Mattapoisett Women’s Club Potluck Luncheon

The Mattapoisett Women’s Club will kick off their 2012-2013 season with an old fashion welcome back Potluck Luncheon at 12:00 pm on Thursday, September 20 at the Mattapoisett Congregational Church, 27 Church Street, Mattapoisett. Come reunite with long-standing friends, and as always, we welcome new members and guests. Sign-up sheets will be available for various club activities. For more information, please contact Myra Hart at 508-758-4703 or Bobbie Ketchel at 508-758-9593.

Quaker Yard Sale

You would like to have a yard sale, but live off the beaten path? You’ll have a chance on Saturday, October 6 by reserving space at the Mattapoisett Friends Meeting annual yard sale, at the church, on heavily-traveled Route 6.

The sale will be conducted from 8:30 am to 12:00 pm, rain or shine. Inside table space is available for $20 or outside space for $10, payable in advance. For reservations, call 508-748-0098.

Anyone who would like to donate items for the church table should call 508-758-3579 for pick-up. Large items and electronic items are not acceptable.

Rochester Historical Society Meeting

The next Rochester Historical Society meeting will be held on Wednesday, September 19 at 7:00 pm at the East Rochester Church/ Museum, 355 County Road. The program for this meeting is “Cranberry Tales & Tools,” a talk by Doug Beaton, local cranberry grower. All are welcome. Refreshments will be served.

Gateway Youth Hockey

The Gateway Youth Hockey season has begun! Gateway Hockey is pleased to announce that the Bantam team has been accepted into the Yankee Conference for the 2012-2013 season. Head coach Mike Houdlette and assistant coaches, Ben Hathaway and Chris Smith, are excited to be given the opportunity to play at a competitive level. With 30 games on the schedule in rinks from Randolph to Barnstable, the Bantams will have plenty of opportunity to develop into what hopes to be a major contender in the league.

The team started their season Saturday night, September 8, in Pembroke against Weymouth. The boys were off to a quick lead with Matt St. John scoring two goals and Alex Atkinson scoring two goals in the first period. Then Weymouth seemed to come alive, scoring five goals in just eight minutes. The sixth goal sent three players into the Gateway net, and goalie A.J. Bridges got banged up and had to leave the game. Final score was Weymouth 6, Gateway 4. Teaghin Andre was outstanding in the net for Gateway.

On Sunday morning, their next game was played in Raynham against Taunton. The boys came up with their first win and a big one with a score of 7-0. Matt St. John had three goals unassisted and his first “hat trick” of the year. Mike Houdlette scored the first goal of the game, unassisted. Will Paling slammed one in the net unassisted. Alex Atkinson added one assisted by Doug Breault and Alex Hathaway. Brian Holmes scored the final goal for Gateway assisted by Brady Smith.

National Drug Take Back Day

The Mattapoisett Police Department will be participating in a prescription drug disposal day. This event is part of a nationwide initiative by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration, (DEA). It will be held Saturday, September 29 from 9:00 am to 2:00 pm. The purpose of such programs is to allow for safe, legal and environmentally-friendly disposal of extra drugs that patients have not used.

This program serves two purposes. First, this program reduces the risk of prescription drugs being consumed inappropriately — either by accident or through illegal sale. Prescription medication abuse is becoming far more prevalent than common street drugs. Widespread anecdotal and survey evidence indicates that a huge portion of illegal prescription drug use occurs when people raid friends’ and relatives’ medicine cabinets. Second, it reduces the risk of prescription drugs entering the water, potentially harming aquatic life or getting into a human water supply. If the household waste is incinerated, the drugs are far less likely to pose an environmental problem than if they go into the wastewater stream.

This program is being provided as a continuing proactive effort by the Mattapoisett Police Department to prevent drug abuse before it happens in our community. We encourage everyone to collect expired or useless prescription medications and bring them to the Mattapoisett Police Station at 64 County Road on Saturday, September 29.

For further information, please contact Captain Anthony M. Days of the Mattapoisett Police Department at 508-758-4141.

ORR’s Football and Soccer

            Before the fall sports contests truly began at ORR this week, a lot of rumors were swirling concerning a few hot topics. Would the Phillips brothers help lead a young football team to victory over Martha’s Vineyard? Would boys’ and girls’ soccer be able to win over Seekonk despite losing a considerable amount of seniors? Would the girls’ field hockey team look to win their fifth straight SCC title with an opening victory over rival Dighton Rehoboth?

The first week of games helps to make a first impression on students and fans of ORR athletics to see how their teams will perform during the season. This week, the teams did not disappoint.

The ORR football team started off their season with a 25-0 victory over Martha’s Vineyard. Quarterback Nolan Bergeron ran for 153 yards and two touchdowns, while his brother Hayden Bergeron provided a key interception in the third quarter to halt a Vineyard drive. Richie Phillips ran for 115 yards on 10 carries and supplied the Bulldogs with a touchdown. The football team looks to go 2-0 with a game against Bishop Stang at home on September 14.The game’s time is undecided due to a recently issued EEE curfew.

The football program was not the only team with early season success. Both the boys’ and girls’ soccer teams won their games against Seekonk on Friday. The girls won 2-0 with key goals from freshman Midfielder Sarah Beaulieu and senior Forward Hannah Walsh. Senior captain Alison Francis assisted Beaulieu in her first-half goal. Sophomore Goalie Mikayla Demanche made seven stops in net, lifting the Lady Bulldogs to their first victory of the season. On the boys’ side, senior Alex Milde scored the lone goal of the game to lift the boys to a 1-0 victory over Seekonk.

The ORR field hockey team tied their first game against rival Dighton Rehoboth with a scoreless game. According to Coach Polly Lawrence, senior Forward Katie Wilbur and Defender Madison Durr both played well.

A Brief Look at ORR’S Newest Faces

Last year marked the departure of four integral parts of the ORR high school faculty; each carried their weight in teaching skills as well as intellect. This year marks the arrival of three young, bright, new minds with their eyes set on similar sights.

            There are two different departments in the school represented by the new teachers: the Science Department and the English Department. Ms. Champagne, a Chemistry teacher, jumped right into her new job teaching classes such as AP Chemistry, Chemistry A, and Essentials of Chemistry. She enthusiastically fills a vital role that was left empty by the egress of Ms. Sullivan.

            The English Department suffered a colossal loss last year with three significant teachers leaving their classrooms at ORR: Mrs. Johnson, Ms. Ribeiro and Ms. Dall. Each held their jobs as educators in the highest esteem and had an incalculable impact on their students.

            Amy Medeiros, a graduate of Bridgewater State University, fills one of the open spots. She began teaching here last year as a long-term substitute, but has a classroom all to herself for the first time this year. She chose Old Rochester as one of her top three schools to perform her student teaching and was thrilled when asked to stay.

            She teaches freshman, sophomore and junior-year English classes, and states that while it is more work and more responsibility, it is a “good challenge.” While she loves English in general, sophomore-year English, or American Literature, is her favorite.

             As a full-time teacher, she gets her own homeroom, develops a curriculum, and she feels students “don’t compare [her] to other teachers” as they often did when she was a long-term substitute. Her passion for teaching came to her during her senior year of high school. She had a teacher that inspired her and it “really rubbed off.”

            When asked her opinion of our school in general, she responded with a simple, “I love it.” Her appreciation for the “awesome students” and “supportive, collaborative environment” has made her time here so far pleasant all-around.

            Michael Beson, a graduate from Fordham University and Union College, also joins the department. In his second full year of teaching, Mr. Beson taught in Winthrop, MA last school year. He believes his choice of Old Rochester to be a good one: he believes the class sizes to be “perfect” and the environment to be “incredibly positive.”

            He commented that he has seen “harder-working students here in two weeks than all year” at his other school. He believes it makes a big difference when “students have ownership of their work.” He teaches freshmen, juniors and has a Creative Writing elective. His favorite subject to teach is his Creative Writing class. He remarked that while writing is something “most students struggle with,” it is his favorite to teach because it is “the most rewarding.”

            His passion for teaching stemmed from his aversion of continuing working “Nine to five in the corporate world.” He grew sick of not being able to laugh or smile or be happy doing his job. According to him, “not a day goes by where I don’t do that in the classroom.”

New Faces Welcomed to ORR Community

Four new administrators were welcomed by the Old Rochester Regional School Committee at their first meeting of the 2012-2013 academic year on Wednesday, September 12. The new Facilities Director, Eugene Jones, and District Technology Director, Ryan McGee, were on hand to present their reports at the beginning of the meeting, while the new School Business Administrator, Catherine Antonellis, accepted well-wishes from the Committee before taking her permitted leave from the meeting.

“I believe she will be a benefit,” said Superintendent Douglas White. “I welcome her as the new School Business Administrator.”

“I look forward to working with all of you and meeting you personally,” Antonellis told the Committee.

The new Cross-District ELL Specialist, Teeh Mazzoni, was not present at the meeting but has not yet begun her duties at ORR. She will transition into her new role starting Monday.

“We had a full vetting of many candidates during the summer,” said the Director of Curriculum and Instruction, Elise Frangos, also thanking the number of individuals who served on the hiring committee.

In addition to the four administrators, there are ten new teachers serving the Old Rochester Regional School District this academic year.

“This summer we had an August teacher induction day,” White said in his report.

Frangos, in her report and later discourse on the 2012-2013 professional development plan, explained the nature of the new teacher induction program.

“We assign one colleague to serve as a mentor for the duration of the year,” Frangos said. The mentor and mentee are required to keep a log detailing their 16 hours of mentorship, in addition to meeting once a month to discuss topics of mutual interest.

“The log is confidential. All I look for is the collection of hours and the nature of the meetings,” Frangos said.

The professional development plan, a 60-page document from which Frangos culled excerpts for discussion, emphasizes the Common Core requirements and takes a new look at forming relationships between the schools in the district.

“We’re set up against a backdrop of really cultivated educational change. [The intent] is to keep teachers up to the minute on instructional techniques,” Frangos said.

Besides organizing workshops, Frangos is creating professional learning communities for job-alike teachers in the different Tri-Town schools. The physical education teachers, for example, would be in a professional learning community, as would the art teachers and other teachers who are the only one in their school. Frangos offers the communities as a cure to loneliness in the district.

In other business, White presented the new Superintendent Evaluation, which is a five-step process beginning with a self-evaluation. In the next step, White would meet with the school committees. The third step, implementation, would require the amassing and study of evidential support that White is meeting the goals for each school committee. Finally, there would be a cumulative evaluation not unlike the previous Superintendent Evaluation.

“It’s a rubric with different criteria from what you’ve used to evaluate me in the past,” White said.

In the Principal’s Report for ORRJHS, Kevin Brogioli asked the Committee to consider a change regarding the cost of intramural sports. Currently, there is a $75 rate per intramural season. Brogioli asked the Committee to change these fees to an annual $25 due, with an additional $50 for traveling teams.

“We’ve been having trouble funding coaches and consequently, many teams haven’t started their seasons,” Brogioli explained the situation.

The Committee voted in favor of the change.

Also in the Junior High news, Brogioli sought approval from the Committee for an alternative Survival trip. Survival, a popular week-long camping trip for seventh graders, excludes students who have received disciplinary actions. Brogioli hopes to institute a two-day camping trip for a target group of male students, described to have respect and authority issues, to be chaperoned by himself, ORRHS Assistant Principal Michael Parker and Mattapoisett Police Officer Mitchell Suzan. The trip, which would require the students to write a self-reflection and form relationships with both each other and the adults, would ease their transition into the high school.

“I’m confident of our ability to get them to work on small group goals,” Brogioli said, stressing that these students were good kids.

Chairperson Peter Bangs questioned how the Committee would respond to probable claims from parents that the trip would reward bad behavior.

Frangos answered that the trip could be tried as a pilot program, possibly increasing over time to include other groups of students and offer an alternative to physical education.

In ORRHS Principal Michael Devoll’s report, the student body is currently quantified as 713 students, of whom 47 are school-choice.  However, one school-choice slot has opened this week as a student chose not to come to ORR. Devoll said that he is addressing the situation by calling the next student on the wait list.

“I’ve always thought 700 was a healthy number,” Devoll said regarding the statistics.

Devoll also spoke about the retirement of Estela Johnston, a Spanish teacher, whose last class is Friday.

“Traditionally, the teacher would be here to be honored, but she could not attend,” Devoll said. Instead, Johnston will attend the October 10 meeting.

Also from Devoll’s report, the ORR Swim Team is doing well in its fundraising, having already met its goals for this year. Furthermore, Devoll said the pool time might cost less than originally anticipated.

Finally, Devoll announced the fall play and spring musical, which will be Romeo and Juliet and Oklahoma!, respectively.

The Committee, after a brief discussion, voted to retract its requirement to approve school plays, provided that the school continue to announce their season to the Committee, as well as disclaim the age-appropriateness of the shows to the public.

After a discussion of the low enrollment in the Tri-Town Early Childhood Preschool Program, the Committee voted to make an exception from the enrollment criteria for two children, ages 2 years and 9 months, who have IEPs. Normally, enrollment in the preschool is limited to three and four year-olds. The exception, provided for by state legislation, will only occur for this academic year.

Currently, ORRHS is working on an advertising campaign to bolster the preschool’s enrollment, which is at less than half. In addition to a public announcement airing on local television, Devoll will make arrangements for a banner to be hung outside the school.

In its other business, the Committee discussed the use of both Galileo (a diagnostic testing system) and SchoolDude, a maintenance and technology computer program. A long testing window for Galileo will allow teachers of ELA, science and mathematics to frequently assess their success in the classroom, leaving plenty of time for MCAS preparation. SchoolDude will allow teachers to request room maintenance or technological help without resorting to the hallway hailing of district custodians and technology staff.

At the conclusion of the meeting, the Committee accepted the open comments from Colin Everett, President of the Old Rochester Professional Educators Association.

“It occurred to me,” Everett said, “that it’s been 11 months. In the past 11 months, we only negotiated twice. We wanted to negotiate in the fall, we wanted to negotiate in the winter, we wanted to negotiate in the spring.”

Everett assessed the Association’s membership as eager for a resolution. “The only way is to negotiate it,” he said.

Everett concluded his comments by expressing his concerns for the expense of delaying negotiations. “I think it owes to both parties to negotiate. Going through the state, it’s going to cost the district, it’s going to cost the Association.”

The next meeting of the Old Rochester Regional School Committee will be on Wednesday, October 10 in the School Committee Conference Room in the Superintendent’s Office.

By Anne Smith


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Possible New Homes On Indian Cove Road

The first hearing of the night was for Susan Domolky, regarding her Notice of Intent to trim dead or downed trees and brush for property at 85 Moorings Road.  Domolky would also like to remove Japanese knotweed and phragmites in order to create a wetland restoration planting area.

The previous owner was planning to maintain the same area, but sold the property to the Domolky family before the project was realized.

“Part of what we’ve shown is a transition to do more of a planting area to create a curve-shape around the edge of the pond,” said Susan Nilson of CLE Engineering, who represented the Domolky family at the meeting.

The biggest focus of the project would be on the invasive knotweed and phragmites.

“The trimming and the cleaning is really being done to try to clean it up,” she said.

“That species is so invasive. It’s a mess out there,” said Commission member Steve Gonsalves.

“We’re not asking to clear it down to grade. We’re going to save everything we can,” Nilson said.

The Commission voted to continue the hearing because the project has not yet been issued a DEP file number.

Then the Commission had a hearing regarding a Request for Determination of Applicability for the construction of a temporary storage shed at Tabor Academy on 215 Front Street.

“I would say we have to define temporary,” said Commission Clerk Norman Hills.  No one from Tabor or their engineering firm were present at the meeting.

The submitted plans offered two ways to anchor the building: bolted-down sonotubes or a concrete slab.  In addition, the storage shed would be used for only one year.

“A slab isn’t very temporary,” said Commission member Joel Hartley.

The Conservation Commission voted in favor of the project, but are requiring the shed be anchored by sonotubes.

Next, the Commission held a continued hearing for Peter and Asha Wallace of 167 Converse Road, regarding their Notice of Intent to maintain two existing view corridors that span from the edge of their lawn to a local salt marsh.

Clerk Norm Hills said that, upon their site inspection, there were conflicts between the location of flags on site and on the plans.

“I went out there and I found a flag west of the wetland line,” Hills said.

Dave Davignon of Schneider and Associates, who represented the Wallaces, concurred that there were minor inconsistencies.

“This wetlands study seems to say we were justified in doubting the line, but we still can’t say for sure where it is,” said Commission member Joel Hartley.

Hills was also concerned about the amount of trees that would be removed during the project.

“There are several trees out there that, if you look at them, you know they’re going to come down, but they’re not the ones you’ve indicated,” he said.

The Commission said that there were several trees in the area marked for razing and trimming and asked that the trees be re-labeled so that only the dying trees would be removed.

The Commission voted to continue the hearing until the September 26 meeting so that the trees can be re-marked and another site inspection can take place.

Then, the Conservation Commission heard Davignon again, this time on behalf of the Indian Cove Association to discuss the redevelopment of the boatyard site.

“As you know, this is a boatyard facility and they have a purchase and sales agreement to make it into three single-house lots,” Davignon said.

While frontage for the area would be considered to be off Aucoot Road, Marion Fire and EMS request that Indian Cove Road be the primary way for access to the properties.

Hills voiced concern over the process for removing the existing buildings, some of which are fairly large.

“The buildings on the boatyard have been falling apart for some time.  With taxes going up, this has become nothing but a detrimental liability,” said Kenneth Jacobsen, another representative for the project.  Jacobsen also said that some of the buildings were built on foundations, while others were not.

“Ultimately we’ll be filing a Notice of Intent for two things: one for bringing a road across the wetland, and then we’ll be proposing to build a driveway in the layout here that will be 12-foot and gravel,” said Davignon.  “We wanted to bring this to you to see if it is a permittable project.”

The next meeting of the Marion Conservation Commission will be held on Wednesday, September 26, 2012, at 7:00 pm at the Town House.

By Eric Tripoli

Commending the Highway Department

I would like to commend the Town of Mattapoisett Highway Department and Engineering Department for their choice of construction companies involved in the drainage and repaving projects on lower North Street and Barstow Street. The work began in mid-May and was completed on September 6. Both construction companies, Gravity Construction & I.W. Harding, were highly professional and genuinely concerned with the welfare of the residents of both streets. The work involved was a massive undertaking and, though sometimes a bit inconvenient for parking, etc., was completed with minimal complications. The end result is obvious in our beautiful new sidewalks, curbs and resurfaced streets. Again, thanks for a job well-planned and beautifully done.

Sincerely,

Patricia W. Cole