Scientist/Children’s Book Author Visits OHS

Loree Griffin Burns knew when she was a young student that she loved science – and writing – and on June 1 she shared her passion for both of her life’s callings with sixth grade students at Old Hammondtown School, highlighting her book Tracking Trash: Flotsam, Jetsam, and the Science of Ocean Motion.

The story behind the children’s book began back in 1992 when shipping containers from a cargo ship fell into the sea, breaking open to release 30,000 floating bathtub toys into the Pacific Ocean. As Burns dove into the history of the accident that quickly turned into a unique study on ocean currents, she managed to weave into her presentation awareness on the damaging effects plastic is having on the oceans and marine life.

In 2003, Burns read a headline in her local newspaper that caught her attention. “Duckies floating to eastern beaches,” it read. It seemed that 11 years after the accident, these plastic bath toys had been carried from one coast to the other coast and were finally hitting the beaches of Massachusetts.

“I found this odd and fascinating at the same time,” said Burns. She found herself asking questions like, whose job was it to track 30,000 rubber ducks across the ocean? How would one do it, and, of course, why?

The idea captured her imagination, compelling Burns to contact the man who made it his business to track plastic toys floating across the globe on the ocean currents. Dr. Curt Ebbesmeyer is his name, and his passion is to understand the ocean movements and surface currents of the planet’s oceans.

Ebbesmeyer not only tracked the bath toys, but he even tracked the movement of 70,000 Nike sneakers that spilled from a shipping freighter into the Pacific Ocean off the coast of Alaska.

Burns held up a sneaker and a bathtub toy like the ones Ebbesmeyer tracked.

“What could you possibly want to track in the ocean besides junk like this?” Burns asked the students. Oil spills was the most important, said Burns. “He (Ebbesmeyer) can say where the slick will move next.”

Burns found Ebbesmeyer and the bathtub toy accident “quirky and interesting,” resulting in her children’s book that explores the flow of the ocean currents and, ever so gently, exposes a growing problem of trash and plastic junk in the world’s oceans in a way that wasn’t “depressing,” she said.

Charles Moore, a scientist with whom Burns worked while researching the material for the book, also worked with the floating junk of the oceans, but he is more interested in what the plastic does rather than to where it floats.

The truth is, said Burns, people are still finding these bathtub toys 23 years after the accident, “And they’re basically in the same condition,” although, perhaps, a bit bleached by the sun and salt water exposure.

“They do not break down. The plastic itself will never break down into its basic elements,” said Burns. The way plastic “breaks down” is bit-by-bit, breaking into smaller pieces all the way down to the microscopic level and never ceasing to exist. The plastic that reaches the ocean remains in the ocean. Moore was onto an important study but, unlike Ebbesmeyer’s, “This is not so funny,” Burns said.

We have a lot of trash in the ocean, said Burns, “But this isn’t the book I wanted to write.”

What helped change the direction of the book to a more positive tone was a beach cleanup event she witnessed at Revere Beach affiliated with the “International Coastal Cleanup.” Burns asked the students how many of them had ever participated in a beach cleanup. Only one raised her hand.

Burns said the number one object recovered from the one and a half-mile stretch of beach during the cleanup in Revere was cigarette butts – roughly 3,500 of them.

School volunteer Debra Nettles asked Burns if plastic trash, such as the junk that washes ashore from cargo shipping accidents, could wash up in Marion and Mattapoisett, since the shoreline is somewhat “sheltered” by the bay.

“I think we’re kind of isolated,” said Nettles. And with the shape of the Marion Harbor, Burns said, the coast is rather protected from trash such as the bath toys.

“A lot of cargo ships lose cargo. I was astonished,” said Burns. Thousands of containers fall into the ocean every year spilling their contents. “But that’s probably about 10 percent of the trash on beaches…. The rest comes from land. It comes from us. We all need to deal with it.”

Burns’ book has been added to the Old Hammondtown Library at the school, and can be found at all three libraries in Tri-Town. After the presentation, Burns talked more seriously about the problem of plastic trash and junk in our waters.

Studies of ocean animals and marine birds show a high percentage of them all have some sort of plastic debris in their digestive systems.

“And they’re dying of starvation because they’re so full of plastic,” said Burns. “They don’t even know they’re hungry.”

Burns said our single-use culture has come to a pivotal point where biodegradable forms of plastic must be developed in order to cease producing more plastic waste that will enter the food chain of all marine life.

“It just gets really, really dark,” said Burns. “You educate yourself and you do what you can.”

A sixth grade student, said Burns, might find it hard to grasp the severity of the situation, “But if you can plant a little seed…”

“If the presentation grabs just one kid, then I’m happy,” said Nettles.

By Jean Perry

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St. Gabriel’s Raises Funds for Charity

Since September 2014, Sunday School students at St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church in Marion raised money for three charities of their choice: the Fairhaven Animal Shelter, care packages to deployed military service members, and Heifer International. Fundraising efforts included selling hand-drawn Christmas card sets, bake sales, and solicitation of direct donations from the congregation. Overall, the children were able to send 22 care packages to sailors, marines, soldiers, and airmen in five overseas deployments and on one aircraft carrier, and raised $5,180 in cash.

On Thursday, May 28 the students gathered at the Fairhaven Animal Shelter to present Animal Control Officer Kelly Massey with a check for $1,727, one-third of their total cash fundraising efforts. The students visited with the cats and dogs currently housed at the shelter, and learned about how their donation would help provide care for the animals. They were even able to name three newborn kittens, which they named Liza (after one student who was celebrating her 8th birthday that day), Nena, and Bo.

The remaining money is being split between Any Soldier Inc., an organization that provides support and care packages to deployed service members, and Heifer International. After the April and May earthquakes in Nepal, the students voted to direct their Heifer funds to that organization’s Nepal Disaster Relief efforts. Each charity received $1,727.

St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church’s Sunday School program runs from September to May for children in preschool through sixth grade. Nursery care for infants and toddlers is open year-round during the 10:00 am service (9:30 am during the summer months). Even though the Sunday School meets next in the fall, there are books, coloring pages, and other activities available for children on Sundays throughout the summer. For more information about the St. Gabriel’s Sunday School program, please contact Christina Bonney at christinabonney@gmail.com.

 

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Marion Town House Public Meeting

The Marion Town House Building Committee together with T2 Architecture invites the public to attend an informational session to discuss options to renovate the Marion Town House. The meeting will be held at the Marion Music Hall on Tuesday June 23 at 7:00 pm. The committee and the architects will discuss options for renovating the historic town house as well as possibly building a community center consisting of the Town House, a Senior Center and an expanded modernized Elizabeth Taber Library.

The purpose of the meeting is to invite townspeople to express opinions and share ideas on this important project. No final designs have been developed as the team needs public input first to help shape the process. A follow-up public meeting will be held later in the summer when the architects will present their conceptual designs.

The Marion Town House Building Committee was formed by the Board of Selectmen last summer to explore four options for renovation of the Marion Town House. The Marion town meeting last year approved funding for the first phase, a feasibility study. The building committee together with the selectmen selected Turowski 2 Architecture of Marion this spring to develop conceptual designs of the four options and produce cost estimates for review by the townspeople.

The ultimate goal of the study is to provide modern functional town facilities in beautifully renovated buildings compatible with the special character of the town. Public input is essential to achieve the desired result.

Regular Season Draws to a Close

Here is a look at the eighth week of scheduled games for Old Rochester Regional High School spring athletics.

Baseball: The Bulldogs closed out their regular season with three big wins this week, one of which clinched a co-conference championship. The boys started out their week with a 4-3 victory over GNB Voc-Tech. Thanks to an RBI from Jordan Menard, ORR broke a 3-3 tie to earn their fifteenth victory of the season. The win would prove pivotal, as the boys’ next win, a 19-3 victory over Case, secured a co-SCC Championship with Fairhaven. Had the boys lost either game, Fairhaven would have secured the title outright. Luckily for ORR that didn’t happen, thanks to strong performances by Bryant Salkind and Will Hopkins, each of whom recorded four hits for the Bulldogs. From the mound, James Leidhold dominated, striking out six and only allowing one hit over the first four innings. The co-championship marks the second straight year the Bulldogs have had at least a share of the title. Finally, ORR closed out their week and season with a 2-1 victory over Coyle-Cassidy. Their final regular season record is 17-3.

            Boys’ Tennis: The boys’ tennis team closed out their regular season with a 5-0 shutout over Dartmouth this week. Though the Bulldogs beat out-of-conference Dartmouth earlier in the season, at that time Dartmouth was missing three varsity players, raising some questions as to if ORR could really beat the Division 1 team. They proved more than capable this week, thanks to wins from Owen Sughrue (first singles), Alex Bilodeau (second singles), Sam Pasquill (third singles), Josh Lerman and Maxx Wolski (first doubles) and Stephen Burke and Jahn Pothier (second doubles). The boys finish their season with an 18-1 record, an SCC Championship, and a hopeful playoff bid that has yet to come.

Girls’ Tennis: The girls’ tennis team finished their season with a tough 3-2 loss against Bishop Stang. The girls got wins from Olivia Bellefeuille (third singles) and Sophie Church and Katelyn Bindas (second doubles), but were not able to secure that needed third point to claim the victory over the Lady Spartans. Though the girls’ regular season ends on a sour note, they look to get back on the more positive side of things during their upcoming state tournament run.

Boys’ Lacrosse: The Bulldogs started their week off with a tough loss to out-of-conference Sandwich, but managed to turn things around with a 9-8 victory over Dartmouth. The win was largely in part to Gerald Lanagan, the ORR senior goalie who recorded 12 saves including one in the final minute that secured the ORR lead until time expired. Offensively, the boys were led by Ethan Lizotte (three goals), Thomas McIntire (two goals), and Landon Goguen (two goals). Pat Kiernan and Ryan Manning also scored in the boys’ 16th victory of the season. The boys received the number two seed in the Division 3 South Tournament, and will look to start their postseason march against Cardinal Spellman on Monday.

Below are the overall spring team records, followed by the conference records in wins, losses, and ties as of May 31.

Baseball: (17-3-0) (14-2-0); Softball: (8-10-0) (8-8-0); Boys’ Track: (6-2-0) (6-2-0); Girls’ Track: (8-0-0) (8-0-0); Boys’ Tennis: (18-1-0) (14-0-0); Girls’ Tennis: (14-5-0) (13-3-0); Boys’ Lacrosse: (15-2-0) (7-1-0); Girls’ Lacrosse: (12-5-1) (7-3-0).

By Michael Kassabian

 

IDC Seeks to Dissolve, Article 17 Passed Over

The Rochester Board of Selectmen and the Industrial Development Commission (IDC) met June 1 to discuss Article 18 of the Annual Town Meeting warrant to dissolve the IDC, and selectmen also decided to skip over Article 17 on Town Meeting floor.

The IDC came to discuss its future and the future of the $88,335 that had remained unspent in its allotment since 1984.

The IDC decided that, as an organization, it was no longer needed in the Town of Rochester and it should be dissolved to free up the IDC funds for other needs.

“What the IDC would like to do is to withdraw those funds, to close that account, and so that that money can be appropriated for the snow and ice removal (costs from this year),” IDC member and Board of Selectmen Chairman Richard Nunes said.

The IDC was created as a source of funding earmarked to assist industrial businesses in developing in the Town of Rochester. According to Town Administrator Michael McCue, there has never been a situation of that sort in town since the creation of the fund.

Town Counsel Blair Bailey explained why there was no longer a need for the IDC.

“This issue is that in small towns, such as Rochester, the statute that the IDC is under has very limited reasons or purposes that you’re allowed to use the money,” said Bailey, “for certain things like industrial development studies and things like that.” He continued, “While we certainly appreciate the creation of it when SEMASS started it, it’s really not something the Town of Rochester needs, frankly, and this money’s been sitting there for quite a long time.”

This $88,000, once freed up, is how the Town hopes to cover some of the cost of the over-expended snow and ice removal budget from fiscal year 2015.

Money will initially be taken from the stabilization fund to pay for the snow and ice removal for the 2014/2015 winter, which brought more than 60 inches of snowfall for the town by the end of March and caused the total cost of snow removal to exceed $160,000. The corresponding amount will then be applied from the newly-dissolved IDC account to the stabilization fund.

The vote passed unanimously following little discussion.

Prior to the IDC meeting, the Board of Selectmen heard from Chuck Shay, appraisal technician for the Town on the subject of Article 17.

According to Nunes, Article 17 was intended as a way to do a preliminary semi-annual tax collection to estimate tax bills from the previous year.

“The reason for doing that would be so that we could send out a tax bill and get revenue,” Nunes said after the meeting. “What’s happened in the past is that tax bills have to go out before the end of the calendar year and the Department of Revenue has had typically been unable to certify the tax rate at the end of the year.” Nunes continued, “So the treasurer would have to request the Board of Selectmen do short-term borrowing into the stabilization fund so that we can pay the Town’s bills.”

He further explained that this practice would hurt the Town’s credit.

“If they’re looking at you, having to do short-term borrowing from your stabilization, they frown upon it because it shows you’re not managing things well,” he said.

During the meeting, Shay and the other representatives from the Board of Assessors said that Article 17 was unnecessary as they would be able to get the Town’s tax bills out by October, thus eliminating any need for the Town to borrow from itself.

The board agreed to withdraw Article 17, but it must be officially passed over at the June 8 Town Meeting since the warrant has already been posted.

During the meeting, McCue delivered a warning to members of the public that there may be disruptions in new services from Eversource as the union representing the local workers has ordered work stoppage until a dispute is settled.

McCue reminded the public that Constitution Way in Rochester will be closed to traffic July 27 through July 31 as part of the First Congregational Church’s week-long Bible camp.

McCue also updated the board on the initiative to get Rochester named a Tree City, USA. He reminded those in attendance that the Town celebrated Arbor Day this year and planted a tree in honor of the holiday. The application for Tree City is completed and will be submitted later.

The next scheduled meeting of the Rochester Board of Selectmen is June 15 at 6:30 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

By Andrew Roiter

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Janet Renee Swoish

Janet Renee Swoish, 82, of Marion, Massachusetts passed away on May 29, 2015 in the presence of family, following a courageous battle with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) and cancer.

Jan was born March 31, 1933 in Brooklyn, NY the daughter of Julius Gustav Derse and Ethel Elizabeth Derse. She attended Public School #147 in Queens, NY and Bernards High School in Somerville, NJ while growing up. Jan spent her formative years at Wilson College in Chambersburg, PA graduating in 1954 and beginning a teaching career in Pennsylvania.

Jan married Raymond Francis Swoish, P.E. of Buffalo NY in 1954 in New Jersey. Ray passed away in August 2008 after 54 years with the love of his life. Jan and Ray were very active in the communities they lived including Princeton, NJ; Marion, MA; Brookfield, WI; Cohasset, MA; Greenfield, PA; Murrysville, PA; finally returning to their beloved seaside village of Marion.

Jan is survived by her sister, Beverly Tarr of Gloucester, MA; her children Captain Douglas Swoish USN (ret) and wife, Evie Swoish of St. James, NY; Nell Elizabeth “Beth” Lorenz of Greenfield, MA; W. Scott Swoish and wife, Nancy Swoish of Marietta, GA; Christopher D. Swoish of Marion, MA; her seven grandchildren, David B. Swoish, Paul T. Swoish, Kerry E. Swoish, Alison N. Swoish, Hannah W. Swoish, Sydney L. Swoish, Taylor K. Swoish; as well as many other dear relatives and friends.

Jan formed a lifelong bond with her fellow Wilson College graduates, members of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR), Sippican League of Women Voters, local garden clubs and charity organizations, while maintaining her faith to the Episcopal Church during the many relocations she and Ray had over the decades.

A memorial service will be held on Friday 10 July, 2015, at Saint Gabriel’s Episcopal Church, located at 124 Front Street, Marion. A reception will be held immediately following the service at St Gabriel’s Parish hall. A private burial ceremony will be held at the convenience of the family in the tranquil setting of Point Road Memorial Forest in Marion.

In lieu of flowers, expressions of affection may be directed to: Saint Gabriel’s Church in Marion.

CVS Project Continues to Continue

After multiple requests to continue the public hearing for LEC Environmental Consultants, affiliated with the proposed CVS project, the Marion Conservation Commission on May 27 wondered how much longer they should honor the company’s requests to continue continuing.

The first public hearing to address the Request for Determination of Applicability to establish the wetlands lines at the property located at the corner of Route 6 and Front Street was October 22, and the hearing has been continued several times since the beginning of this year.

Although a formal plan had not yet been submitted, a Conservation Commission majority informed the representatives of the CVS project during that October meeting that it adamantly opposed allowing any construction within the designated floodplain or wetlands buffer zone on the lot.

On May 27, with another request from the applicant to continue the public hearing until August 26, commission members started asking whether or not they should allow, or could cease to allow, any further continuations.

“It’s become a joke of just make an appointment and continue it,” said ConCom member Jeffrey Doubrava. “[They] make an appointment and continue it and any townspeople who would like to follow this case have had to essentially come to every Conservation Commission [meeting] in the last six months.”

Commission member Steve Gonsalves asked if there was any rule that prohibits the applicant from requesting continuance after continuance. Chairman Norman Hills said he thinks not.

In defense of the continuances, Gonsalves said he did not find the many requests “a bad joke,” and advocated to allow another continuance.

“The bottom line is, I know this is a pretty big project,” said Gonsalves, “and I can respect … that they want to have their i’s dotted and their t’s crossed.” He continued, “I think … we should give them what they need and work with them.”

Hills said that unless LEC Environmental comes back with some information, creates an escrow account for the commission to hire an engineer, or takes action to move the matter forward, the commission should close the public hearing and issue the RDA “with not exactly what they’re looking for.”

“To date, they have not posted that (escrow) money so nothing has happened,” said Hills. “They either need to post the money [or] come up with a plan that looks like they’re actually going to do something….”

Gonsalves suggested the commission makes those suggestions while continuing until the August 26 meeting, and the other members agreed.

“I think that’s fair,” said Doubrava, also retracting the word “joke” he used earlier when describing the string of continuances. “But this was originally posted in October.”

The vote to continue was unanimous.

“They’ve got three months to figure out what they need to do,” said Hills, “and it is the intention of this board to not continue it after that. So they need to decide what to do.”

The next meeting of the Marion Conservation Commission is scheduled for June 10 at 7:00 pm at the Marion Town House.

By Jean Perry

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Solar Project Promised an ‘Expeditious’ Process

The Marion Planning Board heard the gist of the plan for a new solar energy facility slated for Tucker Lane, and Chairman Robert Lane on June 1 promised Clean Energy Collective representatives a Planning Board process “as smooth and expeditious as possible.”

This solar farm project will be the first in the Town of Marion under the Town’s new solar bylaw.

Still in the preliminary stages of planning before a submitted application for a Special Permit, the one-megawatt solar farm will produce electricity for a program called “SolarPerks” that offers all EverSource customers the chance to go solar, while also receiving a 5-percent discount off their monthly bill.

Community Solar Manager for Clean Energy Collective Greg Carey said their solar energy program is different from others because, instead of selling the electricity to municipalities and pumping the excess back into the grid, the program offers solar energy directly to the residents with no money down.

“Residents who want to go solar … but perhaps can’t afford to put solar on their house,” said Carey. “And residents get a discount each month on their electric bill.”

The 6.5-acre lot has been a field for as long as any of the board members could remember, meaning no clear-cutting of trees and brush is needed for preconstruction. The access point for the solar farm would be from a Rochester entry point off Mary’s Pond Road with the actual facility in Marion.

Bill Madden of G.A.F. Engineering said he would be seeking a couple of waivers on behalf of his client, including one for height. The height of the solar arrays will be 8 feet, but the bylaw states that the arrays cannot exceed 8 feet beyond the natural grading of the site. Madden had some concerns about a slight slope on the property.

“Where it’s a newer bylaw,” said Madden, “…I think there’s a little learning and working together … to be sure we have the proper interpretation of the bylaw.”

Lane concurred, but declined to give Madden or Carey any definitive answers to their questions about waivers and filing fees.

“As far as what I’ve seen here, I don’t have any real problem with what they’re proposing,” said board member Norman Hills.

Planning Board member Jennifer Francis, after a question about the history of the clearing of the site stated, “It looks like a great spot for a solar array to me.”

“The applicant is anxious to get going on his project,” said Madden. “We’ll wait to hear back from you folks.”

Lane again told Madden to expect a process “as expeditiously as possible.”

The next meeting of the Marion Planning Board is scheduled for June 15 at 7:00 pm at the Marion Town House.

By Jean Perry

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SouthCoast Children’s Chorus

Do you know a child who loves to sing? The SouthCoast Children’s Chorus announces auditions for its sixth exciting season! Children entering Grades 3-12 are invited to our fun, stress-free auditions at St. Gabriel’s Church, 124 Front St. in Marion. Auditions will take place from June 9 through June 19 and again in August; please contact Director Leslie Piper for an audition date and time. No audition is required for children entering K-Grade 2 who will join the Prep Chorus. For more information, please visit our website: www.scchildrenschorus.org and follow us on Facebook – SouthCoast Children’s Chorus, or contact lesliepiper@msn.com.

Chemistry of Tie Dye

The Marion Natural History Museum’s last afterschool program of this school year featured “Chemistry of Tie Dye” with Chemist Jessica Robidoux and coordinated by Dr. William (Toby) Dills of UMass Dartmouth’s Chemistry Department.  The Museum wishes to thank Ms. Robidoux, Dr. Dills, and all the many volunteers who showed up to help with the program. The students learned a little something about acids and bases as well as having fun dyeing their shirts.  Have a wonderful summer and be sure to stop in to say hello during our open hours. There are still a few spaces in our July summer programs. If you’d like to register your child for “Life along the Shore” or “Coastal Explorations” please visit our website: www.marionmuseum.org. Photo courtesy Elizabeth Leidhold

 

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