The Rochester Republican Town Committee will meet on Wednesday, March 13, at 6:30 pm, at the North Rochester Congregational Church, located at 247 North Ave, Rochester. You do not have to be a committee member to attend. All are welcome.
The Rochester Republican Town Committee will meet on Wednesday, March 13, at 6:30 pm, at the North Rochester Congregational Church, located at 247 North Ave, Rochester. You do not have to be a committee member to attend. All are welcome.
The Greater New Bedford Garden Club is offering two $2000 scholarships to residents of the Greater New Bedford area who are high school seniors graduating in June and who are planning to attend a four year college and pursue a career in horticulture, agriculture, landscape design, agriculture design, forestry, conservation or environmental design.
The goals of The Greater New Bedford Garden Club are to offer educational and inspirational programs and to encourage the advancement of gardening, flower arranging, horticulture, the beautification of the community and the conservation of natural resources. Scholarships are given out every year as a way to support these objectives.
The scholarship applications are available to high school seniors in the guidance offices of New Bedford High School, Fairhaven High School, Greater New Bedford Vocational Technical Regional High School, Dartmouth High School, Westport High School, Old Rochester High School, Old Colony Regional High School, Bishop Stang High School, Global Learning High School and Bristol County Agriculture High School.
The deadline for applications and required paperwork is April, and must be postmarked by that date.
For further information, contact virginiasheehan427@comcast.net.
In presenting the FY25 Draft Budget to the Marion Select Board during its February 21 meeting, Town Administrator Geoff Gorman said the goal has been a level-services budget, the only increases of which would be related to the cost of doing business.
“Any additional services, requests, if we wanted to hire somebody, if we wanted to make somebody go from part-time (hours) to full-time … that would be discussed separately, and we do have a couple of those items that the finance director (Heather O’Brien) and I will discuss as we get closer to a balanced budget,” said Gorman.
As presented, Marion’s Preliminary FY25 Budget of $28,989,359 includes: $13,373,309 for education, $4,371,763 for pension and insurance, $4,358,972 for public safety, $2,676,585 for general government, $2,432,547 for public works, $857,834 for General Fund debt service, $526,253 for human services and $392,056 for culture and recreation.
Gorman characterized FY24 as a busy year that included three collective-bargaining agreements not counting the schools, a reorganization of the Harbormaster Department and “retention support” for nonunion employees.
Property-insurance increases of 5-7% are compounded by the requirement to provide individual-building flood insurance that presently affects the Music Hall but will also affect the new Maritime Center, Fire Station 2 and pumping-station projects. Gorman said Marion has 24 buildings in the velocity zone.
Health-insurance premiums went up by 6.4%, reported Gorman, noting that these “nontransient” increases are probable to continue beyond FY25.
Revenue has become a complex matter, as two large residential developments once projected to be under construction by now are not, and Gorman plainly admitted the town does not know their timelines.
“We’re trying to be conservative and look into a very cloudy crystal ball,” he said.
The priority, he said, is to maintain fiscal responsibility and the triple-A bond rating that Marion owns.
Revenue growth for FY25 is estimated at $679,511, down 18% from FY24.
Free cash is estimated at $3,060,000, but construction of the new Department of Public Works operations building at Benson Brook is “the largest unknown” that could affect the account.
Expense increases, said Gorman, has been affected by police reform; this is the first collective-bargaining agreement under the reform act.
Schools will eat up 46% of Marion’s FY25 budget, and increases include 4% (Old Rochester Regional), 6.02% (Sippican Elementary) and 24% (increased enrollment at Upper Cape Tech.)
Curbside collection is up 13%, and Plymouth County retirement costs are up 9%.
O’Brien discussed revenues, noting that property taxes account for 79% of Marion’s estimated revenues for FY25. This is the first municipal budget process for O’Brien, who worked in the private sector before taking over for the retired Judy Mooney at the end of December.
Select Board member Randy Parker asked if the town should increase its annual $200,000 investment in Infiltration/Inflow (I/I) projects, a source the town had projected income from the two Route 6 residential developments yet to break ground.
In an appointment with the Capital Improvements Planning Committee, CIPC Chairman Dave Janik presented to the board. Attending with Janik were CIPC members Casey Barros, Steve Nojeim and Debra Watson. Janik also credited Mandy Givens, who was unable to attend, for her work on the committee.
In explaining the two-fold purpose of the CIPC, Janik defined capital projects for FY25 as departmental needs costing at least $10,000 and having a lifetime of at least five years.
One objective of the CIPC is to go through capital needs with each town department, assemble that information and then work to achieve a consensus on how to rank them in order of priority. Mitigating factors could include urgency, funding source, if the project is being done to comply with the law, a consent decree or a court order, etc.
The worksheet used by the CIPC to interview department heads is under an annual evaluation.
Of the 36 projects presented during departmental interviews with the CIPC, 18 (half) of them were related to the Department of Public Works.
“We used to rank them all together, but the reality is when you do that the DPW projects sometimes have certain qualities about them such as they’re for public health and safety, they’re paid for by fees, they’re under court order; they would always tend to completely outrank the other non-DPW projects,” explained Janik.
Therefore, a couple of years ago the CIPC decided to present all DPW requests within a separate category.
Janik said the total funding requested for FY25 capital projects is slightly less than $9,500,000, approximately $7,600,000 of which accounts for the DPW subtotal.
The CIPC charted rankings of 18 DPW projects and 18 non-DPW projects.
At the top of the DPW list was a $160,000 regulatory-compliance sewer project; at the top of the non-DPW list was a $95,000 Fire/EMS request for cardiac monitor and defibrillator replacement.
The three most-expensive FY25 capital requests were all DPW projects: $3,213,000 to replace the Creek Road Pumping Station (ranked fourth – DPW/Sewer), $1,787,000 to repave the Cushing Community Center Parking Lot (13th – DPW/Highway) and $1,200,000 for emergency generators (third – DPW/Water.)
The three most-expensive FY25 capital requests not related to the DPW: $804,000 to replace the Harbormaster’s patrol boat (ranked fifth – Marine), $250,000 for town records digitization (seventh) and $182,000 to refurbish Fire Engine 2 (third – Fire/EMS.)
Gorman said half of the $250,000 for the town records digitization would be covered by grant funding. Janik said that the CIPC was not aware of grant funding when it went through its review and ranking process.
“If we were to rank that project again, recognizing the $100,000 grant that was obtained for it, it would probably move several spots up,” said Janik, who also summarized the CIPC’s 10-year plan.
Out of season, usually before September, the CIPC also conducts site visits to be better informed regarding capital projects.
The board thanked the CIPC members.
In his Town Administrator’s Report, Gorman said the footings have been poured and are complete on the Harbormaster building under construction. The project is on schedule, and plans are being made to organize a groundbreaking ceremony.
In his DPW building update, Gorman reported that bid documents have been completed and have been available since February 22; sub-bids are due March 21 and general bids on March 28. Once the bid process is complete, Gorman said the town will know what the building will cost.
A lively Community Garden discussion did not include Select Board Chairman Toby Burr, who abstained from participation.
The garden group sought and eventually received authorization to use the ground north of the Cushing Community Center to create raised, planting beds. The area will be cleared without the use of town resources.
Parker said it’s a great idea and recommended for efficiency’s sake that the board pass its authority to the garden group, but Hills was dissatisfied with the lack of detail in the plan and criticized the choice of location because of the distance to water. “I just don’t think that you’re setting yourself up for success,” he said.
The group was eventually voted permission to use the location that the members would clean up, including the removal of invasive species, then come back to the Select Board with a detailed plan.
Cynthia Callow was appointed temporary election warden.
The board approved the warrant to hold the presidential primary election on March 5. The board approved a Water/Sewer commitment of $263.96 (final readings February 12.) The board authorized Gorman to dispose of two old phone systems, some of which have recycling value. The board approved the minutes from its February 6 meeting.
The next meeting of the Marion Select Board is scheduled for Tuesday, March 5, at 6:00 pm at the Town House Annex building.
Marion Select Board
By Mick Colageo
Kathleen Costello, 51 North Street, has pulled nomination papers indicating a potential run against Jodi Bauer for the latter’s Mattapoisett Select Board seat. Bauer had already returned her papers, confirming a bid for re-election.
The Mattapoisett School Committee terms of Jim Muse and Tiffini Reedy are up this year. Neither had pulled nomination papers as of February 20, but two potential candidates have: Kathleen McArdle and Jack Lebrun.
Alan Apperson has pulled papers for Leonard Coppola’s expiring three-year term on the Mattapoisett Board of Assessors. Coppola has also pulled papers, indicating a bid for re-election.
Lizanne Campbell has pulled papers to run for the expiring seat as Mattapoisett’s town moderator. John Eklund, the incumbent, had not pulled papers as of February 20.
Mattapoisett incumbents who have pulled papers indicating a run for re-election include: Library Trustees William Osier and Elizabeth Sylvia; Planning Board member Tom Tucker; Chuck McCullough (Housing Authority), Community Preservation Committee members James Pierson and Susan Wilbur and Highway Surveyor Garrett Bauer.
Other terms set to expire in Mattapoisett include Albert Meninno Jr. (Water/Sewer Commissioners) and Russell Bailey (Board of Health.)
Rochester resident Portia Silk has pulled papers indicating a run for a seat on the Trustees of the Plumb Library in Rochester. As of Monday, no incumbents had pulled papers. The terms of Library Trustees Chair Kelley Medeiros and Co-Chair Shauna Makuch expire this year.
The 2024 Mattapoisett Town Election will be held on Tuesday, May 21. The deadline in Mattapoisett to pull papers is Friday, March 29, and the deadline to return them is Tuesday, April 2.
Rochester Select Board member Paul Ciaburri has pulled and returned papers, making official his bid for re-election. As of Monday, no challenger had pulled papers.
Also returning papers confirming his bid for re-election was Rochester Water Commission member David Hughes. Four other Rochester incumbents have pulled papers, indicating they will run for re-election: Robin Rounseville (Rochester School Committee), Matthew Monteiro (Old Rochester Regional School Committee), Michael C. Murphy (Planning Board; and David Arancio (Town Moderator.)
The 2024 Rochester Town Election will be held on Wednesday, May 22. The deadline in Rochester to pull papers is Monday, April 1, and the deadline to return them is Wednesday, April 3.
In Marion, Diane Lopes Flaherty has returned nomination papers, confirming her challenge to Randy Parker for his expiring seat on the Select Board. Parker had already returned his nomination papers, making his re-election bid official.
Alanna Nelson has returned papers, confirming her bid to run for re-election to the Planning Board; Jon Henry has pulled papers indicating he will also run for re-election. Dr. John Howard has returned papers confirming his re-election bid to the Board of Health. Chairperson April Nye and member Michelle Smith have pulled papers indicating they will run for re-election to the Marion School Committee (Smith is also chair of the ORR School Committee.)
Also pulling papers in Marion are incumbents Brad Gordon (town moderator) and George TJ Walker (Board of Assessors.)
The Marion Town Election will be held on Friday, May 17. The deadline in Marion to return papers is Monday, March 25.
Tri-Town Elections
By Mick Colageo
The March meeting of the Machacam Club is scheduled for Wednesday, March 6. We meet at the American Legion Hall on Depot Street. Doors open at 5 pm for social time followed by dinner at 6 pm. Our speaker will begin at 6:45. Chef Colby is planning another fulfilling meal. All are welcome. Callers please provide your numbers by Monday evening March 4. Questions may be sent to cwmccullough@comcast.net.
To the Editor
This is to follow up on my letters regarding the sale of the Mattapoisett Fire Station under RFP#22-26.
I attended and spoke during the Town of Mattapoisett Board of Appeals hearing on February 16, 2024 to protest the issuance of a Special Permit.
I was the original winning bidder to the RFP# 22-26 put out by the Town of Mattapoisett, which I proposed a village grocery and offered a sum of $650K.
The Town of Mattapoisett then failed to abide by the dates contained in the RFP and failed to give me a Purchase Agreement in a timely manner. The Town Attorney then added terms to the purchase agreement not contained in the RFP including terms which would prevent financing of the project as proposed.
The Town then ignored my requests to resolve the issues and awarded the RFP to the second bidder for the amount which I believe is $325K to the Town of Mattapoisett Taxpayers. Which if correct is also $125K less than the RFP’s suggested minimum bid.
The Town has breached their fiduciary duty to the taxpayers with this bad faith award of the RFP for the firehouse property.
I am of the opinion that the people of Mattapoisett deserve far better treatment than what was shown in this joke of a real estate deal and that there is significant evidence within the RFP document, the various Sale Agreements, as well as minutes from the hearing to affect significant personnel change in Town Hall as well as with their Council.
Here is to anyone with courage and the willingness to stand for honest office for new Mattapoisett Town Governance.
Sincerely,
Michael Sudofsky
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. All letters must be typed and submitted directly to: news@wanderer.com.
Owen Excellent’s favorite entry in the Grades 7-12 Creative Expression Contest held by Tri-Town Against Racism is a colorful poster of Martin Luther King Jr. by Dylan Dubois, a junior at Old Colony Regional Vocational-Technical High School.
The composition features King’s image on the right looking ahead with the Washington Monument at the center and the words above, below and around: “I have a dream that all men are created equal.”
“It was worked on very good,” said Owen, who is six years old and admitted surprise that he could be a judge.
First, second and third-place winners were announced by Tri-Town Against Racism president Alison Noyce on Saturday at Mattapoisett Library. Also addressing the attendees to discuss the judging of the contest was John Excellent, Owen’s father. The contest theme for 2024 was “African Americans in the Arts.”
Kaden Ludenai, a junior at Old Colony Regional Vocational-Technical High School, won first place (and a $200 cash prize) for his pencil drawing of artist Henry Ossawa Tanner, noting his words, “I will preach with my brush.”
Second place went to Mallory Henesey, an Old Rochester Regional High School junior, for her multimedia image of photographer Ming Smith with the quote, “I like catching the moment, catching the light, and the way it plays out.” Henesey won a $100 prize for taking second place.
Taking third place (and $50) was Old Colony junior Logan Huang, whose striking union of photographs and animated images formed a platform for the words, “We must find a way to look after one another as if we were one single tribe.”
Other African Americans in the Arts depicted among the 15 entries included some who are living and some from the past. Students celebrated singers Aretha Franklin, Beyonce, Whitney Houston and Tina Turner, President Obama, author Jacob Lawrence, rapper Kendrick Lamar, reggae icon Bob Marley, musician Louis Armstrong and actor Sidney Portier.
Owen’s second choice was a colorful “Black Lives Matter” entry made by the youngest student in the young history of the contest, seventh grader Madelyn Sivil, a student at ORR Junior High School.
“I like that it had a black peace sign and that it had hearts in the background,” said Owen, who voted ORR student Carly Mello’s Bob Marley poster as his third choice. “We listen to him at our house all day – a lot of time at my house.”
Owen, who had Lunedai’s winning entry on artist Henry Ossawa Tanner as his fourth choice, does his own art projects in school. “Paper and markers and sometimes crayons, and no colored pencils – we don’t have those at my school,” he said.
“Regardless of where the life raft takes us – you know, we always try to make space in our life raft to throw some things out – we’ll keep that as a fixture on your voyage, your art and your creativity,” said John Excellent, noting that President Gerald Ford officially recognized Black History Month in 1976. “We discussed (the entrants’) stuff. We broke it down, we really talked about it and what feeling that gave us. That’s a powerful thing.”
John Excellent encouraged listeners to fight the distractions and things that cut into one’s time and take away from the desire to express oneself through the arts.
“It’s great that small communities like us get together and find ways to celebrate Black History Month,” he said.
The other judges were Kendall Smiley, Frances-Feliz Kearns, Jenn Wong, and Jess Kimball-Veeder.
Noyce addressed the gathering, citing her appreciation for some amazing artwork turned in, especially entries that helped her learn about artists she had not known of, but she also expressed a belief that much of the work of ending racism lies ahead.
For more information, visit tritownagainstracism.org/post/black-history-month-2024.
Black History Month
By Mick Colageo
The Rochester Planning Board continued the public hearing into the Site Plan Review application for JPF Development’s plan to construct a 15-acre, self-storage facility with seven storage buildings and one office structure within the Industrial District at Kings Highway and Route 28 after focusing on one lingering question: What will be the project’s fire-suppression system?
The project’s engineering consultant, Rick Charron, said a fire-protection engineer has told him a sprinkler fire-protection system is not required by state building code for this type of project, and the town’s consulting engineer, Ken Motta, has agreed with this.
On Tuesday night, the Planning Board brought two high-profile projects one step closer to being approved.
Board Chairman Arnold Johnson responded with questions: What type of fire suppression would be put in place instead of sprinklers? A cistern system? Does the town Fire Department agree with what state code requires there?
As the board approved the continuance, Johnson said the panel will get the full answer to whether fire suppression is required for such a facility in time for its next meeting on Tuesday, March 12.
Before this vote, Charron reported a new calculation, that the 15 buildings will hold a total of 330 storage units when they are fully constructed. He said the applicants are willing to be compliant with any conditions the town may ask of them. They will be willing to allow an easement across part of the property for abutters should public water become available in that area, he added.
The board then came even closer to approving BWC Snows Pond LLC’s application to build a solar-energy array and battery-energy storage on 12.55 acres of a 31-acre parcel at 0 Cushman Road in a Residential/Agricultural District, the Mattapoisett River Valley Watershed and Groundwater Protection District.
The project’s engineering consultant, Andrew Hamel, reported that Motta has said the applicant has satisfactorily addressed his concerns about the plan’s initial design. As a result, the panel approved the bond amounts that the applicant must post and the waivers to town regulations that the applicant was requesting. Johnson said the board will have a draft decision ready for the March 12 meeting.
The board set a decommissioning bond of $22,700, a two-year landscaping bond of $95,000 and a five-year maintenance bond of $16,000. Board member Ben Bailey sought and received approval for one revision to the requested waivers. The trees on the access road will not be cut down indiscriminately. The trees that will be cut will be flagged first so that Town Planner Nancy Durfee can inspect those trees first.
The Rochester Planning Board will meet next on Tuesday, March 12, at 7:00 pm at Town Hall, 1 Constitution Way.
Rochester Planning Board
By Michael J. DeCicco
Marion Town Administrator Geoffrey Gorman and Town Clerk Lissa Magauran would like to remind registered voters of important dates and details ahead of the Massachusetts Presidential Primary.
The 2024 Massachusetts Presidential Primary will be held on Tuesday, March 5. Residents can check their voter registration status at sec.state.ma.us.
The last day to request a vote by mail ballot was Tuesday at 5:00 pm. In-person early voting at the Town Clerk’s Office began on February 24 and will continue through March 1. This week’s hours are Monday through Thursday from 8:00 am to 4:30 pm and on Friday from 8:00 am to 3:30 pm.
All registered voters who haven’t already voted by mail are welcome at any in-person session. In-person Absentee Voting is also available until noon on Monday, March 4, during regular business hours.
Voting on the day of the Presidential Primary, Tuesday, March 5, will take place at the Benjamin D. Cushing Community Center, 465 Mill Street (Route 6), from 7:00 am to 8:00 pm.
For questions or additional information, contact the Town Clerk’s office at 508-748-3502 or email lmagauran@marionma.gov. Sample ballot and voting information can also be found at marionma.gov/Election-Information.
Local Author Matt Davis – Matt Davis was born and raised in New Bedford, but his career as a professor and researcher at a university in California provided him with many opportunities to explore the world. In his new book, At Home in the World: Reflections of a Travel Addict, Matt shares some of his favorite experiences while traveling internationally. Please join us on Saturday, March 9 at 12:30 pm for a talk where he will share photos and some stories from the book and discuss how his passion for travel developed during his childhood years. Signed copies of the book will be available for purchase ($20.00, cash or check, please). There are 25 spots available for this event. Please register through our online Events Calendar.
Doodle & Tranquility Workshop with Cara Bean (ages 8+) -Would you like to have fun drawing in a relaxed environment helping you achieve mindfulness? Sign up for an interactive doodling workshop on Saturday, March 16 from 10:30 am -12:30 pm with Cara Bean, local author, teacher and artist. This workshop for ages 8 and up will begin with a quick presentation about the mental benefits of doodling Then the group is led through a calming mindful drawing activity. There will also be fun doodling games. This program is funded by a grant from the Rochester Cultural Council.
Find out about more upcoming programs by viewing our Events Calendar on plumblibrary.com.