Chapter 61 Tax Reduction Program

Come learn about the Chapter 61 tax reduction programs and get your questions answered! Chapter Land includes land used for Forestry, Agricultural purposes and open space and recreation. Chapter 61 Programs offer a property tax break for landowners willing to commit to keeping at least five acres or more of their land undeveloped for a specified period of time.

Guest Speakers will include: Kathleen Costello, MAA Principal Assessor, Joe Perry, DCR Service Forester, Linda Rinta, USDA Certified Farm Planner and Phil Benjamin, Benjamin Forestry Services.

Please call either Elizabeth Leidhold at 508-758-4100 ext. 229 or Laurell J. Farinon at 508-763-5421 ext. 206 if you have any questions.

This event is free and open to the public. The date of the event is Thursday, March 19 at 7:00 pm at the Mattapoisett Public Library, 7 Barstow Street, Mattapoisett. Light refreshments will be served.

Showstoppers Performing Arts Camp

Registrations are now being accepted for Showstoppers’ 11th Annual Performing Arts Camp for boys and girls in Grades 2-8, April 20-24, 9:00 – 3:00 daily, at the Knights of Columbus in Mattapoisett. A musical theater showcase will be presented to the public at 2:00 pm on Saturday, April 25 at the Music Hall in Marion. The camp costs $175 per child and includes performance CD, T-shirt, gift pack and certificate of completion. Don’t delay! Reserve your spot today! For more information or to register, call 508-758-4525 or email info@showstoppers.us.

Marion Council on Aging

The Marion Council on Aging now has tickets available to the final dress rehearsal of Sweeney Todd – School Edition at the Old Rochester Regional High School on April 8 at 7:30 pm. Admission is free, but please bring a non perishable food item for the local pantry.

Due to the popular demand of our trip to the JFK Memorial in Hyannis, we have scheduled another trip for May 4. Space is limited. Call the office for reservations.

“Storytelling” Event

Mattapoisett Congregational Church will offer “StoryTelling,” an interactive community event for all ages on Sunday, March 22 from 4:00 to 6:00 pm. Experience Bible stories in a new way and learn more about the art of storytelling. Rev. Bert Marshall will present old and new stories orally and musically passed down from generation to generation. For more information, visit www.gospelofmarkalive.com. The event is free, but donations are welcome. Reservations are recommended. Email: mattcongce@verizon.net or call 508-758-2671 to reserve a seat.

The Little Mermaid at ORRJHS

The Old Rochester Regional Junior High School Drama Club will perform The Little Mermaid on Thursday, March 19 at 7:00 pm in the junior high school auditorium. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for Students and Seniors; Children 5 and under are FREE. The performance is open to the public. Reserve your tickets by emailing orrjrhighdrama@gmail.com. Please provide your name, number of tickets and type of tickets with your reservation.

ORRJHS Students of the Month

Kevin T. Brogioli, Principal of Old Rochester Regional Junior High School, announces the following Students of the Month for February, 2015:

Green Team: Genevieve Grignetti and Ian Friedrichs

Orange Team: Madeline Hartley and Logan King

Blue Team: Hunter Hanks and Hunter Moreau

Red Team: Finneas McCain and Ruth Harris

Special Areas: Jillian Higgins and Edward Dunn

Science on Ice

Please join Tabor Academy in welcoming oceanographer and science photographer Chris Linder to campus for our first Science at Work Lecture Series on March 30 at 6:30 pm in the Stroud Academic Center, Tabor Academy, 232 Front Street, Marion. For over a decade, Linder has focused on communicating the stories of scientists working in the Arctic and Antarctic. He has documented dozens of scientific expeditions and has spent over two years of his life exploring the polar regions.

“Polar exploration is at once the cleanest and most isolated way of having a bad time which has been devised,” wrote Apsley Cherry-Garrard of his time with the 1910 Scott expedition to the South Pole. And that’s how most of us still imagine polar expeditions: stolid men with ice riming their beards risking death for scientific knowledge. But polar science has evolved over the past century. Using images from the Adelie penguin chapter of his book Science on Ice and recent work in Siberia, oceanographer-turned-photographer Chris Linder will demonstrate the power of photography to inspire the next generation of scientists.

Mr. Linder will spend the day in classrooms on March 30 with Tabor Academy students and faculty before sharing his work with the local community at 6:30 pm at this free evening lecture.

Tasty Welcome to Spring

The Mattapoisett Woman’s Club March 19 meeting starts at noon in Reynard Hall at the Mattapoisett Congregational Church, 27 Church Street.

Don’t Be Late! You won’t want to miss Colby Rottler’s talk on his second-career journey to professional chef and culinary instructor.

Topics on his agenda are: the change in career and the culinary institute he attended; must-have kitchen utensils/gadgets; what makes a dish successful or unsuccessful; how herbs and spices change the texture and taste of food; and answers to questions you’ve wanted to ask, such as does the size of the egg you use affect the recipe.

Did I mention there will be samples to taste? Join us for a light lunch and a delicious talk! For more information, please call Barb at 508-864-5213.

Take a Morning Walk with the BBC

Come join the Buzzards Bay Coalition and the Wareham Land Trust on Wednesday, March 25 from 9:00 – 10:00am for a free morning stroll through the Wildlands Trust’s Rounseville II Preserve on Mary’s Pond Road in Rochester. Walking outdoors is great exercise for your body and mind, and on this walk you’ll also learn about history and ecology along the way.

This walk is part of the “Wednesday Walkabouts” series of free morning walks in March. The other two walks will take place on March 11 at East Over Reservation in Rochester and on March 18 at West Island State Reservation in Fairhaven.

Registration is required for this walk. To RSVP, email bayadventures@savebuzzardsbay.org or call 508-999-6363 ext. 219.

“Wednesday Walkabouts” is part of the Coalition’s Bay Adventures series – programs designed for explorers of all ages to get outside and discover Buzzards Bay. To learn more about all our upcoming Bay Adventures, visit www.savebuzzardsbay.org/bayadventures.

Student Population Drives ORR Budget

It is not a level service budget per se, if you compare it to last fiscal year, but the FY16 ‘better school budget’ could be considered level service if one takes into account the growing student body at ORR.

With class size already a concern of the Old Rochester Regional School Committee, the projected increase in student population at the high school next year is expected to exceed 800 for the first time, further driving up class sizes and pushing some teachers beyond their contractual maximum student caseload.

“Seven-hundred has always been considered healthy,” said ORRHS Principal Mike Devoll on March 3. “Eight-hundred scares me.”

In the current 2014-2015 school year, according to Devoll, the average class size is 24.9; “extremely large,” as Devoll described it.

Since 2008, student population has increased steadily by 16.2%, while teaching staff has been reduced by 9.9%. The average caseload for teachers is 119, and the high school currently has 32 classes with 28 or more students enrolled.

“Ultimately,” said Devoll, “something has to give.”

The FY16 budget proposes adding two new English teachers for two additional sections of English to keep class sizes, currently at 23.6 students per class, steady at 22.4.

During the last joint meeting of the School Committees, committee members favored Devoll’s proposed addition of two new intervention skill-based math classes to help bridge the gap created by the transition from junior to high school, which has had a negative impact on MCAS scores.

“You can’t run those classes with class sizes the way they are now,” said Devoll.

Also proposed are one additional health class and a 0.4 teaching position for American Sign Language, which has been added to the foreign language curriculum as the school phases out French. Devoll said 41 students who otherwise would not fulfill the two-year foreign language college entry requirement have expressed interest in taking sign language.

In addition, two sections of physical education are included in the budget while specialist courses remain at level service.

The student population at the junior high is predicted to decrease slightly, as long as the committee votes to forego school choice slots a second year in a row. Last year, committee members voted not to offer any school choice slots out of concern for class sizes that climbed to an average of 28.

This budget proposes two new seventh-grade teaching positions and the addition of a new seventh-grade “mini-team” alongside the red and blue teams, to reduce class size to an average of 22.

Superintendent Doug White said lower class sizes in both schools would provide “more airtime” for students and a better chance for teachers to monitor and facilitate students’ progress.

“There’s a big difference between teaching 18 students and … 24, 25 students,” said White.

The only change in the specialist category is an increase in the library position from a 0.6 to a 1.0 position. White said the librarian could be available to more students as she takes on more of a media and technology teaching role.

A 35% increase in the demand for supplies funding also reflects the increased needs of a growing student body.

The cutting back of school choice, said White, has the potential to affect the budget over the next two years because of the loss of revenue to the tune of $120,000. The School Committee has not yet voted on whether or not to offer school choice slots to seventh grade for next year.

Total town assessment with this proposed budget of $17,269,113 – less transportation reimbursement and revenue – is at $13,993,254 and is broken down as follows: Marion – $4,230,738; Mattapoisett – $5,056,460; and Rochester – $4,706,056.

The Old Rochester Regional School Committee met again on March 11, after The Wanderer went to print, in order to vote on school choice.

By Jean Perry

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