Charles R. “Chuck” Phillips, Jr, O.D.

Charles R. “Chuck” Phillips, Jr, O.D., 80, of West Wareham died June 23, 2015 peacefully at Tobey Hospital after a long illness.

Born in New Bedford, the son of the late Dr. Charles R. Phillips, Sr. and Hope P. (Whiting) Phillips, he was raised in Fairhaven and lived in Mattapoisett most of his life before moving to Wareham in 1998.

Dr. Phillips was an optometrist in New Bedford for over 40 years.

He attended Holderness School in New Hampshire and was a graduate of Fairhaven High School.

Dr. Phillips was an avid hunter and fisherman and was happiest when in the North Maine woods at the family cabins.

He was a member of the Pythagorean Lodge A.F. & A.M. Dr. Phillips proudly served in the U.S. Air Force as a weatherman and was discharged in July 1961.

Survivors include his 3 children, Dawn A. Phillips of New Bedford, Karen W. Phillips of East Freetown and Charles R. “Chip” Phillips, III of Mattapoisett; his former wife, Gail U. (Underdown) Armbruster of Mattapoisett; and 6 grandchildren, Matthew E. Neumann, Amanda R. Johnston, Abbe G. Neumann, Charles R. “Cole” Phillips, IV, John Ryan Phillips and Seth M. Phillips. His beloved African Gray Congo Parrot Jolie will reside with his daughter Dawn.

Visiting hours will be held on Friday from 4-8 PM in the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home For Funerals, 50 County Rd. (Rt. 6) Mattapoisett. In lieu of flowers, remembrances may be made to Shriners Hospitals for Children, 51 Blossom St. Boston, MA 02114. For directions and guestbook, please www.saundersdwyer.com.

Solar Farm Proposed for Center of Rochester

The historic center of Rochester may soon be home to a large-scale solar energy facility.  The 10-acre commercial solar farm would be built upon the old Gibbs dairy farm site, between New Bedford Road and Dexter Lane, right in the center of town. The solar facility would abut several residential properties as well as the historic cemetery, as Robert Rogers of G.A.F. Engineering and Amelia Tracy, project development manager of NextSun Energy, explained on June 23 during a pre-submission conference with the Rochester Planning Board.

Among the main concerns was the proposed selective cutting of trees taller than 20 feet within the 20-foot vegetative buffer around the perimeter of the property in order to avoid shadows being cast upon the solar arrays.

Another concern was screening so that abutters and passersby could be shielded from the solar arrays. Both Rogers and Tracy assured the board and abutters that the project would abide by most of the Town’s solar bylaw, and screening to the board’s satisfaction would be a top priority.

Gary Florindo was the first board member to speak out against the selective cutting, adamantly opposing the chopping of any of the old trees in the 20-foot buffer surrounding the area slated for clear-cutting.

Florindo said he wasn’t buying the shading issue as a legitimate need to cut taller trees down. “Because the major trees that are in the buffer zone … are going to be a green buffer. I don’t see why they have to be cut down,” said Florindo. “I don’t think it’s necessary to take those big ones out. I think you can make them work right there.”

Rogers was seeking a number of waivers from the board relative to the Town’s recently adopted Limited Commercial Zoning Bylaw which entails, among other things, certain requirements pertaining to open space maintenance, the subdivision of land, and stormwater requirements – things Roger said do not apply to a solar energy facility. And although the board was willing to grant several of the waivers, it was reluctant to waive certain things like stormwater management and selective tree cutting within the buffer.

Abutter Mary Barr, who said her property would be situated “next to that lovely gravel drive,” the proposed entrance to the site, spoke on behalf of the wildlife that would be dislocated as a result of the clear-cutting and opposed the selective tree cutting.

“And how disrespectful is it to put this right next to a cemetery in the middle of this lovely town?” she asked.

Florindo said the project would change the character of the cemetery and he did not welcome the change to the neighborhood the solar farm would bring.

“You want to fit your project it, fit it in,” said Florindo. “But you’re not going to cut down all those trees in the buffer.”

Planning Board member John DeMaggio suggested the project planners submit calculations on how the 20-foot tall trees would affect the solar energy output. As a rule of thumb, said Tracy, it is a two-to-one ratio.

“But we could definitely produce those calculations,” said Tracy.

Planning Board Chairman Arnold Johnson said he spoke with the Rochester Cemetery Commission, “And they’re not as concerned with the screening as we are at this point,” said Johnson. He added, though, that Rochester was “not too big on chain-link fence,” so that detail regarding screening would need adjusting.

Abutter and Historical District Commission member Susan Fleming said she was completely against the project.

“I can’t think of a worse place to put this,” said Fleming. “And the picture of a solar farm, it’s going to ruin the center of town.” She continued, “It’s going to ruin the property value…. No one’s going to want to live here; it’s gonna ruin the town.”

Abutter Matthew Monteiro agreed, saying the solar farm would lessen his property value that is currently surrounded by woods “by huge numbers.”

Johnson said Rochester has one of the most comprehensive solar bylaws in the state, especially when it comes to screening, although several people questioned the selection of vegetation for screening, especially plants Tracy said would grow into “robust vines” within five years – too long for some present that night.

“I don’t want to see the skyline change,” said Florindo. “Once you take the trees down, the skyline is changed. We’ve done a lot of work to try to work with everybody and I’m not going to go along with taking out those big trees.”

A solar farm, said Johnson after the meeting, was not what the board had in mind when it proposed and passed its new Limited Commercial Zoning Bylaw at Town Meeting on June 8, with its intent of keeping further development in the historical center in character with the current surroundings. The solar bylaw, however, supersedes the zoning bylaw, and solar facilities enjoy further protected status by state legislation, according to Johnson.

The NextSun Energy solar project was not the only solar farm pre-submission conference that night. The board was also introduced to a plan to construct a solar farm at 99 Perry’s Lane. Rogers, who also represented Dennis Clemishaw, said the project would lie completely within the town of Marion, except for the access to the site. The board agreed that Rogers would submit the same materials to Rochester as it will Marion in order to assure that concerns of the Town of Rochester were as equally addressed as those in Marion.

The next meeting of the Rochester Planning Board is scheduled for July 14 at 7:00 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

By Jean Perry

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Gardens By The Sea

St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church’s 13th annual Gardens By The Sea tour and luncheon is scheduled for July 10 from 10:30 am to 3:30 pm (rain or shine). Walking tour steps off at the Capt. Hadley House, corner of Route 6 and Front Street, Marion. Garden tour tickets are available for $20 at The Bookstall, Marion General Store or St. Gabriel’s office on South Street, Marion. Combination tour and luncheon tickets may be purchased by mail. Send a $45 check payable to St. Gabriel’s to Frederica See, 11 Bayberry Lane, Marion MA 02738. Luncheon will be served at the Kittansett Club. Call 508-748-1507 for more information.

Celebration Sunday

Mattapoisett Congregational Church finished the church year with “Celebration Sunday”. The children led a joyful worship filled with special music, blessings, and multi-media–sharing the message, Celebrating God’s Love Together followed by a church BBQ on the lawn. Photos courtesy Patricia Berry

 

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To the Beach!

Beachgoers celebrated the official opening of the Mattapoisett Town Beach on June 20. The beach house has been renovated and was ready for the roughly 200 participants in Mattapoisett Recreation’s Beach Olympics and other family activities. Photos by Felix Perez

 

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Mattapoisett Road Race

Celebrate Independence Day by running the 45th annual five-mile road race held in the scenic seaside town of Mattapoisett, MA. The race begins at 9:00 am on Saturday, July 4. All proceeds are awarded to graduating seniors from ORRHS. For more information and/or to register, log on towww.mattapoisettroadrace.com.

Athletic Achievements

Jen Galavotti has been named to the Little East Conference Spring Academic All-Conference team. Galavotti, a member of the Keene State College Softball team, class of 2017 and native of Marion is majoring in Exercise Science.

To be named a Spring All-Academic awardee, a student-athlete must have a cumulative grade point average of 3.3 or higher through the 2015 spring semester and be at least a sophomore academically and athletically. The student-athlete must also be a full-time member of a varsity sport and be enrolled in the institution for a full academic year.

New Trash System Complaints Continue

Rochester Town Administrator Michael McCue said complaints are still coming in about residents not following the new trash and recycling system method of curbside placement of trash, and the Rochester Board of Selectmen on June 15 wondered what future action should be taken if some residents continue to ignore the new rules for curbside waste disposal.

“There have been sporadic reports of very excessive additional trash bags in some locations on a weekly basis,” said McCue during a follow-up interview, “as well as obvious recyclables spilling out of trash bins.”

Residents were encouraged to recycle more to save the Town money on trash disposal with the addition of the 95-gallon recycling bins residents are asked to use for recyclable items rather than throwing them in with the regular trash.

McCue said the complaints range from public health issues to aesthetic issues as to “some of the stuff we’re seeing out in front of houses.”

“I ask the board to consider perhaps putting together a more specific policy as to pick-ups and as to the amount that can be picked up,” said McCue.

The town administrator said overall the new collection system has been a success but, as with anything, “You really don’t learn what kinds of bumps come up along the way until you hit those bumps.”

The board took no immediate action; rather, it preferred to collect more information over the coming weeks before considering repercussions for continuing to not follow the trash and recycling pick-up procedure.

“I think we got the word out there,” said McCue about initially informing the public about the new automated trash and recycling collection system. “I certainly would invite more comments on more of a global nature the residents of the Town of Rochester may have.”

The board also asked McCue to seek out an opinion from ABC Disposal, Inc. Operations Manager Jerry Dugan about how he views the progress of the new trash system.

“I think everything is going well, but, with anything, it needs a little tuning up,” said McCue.

Also during the meeting, selectmen accepted the resignation of the only two serving members on the three-member Rochester Personnel Board. The resignation of Kelly Sullivan-Morgado and David Ditata comes on the heels of a Town Meeting vote that rejected an article that would alter the step increases for employees covered under the Employee Compensation Plan. The Personnel Board assisted in creating the selectmen-recommended policy that voters rejected on June 8.

In other matters, Board of Selectmen Chairman Richard Nunes told the board his recent discussion with Comcast representatives over establishing live feed capability for the Town was unfruitful, at best.

Nunes said Comcast reps “did not like that option” when asked to split the cost of the project 50-50 with the Town, which would roughly total $16,000. Instead, said Nunes, Comcast insisted either ORCTV cover the cost of the live feed capability or the Town of Rochester. Nunes said a fair compromise would be for the Town and Comcast to split the cost evenly.

“Do we want it?” Nunes asked selectmen. “And if we do want it, how are we going to fund it?”

Selectman Bradley Morse said he needed more time to digest the information, and Selectman Naida Parker questioned whether live feed capability was necessary at all.

Nunes’ argument was that the Town could use the live feed to broadcast directly from the Police Station in the event of an emergency.

The next meeting of the Rochester Board of Selectmen is scheduled for June 29 at 6:30 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

By Jean Perry

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Sippican School Class of 2016 Car Wash

The Sippican School Class of 2016 held its first fundraiser, a car wash, on Saturday, June 13, at the Sippican School bus loop. Money raised will go towards sixth grade activities the next school year. Photos by Colin Veitch

 

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‘Mischievous’ Wins Marion Bermuda Line Honors

‘Mischievous’ grabbed the line honors in the 2015 Marion Bermuda Race with a splendid performance. She crossed the finish line at St. David’s Lighthouse Bermuda during the twilight Lighthouse committee cocktail party at the finish tower on Monday evening at 6:42 EDT. ‘Mischievous’ is a Meriten 65 sailed by cadets from the Massachusetts Maritime Academy and skippered by Charles Cahill. Dozens of spectators cheered her as she crossed between the buoys that set the boundaries of the bearing from the lighthouse.

As of 1800hrs ADT the lowest, slowest handicapped boat in Class C, ‘Silhouette’, finished first in the class C and is now in first place in the race for corrected time winner. She is a classic looking Cherubini 44 skippered by David Caso. She will certainly finish first in Class C, but positions can change as the Class D boats finish. Overall handicap winners may not be confirmed till the slower boats finish. Deciding the overall winner is a waiting game.

‘Silhouette’ won the Founders Trophy in 2007.

‘Spirit of Bermuda’, the Bermuda Sloop Foundation’s sail training vessel chartered by Jim Butterfield for an employee team building adventure, had a strong fourth for line honors and first in the Classic Division compared to disappointing performance in past Bermuda Races.

The 118-foot Bermuda sloop replica was standing third for line honors position, but got nipped at the line by ‘Lucy Georgina’, a modern Xp44 that could out point ‘Spirit’ when they had to tack to the finish. For the past two days ‘Spirit’ was flying on a reach right down the rhumb line sailing at over 10kts VMG for her best finish ever in a Bermuda Race.

“Excellent… Great!” said George Fergusson, the Governor of Bermuda, at the end of his first ocean race to Bermuda. “The Gulf Stream was a bit damp with waves coming from various directions. The highest wind was 39 kts. We took the mizzen [a small sail in the back of the 4-sail rig] down and put reefs in the mainsail [the biggest sail] to reduce its size. When we took the mizzen down, the boat got more upright without reducing speed. We were doing 11 kts in the Gulf Stream. We had two beautiful days from the Gulf Stream to St. David’s.”

When asked if he would like to do the race again, Governor Fergusson quipped, “ Probably not tomorrow, but one day I’d like to.”

Chip Johns’ Baltic 58 ‘Margalo’ now stands first in Class A on corrected time preliminary data. The J46 ‘Ariel’ has moved into second and ‘Defiance’ the Swan 56 is third.

The US Naval Academy boats are dominating Class B. They stand 2-3-4 in the race on overall corrected times in preliminary reports. In spite of being the lowest, slowest handicapped boat in Class B, ‘Swift’ NA11 skippered by Kyle Briggs punched her way into the preliminary corrected time lead for the Founders Trophy, but then fell to second at the 1800hr report when ‘Silhouette” finished first in Class C.

‘Swift’ seems to have a lock on Class B honors. ‘Swift’ also leads the Celestial Navigation Division. ‘Integrity’ NA22 skippered by Tom Wester moved into second in class and division and ‘Defiance’ NA23 skippered by Jared Velaske fell back to third in class and division.

Currently standing second in Class C is ‘Black Mallard’ a Cardinal 46 skippered by Tracy Day McRoberts, the top female skipper in the race. ‘Attitude’, a Beneteau 423 skippered by Shawn Dahlen, is currently third.

The smallest boats, those in Class D, are led by ‘TI’ an Alden Mistral 36 sailed by Gregg Marston. Following in second is ‘Trust Me’ the Moody 47 skippered by Jeff Dowling. In third is ‘Free Spirit’ sailed by Thomas Stokes.

All of the positions are preliminary based on handicap times. They are certainly subject to change over the final hours sailing to Bermuda.

Two boats from Class A have retired. ‘Kiva’ an Aerodyne 47 ripped her mainsail and ‘Free Range Chicken’ had a rigging failure. Both returned to the US. ‘Legacy V’ from Class B retired after one of her crew, Bill Fasnacht, died of natural causes. His crewmates could not revive him after an hour of CPR. ‘Legacy V’ has returned to Connecticut.

‘Swell’, Class C, did not start and Class D entry ‘Is Fearr Cara’ retired earlier and returned to Maine while classmate ‘Shuang Hsi’ is motoring in to Bermuda.

On Tuesday, winds on the approach to Bermuda, where most of the fleet should be now, are predicted to be westerly allowing the yachts to sail on a reach to the finish.

For a look at wind and current predictions, go to www/passageweather.com and click on the Marion Bermuda race link.

By Talbot Wilson

Preliminary awards listed at http://www.marionbermuda.com/scoring/summary.php

Note: All results are preliminary

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