Town Challenges NPDES Permit Demands

During a special meeting held specifically to address the EPA’s draft NPDES permit, the Marion Board of Selectmen on February 5 were joined by consultant engineers from CDM Smith who schooled the selectmen on the history of the Town’s wastewater treatment plant, the EPA’s new stringent requirements, and a tentative $20 million encumbrance for the Town.

The deadline for comments in response to the draft NPDES permit, which stands for Nation Pollution Discharge Elimination System, was the next day, leaving only 24 hours to challenge the draft permit and try to persuade the EPA to reconsider its strict new nitrogen, heavy metal, and other pollutant levels on the Town’s wastewater treatment plant.

CDM Smith Project Manager Shawn Syde told selectmen that this draft permit is so different than the last one issued that, even with the latest in wastewater technology, the new requirements would be impossible to reach.

“It’s very aggressive,” said Syde, “and in our mind, unrealistic.”

The most significant, and most costly, change is the EPA’s elimination of unlined lagoon use and the prohibiting of allowing the biosolids (sludge) to degrade naturally in the lagoons.

Marion’s three unlined lagoons off Benson Brook Road were built in the 1970s and are integral to the function of the wastewater treatment plant. The lagoons store untreated excess wastewater and treats activated sludge, which then biodegrades on its own.

The draft permit would require the Town to have the sludge removed from the site for disposal.

According to the data the EPA used to draft the NPDES permit, the lagoons are leeching into the groundwater and polluting Aucoot Cove and Sippican Harbor with nitrogen and other heavy metals, to which Syde said there is no proof.

“Where we find ourselves right now is not because of something the Town of Marion has failed to do,” said Selectman Stephen Cushing. “…They changed the rules on us.”

As part of its response, the Town will challenge the data the EPA used and allege that the EPA was too rigid in its requirements, essentially putting an undue financial burden on the Town by not allowing it to seek alternative methods to comply with the new pollutant levels.

Capital costs to the Town that could exceed $20 million would include sludge treatment and disposal, the lining of the lagoons, the expanded filtration and monitoring of nitrogen, phosphorus, and other pollutants, and groundwater cleanup.

“I’ve never seen anything like this,” said CDM Smith Vice President and expert on estuary science Bernadette Kolb via speakerphone during the meeting.

The permit mandates a wastewater treatment plant upgrade as a solution to meet the new limits, which the CDM Smith representatives, Town Administrator Paul Dawson, and selectmen found unfair, since other alternatives exist that could meet the permit requirements.

Some alternatives, said Syde, would be to cease using the effluent brook that delivers treated water into Aucoot Cove and instead run a pipe along the brook.

Kolb said the Town could also create an outfall farther offshore to lessen the nitrogen impact the EPA says the wastewater treatment plant is causing along the shore. With that, said Kolb, there would be no need for nitrogen or phosphorus limits in the permit.

“So there is some room for some give and take in this,” said Chairman Jonathan Henry.             Dawson told him, though, that the matter could go a number of ways.

“We don’t have any guarantee at this point that there will be any [give and take],” said Dawson.

The EPA could grant the permit as-is, it could withdraw the draft permit and allow the Town to explore other options, “or it could go in between,” said Dawson.

Dawson said the Town’s response “ought to give the EPA pause to think.”

After discussion, selectmen joked about renaming the unnamed ‘effluent brook’ to “Cushing’s Creek,” eliciting laughter. Dawson then suggested “Dawson’s Creek,” which won them over.

By Jean Perry

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Florence Eastman Post 280

The monthly meeting of the Florence Eastman Post 280 will be held at the Post Hall at 7:00 pm, February 18. The meeting will cover the Ham & Bean supper scheduled for February 21, as well as the past supper and changes to the portions for future dinner events. These events have to be successful as boys’ and girls’ state tuitions are looming very close, and we would like to send the same as last year which was “9”!!

Bring your ideas for fundraising as we cannot function without our members support and, obviously, the support of the great folks in our area who always patronize our efforts. The Hall is always available for rental. Just contact one of our members or call Mike at 508-758-9311.

Klondike Derby at Camp Cachalot

Over the last couple of weekends the Marion Boy Scouts Troop 32 attended a Klondike Derby at Camp Cachalot in Myles Standish State Park and had their annual Movie Night at the cabin at Camp Hadley, Marion. The Klondike Derby was attended by Jackson St. Don, Chris Horton, Jack Nakashian and David Sheldon on January 31. There were difficulties this year due to, of all things, snow. But the Scouts performed as many of the skill tests as they could and had good fun in the cold and snow in the all day event.

 

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Service Board Creates Opportunity

During our annual leadership symposium, one student group was assigned to generate ideas for improving the community service program at Tabor Academy. Both this group and the newly formed Community Service Board discussed the theme of using Tabor’s facilities to benefit the wider community. This led to the idea of a “Learn to Skate” event.

Last Sunday, February 8, the Varsity Hockey players taught kids in the community to skate in the Fish Center.

The Service Board has weekly meetings with Director of Community Service, Lauren Boucher, and Amelia Wright. The board is made up of two co-heads and two representatives from the sophomore, junior, and senior classes.

The group has been very productive this year in advertising service opportunities around school and planning a variety of new opportunities for students.

“In our Community Service Board meetings, we realized that we had plenty of community service opportunities in New Bedford and surrounding areas but that we weren’t utilizing our own campus,” said Jenna Weyant, a senior representative on the board. “So, this year we wanted to focus on bringing the community to Tabor.” Weyant continued, “With a campus like Tabor’s, there are endless possibilities. We had Alma del Mar students come to play kickball; we’ve had the community come to the Braitmayer for arts and crafts.”

Furthermore, a group of students spend Thursday nights in Greater New Bedford with children of the Big Brother Big Sister Program. Now, the students are going to be spending more time at Tabor doing activities with their Big Brothers and Sisters.

Recently, the students came to Tabor for dinner and to watch one of their “Big Brothers” play in a hockey game.

“Tabor is like a whole new world for these kids,” says senior Matthew McFaul, who is a co-head of the service board and a big brother. “The kids get really excited when they come. It’s really special for them. For instance, some had never seen a live hockey game.”

The day was special for the kids, who were excited to eat dinner with their big brothers and sisters and to watch one of them in action on the ice.

In a few weeks, the students will visit again for the annual Asian Dinner to enjoy some of the culinary treats prepared by our international community.

The use of Tabor’s facilities, such as the hockey rink, is becoming increasingly appealing to the service board and community members, given the success of events like “Learn to Skate” and Sunday Skates for the town.

The service board has helped to create programs and to improve the utilization of Tabor’s campus to benefit the wider community.

By Julia O’Rourke

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LED Sign Approved, Bylaw Codifying Costly

The Rochester Planning Board approved the main pylon sign for the Rochester Crossroads commercial development on Cranberry Highway, as expected.

Planning Board Chairman Arnold Johnson during the January 13 meeting ordered a draft decision drawn up for approval during the February 10 meeting when the public hearing was closed and the decision ratified.

The 26-foot LED lit sign with be visible from Interstate 495, the first of several other signs slated for the project that were withdrawn without prejudice during the previous meeting.

The Rochester Zoning Board of Appeals had already granted a special permit for the signage, but the Planning Board ordered the developer to come to the Planning Board for a proper site plan review.

The project also required several waivers, for example, to display a sign that is no more than 9 square-feet in size.

There was a slight pause after Johnson called for a motion to approve, but once made, the motion passed swiftly.

Also during the meeting, Kevin Forgue of G.A.F. Engineering explained an application for an Approval Not Required on behalf of applicants Dennis and Karen Clemishaw of 99 Perry’s Lane.

The Clemishaws were seeking the removal of lot lines separating property straddling the town line between Rochester and Marion in order to create frontage on Perry’s Lane to access one of the lots with no direct access to the road.

With no significant concerns, after a brief discussion, the application was approved.

In other matters, the board approved two separate site plans pertaining to The Pines at Hathaway Pond.

Representatives from The Pines had previously engaged the board in discussion over the addition of several bulkheads to some of the units at the development, but the board requested that plans reflecting the bulkhead additions be submitted.

The board issued four conditions on the plans before approval.

Also discussed, a public forum to review the Limited Commercial District strategy is still in the works, with sickness and snow interfering with previously scheduled dates. A February 21 date has been canceled, and the forum will now be held later in March.

The Planning Board will meet with the Board of Selectmen on February 23 after their meeting to go over the strategy with them before moving forward with the public forum.

“It would be nice if we could get together and discuss things before we went anywhere,” said Johnson. “It’d be nice if the selectmen agreed with us before … or suggested some alternatives.”

The selectmen withdrew any support they had for two articles the Planning Board had on the warrant during the Fall Special Town Meeting, and Johnson alluded to avoiding a similar situation at the Annual Town Meeting in May.

Johnson intends to present the selectmen with the draft bylaw at this stage in its development before moving forward any further.

“And hopefully we’ll have a cohesive document that we can bring to a [public] forum,” said Johnson.

The Planning Board is looking at proposing two articles for the Town Meeting warrant – one that addresses the Limited Commercial District, which is roughly land surrounding the center of town, and the second will serve to add a definition of “mixed use” to the bylaw just in case the first article fails on Town Meeting floor. Johnson called it a ‘failsafe.’

Johnson also updated the board on the progress of hiring a consultant to assist the Town in codifying its zoning and general bylaws.

The chairman told board members that Town Administrator Michael McCue presented him with one estimate for the work, totaling $12,000.

“Which I can’t support right now,” said Johnson. “It seemed like a lot of words in there to justify a big price tag.”

Johnson pointed out that it was only one single estimate and he would keep the board updated as other estimates come in.

The next meeting of the Rochester Planning Board is scheduled for February 24 at 7:00 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

By Jean Perry

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Blizzard Season Continues

National Weather Service Taunton– A winter storm will bring blizzard conditions to eastern Massachusetts, including the entire Tri-Town region this weekend.

There is a blizzard warning in effect from 7:00 pm Saturday, February 14 to 11:00 am Sunday, February 15.

Hazard types include heavy snow, poor visibility, and strong to damaging winds.         Snow accumulations are predicted at 8 to 10 inches, and snow drifts several feet deep can also be expected.

Travel will become nearly impossible and potentially life threatening due to whiteout conditions and bitterly cold wind chills.

Conditions will remain dangerous for travel well into Sunday due to blowing and drifting snow, reduced visibility, and dangerously cold wind chills. Visibility will be one-quarter of a mile or less at times.

Power outages can be expected in some locations due to very strong winds from the north at 30 to 40 miles per hour with gusts up to 75 mph.     A blizzard warning is issued when sustained winds or frequent gusts over 35 mph are expected with considerable falling and/or blowing and drifting snow. Travel must be completed by late Saturday afternoon. Those venturing outdoors may become lost or disoriented. Stay indoors.

The snow will move in Saturday evening and intensify overnight. By Sunday morning, heavy snow is likely especially along the coast with northwest winds strengthening. Temperatures will plummet during the day on Sunday. By Sunday evening, temperatures may be around zero even at the coast with wind chill values a lot lower than that.

Regardless of how much snow falls, this will likely be a dangerous storm to be out and about in due to the combination of wind and cold.

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Richard ‘Dick’ H. Jackson

Richard ‘Dick’ H. Jackson passed away on February 9, 2015. Richard was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1931 to Richard Percy and Isabel Drew Jackson. Following graduation from Brown & Nichols School Cambridge Massachusetts, he attended Massachusetts Maritime Academy graduating in 1952 with a Bachelor’s of Science in Seamanship and Navigation. He sailed with the Isthmian Steamship Company and was commissioned into the United States Navy in 1956 and served during the Korean War. Richard is a retired Lieutenant Commander from United States Navy. In 1957, in Japan, Richard married Yvonne Beadsworth of Calcutta India. Following their wedding, Richard and Yvonne were stationed briefly in San Diego, California. In August of 1957, Richard and Yvonne moved to Marion Massachusetts where they have resided for 57 years. While living in Marion, Richard served as Wharfinger at Old Landing Wharf from 1969 to 1976 and also served as Assistant Director of Civil Defense from 1971 to 1976.   Following his Navy service, Richard was an instructor at the Massachusetts Maritime Academy and worked as an Industrial Engineer for Sippican Corporation, Acushnet Company, and Davol Corporation. But most of his joy was found spending time with his family and friends on the “Yvonne M”, boating, fishing, lobstering, scalloping, quahoging and generally enjoying the salt air and sea swells.   Richard and Yvonne also enjoyed travelling, having traveled to all 7 continents.

He is survived by his beloved wife Yvonne M. Jackson, Jo Ann Watson and son-in-law Doug Watson (Marion, MA), daughter Karen Jackson Boonstra (Arlington, MA), daughter Amy Drew Jackson-Grove and son-in-law Wesley Grove (Glastonbury, CT). He was also the loving cherished grandfather to Alexander Drew Boonstra, Jackson Tyler Boonstra, Sonia L. Jackson Boonstra, Lucas Jackson Grove and Sarah Drew Grove. Richard is survived by many dear friends and extended family from Marion and around the world.

Richard belonged to the Congregational Church of Marion, serving as a Deacon for many years. A memorial service will be held at the Marion Congregational Church on April 25, 2015 at 11am. Per Richard’s request, in lieu of flowers, contributions in Richard’s memory can be made to the Deaconess Fund Marion Congregational Church http://marionfirstchurch.org/contact-us and would be appreciated.

Elks Student of the Month

The Elks of Wareham Lodge No. 1548 sponsors the Elks Student of the Month and Student of the Year Awards for students enrolled in local area high schools. The criteria used in nominating a student includes a student who excels in scholarship, citizenship, performing arts, fine arts, hobbies, athletics, church, school and community service, industry and farming.

We congratulate Senior Sydney Swoish of Marion for being selected by the Old Rochester Regional High School faculty and staff. Sydney has been an A student in Finite Mathematics all year. She is a hard working student and consistently scores well on any assessment. She also works with the special needs students in and around the school.

Hairspray at Tabor Academy

Tabor Academy’s Drama and Music Departments present Hairspray, a musical theatre production based on the New Line Cinema film written and directed by John Waters, book by Mark O’Donnell and Thomas Meehan, music by Marc Shaiman, lyrics by Scott Wittman and Marc Shaiman. The performance will be at the Tabor Academy Fireman Center for the Performing Arts in Hoyt Hall, 235 Front Street, Marion on February 19, 20, and 21 at 7:30 pm. Presented by special arrangement with Music Theatre International.

When John Waters wrote and directed the campy film Hairspray in 1988, he was satirizing the fact that more than three decades after the Civil Rights movement, African Americans and other disenfranchised groups still did not enjoy the rights that white Americans did. The show is set in Baltimore, Maryland, circa 1962, and follows a normal teenager, Tracy Turnblad, while she chases stardom and cleverly leads the desegregation of a popular TV dance show.

With the events in Ferguson, New York, and other cities across the nation this past summer and fall, as well as with the resulting protests concerning these fatal encounters between the police and young black men, Waters’ ironic wit is as sharp today as it was in 1988. Although the film was never mainstream, Waters’ Hairspray spawned a small industry that has become as Main Street as a Broadway production in 2002 and a Hollywood film in 2007. In the years since, the show has had numerous national and international tours. In 2014-2015, with Tabor’s commitment to inclusivity and enrolling a diverse student body, staging Hairspray seemed like the proverbial no-brainer!

Hairspray celebrates the debut of the marginalized, of those who look and perhaps sound different and who struggle to express themselves in a world that represses their voices. We deserve a place, they say; we deserve to be heard. Indeed, as the signature lyrics from the show’s finale suggest, “You can’t stop [that] beat.” The train of integration and equality is barreling down the tracks, and “tomorrow is a brand new day, and it don’t know white from black.” In staging Hairspray, Tabor’s cast and crew – fifty-eight strong – hope to spread that message.

A number of local students, all from Marion, are participating in the production including Lucy Saltonstall ’17 as Sketch, Oliver Sughrue ’16 as Fender, Logan Russell ’15 as Wilbur, Eleanore Sullivan ’15 as Velma, Abigail Taber ’15 as Doreen, Sophie Polonsky ’17 in Costuming, Madeline Kistler ’18 in the Technical Crew, Jack Gordon ’17 in the Technical Crew, and Julia O’Rourke ’15 as the Stage Manager.

The cast and crew invite the local community to Tabor Academy to enjoy Hairspray, a feel-good musical comedy in the Fireman Center for the Performing Arts in Hoyt Hall at 235 Front Street, Marion. The show will begin at 7:30 pm on February 19, 20 and 21 with tickets available for $10 at the door.

Friends of Mattapoisett Harbor

Dear Editor:

The Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) will hold a public hearing on Thursday, March 5 at 7:00 pm at the Old Hammondtown School. The hearing will consider public comments about the large pier proposed for a private home at 3 Goodspeed Island. The proposed pier will be a 290-foot long pile-supported structure with a floating dock and 75-foot long wave attenuator structure at the southern end. The design will allow slips for one to two boats in 30 inches of water at mean low tide. Complete plans for the pier can be viewed at the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission office at Town Hall.

More than 200 citizens have formed the Friends of Mattapoisett Harbor to oppose the pier as presently designed. We believe the proposed pier is far too large for the proposed site, and will create environmental harm as well as limit the rights of the public to use the waters, bottom and shoreline of inner Mattapoisett Harbor. We have prepared a fact sheet about the pier; to receive a copy, please send an email to goodspeedislandpier@comcast.net or write to us at P.O. Box 817, Mattapoisett, 02739.

We urge everyone who enjoys the harbor and shoreline to learn about the proposed pier and attend the hearing on March 5.

Mike Huguenin

Friends of Mattapoisett Harbor

 

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