Mattapoisett Cultural Council

The Mattapoisett Cultural Council invites you to join them at 10:00 am on Saturday, March 10 at the library for a public meeting.

Woven through the fabric of our life experiences here in Mattapoisett are cultural events that highlight traditions, create learning opportunities and draw our community together. You may be surprised to learn that many of them are funded, in part, by your Local Cultural Council.

Some examples include the Harborfest, field trips for Mattapoisett school children, live performances in schools, the Council on Aging, the Free Public Library and other venues and the ORCTV Telethon.

Your Local Cultural Council also supports arts, humanities and sciences regionally, such as the Teen Artist Internship Program at ArtWorks!, the Buzzards Bay Musicfest and both the SouthCoast Children’s Theatre and the SouthCoast Children’s Chorus.

We need your interest and support to keep the Council connected to opportunities in the arts, humanities and sciences throughout our community. Please join us for our public meeting. You can also contact us at MattapoisettLCC@gmail.com.

Plumb Library Events

The following are the programs for March at the Joseph H. Plumb Memorial

Library, 17 Constitution Way, Rochester:

Nonfiction Book Discussion Group — The Nonfiction Book Discussion Group will meet Thursday, March 22 at 6:30 pm to discuss In the Garden of the Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler’s Berlin by Erik Larson. Larson, author of Devil in the White City and Isaac’s Storm, this time turns his gaze to Berlin at the start of the Third Reich. The American ambassador, William Dodd and his family have just moved to Germany. His warnings about Hitler fall on deaf ears as his daughter has affairs with a powerful Nazi and with a Soviet spy.

Cafe Parlez — Café Parlez’ selection for March is The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick. Orphan, clock keeper and thief Hugo lives in the walls of a Paris train station. When he becomes friends with a bookish girl and a crotchety old toy seller, his undercover life and most precious secret are put in jeopardy. This book won the Caldecott Award for Illustration in 2008 and was recently made into a movie. We will be discussing Hugo Cabret on Thursday, March 29 at 6:30 pm. Books are available at the desk, or bring your own copy.

Knitting Group — Join fellow knitters and crocheters at Mary Leonard’s Knitting Group on Friday afternoons  from 2:00 – 3:30 pm.  Knitters and crocheters of all levels are invited to drop by to enjoy tea, cookies and the company of fellow crafters. Beginners are welcome.

Coffee with the Candidates — Being an informed voter is the best way to participate in a democracy. With that in mind, the Plumb Library offers its first Coffee with the Candidates.  Join us on Saturday, March 24 from 9:30—11:00 am for an informal “meet and greet” with the candidates for the local election. Refreshments will be served thanks to the Friends of Plumb Library. Drop by and meet your neighbors who are running for local offices such as Selectmen, Library Trustees, Water Department and more.

Irish Music and Fun — Children ages 4-10 are invited to take part in Music ‘n’ Fun Class with Aoife Clancy: A St. Paddy’s Day Celebration on Saturday, March 24 at 11:30 am. Aoife Clancy brings her years of music experience and her unique style of teaching to incorporate traditional Irish music, song and dance from her Celtic roots. Aoife feels it’s important to get children involved in music class, so she’ll be demonstrating a simple Irish jig along with songs her father taught her growing up in Ireland. She will share stories of Irish mythology dating back hundreds of years. All of this will be done in a very informal and fun way. The class should run about 50 minutes in length, and space will be limited. Comfortable clothing should be worn and shoes will be removed to avoid little people from getting hurt. Call 508-763-8600, drop by the library at 17 Constitution Way, Rochester, or email info@plumblibrary.com to reserve a space. This program is sponsored by the Friends of Plumb Library.

To find out more about these and other programs at the Plumb Library, visit our website at www.plumblibrary.com and check the Events Calendar. You can also check our blog at plumblibrary.wordpress.com, or “like” us on Facebook.  The 100th person to “like” us wins a Dunkin’ Donuts gift card.

Maconchu Club

In lieu of a regular meeting for March, the Maconchu Club of the Mattapoisett Congregational Church will be attending The Boy Friend, ORR Drama Club’s spring production, on March 25 at 2:00 pm. Tickets for members can be picked up from Carol Atkinson or ordered from Carol at 52 County Road, Unit 29, Mattapoisett. The price will be $12 and checks should be made out to the Maconchu Club.

Rochester Rabies Clinic

There will be a rabies clinic on Sunday, March 25, from 12:00 to 2:00 pm at the Grange Hall on Hartley Road in Rochester. The cost is $12 per shot. All animals must be properly restrained; all dogs must be leashed, all cats in cat carriers. Licensing will be available for Rochester residents.  The cost is $10 for intact male or unspayed female; $7 for spayed or neutered. Contact Anne Estabrook, ACO at 508-649-9813 with any questions.

ORYF Pop Warner All-American Scholars

Several ORYF Bulldogs were recently chosen as 2012 Pop Warner All-American Scholars for the New England region. To be eligible to receive this honor, a student must be a football player or cheerleader with a minimum grade point average of 96 percent. Team placement is determined by each scholar’s academic achievements along with their extracurricular activities and community service. All of the scholars have now moved on to be evaluated at the All-American national Level. The 2012 Scholars are:
            •Fifth Grade: First team: Jake Mourao. Honorable Mention: Robert Ross, Maxwell Urion Nelson.
            •Sixth Grade: First Team: Michael Kennefick II.  Second Team:  Jenna Aruri, Noah Fernandes.
            •Seventh Grade: First Team:  Lillian Healy. Second Team: Tessa Camboia, Nathan Garcia, Jordan McArdle, Tyler Mourao.
            •Eighth Grade:  First Team: Riley Johnson, Thomas Winters.
The scholars are invited to attend the New England region banquet at Gillette Stadium to celebrate their outstanding accomplishments.

UCT Home and Garden Show

Upper Cape Tech welcomes the public to attend their second annual Home and Garden Show on Saturday, March 17, and Sunday, March 18 from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm each day. This year, the show will feature an Irish theme.
Exhibitors will be promoting their products and services.  Home improvement demonstrations will be held throughout the weekend. On Saturday and Sunday, there will be cooking demonstrations and various outdoor displays. On Sunday, there will be a pastry sale and live Irish music by The Shananagans. Come see Breakaway Grills, “The X Grill.” This is a family-friendly event with fun activities planned for both days: raffle prizes, children’s entertainment, food concession and more!
All proceeds will directly benefit the students of Upper Cape Tech.

South Coast Bikeway Meeting

The South Coast Bikeway Committee is presenting a workshop on the nuts and bolts of building a bicycle-friendly community on Wednesday, March 14 at The Greater New Bedford Regional Vocational Technical High School auditorium at 1121 Ashley Blvd New Bedford.

The event will have light refreshments and is free of charge. There is no need to RSVP, just show up and learn something! If you have any questions, please contact Adam Recchia at 508-824-1367 or arecchia@srpedd.org: Program schedule is as follows: 5:30-6:00 pm: Social “half-hour,” 6:00-6:20 pm: What is the South Coast Bikeway?  By Adam Recchia, SRPEDD, 6:20-7:00 pm:  Low Cost Alternatives to Building a Bicycle-friendly Community By Bill DeSantis, P.E., Vanasse Hangen Brustlin, Inc., 7:00-7:30 pm: Q&A with Bill and Adam. Is open to anyone and everyone interested in seeing more bicycle-friendly communities, including planners, local public works officials, local officials and residents interested in bicycling.

History of the Pigwacket

In 1740, the death of the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles IV, set of the War of Austrian Succession. The War would have ripple effects felt around the world in Rochester. When Charles IV died his daughter, Maria Theresa was left to take his place. France and Prussia challenged her authority declaring she was not eligible to assume the various thrones held by the Hapsburgs because she was a woman. The British and Dutch who had long been enemies of the French supported Austria. Great Britain did not get involved in the war until late 1743. In March 1744, war was officially declared between France and Great Brittan. In May, the news reached the French colony at Nova Scotia. The French wasted little time in attacking British ports. The war soon spread to British holdings in New York, New Hampshire and Massachusetts. The war front in the American colonies is known as King George’s War.

Native Americans were often drawn in to colonial wars as allies for the colonists. War could be a valuable source of income for natives but could also be devastating to native families because Native American men suffered high mortality rates in conflicts.

Native Americans also sided with the French during colonial conflicts with the British. Eastern Abenaki in Maine often sided with the French but by the outbreak of King George’s War the Abenaki were suffering from internal conflicts and the southern Abenaki known as the Pigwacket sided with the British.

However, not all of the Pigwacket wished to take sides and fight in the war. In July 1744, several Pigwacket leaders went to Boston to ask the Governor for a safe place to settle during the duration of the war. The Pigwacket wanted to locate to an area in which they had friends. The colonial government denied this request instead choosing a settlement where they could keep a close eye on and make sure they did not get involved in the war against the British. The other option given to the Pigwacket people was to return to where they came from and face a harsh treatment from both sides of the war parties.

The Pigwacket were moved to Castle Island where they were put to work making snowshoes. A colonial committee had been charged with investigating the situation at Castle Island and decided to send the Pigwacket to “English Families, as shall be willing on reasonable Conditions to receive them…” The colonial government wanted to move the Pigwacket further away from the war front, ideally south of Boston. However, they had difficulty finding a town that would welcome them.

By 1746, the Pigwacket found a home in Rochester.  The people of Rochester were willing to host the war refugees and provided some land at Attansawomuck Neck now known as Mattapoisett Neck for the Pigwacket to live. Local residents Noah Sprague and Benjamin Hammond, Jr. were appointed by the colonial committee to act as guardians. These men provided the Pigwacket with necessary tools such as axes, hoes and a fishing boat with funds given by the committee.

Noah Sprague sent bills to the committee to have them pay for materials and goods used by the Pigwacket people including wood cut from his swamp that was used to make baskets and dishes, cedar shingles and picked green apples. Sprague even charged the committee thirty pounds for “extradinary Travlle & care” he had provided.

The Pigwacket people felt the reservation they had been placed on was too confining and they were not happy with their situation. A Rochester resident complained that the Pigwacket were “insolent and surly” and asked the General Court to remove them from Rochester. A General Court committee investigated the situation and accused local residents of selling liquor to the Pigwacket and providing poor guardianship.

The Pigwacket stayed in Rochester but were moved to another tract of land northwest of the Witch Rock on New Bedford Road. By the early 1900s, this area of land had been “given up to woods and huckleberry pastures” and was known in Rochester as Pigwacket.

In 1748 many of the Pigwacket left and returned home. However, some settled with Native Americans in Dartmouth, Freetown and Middleboro. The name Pigwacket survives today in Mattapoisett as Pigwacket Lane but the location of this street does not correspond with the location of the Pigwacket settlement over two centuries ago.

Kyle DeCicco-Carey


Town/RMS Look to Decrease Impact of Cuts

A revised budget presented by Superintendent Doug White and the RMS Budget Subcommittee to the Rochester  Board of Selectmen/Finance Committee on February 27 show some softening of the impact of cuts for next year’s budget at the elementary school.

Earlier this month, the preliminary budget laid out a reduction of four staff and six paraprofessionals; however savings identified by school and town officials may save some professional teaching positions in the upper grades. The reduction of teaching staff for grades four through six were expected to raise class sizes to as high as 28 to 29 in a classroom, according to Mr. White.

A collaborative effort between Mr. White and Town Administrator Richard LaCamera helped whittle down RMS’s FY 2013 budget, but cuts do remain extensive.

The school subcommittee had originally asked the town for an additional $437,000 to level service the budget – but they settled on $354,811 in cuts. The $437,000 derived from projected increases due to contractual raises, higher utility costs associated with the building renovation/expansion,  increased number of Bristol Aggie tuitions, and soaring special education costs.

After listing off areas where savings were identified, Mr. White said cutting any more “starts to impact more personnel,” he said, particularly in the higher grades.

Utility savings significantly helped bring down the cuts. “The building has expanded, and the [estimated costs] may have been inflated,“ Mr. White said, noting that the school would fill the oil tank less often and a new electricity agreement would reduce the cost from 10.8 cents per kilowatt hour to 6.8 cents per kilowatt hour.

Elimination of a bus, which would increase the length of the ride for some students from 45 minutes to about an hour, also yielded some savings. The bus contractor had agreed to revert to its FY 2011 rates. Both actions resulted in a savings of $55,715.

Despite the loosening of the budget, the cuts remain substantial, with the paraprofessionals and science lab position eliminated and the technology  position downgraded to .6 from full time. Mr. White said, though, that he is “optimistic” that the district may obtain a $500,000 technology grant that could help restore the tech position. The fate of that grant will be known in two or three weeks, he said.

The issue of whether Bristol Aggie Tuitions should be on a separate line item in the town budget – as opposed to being deducted only from the RMS budget – spurred some open debate between Town Administrator Richard LaCamera and school committee member Sharon Hartley. About $187,000 was reduced from RMS’s proposed FY 2013 budget to pay for 11 high school students to attend Bristol Aggie.

“It doesn’t make sense to cut teachers so we can send children to Bristol Aggie. It’s a town responsibility. It doesn’t make sense to take the money out of [RMS],” Ms. Hartley said.

Mr. LaCamera firmly opposed the idea, arguing that the town shoulders much of the education costs already by paying for the health insurance and unemployment worker compensation for ORR employees. “We’ve absorbed all of the costs for health insurance. And it has gone up 40 percent,” he said, noting that the town ploughs the school parking lot and paid for the increase in the property/liability insurance for the building addition – costs that all steam from outside the RMS budget.

“It’s a two-way street,”  Mr. LaCamera said.

The Finance Committee agreed to look at the impact on town-wide on departments if the tuition costs were distributed among them, but in a way not to completely redo all budgets.

But Mr. LaCamera stressed that the town departments can’t be squeezed further. “It’s a serious problem. We are at the point we can go nowhere anymore,” he said, commenting that education costs make up 67 percent of Rochester’s overall budget.

The committee rejected an idea floated by one finance committee member to explore School Choice, which would allow out-of-district students to attend RMS in exchange for $5,000 from the sending district. ORR Junior High and High School generates $340,000 in extra revenue through School Choice , according to the superintendent.

Mr. White said it could get complicated if students from the Tri-Town opted to attend schools in other parts of the district . Also, Tina Rood pointed out that School Choice could lift the class size to the point that the hiring of a new teacher would be required, defeating the purpose of bringing down costs.

Ms. Hartley took some time to thank town and school officials for working together on the budget.

“I’m appreciative of [Richard LaCamera] and [Doug White] working together. This represents a collaborative effort,” she said.

In other business discussed at the Rochester Selectmen Meeting:

• A new lockbox soon will be installed at the Town Hall to collect excise taxes (checks only) and census statements

• Mr. LaCamera said recent connectivity problems with the Verizon landline for town buildings has prompted the town to enter into new agreement with Comcast

• Mr. LaCamera suggested that the Select Board meet with the Park Commission due to its failure to approve invoices on a timely basis and hold consistent meetings.

By Laura Fedak Pedulli

Whaler’s Way Hearing Continued

The Mattapoisett Conservation Commission held its regular meeting at 6:30 pm on Monday, February 27 at the Town Hall.

The commission heard from Rick Charon on behalf of Dean Whitla for a continued hearing regarding the installation of a new septic system on a property at 68 Fairhaven Road. Several problems with the existing system include its state of disrepair and location below the water table, which poses a contamination threat to the ground water.

According to Mr. Charon, the new system would be located above the water table and since they would be improving an existing land development, there would be no negative impact on the surrounding ecosystems. The Commission voted in favor of the plans pending a standard order of conditions.

Next, they heard from Dennis Mascetta, on behalf of the Sabra family, regarding an RDA to install a new two-car garage and back-up generator at 3 Spruce Avenue. One abutting neighbor voiced concern that the construction of the freestanding garage would negatively impact the unimproved road conditions in the area.

“We don’t make those decisions. Unimproved road conditions aren’t in our purview,” said commission member Bob Rogers. They later voted in favor of the plan.

The bulk of the meeting was spent hearing from Rich Rheaume of Prime Engineering, on behalf of Greg Downey and his NOI for a house on Whaler’s Way. The plans require several different adjacent lots to be bundled together into a larger parcel. The few residents in attendance at the meeting voiced various opinions regarding the plans for the house.

Paul Orzenkowski of the Mattapoisett Land Trust was concerned about the status of an intermittent stream that flows on one piece of the property. The stream originates from a protected perennial stream located near the property.

Conservation Commission Chairman Peter Newton said that the regulations governing intermittent and perennial streams are very similar. He did not foresee a conflict regarding the treatment of the intermittent stream.

Abutter Bob Field mentioned that he was concerned that a swale on his property may be negatively affected by the construction of additional drainage culverts in the neighborhood. The hearing will be continued at the next meeting of the commission.

The commission also heard from Mr. Orzenkowski, who requested to work with the Mattapoisett Land Trust to expand a local trail to make it better suited for horseback riding. They also discussed with Dave Davignon of Schneider and Associates a submittal requirement for a revised project on Goodspeed Island.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission will be Monday, March 5 at 6:30 pm at the Town Hall.

By Eric Tripoli