Marion Council on Aging

The Council on Aging now has applications for the Marion Community Fund to help home owners with their real estate taxes. All grants will be paid to the Town of Marion and credited toward the grant recipient’s tax bill. The following income and asset requirements are as follows: Income limit is $25,000 for a single household, married $37,500; Asset limits: Single, $46,000 and married $63,000 (excluding your home).

The Annual Marion Social Club at 44 Pumping Station Rd. will hold a BBQ dinner for Marion elders on August 16 at 1:00 pm. Doors will open at noon with door prizes for everyone. Marion residents may bring one guest. No take out meals allowed, but meals will be delivered to the homebound. Transportation will be provided by the Council on Aging. The cost for the event is $0.50 (fifty cents). Please pick up your ticket at the Council on Aging.

Board Approves Front Yard Garage

Under the Town’s Zoning Bylaws, a garage or similar structure cannot be built in front of the property’s principle structure; however, when you are like Amy Johnson of 44 Walnut Plain Road and you haven’t got the space behind your house to fit a garage, you go to the Rochester Zoning Board of Appeals for permission to build one anyway.

On June 11 during the continuation of her public hearing, Johnson provided the board with the stamped plans the board required and explained why she could not build her proposed garage behind her house.

“Putting the garage by your new zoning law would destroy my lot, my yard, my view…” said Johnson. There are a number of trees between Johnson’s house and the proposed location of the garage, with plenty of room between that spot and the road. “It would destroy my neighbor’s view…”

The garage would meet the setback requirements. The position of the garage was the issue at hand. There simply was no room for it in the back, said Johnson.

With no abutters present, ZBA member Kirby Gilmore said he found no problem with the project, but proposed a condition that only this one 26- by 24-foot structure would be allowed on the property and nothing further in the future. The special permit was approved.

The next meeting of the Rochester Zoning Board of Appeals is scheduled for June 25 at 7:00 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

By Jean Perry

ROzba_061815

Spring Sports Draw to a Close

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

            Baseball: Coming off of an exciting 3-2 win over Dedham, the No. 3 seeded Bulldogs looked to the semifinals of the Division 3 South state tournament to continue their excellent postseason run. However, the boys were eliminated from the tournament this week, effectively ending their season thanks to a 13-7 loss to No. 2 seed East Bridgewater. Though pitchers James Leidhold and Brendan Deverix made a strong effort from the mound, the East Bridgewater batters were too strong to be contained, and the Bulldogs’ offense, headed by Sam Henrie (2-for-3, steal, run) and Bryant Salkind (2-for-4, RBI, double) was simply not able to keep pace. The Bulldogs end their season with an 18-4 season and a SCC championship. They graduate eight seniors.

Boys’ Tennis: The boys’ tennis team, the No. 2 seed in the Division 3 South state tournament, was eliminated this week in the state semifinals. After coming off of a strong 5-0 showing over Sturgis East and a 4-1 win over Martha’s Vineyard, the boys faced off against No. 1 seed Dover Sherborn and unfortunately came out on the short end, suffering a 3-2 loss. Though ORR got wins from Alex Bilodeau (second singles) and Sam Pasquill (third singles), Dover Sherborn’s doubles teams and their first singles’ player were simply too tough to beat, resulting in the crushing loss for the Bulldogs. However, the boys finished their season with a 21-2 record, and they clinched their second straight SCC championship by a wide margin. The team graduates senior captain Stephen Burke, who played on the second doubles team for the Bulldogs.

Girls’ Tennis: Dover Sherborn’s tennis program proved to be strong across the board this week, as the No. 2 seeded Raiders knocked the No. 7 seeded ORR Lady Bulldogs out of the Division 3 South tournament with a score of 3-2. Old Rochester got wins from senior star Julia Nojeim (first singles) and Olivia Bellefeuille (third singles), but could not secure that needed third match to come out on top. The team finishes their season with a 14-6 record, and graduate Nojeim, whose presence and reliability will surely be missed come next spring.

Track: The lone track athlete still competing was unsurprisingly senior Kevin Saccone, who this week competed in the prestigious New England Championship Meet in Saco, Maine. Saccone had a fantastic day, placing second in the long jump and sixth in the 110-meter hurdles to finish off an impressive high-school track career. Both of Saccone’s results (22’9” in the long jump, 14.4 seconds in the hurdles), were personal bests, and they also broke both of the school records that he already held.

Boys’ Lacrosse: The Bulldogs were also unfortunately knocked out of the Division 3 South tournament this week. After defeating Archbishop Williams earlier this week, the boys faced off against top-seeded Cohasset, who handed the Bulldogs their first and last loss of the postseason in a 15-3 fashion. Cohasset, who has had their varsity lacrosse program in place for several years, was simply too quick and strong to halt, and though the Bulldogs got a little offensive help from scorers Ethan Lizotte (two goals) and Taylor Hatch, it would not prove to be enough, as heading into the fourth quarter, the boys were down by a 13-1 margin. The boys finish their season with a co-SCC championship, a 19-3 record, and a historic playoff run for the fifth-year lacrosse program at ORR.

Girls’ Lacrosse: The No. 4 seeded Lady Bulldogs were also eliminated from the state tournament this week with a tough 19-4 loss to top-seeded Norwell. For a moment, things were looking up for the girls, as they had a 2-1 lead early in the first quarter. From there, however, Norwell unleashed a vicious offensive attack that resulted in seventeen unanswered goals. The ease at which Norwell played was frustrating for ORR, as the clean passes and lack of turnovers provided very few opportunities for the Lady Bulldogs to change the momentum of the game. Despite the loss, the girls had an excellent season, securing a tri-SCC championship with Apponequet and Fairhaven, having three seniors reach the 100 goal mark (Bailey Truesdale, Chloe Riley, and Mikayla Demanche), and finishing off their spring with a strong 14-6-1 record.

Below are the final overall spring team records, followed by the conference records in wins, losses, and ties.

Baseball: (18-4-0) (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: (21-2-0) (14-0-0); Girls’ Tennis: (14-6-0) (13-3-0); Boys’ Lacrosse: (19-3-0) (7-1-0); Girls’ Lacrosse: (14-6-1) (7-3-0).

By Michael Kassabian

Bulldog_flag

Mattapoisett Non-Profit Is All Hands

Nearly two months ago on April 25, Nepal was devastated by an earthquake measuring 7.8 on the moment magnitude scale (MMS). Aftershocks of similar magnitude continued to destroy homes and buildings of historical significance throughout many Nepalese districts in the days that followed, causing vast loss of life and sustained injuries to the residents and tourists of those districts. Then, on May 12, another aftershock reaching 7.3 MMS struck the region. Through it all were volunteers from the Mattapoisett-based non-profit organization, All Hands Volunteers, who mobilized a professional team in Nepal beginning on April 28 – only three days after the first earthquake.

All Hands Volunteers, or AHV, has been around in some form or another since the Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami in 2004. The organization germinated when its founder, David Campbell, dropped everything to travel to Thailand in the wake of the tsunami as an independent volunteer.

“He was completely horrified by the human suffering and he took himself over to Thailand to see how he could help,” said Rachel Deery, grant writer for AHV. “When he got there he realized something – a lot of people had the desire to help, but they weren’t able to be productive.”

Deery’s re-telling of Campbell’s transformative experience revealed the central challenge of being an independent volunteer in an immediate crisis. The independent volunteer has an intense desire to help, but isn’t sure about the best way to go about serving the stricken community. So, after volunteering in Thailand (and later applying the same model to domestic disaster relief after Hurricane Katrina in 2005), Campbell founded AHV in order to harness the humanitarian efforts of independent volunteers. It’s clearly an organization that is both needed and successful in accomplishing its mission.

“We’ve done 52 projects in the past 10 years,” Deery said. “We’ve mobilized 30,000 volunteers from 77 countries. It’s what makes us unique in disaster settings – the efficiency in getting volunteers there, they’re multi-skilled, they bring an amazing sense of compassion and they develop relationships with the affected communities because we set up our bases right in the affected communities.”

Currently, AHV has seven projects running. Some of these projects keep some volunteers close to home by providing domestic flood relief to Houston and Detroit as well as assisting with long-term rebuild programs in New York in the continued aftermath of Superstorm Sandy. Abroad, AHV has two programs in the Philippines in response to the region’s typhoons, one program in Malawi, Africa that is a partnership with the United Nations, and, of course, the current project in Nepal.

“We basically empower volunteers, these people who have a lot of energy and passion and are moved to help out and make it so that they are productive and are not a burden to the community,” Deery explained AHV’s approach to service.

In the event of a crisis, AHV first sends a professional team to the region to establish a permanent base. The team works with many organizations – from the United Nations to the Red Cross – to collect assessment data, determine the community’s immediate needs, and coordinate with independent volunteers who submit applications to AHV.

“We don’t send in volunteers right away; we have to see whether we’re needed. When it becomes apparent that we’re needed, we set up,” Deery said.

Deery also cited the need for extended volunteer projects, not just immediate disaster relief.

“After the dust settles in the disaster, there’s a long process for recovery. These things can’t be rebuilt all at once. We have the infrastructure, the roads, the houses, the schools,” she said. This is why AHV still has two projects in the Philippines, one to rebuild schools and permanent homes and another to rebuild fishing boats for a subsistence fishing community who lost everything about a year ago in the typhoon.

The AHV volunteer program in Nepal is the organization’s latest international service initiative.

“It seems really grave at the moment,” Deery said. “There is a lot to be done and there are a lot of people who are displaced at the moment. Over 700,000 homes have been destroyed or damaged. And the monsoon season is starting as we speak and is causing landslides. More people whose houses are being destroyed are being displaced.”

Some of the key volunteers supporting AHV’s disaster relief in Nepalese are Old Rochester Regional High School students. According to Deery, Seijal Parajule, whose family is from Nepal, “came up with this idea to do a car wash to raise money for Nepal because there is so much that needs to be done.” The car wash and accompanying bake sale was a massive success, with Parajule, her family and classmates raising a little over $2,000.

“The day of the car wash the Fire Station gave us the venue there and Village Signs gave us free signs and Uncle Jon’s gave us coffee for the day, so it was a community event,” said Heidi Dubreuil, Development Associate for AHV.

Dubreuil also said that Parajule and her classmates are continuing to fundraise for AHV’s efforts in Nepal.

“They’re still raising money and bringing it on their own. It’s pretty amazing,” she said.

Additionally, the senior class at Old Rochester Regional donated their senior gift to AHV. This is particularly exciting to Parajule and her classmate, Alex Friedman, both ORR seniors, who will be volunteering in Nepal this summer.

“We’re not rebuilding quite yet,” Deery said. “We’re responding to the humanitarian needs. We have a professional staff there that is coordinating volunteers to go out in the community. We are removing rubble from properties, distributing tarps, blankets, rice, hygiene kits, deconstructing dangerous buildings, building child safe learning centers. We work on a number of fronts. It depends on the day; it depends on what the need is. We’ll probably end up staying there to rebuild.”

“We’re there to accommodate people who want to volunteer. We’re not trying to sell volunteerism; we provide a conduit to people who do want to volunteer,” Deery added.

Prospective volunteers or donors can learn more about All Hands Volunteers and its current projects at www.hands.org. They can also visit www.riseuprideon.crowdsterapp.com to learn about Rise Up Ride On 2015, a four-day fundraising cycling tour in August following the route of the typhoon in the Philippines. As of press time, there are still seats available on the cycling team – as well as many potential service applications waiting to be submitted by prospective volunteers.

“’Many hands make light work’ is certainly an appropriate adage,” Deery said.

By Anne Smith

 

Tobey Hospital Guild Scholarships

The Tobey Hospital Guild recently announced $3,000 in scholarship awards for individuals who are pursuing a career in healthcare.

The Guild presented three $1,000 scholarship awards to area high school seniors during its annual Scholarship Luncheon held May 28 at Bay Pointe Country Club in Buzzards Bay. The awards were presented by Josephine Praino, Scholarship Chair for the Tobey Hospital Guild, and Joan M. Martin, President of the Tobey Hospital Guild.

The 2015 scholarship winners are:

– Shawna Antonellis, a graduate of Bourne High School, who will attend Emmanuel College to pursue a career as a physician’s assistant in oncology. Shawna received the Leonard Martone Scholarship, which was awarded in his memory by his wife, Betty.

– Heather Nadeau, a graduate of Old Rochester Regional High School, who will attend Worcester State University to pursue a career as an occupational therapist.

– Samantha Rayner, a graduate of Old Colony Regional Vocational Technical High School, who will attend Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences with a focus on physical therapy.

Free Movie: Last Tuesday of the Month

St.Vincent (PG-13, 1hr. 42min.) will be shown at the Mattapoisett CoA Senior Center, Center School, 17 Barstow St., on Tuesday, June 30 at 12:00 noon. The free movie is sponsored by the Friends of the Mattapoisett CoA.

In St.Vincent, a single mother moves into a new home in Brooklyn with her 12-year old son, Oliver. As she works long hours, she has to leave Oliver in the care of their new neighbor, Vincent. He is a retired curmudgeon with a penchant for alcohol and gambling. Oliver accompanies Vincent on his daily rounds – the race track, a strip club, and the local dive bar. Oliver soon sees Vincent as a misunderstood man with a good heart.

You get two pizza slices for only $2 prepaid. Pay for your pizza at the CoA Senior Center by Monday, June 29. Also call the Senior Center at 508-758-4110 to reserve your seat – we need know how many chairs to set up.

Become a Volunteer Baywatcher

Do you love the water and want to help protect it? Volunteer as a Baywatcher with the Buzzards Bay Coalition in your community this summer! The Coalition is looking for dedicated volunteers to help monitor the health of local waterways across the Buzzards Bay region.

The Coalition is looking for Baywatchers to monitor the water in the following locations:

– Falmouth: Mashapaquit Creek, Quissett Harbor, Rands Harbor, West Falmouth Harbor and Wild Harbor River

– Bourne: Back River, Briarwood Center, Eel Pond, Phinneys Harbor and Red Brook Harbor

– Wareham: Agawam River, Broadmarsh River, Onset Bay, Shell Point Bay and Weweantic River

– Rochester: Sippican River

– Marion: Blankinship Cove, Hammett Cove, Sippican Harbor and Wings Cove

– Mattapoisett: Brandt Island Cove, Eel Pond and Mattapoisett River

– Fairhaven: Little Bay and Nasketucket River

– New Bedford: Acushnet River, Clarks Cove and New Bedford Harbor

– Dartmouth: Apponagansett Bay and Salters Pond

The Baywatchers program is the largest volunteer-based coastal monitoring effort in New England. Through the Baywatchers program, the Coalition monitors all of Buzzards Bay’s major rivers, coves and harbors – an area covering more than one-quarter of the Massachusetts coast. The data collected through the Baywatchers program form the foundation of the Coalition’s efforts to restore and protect Buzzards Bay.

Baywatchers volunteer approximately one morning per week from May to September at a designated location in their community. Using a water testing kit, Baywatchers collect samples and measure salinity, temperature, water clarity and dissolved oxygen at the site. Baywatchers receive training prior to volunteering and do not need a science background.

If you’re interesting in becoming a Baywatcher, contact Director of Monitoring Programs Tony Williams at 508-999-6363 ext. 203 or williams@savebuzzardsbay.org. For more information about the Baywatchers program, visit www.savebuzzardsbay.org/baywatchers.

More Allegations of Lalli Wetlands Violations

The Rochester Conservation Commission reluctantly continued the Enforcement Order and wetlands violations matter for Dustin and Travis Lalli until its next meeting to allow for a site visit, but denied the Lallis’ request for a three-month extension on filing a Request for Determination to delineate the wetlands on their property located off High Street.

The matter of alleged wetlands violations committed by the Lallis was first brought to the commission’s attention back in June 2014, and during the June 16, 2015 meeting, the commission had a second anonymous complaint letter from a resident near the Lalli property with new allegations of wetlands violations in addition to the repeated requests for a RDA that was due back on May 1, 2015.

This time, the Lallis brought attorney Andrea McKnight, who promised the commission that the Lallis would follow through with their responsibilities if given three more months to have the wetlands specialist determine whether or not the wetlands in question are in fact wetlands. The Lallis maintain that several areas of concern are not actually wetlands, calling one of the areas nothing more than “a gigantic puddle” in the middle of the property.

The commission cited the stockpiling of dirt and the digging of trenches that empty into a cranberry bog reservoir as significant areas of concern; however, the Lallis assert that the trenches were dug to reroute stormwater runoff coming from the Connet Woods development that abuts the Lalli property.

“Another is an excavating area Travis Lalli built for the runoff as a catch basin outside the 100-foot buffer zone,” said McKnight. However, she said, an area excavated to build new cranberry bogs was done by the previous owner, not by the Lallis.

As part of their defense, the Lallis also claim the property is agricultural land, and McKnight said the Lallis sell their agricultural products at farmers’ markets and report their taxable income as farming income.

Commission member Laurene Gerrior asked Dustin Lalli what he sells at farmers’ markets, to which he replied, “Eggs, herbs … hops, lettuce, peas … arugula …” When asked at which farmers’ markets he sold his goods, Dustin Lalli corrected McKnight and said he does not sell anything at farmers’ markets, rather, “I do go to festivals to sell them because there’s less competition.”

Conservation Agent Laurell Farinon brought up the most recent complaint letter she received in May 2015, and told the Lallis that they have to follow-up on the letter, even if the claims turn out to be unfounded.

“We have to follow up … we do it every day,” said Farinon. “We take everything with a grain of salt, but we do need to follow up with a site visit.”

The letter alleges that, upon hearing gunshots – “lots of gunshots” – the resident went to see from where they were coming. The resident wrote that the noise was coming from the Lalli property and they observed the following, as written in the letter, during numerous visits to the site:

“A large amount of tree cutting that may be within your jurisdiction, what appeared to be a pump running in a large body of water next to a make shift {sic} building and horse corral, I believe the water was being discharged in the woods to the south, four wheel drive trucks ‘mud bogging’ in this same body of water, and a jet ski in the water. I also observed a dump truck dumping dirt in the area of this body of water.”

The resident continued, “The property is a mess, junk cars, construction debris, beer bottles and what appears to be a large fire pit.”

Farinon later said she believed the Lallis might be confused over which wetlands areas are the actual areas in question and pointed out that the commission has been continuously asking for a site plan and restoration plan from the Lallis to no avail.

Farinon took out a state map of core wetlands and pointed out the areas in question, including a wet area in the center of the property as well as an isolated wetlands spot in the northwest. She also expressed concern that the Lallis were still referring to one particular wetlands scientist who previously stated that she could not take on the workload on behalf of the Lallis at this time. She encouraged the two men to return to a list of wetlands specialist she supplied them in the past and to choose a different one.

Commission members were reluctant to grant the Lallis the three months they requested, given the history of the alleged offenses and the significant amount of time that has passed without results.

“We’ve been discussing this for about a year,” said commission member Kevin Cassidy. “…We’ve extended at least two or three time to get the wetlands delineated.” As for the three-month extension, “I don’t think we should do it,” he stated. Instead, he recommended the commission visit the site and determine how much time to grant at the next ConCom meeting in July.

“Then determine … whether or not we’re going to give you an extension,” said Cassidy.

Town Counsel Blair Bailey, standing in the back of the room the whole time, recommended the same, but added a stipulation that the Lallis include a written correspondence from the wetlands scientist they choose, including a specific amount of time they will need to complete the analysis and generate a report.

The site visit was scheduled for Monday, June 22 and the matter was continued until July 7.

At the end of the meeting, Gerrior brought the commission’s attention to a Mattapoisett Conservation Commission article in the June 11 issue of The Wanderer where one Mattapoisett resident member asked, “Why do we have rules if people are allowed to come in and ask for forgiveness later?”

“And I think we’re seeing this, too [in Rochester],” said Gerrior, referring to after-the-fact filings.

Commission member John Teal concurred, saying, “We (ConCom) don’t want to be bullies. But we want things to get done right.”

The next meeting of the Rochester Conservation Commission is scheduled for July 7 at 7:00 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

By Jean Perry

ROcc_061815

Friends of Marion Visiting Nurses

In November of 1914, the Marion Visiting Nurse Association was established in an effort to provide quality care for members of the community. The inspiration for the association came when a young lady who cared for her family fell ill and was not able to get proper treatment as a result of poverty. After this tragic incident, the idea came to life and a trained woman was able to ease pain in the community.

This self-supporting group has been successful since its establishment, assisting residents of Marion while holding fundraisers and flea markets to raise money to support the costs of caring for the ill.

Eventually, in 1990, the group was taken over by St. Luke’s Hospital and subsequently became a part of the Southcoast hospital system. As a whole, the combined group covers a larger territory.

According to current President Jeanne Daly, “At the time of the merger, St. Luke’s allowed them to keep the money that they raised and the group developed a non-profit.”

This non-profit is known as the Friends of Marion Visiting Nurses, which continues to use the interest of these previously invested funds to provide scholarships and fund organizations committed to “helping the health and welfare of the people in Marion,” according to Daly.

The impact of the Friends of Marion Visiting Nurses is widespread and perhaps under the radar.

The non-profit assists well-known caring facilities and organizations locally such as the Council on Aging, Coastline Community Services, and Community Nurse and Hospice.

Additionally, Daly explained that the group underwrites the cost of the senior stretch program, which is held at the community house of the Congregational Church three times a week.

Annually, the Friends of Marion Visiting Nurses provides scholarships to students of the Tri-Town area who are graduating from a public or independent high school within the Tri-Town who plan to pursue a career in nursing.

The college-bound graduates “must demonstrate academic achievement and community involvement,” according to the scholarship association.

This year’s recipients are Victoria Caton of Mattapoisett and Sarah Robertson of Marion, both of whom recently graduated from Old Rochester Regional High School.

Caton will be attending Curry College in Milton, Massachusetts to study nursing. Her career objective is to acquire a Bachelor of Science in Nursing Degree. Caton has participated in a number of community service projects such as Habitat for Humanity and had the opportunity to work with the Schwartz Center for Children in Dartmouth where she interned with medical professionals.

Robertson will be attending Saint Anslem College and has also done a variety of service work pertaining to medical care. In addition to working with nurses at Tobey Hospital tending to patients, she volunteered in Guatemala to run a health clinic for babies with her mother and sister. For Robertson, both of these projects helped to reaffirm her career choice.

Both young women will be provided with $1000 to assist them in funding their nursing education.

The Friends of Marion Visiting Nurses continues to support endeavors in the community to provide healthcare for all.

For more information on the Southcoast Visiting Nurse Association please visit http://www.southcoast.org/vna/.

By Julia O’Rourke

 

Academic Achievements

The spring semester Dean’s List at Bryant University includes the following area residents:

– Stephanie M. Barrett, a senior in Finance from Marion

– Christopher C. Carando, a sophomore in Finance from Mattapoisett

– Bradley J. Ellis, a senior in Marketing from Mattapoisett

– Austin R Gibbs, a freshman in Accounting from Marion

In honor of their outstanding academic achievement, Emmanuel College has named more than 500 students to the Dean’s List for the Spring 2015 semester. To earn a spot on the Dean’s List, Emmanuel students must achieve a grade point average of 3.5 or higher for a 16-credit semester. The following local students were recognized:

Jonathan Igo of Mattapoisett who also graduated this May and received a Bachelor of Arts in Management

Keri Robbins of Marion who also graduated this May and received a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology with a concentration in counseling and health

Megan Riley Hagberg of Marion graduated from the University of Mary Washington with a Bachelor of Science in economics with a minor in urban studies.

Cody J. Nadeau of Marion graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Philosophy from McDaniel College.

Max Albury Gryska of Marion graduated from Friends Academy with distinction on June 10; she will attend Tabor Academy in the fall.

Katherine Medeiros of Mattapoisett was awarded a bachelor’s degree at Assumption College’s 98th Commencement ceremony, graduating with a major in Human Services and Rehabilitation Studies and a minor in Education.