting, finishing moves, defensive techniques, conditioning and basketball IQ. Cost is $150. Sign up deadline is July 5. Space is limited to 26 players.

Shooting Stars Girls Instructional Basketball Clinic will be held July 18-22 from 9:00 am – 12:00 pm in the Old Hammondtown School gym. This clinic is geared towards instructional level players in Grades 3-5. The clinic will focus on ball handling, passing, shooting, man-to-man defensive techniques, footwork and gameplay. Director Julie Letourneau is a former Division 2 basketball player who played professionally in Luxembourg and currently coaches with the MATTREC basketball program. Cost is $150. Sign up deadline is July 12.

Summer Conditioning Clinic will be held on Tuesdays & Thursdays, July 12 – August 4, from 4:00 – 5:30 pm at Old Hammondtown School. This clinic is geared towards children in Grades 4-6 who are interested in increasing their condition levels in a fun and safe environment. The clinics will focus on youth conditioning through speed, agility, strength and power drills along with fun game play. Chad Cabeceiras (Mr. C) will direct the clinics. Chad is a Physical Education teacher in Mattapoisett and a graduate of Bridgewater State University with degrees in Exercise Science & Kinesiology. He is also a certified boxing fitness instructor and IYCA Youth Nutrition Specialist. Cost is $130. Sign up deadline is July 5. Space is limited to 15 participants.

Nature Explorers Program will be held July 25-29 from 9:00 am – 12:00 pm (with possible additional week August 1-5). Join MATTREC and the Marion Natural History Museum to explore some of Mattapoisett’s unique natural areas including Ned’s Point Lighthouse, Aucoot Cove, the Mattapoisett River, along with various salt marshes, bogs, forests and Land Trust properties. Participants will visit with local aquaculture operators, the Harbormaster, Shellfish Officer, and other local authorities. Your child will enjoy exploring nature with Elizabeth Leidhold, Director/Lead Educator at the Marion Natural History Museum and Mattapoisett’s Conservation Agent. Cost is $125. Sign up deadline is July 6.

Shoolman Preserve Walk

Members of the Rochester Land Trust have been hard at work this winter with their partners from the Mattapoisett Land Trust. After MLT made RLT co-owners of the 80 acre property opposite 199 New Bedford Road, a great deal of work has been done. A kiosk and parking area have been installed, a total of 1½ miles of trails have been opened to make a circular walk with spurs to a holly grove and a view to the river, and an agreement with the Rochester Conservation Commission was made to extend the trails onto their previously landlocked property.

Now both RLT and MLT would like to invite the public to view this improved property. The gift of Edith and Eliot Shoolman back in 1984 for the enjoyment of the beautiful woods, a place to listen for birds and walk in nature, can now be appreciated to its fullest. Join us for an introductory walk on Sunday, May15, at 11:00 am to see what has been done there.

Electronics and Household Appliance Recycling Day

The Mattapoisett Lions Club, Inc. is sponsoring an Electronics and Household Appliance Recycling Day on Saturday, May 14. The event will be held next to the Bowlmor Bowling Alley, 22 County Road, Route 6, Mattapoisett between 9:00 am and 3:00 pm.

This event presents a great opportunity to clear out all that unwanted clutter that’s accumulated over the years in and around the house or office. All are encouraged to sort through their basements, attics, offices, and garages for any electronic or electric devices, and any household appliances (large and small) just collecting dust and no longer needed. Bring them to the event and for a nominal fee have them recycled and disposed of once and for all! Pick-ups considered for seniors and disabled citizens.

Recycle Electronic/Electric Devices ($5 fee) or ($35 fee per car load). Laptops, mobile devices, computers, CPU boxes, computer parts/accessories, keyboards, mice, cell phones, land line phones, speakers, video games/systems, camera/video/audio equipment, VCR’s, fax and copy machines, printers, amplifiers, pre-amps, set top boxes, scanners, shredders, wires, plugs, drives, cards, servers and much more. Recycle TVs (in wood console, plastic, projection) all sizes ($25 fee), and monitors ($15 fee).

Recycle Household Appliances & Metal Items: Large ($10 fee) and Small ($5 fee or $35 per car load). All white goods including refrigerators, freezers, water heaters, stoves, ranges, dishwashers, washing machines and dryers, microwave ovens, toaster ovens, toasters, coffee makers, irons, hair dryers, electric can openers, blenders, mixers, power tools, metal items less than 8 feet long, metal poles, metal desks, barbecue grills (no propane tanks), pots, pans and much more!

All donations to benefit Lions Club Charities and are tax deductible as may be allowed by law. Mattapoisett Lions Club, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) IRS approved public charity.

For more information contact Lion Bob Saunders at 508-758-4675.

Carol A. Taylor

Carol A. Taylor, 70, of Rochester passed away May 10, 2016 at Kindred Transitional Care and Rehabilitation – Forestview.

Ms. Taylor was born in Acushnet, daughter of the late Floyd W. and Evelyn (Winslow) Taylor, and was a lifelong resident of Rochester. She was a member of the First Congregational Church of Rochester. She was employed as a cook by the Old Colony Regional Vocational Technical High School until her retirement. She enjoyed baking and ran her own cake baking business for many years. She loved her animals.

Survivors include a sister: Patricia Tilton and her husband, Timothy; 2 brothers: Edward and Warren Taylor; a stepsister: Janice Cocking and her husband, Gordon; a stepbrother: Charles Denault and his wife, Carol; and several nieces & nephews.

Relatives and friends are invited to attend a memorial visitation at the Kirby Funeral Home, 61 Tarkiln Hill Road, New Bedford on Friday, May 20, 2016, 6-8 P.M. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made to a charity of your choosing.

An online guest book is available at www.potterfuneralservice.com.

Wastewater Tops Town Meeting Concerns

The town is in an excellent financial condition. This is how Marion Finance Committee Chairman Alan Minard started off his state of the town’s finances address to voters during the May 9 Annual Town Meeting.

“It was a tougher year than usual,” he said, with cuts made here and there in order to provide for mostly level-funded budgets throughout.

Town Meeting approved the $21,122,751 total operating budget with minimal discussion before moving onto other articles, most notably the ones that had to do with water and wastewater, which led to the repeated question by some: How will this affect the rates?

Article 3 started the conversation off with the Water Enterprise budget of $2,093,376, (up 4.16% from FY16), prompting residents to ask how that would affect the rates, to which Finance Director Judith Mooney replied saying there would be a 2.5% increase, same as last year. Article 4, the Sewer Enterprise Budget of $2,737,119, (up 1.35%), revealed a 3.5-8% increase, depending on usage.

“I’d like to say it’s one of those easy blanket charges,” said Mooney, “…it depends on the household, how many [people]…. The high end would be the high-end users, the high tier.”

But it was Article 12 that started the real debate.

The article, which ultimately passed the 2/3-vote requirement, appropriates $1.5 million towards the permitting, design, ad modifications of the town’s wastewater treatment plant to meet the new stricter requirements of the EPA’s National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit.

“This is a situation where we have very little choice,” said Minard, giving the Finance Committee’s recommendation that the article be adopted. The amount will likely go down, he stated, “Which reflects a growing understanding of the factors involved.”

Resident Barbara Sanderson asked, “Does it feel to anyone but me like people like us … who have been told we have to be on [town] sewer … are carrying an unfair burden for this work?”

The bond for the work would be paid from the Sewer Enterprise Fund, which is funded by the sewer ratepayers.

Selectman Jonathan Henry explained that a law dating back some years made paying for capital expenditures of systems such as wastewater to be funded by the consumers and not the taxpayers at large.

Further into discussion, resident Joseph Zora questioned the other contributing factors to the pollution in Aucoot Cove saying that if failed septic systems were to be blamed for such a significant part of it, where was the Board of Health? Zora argued against the data the EPA used when drafting the NPDES permit and commented that the town should have an experienced environmental attorney negotiating with the EPA, not the town administrator and selectmen.

“Only then should we allow the EPA to dictate to us what our compliance requirements are because as of today, they are using very bad, bad data,” Zora said.

Planning Board member Jerry “Rico” Ferrari said the Master Plan Committee was looking into tentative data on water and sewer and would bring forth information at next year’s town meeting, but he added, “Unfortunately, you have to go with this amount of money to be in compliance.”

There was more talk about regionalization with Wareham and other communities near the Cape Cod Canal, which is currently in the beginning stages of feasibility exploration.

Ms. Sanderson questioned the appropriateness of having 2/3 of the town vote on whether 1/3 of the town, which is serviced by sewer, should pay the cost for this. Resident, and School Committee member, Christine Winters asked what the percentage of non-paying water/sewer-paying municipal buildings was compared to residential, to which neither selectmen nor Town Administrator Paul Dawson could answer.

Article 13, although it passed, faced some opposition as some, including Ferrari, who is up for re-election to the Planning Board, opposed appropriating $630,000 to replace the Mary’s Pond drinking water well, with Ferrari and other advocating for regionalization over the local water source.

Resident Allan Ditchfield posed the question of tapping into Wareham, and Superintendent Rob Zora said the possibility was looked at several times over the years.

“We feel it’s better to reactivate our well field and tie into that,” Zora said, adding that perhaps five to ten years in the future it would be a more viable option.

Ferrari argued that the Master Plan Committee preferred to explore the tie-in with Wareham option, asking voters to hold off until next year for its recommendation.

“Give the team some time,” said Ferrari. “We don’t need it now. Six months, nine months … it’s not going to make any difference….” he said, except to the taxpayers’ paychecks.

Zora said Wareham could wind up charging Marion whatever it wanted to service the town, and he preferred that Marion control its own resources.

“We own it,” said Zora. “We own it now. We just got to fix it. And it’s a good water source.”

The voters agreed with Zora and the article passed.

Article 14 to appropriate $92,500, down from the $120,000 originally stated on the warrant, to develop and implement a Capacity Management Operations and Maintenance (CMOM) program mandated by the EPA to manage and maintain storm and wastewater collection systems garnered some debate as well, but took considerably less time to pass than the previous articles. Article 16, similar to number 14, appropriating $150,000 towards an Asset Management Program, another component of the EPA’s requirements, passed as well.

The only other article that raised some contention was Article 22 to appropriate $171,473 – Marion’s share of the total $603,000 – to fund ORR’s five-year capital expenditure plan.

There was some debate over the difference between the article’s request for a Proposition 2½ debt exclusion rather than a Proposition 2½ override. Dawson and Minard explained that the exclusion would raise the tax levy above 2.5% for up to ten years, while an override would raise the tax levy permanently. Nonetheless, the article passed.

Other items that were approved were $12,265 for defibrillators for the Police, Recreation, and Facilities Departments; $6,194 to fix the beach house roof at Silvershell Beach; $55,000 for two new outboard motors for the harbormaster’s control boat; $81,804 for a ventilation system for Fire Station 1 and $39,905 for repairs; $25,000 for vinyl tile replacement at Sippican School; and $92,400 to replace the asphalt and rubber roof as well as duct insulation at Taber Library.

For Community Preservation Act articles, voters approved $194,700 for the CPA Budgeted reserves; $111,950 to replace and restore the historic windows at the Pythagorean Hall; and $65,000 for Marion’s share (in conjunction with Mattapoisett and Fairhaven who will contribute an equal share on top of grant monies) to protect 114 acres of land at and surrounding the Mattapoisett River, a local water supply.

By Jean Perry

 

Knights Teen Dance

The next Knights Teen Dance is on Friday, May 13 from 7:00 to 10:00 pm for $8 at The Knights, 57 Fairhaven Road in Mattapoisett. Teen dances are a safe place for 6th, 7th, and 8th graders to have a good time socializing, dancing and listening to their favorite music on a Friday night. Knights of Columbus Chaperones and a uniformed police officer are on site at all of our dances.

Tabor Arts on Display in May

Tabor Academy has several performances this month as the school year winds to a close. The public is invited to join in the celebration of achievement these performances represent.

Every year, the month of May brings a ton of talent to Tabor’s stages – our actors perform Spring One Acts in the Black Box over two weekends while our dancers perform their final recital of the year. Please join us on May 19 in the Fireman Center for the Performing Arts (235 Front Street) at 6:30 pm for the Dance Recital. The dancers performing just won a Platinum Award for their hip-hop number and a double gold award for their jazz routine at the recent Step Up 2 Dance competition, so it is sure to be a great show yet again this year.

On the music front, Tabor student musicians have several recitals you won’t want to miss. The Music Students’ Recital is on Thursday, May 12 in Lyndon South Auditorium at 6:30 pm (inside the Stroud Academic Center at 232 Front Street). These students are part of Tabor’s private music instruction program where 13 private music teachers come to campus to teach students on most string, woodwind, brass and percussion instruments as well as piano and voice. It is always fantastic to hear the music students and to mark their growth year to year. There is a healthy range from a first time performer to more experienced musicians, and this recital is full of wonderful music as well as spirited, youthful enthusiasm.

As the month matures, the Chamber Music Recital will keep your toes tapping with Tabor’s a cappella groups on Monday, May 16 in Lyndon South Auditorium at 6:30 pm, and finally, the Madrigal Singers will perform their last concert on Friday, May 20 at 7:00 pm in Wickenden Chapel.

Tabor students and faculty invite you to come out and enjoy the artists this spring!

All Quiet On The Western Front

All Quiet On The Western Front will be shown on Friday, May 13 at 7:00 pm at the Marion Music Hall. Just three years after the first “talkie” movie was made – The Jazz Singer in 1927 – the very important movie All Quiet On The Western Front was filmed in 1930 and is one of the most powerful films ever made. Young school boys are encouraged to join the battle underway at the start of World War I. They search for glory and honor, but instead find the horrors of combat and man’s inhumanity to man. All Quiet On The Western Front is not for the faint hearted. David Pierce will offer brief comments at the conclusion of the movie. This film is part of the Classic Movie series sponsored by the Sippican Historical Society and the Marion Council of Aging. There is no charge to see the film. Donations are gratefully accepted. Free popcorn.

Tiara 5K Draws Record Number

The Mattapoisett Mother’s Day tradition has grown steadily each year, with 2016 proving to be the biggest year yet for the annual Mattapoisett Women’s Fund Tiara 5K, a fundraiser road race benefitting the Women’s Fund of New Bedford.

Now in its tenth year, this year’s Tiara 5K had already received 903 registrants – one more than the 902 last year – by the time online registration closed the Friday before the race, said Liz Ackerman, one of the event organizers.

Ackerman is an owner of the Oxford Creamery, which is the beginning point and finish line for the race that winds its way through Mattapoisett village and back again.

“This being the tenth year is so exciting,” said Ackerman. She said this year, not only were there more participants, but there were more additions to the celebration, including goodies, cakes, cupcakes, face painting … all carried out by about 100 local volunteers, ORR students, and volunteers of the Women’s Fund.

“The Women’s Fund is doing a lot with equal pay, women’s education, and living wages,” said Ackerman. “And they help women trying to get a job to sustain their families. And that’s a huge thing.”

Luckily, the forecasted rain held off until later in the day after the event was over.

Taylor Days-Merrill, 22, was first to cross the finish line at 16:57, followed by Selena Scott, 38, who finished first in the women’s division at 20:26.

By Jean Perry

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Cooman Organ Recital

The organ recital series at the First Congregational Church in Marion will continue on Sunday, May 22 at 4:00 pm with a program of fresh, new music – joyous, sparkling, and evocative of the Renaissance and Baroque.

Performing on the church’s historic George S. Hutchings organ will be Carson Cooman, composer-in-residence at The Memorial Church of Harvard University, whose captivating “Sonatina, Opus 1016” was featured on the November 2015 recital program of Steven Young. Cooman has attracted wide acceptance and enthusiasm for his own engaging compositions and his lively playing of recent organ works, many written especially for him to perform.

As a composer, Cooman has created a catalog of works in many forms, ranging from solo instrumental pieces to operas and from orchestral works to hymn tunes (www.carsoncooman.com). As an organ recitalist, Cooman specializes in the performance of new music. Over 150 compositions by more than 100 international composers have been written for him.

Cooman holds degrees in music from Harvard University and Carnegie Mellon University. He has given premiere performances of works by a number of today’s most distinguished composers and has made many recordings, including recordings of music by Lothar Graap and Carlotta Ferrari, both of whom will be featured on the May 22 program. His own work has been performed on all six inhabited continents and appears on over 40 recordings.

The First Congregational Church in Marion was built in 1841 with the contributions of local ship captains. In 1884, with support from local philanthropist Elizabeth Taber, a new mechanical-action organ by George S. Hutchings was installed. Hutchings was prominent among American organ builders and built organs for the old Boston Music Hall, the Old South Church, and Symphony Hall.

Tickets for the recitals are $10 and may be purchased at The Bookstall on Front Street in Marion and at the door. For more information and reservations, call 508-748-2067. The First Congregational Church, located at 28 Main Street at the corner of Front and Main in Marion, is handicapped accessible.