FinCom Asks Probing Questions

As Mattapoisett’s Finance Committee nears the end of its hard work preparing for the spring town meeting, they met on April 9 with various department heads to ask questions pertinent to capital funding requests.

First up was John DeSousa, Chairman of the Community Preservation Committee. As he had done at the selectmen’s meeting the night before, DeSousa gave a presentation that outlined the year-long work the committee has now completed, which included the development of a master plan. The master plan contains firm guidelines on the process for requesting funds from the CPC, the system for grading or prioritizing the requests, and the types of requests that may be requested. He said that committee members had also participated in training at the state level to become more familiar with this relatively new funding source of community projects. DeSousa explained that the Community Preservation Act, which recently underwent some rule changes, now allows the CPC to accept donations from the public.

In February, the CPC voted to accept all seven requested projects and bring them to town meeting where voters will decide the final fate of each. Those projects are: Barlow Cemetery – $3,627 for fencing repairs and general maintenance; Mattapoisett Historical Society/Museum – $16,000 for new cataloging system of historical documents; Buzzards Bay Coalition – $96,000 for land acquisition at Nasketucket Bay; town wharf – $49,000 for masonry repairs; Bike Path Committee – $39,000  for engineering fees for Phase 1B; town beach bath house – $50,000 for repairs including handicap accessibility structural improvements; and Recreation Department – $55,000 for a tot lot adjacent to the tennis courts at Center School. A lead person from each organization that requested funding will lobby for their project at town meeting. The CPC cannot initiate a project; it can only review requests they receive and either accept them based on specific criteria or reject them.

Chairman of Capital Planning Chuck McCullough was next to give his committee’s presentation of capital expenses received from various departments for 2015 budget consideration. During his presentation, Police Chief Mary Lyons was asked to explain the need for a new utility vehicle. She explained that this would be a SUV-style cruiser of the type now being ordered versus a sedan style. The Finance Committee members also asked about the need for a new ambulance. Chief Lyons explained that neither Tobey Hospital in Wareham nor St. Luke’s Hospital in New Bedford is designated as a trauma center by the state. This means that trauma victims must now be transported to Rhode Island Hospital. She said that transports to Rhode Island are about twice a week and add many additional miles to older ambulances.

The committee also questioned why the estimated costs for a new fire station – part of the five-year capital plan – had gone from $2.5 million to $3.5 million. Fire Chief Andrew Murray was on hand to explain that costs for building a new fire station had increased from when he completed researching similar structures. They also questioned him on the requests for repairs to fire suppression vehicles. Chief Murray explained that the requested sums for repairs would be good investments in the fire engines, giving them many more years of services rather than purchasing new vehicles that won’t fit in the current fire station facility.

McCullough completed his presentation by presenting the full list of funding requests prioritized by Capital Planning. Those requests are: (1) fire department’s Engine 4 repairs  – $15,000; (2) police utility vehicle – $35,000; (3) library window repairs – $7,000; (4) fire department Engine 2 refurbishment – $125,000; (5) new ambulance – $200,000; (6) local schools combined computer infrastructure upgrades – $49,000; (7) local schools technology upgrades – $30,000; (8) Hammond Street parking – $18,500; (9) local schools playground repairs – $21,000; (10) beach raft repairs – $10,000; (11) town hall office equipment – $13,400; (12) road sign project – $22,000; (13) highway department building repairs – $40,000; (14) library generator – $50,000; (15) fire department station vehicle – $36,000; (16) highway department utility vehicle – $50,000; (17) new math curriculum – $49,000; and (18) new police cruiser – $32,500.

Town Administrator Mike Gagne said that voters would most likely not fund the full list, noting that possibly only the top six items would pass. FinCom member Pat Donoghue questioned if items that had been given a prioritized position could be taken out of sequence. She was reminded that policy had been changed to discourage funding a need that might enjoy favoritism with a specific group, rather than what was best for the community at large. Gagne said that only the items that could be funded from free cash or other approved sources would be included in the town meeting warrant. That is part of the work that FinCom will undertake leading up to the printing of the town meeting warrant.

Nick Nicholson, Superintendent of the Water and Sewer Department (an enterprise business), was last to appear before the FinCom members. He shared that the new water meters are a great improvement for the town’s ‘cash registers.’ They not only improve the recorded amount of water consumed by each customer, but they also identify leaks and other problems that might otherwise go undetected. He talked to them about the need to purchase more sewer capacity from Fairhaven for future sewer needs when such areas as Harbor Beach, Aucoot Cove, Brandt Island Beach, and Pease Point are added. He also said that there are plans to expand the sewer system to the north along North Street all the way to the end of Industrial Drive.

Nicholson said that he will be seeking authorization to sell property located inside Bay Club and at 33 Church Street to offset the cost of constructing a new water and sewer facility. He noted that such a building would consolidate the current fragmentation of the department and also eliminate rent payments for the 19 County Road office building.

Nicholson went on to explain that phase 3 of the water supply development will be delayed about a year until the new water and sewer rates are in place and the impact of the increase can be evaluated.

The next meeting of the Finance Committee is April 15 at 6:30 pm.

By Marilou Newell

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ORRJHS Students of the Month

Kevin T. Brogioli, Principal of Old Rochester Regional Junior High School, announces the following Students of the Month for March 2014:

– Red Team: Megan Guaraldo and Logan King

– Blue Team: Vanessa Ortega and Joseph Robinson

– Orange Team: Ainslee Bangs and Tyler Menard

– Green Team: Allison Kvilhaug and Benjamin Lafrance

– Special Areas: Julia Cabral and Samuel Austin

Maconchu Club

The Maconchu Club of the Mattapoisett Congregational Church will meet at 7:00 pm on Saturday April 26 instead of their regular meeting night due to Easter. The speaker for the evening will be Thomas Shire who has a very varied background and who will speak to us about having owned a number of theaters including the State Theater in New Bedford, now known by its original name, the Zeiterion.

As always, all are welcome to join us for the program and for coffee and refreshments following.

Sea Chantey Concert at the MHS

Come join the melodic fun as The New Bedford Harbor Sea Chantey Chorus performs at the Mattapoisett Historical Society, 5 Church Street, on Sunday, April 27 at 2:00 pm. The 40+ member chorus’ repertoire includes the chanteys (work songs) of the Yankee sailor and whaler, along with the ballads and ditties of global mariners and coastwise fisherfolk in North America, the Cape Verde Islands and the British Isles. Free. Donations welcome. For more information, please call 508-758-2844 or email mattapoisett.musem@verizon.net.

Rochester Republican Town Committee

The next Rochester Republican Town Committee meeting will be Saturday, May 3 at 9:30 am at the East Freetown Crossroads Plaza, second floor. The public is welcome.

AFS Club Visits Arcola, IL

Members of Old Rochester Regional High School’s AFS club went on a short-term exchange to a high school in Illinois last Wednesday through Sunday. The students were hosted by AFS club members in the small town of Arcola. While there, they experienced what life is like in America’s mid-west.

ORR students on the trip included freshman Tessa Comboia; sophomores Abby Field, Cate Feldkamp, and Holly Frink; juniors Annie Henshaw, Samantha Malatesta, Chloe Riley, Kate Colwell, and Morgan Browning; and seniors Emily Hyde, Evelyn Murdock, Lizzie Machado, Nancy Pope, Robby Magee, and Renae Reints. ORR’s senior foreign exchange students – Louisa Truss from Germany and Ailina Cervantes Diaz from Costa Rica – also went to Arcola. The students were chaperoned by Nurse Kim Corazzini and parent-volunteer Rhonda Reints.

While in Arcola, the students attended a day of school at the town’s high school. “I always think that ORR is such a small school, but theirs is like half the size of ORR,” said Frink, “Everyone knows everyone and they’re really just kind to each other.”

Frink and many of the other ORR travelers admired how the students from Arcola always make a point to say hello to others in the halls or around town. “It’s small, but it’s something,” said Frink.

Malatesta noted how this unity reached beyond the students. “Their community supports them so much more than ours. They’re just so invested in their school,” said Malatesta, “The community is the one that’s raising money so that they can get iPads next year. It’s not the school; it’s the parents and the people that have graduated.”

This devotion reaches beyond academics in Arcola. Each year, townspeople paint the telephone pole bases on the main road to resemble members of the high school’s football team. Besides just decorating in support of their teams, Hyde noted, “They all go to every sporting event. It’s not just the athletes that show up to the basketball games, the track meets – it’s everybody. Everybody from different towns even, not just Arcola.”

Along with the welcoming culture in Arcola, the students of ORR had the opportunity to spend an afternoon immersed in the area’s Amish community. They visited a museum at Rockome Gardens, enjoyed an authentic lunch in the home of an elderly Amish couple, toured a buggy-making shop, and visited an Amish farm where they got to ride in a horse and buggy. The simple way of life of the Amish was foreign and intriguing to the ORR students who come from a less diverse area.

“You always think that they’re different people, but they’re so much like us,” said Hyde of the Amish people. The other students from ORR were equally delighted with their Amish experience. Many of them chose Amish experiences as their favorite part of the trip.

“I really loved riding in a horse and buggy. That was great,” said Frink, “I just liked getting introduced to different cultures.”

“It was so cool to see the different kinds of transportation, not the basic car that everyone else has,” said Machado, adding, “Honestly, the people that were there, they were so nice; they were so welcoming.”

On their last day in Illinois, the ORR students visited Chicago with their friends from Arcola. They had the opportunity to go to the top floor of Willis Tower (previously known as Sears Tower) and walk on the Sky Deck’s Ledge – a glass box extending off the building’s 103rd floor, 1,353 feet above the city. After this thrilling experience, the students had Chicago’s famous deep-dish pizza for lunch. They spent some time at Navy Pier’s shopping center before a sad goodbye outside ORR’s hotel for the night.

Despite the brevity of the trip, some strong friendships formed between the students from ORR and Arcola. The initial meetings had passed when Arcola’s AFS club visited Tri-Town last month, and last week’s trip was about strengthening those friendships along with sparking new ones.

“You can only get to know each other so much in a short period of time, but being able to really meet them when they came to ORR, and then to live with them,” said Frink, “you really get to know someone when you know where they come from.”

“It’s one thing to go to Ned’s Point with somebody,” said Hyde, touching upon a similar point, “but when you’re living in somebody’s house for three days, you just grow so much closer.”

Murdock said she felt this trip was more beneficial than previous exchanges because it wasn’t overly-structured. “This year, I felt so much closer to all of them because we actually went to where they hang out. We went to their restaurants and we went to the park,” she said, “We got to spend a lot of down time with them – hanging out them and their friends and seeing what people actually do there.”

Colwell, like the others, was sad to leave but happy for the memories made. “I really enjoyed seeing everyone again, because I missed them,” she said, “I thought it was really nice going out to lunch with them, and having deep-dish pizza in Chicago and everything.”

Each student made their own unique memories while in Arcola. Henshaw took an early exercise class with her host student’s mother – a fun and tiring morning she won’t soon forget. “It was ‘Chicks in Training’ and I got to exercise with most of the kids’ moms,” Henshaw laughed. “That was an amazing bonding experience.”

A previous exchange student herself, Henshaw was able to compare this AFS trip to her experiences in Panama last summer. While the Panama trip was organized for community service and the Arcola trip was organized for making new friendships, Henshaw said the ideals behind the exchanges are similar. “The purpose of the trip was somewhat the same, that it was about meeting new people and building relationships, and understanding other cultures and being accepting of other cultures.”

That’s just what ORR’s AFS club did out in Arcola, Illinois. Now that they’re home in Tri-Town, the students are cherishing their memories and staying in touch with their new friends in the mid-west, while the underclassmen look forward to future AFS exchanges.

By Renae Reints

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Families Flock to Rochester Easter Events

There was no other place a kid in Rochester would rather be the day before Easter than in the fields at Plumb Corner. Well over a hundred children lined the two fields, ready to hunt the hundreds of colorful plastic Easter eggs filled with candy that lay in the grass before them. The excitement over the egg hunt might have been over just a few frantic minutes later, but the businesses of Plumb Corner and the Plumb Library sponsored free events like cookie decorating, crafts, a jellybean counting contest, and face painting that kept kids and their families busy the rest of the morning. The weather was fine and even the Easter Bunny found it warm enough to hop over for a visit. By Jean Perry

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MAC Exhibition of Photography

The Marion Art Center is pleased to announce the opening of an exhibition of photographs by Ronald Wisner and Corinna Raznikov. A reception honoring the photographers will be held on Friday, April 25 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 photographs featuring Corinna’s whimsical portraits and Ron’s landscapes from around the world and in our own backyard. The show will run until May 31.

Corinna Raznikov’s photography has been featured in numerous galleries and museums in group and one-woman shows from Scotland to San Francisco and is regularly published in national and regional magazines.

She received her B.A. in Art and English from the University of the Pacific, where she concentrated her studies on the portrait in photography. Corinna furthered her training by studying the history of photography at the University of Glasgow, Scotland and the aesthetics of photography at Harvard University.

After completing her degree, Corinna taught photography at the University of the Pacific, and continues to teach in her field as a highly-regarded instructor.

Along with her commercial work as a wedding photographer, Corinna continues exhibiting her artwork and volunteering her photography services in many capacities. Her recent project “Vocabulary Day” is an ambitious six-year project where she is photographing more than 500 children dressed as definitions in Sippican’s “Living Dictionary” to raise awareness for literacy as well as funds for Sippican School’s Etta Hicks-Allen Library.

Her work has been described as “mysteriously revealing of the spirit of her subjects.” She has received numerous awards and acclaim for her images that capture the natural beauty of her subjects. She lives in Marion, MA with her husband, daughter Josephine, Jezebel the cat and Stella the dog. They all love art and sailing.

Ronald Wisner is the former CEO and founder of the Wisner Company, which manufactured and sold photographic devices world-wide for over two decades through 2004. He has taught, lectured and published on the subject of photography extensively, holds several U.S. photographic device patents, and was the official OEM manufacturer of the Polaroid 20×24 instant camera, which he installed in key major cities in Europe and Asia in partnership with Polaroid Corporation. Ron Wisner is primarily a landscape photographer and photographs internationally.

Good Friday Decission II

Dear Editor:

The school committee, with little if any thoughts or discussion, voted to abandon Good Friday which has been observed for years. The public was given no public notice. We are a Christian nation and this day has solemn connections to the faith of our founding fathers and to all Christians. The decision was not thought out but brought up without prior notice to the committee. The Tri-Town families should have a say in this decision as it will affect many students who are being raised with Christian principles. Praying was removed, Christmas has been removed, and now Good Friday. Our country’s religious freedom is in rapid decline. What is to follow, only the prophets of old are sure to tell.

Sincerely,

Jane Awad, Mattapoisett

 

 

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.

Marion Fireworks Committee

The 2014 Marion Fireworks Committee held the Second Annual Beach Party at the Marion Music Hall on Saturday, April 5. The night was a great success! Thank you to all that attended.

The Committee would like to say a special thank you to the many sponsors, businesses and individuals that sent monetary donations or a donation for our Silent Auction: Anthony Days, Barden’s Boat Yard, Congressman William Keating, Eden’s Florist, Ensemble Events, Fairfield Inn-Middleboro, Harriet’s Catering, Jeff Hemphill, Joan Gerster & Fred Trezise, Kaleidoscope of Dance & Gymnastics, Karma Salon, Lindt Chocolate, Little Harbor Country Club, Marion Recreation, Nick’s Pizza-Mattapoisett, Pat Kelleher, R. Carroll & Son Property Management, Residence Inn-Dartmouth, Sea Dips, Serendipity by the Sea, Top of the Hill Liquors, Ying Dynasty-Mattapoisett, and Zulu Nyala, South Africa.

A limited number of special-edition 2014 Marion Fireworks T-shirts are available to purchase for only $20 each.

Through Beach Party ticket sales, auction proceeds, T-shirt sales, and previous contributions, the Committee has raised $23,000 to date. However, this is still shy of the goal of $50,000.

The deadline to raise all funds for the fireworks is May 15.

Please send your donations today to: Marion Fireworks Committee, 13 Atlantis Drive, Marion, Massachusetts, 02738. No amount is too big or too small. All donations are tax deductible.

Any questions, please contact the Marion Fireworks Committee at 774-217-8355 or info@marionrecreation.com.

The 2014 Marion Fireworks Committee thanks you for your support and looks forward to celebrating Independence Day with fireworks again this year!