Easy Approval for Special Permits

With no opposition from board members or abutters, the Mattapoisett Zoning Board of Appeals approved two petitions for special permits during a swift meeting on September 18.

Christian and Bashawn Thorell of 23 Brandt Beach Avenue were granted a special permit to add a 12-foot by 15-foot sunroom to their home, as well as a master bathroom and master walk-in closet. The project required a special permit for a shortage of 10 feet of the required 30-foot setback.

Architect Gary Brackins presented the site plan to the board, stating that the addition would result in a 10-foot shortage in the setback, but Building Inspector Andrew Bobola noticed that the plan proposes a 23-foot setback. Brackins explained that the design reflects a three-foot extended rake of the second-floor gable, but as Bobolo pointed out, the walls of the building would create a 23-foot setback, a more favorable scenario.

“So it’s not quite as dramatic as it sounds,” stated Bobola, calling it an “adequately proposed addition.” He added, “It’s not huge by any nature.”

There were no abutters present and no questions from the board, but ZBA member Paul Milott wanted the board to acknowledge before voting that the original house was built in 2009.

“Now we’re here five years after it’s built and we’re sort of going in the wrong direction,” said Milott. He then stated that he found no reason to deny the special permit.

Bobola commented that the proposed 10-foot by 13-foot interior room was not a big deal.

“You’ve seen some of the monsters that have come through here,” said Bobola.

The vote to approve was unanimous.

Also during the meeting, the board approved a special permit for Joanne O ’Day to build an 8-foot wide deck off her 8 Linhares Avenue home. The deck would result in a shortage of about 6 feet on the east side of the property.

O’ Day described her plan as a simple plan, and Bobola commented that it was a reasonable request that would not create a negative impact on the character of the neighborhood.

“I support Joanne’s project because it was thoughtfully done,” said abutter Ed Walsh of 4 Linhares Avenue. He said the majority of the homes in the neighborhood already have decks. “It will blend very well.”

Milott stated that he found nothing negative about the project and other board members said they were fine with it.

The vote to approve was unanimous.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Zoning Board of Appeals is scheduled for October 16 at 6:00 pm at the Mattapoisett Town Hall.

By Jean Perry

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Alex Pateakos’ 8th Annual Bike Run

Dear Community:

The Family of Alex Pateakos would like to thank all the dedicated individuals who contributed to Alex Pateakos’ 8th Annual Bike Run on Sunday, September 14, 2014. Alex suffers from Type 1 Spinal Muscular Atrophy, which leaves him in a wheelchair and unable to talk or walk but trust me, we always know what he’s thinking. Alex, who lives in Marion, was diagnosed at eight months old and his parents were informed that he would likely pass away by the age of two, but because of great nursing and a rocking attitude, Alex is now 10 and taking the Fifth Grade at Sippican Elementary in Marion by storm. Each year, Tammy and Scott Foisy take up his Bike Run fund-raiser to help provide for things insurance does not cover, as well as things Alex may need. Tammy, Alex’s former nurse, and Scott dedicate so much time to this as do their children who are there to help ever year. It’s an unbelievable amount of work and they do it with a smile. In addition to the Foisys, we wish to thank the Freetown VFW, Scott Reiniche from Pro Sound Entertainment and Easy 99.1 for the music for eight years now, Marianne and Mark Walker for cooking and managing the food, Lee Catanho and Lori Aquiar for volunteering every year, Bob McFarlin and everyone at Clement’s Marketplace in Portsmouth, RI, and Mark Foisy for helping create the route and getting the route direction fliers printed. You all make Alex’s life a better place and we appreciate your efforts very much. Thank you so much. See you next year and watch out, Alex is getting closer to being a teenager. Look out Middle School!

Family of Alex Pateakos

 

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.

Mattapoisett Congregational Rummage Sale

The Mattapoisett Congregational Church will hold a rummage sale on Saturday, October 4 from 9:00 am to noon. The Church Sale will feature gently-used clothing for men, women and children, shoes, belts, pocketbooks, hats and stockings as well as a variety of domestic items such as sheets, blankets, towels and place mats. Also included will be books, puzzles, and jewelry. Be sure to shop at the “Boutique Booth.”

Marion Pathway Committee

An important informational meeting presenting the proposed Marion bike path route and the process required to obtain funding for its construction will be held on Monday, September 29 at 7:00 pm in the Marion Music Hall. The public is invited to view slides and maps of this rail trail to and through Marion, which will ultimately connect Providence to Provincetown. Become a part of this exciting plan while enjoying coffee and neighborly conversation.

Paul W. Fluegel

Paul W. Fluegel, 53, of Mattapoisett passed away on September 28, 2014 at St. Luke’s Hospital after a long and courageous battle with cancer. He was the husband of Lois S. Cosgrove-Fluegel.

Born in New Bedford, the son of Richard A. and Margery S. (Macomber) Fluegel, he lived in Mattapoisett most of his life.

Paul graduated from Old Rochester Regional High School where he was awarded the honor of South Coast player of the year for baseball. He then attended Salve Regina College where he received his degree in law enforcement.

He started his career in Nashua, New Hampshire, eventually joining the Wareham Police Department where he was employed for almost 30 years.

Paul enjoyed traveling, camping and above all, skiing with friends and family. He was an extraordinary father, coach and friend, as well as an avid Red Sox and Bruins fan.

He is survived by his wife; his parents; his 2 children, Jacob Fluegel and Alexandra Fluegel; his 2 step-children, Zachary Cosgrove and Angelina Cosgrove, all of Mattapoisett; a sister, Janice White and her husband Randy of Lakeville; a brother, Steven Fluegel and his wife Susan of Wareham; as well as several nieces, nephews and cousins.

His Memorial Service will be held on Friday, October 3rd at 10 AM in the Mattapoisett Congregational Church. Burial will follow in Cushing Cemetery. Visiting hours Thursday, October 2nd from 3-8 PM in the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home For Funerals, 50 County Rd. (Rt. 6), Mattapoisett. In lieu of flowers, remembrances in Paul’s memory may be made Old Rochester Little League, P.O Box 236, Mattapoisett, MA 02739.

Selectmen Chop BOH Requests from Warrant

After expressing frustration over items in an article submitted by the health agent, Rochester Board of Selectmen on September 22 excluded them altogether while approving the rest of the Fall Special Town Meeting warrant.

Health Agent Karen Walega sought to increase the public health nurse’s salary line item by $5,000, double the current amount, which had selectmen scratching their heads and taking issue with the article.

“If they work under a contract, I don’t see how they could just ask for more money,” said Selectman Richard Nunes.

Walega was seeking to increase the hours of part-time Rochester Public Health Nurse Betsy Dunn as a result of this year’s Lyme disease activity and also flu season preparation. Board of Selectman Chairman Brad Morse suggested the department pay her for extra hours out of its own revolving account.

Selectmen were also bothered by Walega’s other request for a $3,200 increase to the expenses line item to pay for a biennial inspection of the old town landfill, mandated by the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection.

“Why was that not budgeted?” Morse asked. “I question both of these … I mean, we didn’t budget for this.”

Nunes wondered why Walega did not include the inspection expense in the fiscal year 2015 budget before the Annual Town Meeting in May. In fact, he said, in his 12 years of public service in Rochester, this was the first he had ever heard of this biennial landfill inspection.

Morse said he would not vote for it and Nunes suggested omitting the two requests from the article.

“Knowing nothing about it, I have an issue with it,” said Morse. “I would say pull parts of Article 1.”

Selectmen amended Article 1 to omit the health agent’s requests, but left the veteran services agent’s supplemental appropriation request for an additional $30,000 to cover the cost of services for veterans who recently relocated to Rochester. The State reimburses the Town 75-percent of the costs.

Article 2 is a transfer of $69,500 from the Special Education Costs Stabilization Fund to cover unexpected SpEd services for FY15.

Article 3 is a request to transfer $800 from the Sale of Cemetery Plots Fund to buy back a cemetery plot from a purchaser who no longer wants it.

Selectmen discussed how the Cemetery Commission has no budget for this purpose, and how the buyer is selling the plot back to the Town for the same price they purchased it. Nunes joked that the cemetery was not making a big enough profit for the Town, eliciting laughter from the board.

Article 4 is for $10,000 for a new voting machine that Selectman and Town Clerk Naida Parker requested. Parker said she wanted to either lease the equipment or purchase it, whichever was more economical, and that she would like to have the new machine before the 2015 annual election so voters can adjust to the new machine before the 2016 presidential election.

“I don’t want voters going into the polls with a brand new machine in 2016,” said Parker. “That would seriously slow down and impact the process.”

Article 5 is a request for $20,000 to conduct a feasibility study pertaining to the Town Hall Annex, which could potentially be relocated to a prefabricated building to be placed on land located between the police station and the Senior Center on Dexter Lane.

Town Administrator Michael McCue suggested requesting $25,000, with $5,000 allotted for a contingency plan in the case of unplanned expenses during the study. Selectmen did not agree and reduced it to $25,000.

Article 6 requests a transfer of $15,000 toward funding the Town’s future obligations for the cost of Other Post Employment Benefits (OPEB).

Articles 7, 8, and 9 pertain to amendments to the Town’s Zoning Bylaws.

The next meeting of the Rochester Board of Selectmen in scheduled for Monday, September 29 at 6:30 pm at the Town Hall.

By Jean Perry

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Marion Rec Youth Basketball Registration

Marion Recreation will hold Registration Nights for the Youth Basketball 2014-2015 season on Monday, September 29 and Tuesday, September 30 at Sippican School in the Community Room from 6:00 to 8:00 pm. Registration is open to Marion and Rochester residents.

If you are unable to attend the Registration Nights, you may mail your completed Registration Form along with payment to Marion Recreation, 13 Atlantis Drive, Marion. The registration must be received before the deadline dates of December 1 for Learn to Play and October 27 and 28 for the Girls’ and Boys’ Leagues.

The kindergarten to third grade Learn to Play Clinic is $65 per child and includes a T-shirt. Deadline for registration is December 1. Their season begins in early January 2015.

Girls’ League for grades 4-6 and Boys’ League for grades 4-6 is $155 per child. The fee includes uniform shirt and shorts. Deadline for registration is at Placement Night, October 27 and October 28.

All girls and boys in grades 4-6 are required to their attend Placement Night on Monday, October 27 and Tuesday, October 28.

For more information, please call Marion Recreation at 774-217-8355, email info@marionrecreation.com or visit www.marionrecreation.com.

Old Rochester Little League

Would your son or daughter like to play baseball? Old Rochester Little League registration is open for the 2015 Spring Season for boys and girls (ages 4-12) from Marion, Mattapoisett and Rochester.

To register, visit ORLL.net or if you have questions, please email Derek Mello at southeastmaumpires@gmail.com.

Come be a part of Little League Baseball! Registration is now open for the 2015 season. Parents are encouraged to register their children early. To register, visit the league website at orll.net (click on the pink box under the masthead). The league will hold winter hitting sessions at The Cage in Marion for all Minor and Major League players, and only players registered for the 2015 season will be able to participate in the Winter Hitting Sessions.

Old Rochester Little League will be holding one final Major League and Minor League tryout/evaluation for the 2015 Season!

Evaluations for 8-12 year olds will be on Friday, October 17 at 6:00 pm at Dexter Field in Rochester (rain date will be Friday, October 24 at 6:00 pm). Kids aged 4-7 do not need to attend an evaluation.

This evaluation is for players looking to play in the Minors or Majors. Players who played on an ORLL Majors team in 2014 don’t need to attend the eval. Players who wish to stay in the minors after playing in the ORLL minors in 2014 don’t need to attend the minors eval.

Eligible players for the Majors include children who are 9-12 years old as of April 30, 2015. If your son or daughter is interested in playing in ORLL at the Major League level, they must attend the tryout/evaluation on Friday, October 17 at 6:00 pm at Dexter Field #3 in Rochester.

Eligible players for the Minors include children who are 8-11 years old as of April 30, 2015. If your son or daughter is interested in playing in ORLL at the Minor League level, they must attend the tryout/evaluation on Friday, October 17 at 6:00 pm at Dexter Field #3 in Rochester.

All players should come ready to play with cleats, a baseball hat, and a baseball glove. They should also bring their batting helmet and bat if they have their own. Helmets and bats will be provided for those that need them.

 

Marion Art Center

The Marion Art Center is pleased to announce the opening of an exhibition of paintings by Charles Parsons and prints and drawings by Mark C. Parsons that will run from October 4 to November 14. An opening reception hosted by the Marion Art Center will be held on Saturday, October 4 at the Marion Art Center from 6:00 to 8:00 pm. Both the Cecil Clark Davis Gallery and the Patsy Francis Gallery will be filled with watercolors and oils by Charles Parsons and prints and drawings by his son, Mark Parsons.

Charles C. Parsons or “Charlie” as he was known by everyone, passed away in 2011. He was a long-time patron of the Marion Art Center, as well as a faithful member of the Board of Directors and he was a teacher, mentor and friend to a large circle of local painters. His personal presence is very much missed by all, but his paintings remain a source of inspiration and beauty for everyone who sees them. Charlie exhibited many times in the galleries of the Marion Art Center, taught workshops, and regularly encouraged fellow Art Center member artists to continue growing as artists. His wife, Sandria Parsons says, “Charlie sketched everywhere he went – waiting for lunch at a diner, from the deck of Kittiwake, at town meeting, before boarding a plane. He primarily sketched the figure – his children and grandchildren, unknowing strangers – disciplining himself to make two-minute sketches or to draw with a single line never taking his eyes off his subject.”

The Marion Art Center is honored to host this exhibition of Charlie’s paintings and to introduce his son Mark’s prints and drawings to this community.

The Marion Art Center is located at 80 Pleasant Street, Marion. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Friday from 1:00 to 5:00 pm and Saturdays from 10:00 am until 2:00 pm. Admission is free and open to the public.

100th Anniversary of Marion’s Marconi Installation

Few today realize that Marion was once home to the world’s largest and most powerful wireless telegraph station. Built in 1914 by the pioneering Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company, the Marion installation boasted 14 towers, each standing more than 400 feet tall. The station was designed to handle all trans-Atlantic radio traffic, communicating directly with another high-powered wireless plant in Norway. So impressive was the station at the time of its installation, it was referred to as “one of the wonders of the twentieth century.” This first weekend in October, Calvin Trowbridge, Jr., author of Marconi: Father of Wireless, Grandfather of Radio, Great-Grandfather of the Cell Phone, The Story of the Race to Control Long-Distance Wireless will be in Marion to help Sippican Historical Society and Sippican Lands Trust celebrate the 100th anniversary of Marion’s Marconi installation.

The celebration will take place in two phases. At 7:00 pm on Friday, October 3, Mr. Trowbridge will speak at the Marion Music Hall (164 Front Street) about the Marion facility, the competition and patent wars, and the fast pace of invention and technology change as the potential for radio became understood in the early 20th century. Copies of Trowbridge’s book will be available for purchase, and attendees will have the opportunity to chat with the author after his presentation. The lecture is offered free to the public, and no reservations are required. For more information on Mr. Trowbridge’s lecture, please call SHS Executive Director Kimberly Teves at 508-748-1116 or email info@sippicanhistoricalsociety.org.

In conjunction with Friday’s lecture, the Sippican Lands Trust will host a one-hour guided tour of their “Radio Tower” property on Saturday, October 4, at 11:00 am. The property was acquired by the SLT in 1986 and is the actual site of the once-active Marconi wireless telegraph station. Local resident and Radio Tower steward Richard Evans will lead participants through the trails and remnants of this historic property, and Mr. Trowbridge will be on-hand to offer his insights, as well. Evans is an amateur radio operator and has been interested in this property since he walked through the transmitter building and tower field in early 1950 before the towers were dropped. In case of rain, the tour will be held on Sunday, October 5 at 11:00 am. The tour is also offered free of charge to the public, with no reservations required. The Radio Tower trail is accessible from Benson Brook Road, past the Marion Transfer Station. Parking is available in that area, and participants should gather to the right, near the SLT kiosk at the head of the trail. Property map is available online at http://sippicanlandstrust.org/wp-content/uploads/radiotower.pdf. For more information on the SLT guided tour, please call Executive Director Robin Shields at 508-748-3080 or email robinshields@sippicanlandstrust.org.