New Committee to Explore Alternatives

            Rochester’s Select Board, meeting on Monday night, dissolved the Public Safety Feasibility Study Committee that was examining the town’s goal of improving Police and Fire Department facilities and created a Public Safety Facility Building Committee.

            Public Safety Feasibility Study Committee Chairman Arnie Johnson told the Select Board that the feasibility report has been produced, detailing options. Unfortunately, he said, all the options “will cost a lot of money.”

            Johnson said that is why he is recommending the Public Safety Feasibility Study Committee be disbanded and a Public Safety Facility Building Committee be appointed. “So we can explore other options,” Johnson said. “Bring the original cost estimates down.” He gave as examples: focusing on the main Fire Station alone and finding an alternative to a traditional “stick” construction.

            The Select Board followed his lead and appointed 11 voting members to a new Public Safety Facility Building Committee.

            Eight committee members represent town government: Johnson (Planning Board chairman), Fire Chief Scott Weigel, Police Chief Robert Small, Select Board member Adam Murphy, Facilities Manager Andrew Daniel, Deputy Fire Chief Jeff Eldridge, Finance Committee member David Arancio and Town Administrator Glenn Cannon. Select Board member Brad Morse will serve as Murphy’s alternate.

            The other three voting members are Rochester residents Brian Porter, Bob Francis and David Sullivan.

            In February, the Public Safety Facility Feasibility Study Committee agreed with consultant Ted Galante’s focus for examining whether to combine, replace or rehab the town’s police and fire stations to alleviate cramped quarters.

            The committee, with Galante’s assistance, studied the feasibility of renovating and expanding the Police Station at 26 Dexter Lane, building a new Fire Station headquarters at 65 Pine Street or on Mendell Road and further down the timeline, build Fire Department substation on High Street where a quicker emergency response will be needed when a proposed, 60-unit senior housing development is built off Route 28.

            While postpandemic building costs have skyrocketed in general, even over the several months since the Feasibility Study was launched, the committee’s estimation of total hard and soft costs for a three-facility project (main Fire Station, east-side substation and Police Station expansion/renovation) has soared from initial ballpark figures. When the report was completed last week, the hard construction cost of a new main Fire Station alone was estimated at $21,000,000. Soft construction costs typically add approximately 30%.

            Later in the meeting, the Select Board helped create another new committee after Arancio requested the town create a By-Law Review Committee “to really dig down into a bylaws where they need revising,” he said.

            Arancio noted that Town Planner Nancy Durfee had proposed that a similar, less formal bylaw review board be created. She has since withdrawn that plan in favor of seeing the creation of this bylaw committee as proposed Monday night.

            The Select Board proceeded to establish a seven-member By-Law Review Committee to include: three ZBA members, two Planning Board members and citizens’ at-large members appointed by the Select Board and nonvoting members from Town Hall staff. Morse said the public should contact Town Hall to volunteer for an at-large seat.

            In other action, the Select Board quickly approved a request by Building Commissioner Paul Boucher to take legal action against 0 Walnut Plain Road. Boucher did not comment further as he exited the meeting. On August 8, the Planning Board approved a Certificate of Compliance for a solar project at 0 Walnut Plain Road and Old Middleboro Road after Johnson reported that all disturbed areas appeared to be vegetated and stabilized.

            The Select Board approved Small’s request to appoint a new officer. He is Gene Robinson, an Acushnet resident whom Small said brings over a decade of police experience to Rochester, including as an officer in his hometown.

            The Select Board approved a request from Weigel to fund new, more digitally adaptable radios for better communications with the Police Department, an expense that will be paid for using ARPA funds. Weigel said he needs a total of 12 radios at $1,800 each. The board voted, allowing an initial expenditure of $25,000.

            The board set this year’s Tree Lighting event for December 4.

            Cannon announced the Fire Department will hold an Open House at its main station on Thursday, October 12, from 10:00 am to 2:00 pm as a way for the public to see what maintenance (or replacement) the facility needs.

            The Rochester Select Board set its next meeting for Monday, October 23, at 6:00 pm at Town Hall, 1 Constitution Way.

Rochester Select Board

By Michael J. DeCicco

Mattapoisett Community Preservation Committee

The Mattapoisett Community Preservation Committee will be accepting project funding applications for Committee consideration and presentation at the Spring 2024 Annual Town Meeting. The Project Application will be available on the Town Website and in paper form at the Selectmen’s Office on October 12. Submit completed Applications by November 17 to:

Mattapoisett Community Preservation Committee, c/o Board of Selectmen’s Office, PO Box 435, 16 Main Street, Mattapoisett, MA 02739.

            Each Project request must be submitted to the Community Preservation Committee using the Project Application Form. Requests must include a synopsis of the Project; supporting documentation (e.g. project cost breakouts, engineering and/or architectural plans); Project timeframe overview and may include letters of support from others in the Community. Nine (9) paper copies of the package must be provided to the Committee.

            Applicants should review the Town of Mattapoisett Community Preservation Act Plan found on the Town Website before submitting Project Applications.

            For information and questions, email cwmccullough@comcast.net.

Mattapoisett Friends Meeting Yard Sale

Mattapoisett Friends Meeting will hold its fall yard sale this Saturday, October 7 from 8:00 to 12:30. The sale, with added merchandise, will continue on Monday from 9:00 to 2:00. Guest vendors will be joining the Friends. There will be a variety of things for sale ranging from estate sale items to pet Halloween costumes. One of the tables will be dedicated to stamps for hobbyists and beginning collectors.

            The meeting house is at 103 Marion Road in Mattapoisett. The Friends are grateful for the donations they received from the community.

Little Library Approval Rescinded

            Rochester’s Library Board of Trustees quickly dispensed with several of its most controversial issues in a stunningly brief meeting on September 28.

            The board started its meeting in a Senior Center room crowded with area residents by adopting the town’s flag policy (rather than adopting its own), wherein the library will only fly the flags of the town, the state, the Federal government and the military and, by implication, not those of special-interest groups such as the LBGTQ Rainbow flag.

            It then reapproved the library’s gift policy, which was first adopted in March 2008. Citing this policy, which states “Acceptance and utilization of donated materials is at the discretion of the library,” the board then made its most impactful decision of the night.

            The board voted to return the Rainbow-flag-lined Little Diverse Library that sits outside Plumb Memorial Library’s front entrance to Tri-Town Against Racism, the community-based group that donated the small mailbox-sized book depository to the town. It is here that the Rainbow flag flew, drawing residents’ complaints that sparked the library to take the flag down.

            Before the Little Library vote was taken, Trustee Chairperson Kelley Medeiros explained the motion to give it back to TTAR was based merely on the fact the town library controls its own grounds and staff and must accept gifts such as the Little Diverse Library only under agreed-to provisions.

            No such provisions were agreed to when a previous library director and trustees board approved the acceptance of the donation in January 2021, Medeiros said. The contents of the little library would not be under the trustee board’s control.

            Medeiros opened discussion on the issue by noting that recently 20 pieces of correspondence received on the issue were in favor of the library, 13 were against, and the grand total of all correspondence received since the issue arose has been 49 in favor of the little library and 18 against. She added, however, that while the board does not support any political agenda, it does have to support its policies.

            Rhonda Baptiste, vice president of Tri-Town Against Racism, protested Mederios’ assertion about the lack of an agreed-to provisioning, noting TTAR followed careful steps and did everything the group was asked to do.

            “TTAR’s steps to approval didn’t comply with our policy,” Medeiros answered.

            “We went through every single step,” TTAR President Alison Noyce said, “every single step.” She said this donation should not be changed just because some people are offended by certain books.

            Medeiros responded that the library should be a safe space for everyone. “This is to follow our policies, our gift policy,” she said.

            Medeiros then cut off public discussion, as several audience members had their hands raised, and she motioned for a vote. The resulting approval to return the library to TTAR was unanimous, but it was met with shouts of “boo” and “shame” from the crowd.

            Next, Medeiros made the crowd equally unhappy by motioning to table indefinitely proposals by Jeffrey Costa and Greg Hardy to install additional little libraries on Plumb library grounds. These proposals, too, passed unanimously. She explained to the crowd that this is merely a way to be fair and consistent with library policy. No provisions/conditions are being proposed for these little libraries either.

            Costa, a Rochester resident and Zoning Board of Appeals associate member, had recently suggested in a letter to the library board that a “little pro-family” (library) and “a little pro-freedom” be constructed next to the “Diversity Library” as a counterpoint to the latter’s messaging.

            After the meeting adjourned, Medeiros emphasized again that the little library is being returned simply because the steps to approve it did not follow policy. As to why she curtailed public discussion on the issue before the vote, she said, “Because it was debated at the last meeting, the public hearing two weeks ago. We have heard it all. It was time to vote.”

            Asked what the group’s next step with Rochester’s little library donation will be, TTAR Marketing Director Jessica DeCicco-Carey frowned and shrugged, saying the group is not really sure what it will do once the little library is returned to them. “We don’t have a decision yet,” she said.

            Noyce said Rochester is now the only one of the three towns in the Tri-Town area to reject a Little Diverse Library. “I’m embarrassed for them,” she said.

Rochester Library Trustees

By Michael J. DeCicco

Barbara Bullock Gee

Barbara Bullock Gee (86) of Marion, MA, a caring wife, mother, grandmother, great grandmother, and friend to many passed away peacefully at home, after a short illness, on September 28, 2023 surrounded by her loving family.

            Barbara was born in Schenectady, NY on March 14, 1937, the beloved daughter of Boyd and Grace Bullock.  Barbara attended Northwestern University in Evanston, IL where she studied journalism and was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority.  Barbara married Kenneth Gee on October 12, 1957 in Coshocton, OH. She was pre-deceased by her husband Ken in November 2012. Those left to cherish her memory include their three children daughter Judy, of Dover, MA son Clark and his wife Margaret of Marion, MA and son Ron of Golden, CO, three grandchildren Andy Lewis and his wife Lindsay, Amanda and her husband Ryan Schaub of Charlotte, NC, and Austin Lewis of Dover, MA, and one great grandchild Chase Schaub of Charlotte, NC.

            Barbara produced special musical events for institutions including the Atlanta Symphony, the Seattle Opera, the National Ballet of Canada, The Red Auerbach Foundation, and the Boston Ballet.  Her business theatre career began in 1980 with the founding of Fashion Marketing Inc., producing national designer fashion shows for Vogue Magazine, Chanel, Bob Mackie, Arnold Scaasi, Louis Feraud, Escada, Balmain, Lanvin, Akris, Gucci, Valentino, among others, and trade shows and corporate sales meetings for such clients as Timberland, Avon Products, Titleist, Dupont, Converse, Keds, TJ Maxx, Ellesse and Talbots. Barbara arranged personal appearance events for celebrity talents including Elizabeth Taylor, Izabella Rossellini, and Robert Parish. A tour produced for Sports Illustrated, starring U.S. Jr. Olympic Gymnasts led to an opportunity to produce Easter at the White House, the children’s show presented by the First Lady each year on the South Lawn. Barbara produced this show for Mrs. Clinton from 1995-1998. She also directed the theatrical, dance and scenic elements for the Isabella Stewart Gardiner Museum Rembrandt Ball “On the Road to Leiden” in 1999 and wrote, produced and directed a short musical about the life of Elizabeth Taber “Our Fair Lady” in 2015.

            Barbara was a long-time member of Sippican Tennis Club, Beverly Yacht Club, and The Kittansett Club.

            There will be a celebration of life party (she always loved a good party) at the New Bedford Whaling Museum on Sunday November 12, 2023. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the Buzzards Bay Music Festival. Link: https://buzzardsbaymusicfest.com/donate/

Patricia Stoycos Loucks

Patricia Stoycos Loucks, 85, died on September 27, 2023 at Homestead Village in Lancaster, PA following a long illness. She was born on May 29, 1938 to the late Marshall and Eleanor Ross in Mattapoisett, MA, the small and beautiful coastal town where she grew up. She was a graduate of Chatham College in Pittsburgh, PA where she obtained her Bachelor of Arts degree in Fine Arts. Prior thereto, she attended the Northfield School for Girls in Northfield, MA.

            Following college, she moved to New York City and worked as a proofreader for McGraw Hill. Following marriage and the birth of a son, she moved with her family to Cleveland, OH. They relocated to Lancaster in 1966, where she gave birth to a daughter. Over the next 30 years, she worked as a part-time proofreader for The Fulton Press, a real estate agent with Puffer & Associates, and a volunteer in the Fulton Opera House box office.

            Patricia was a fiercely devoted wife and mother and dedicated her life to the happiness and well-being of her family. She had many dear friends with whom she enjoyed spending time. She was an accomplished and prolific watercolorist who won numerous awards for her paintings. She was a member of the Lancaster Art Association and displayed her work at local art shows. Her style and technique evolved in her later years from a traditional approach to one involving vibrant opaque colors that often incorporated elements of collage.

            Her remarkable imagination, creativity, and vision also manifested with home renovations, which gave her great joy. In 1980, she worked with an architect and builder to transform a stone mill built in 1770 that had provided flour for General Washington’s troops during the Revolutionary War into a modern home where she and her family lived for many years.

            She was deeply passionate about the eight cocker spaniels that she raised over the years. She enjoyed traveling and went to many interesting destinations, including a walking tour of England, visits to Scotland, Ireland, Belgium, and France, several trips to Greece, the 1994 Winter Olympics in Norway, and the Island of Tortolla, British Virgin Islands, a place that she and her first husband loved. She was a member of Highland Presbyterian Church, and later the Unitarian Universalist Church, both in Lancaster.

            She was preceded in death by her parents; her first husband of 35 years, Alexander V. Stoycos and her second husband of 23 years, John A. Loucks, both of Lancaster. She was also predeceased by three sisters-in-law, Veronika Ross of Fairhaven, MA; Anna S. Loucks of Cookeville, TN; and Joan S. Mokas of Dayton, OH as well as a stepdaughter, Billie Ann Kuklinski of Charlotte, NC.

            She is lovingly survived by her two children, William R. Stoycos, Lancaster, PA and Sarah M. Stoycos, Rockville, MD; her brother, John M. Ross, Fairhaven, MA; two grandchildren, Noah B. Stoycos, Winston-Salem, NC and Alexander L. Stoycos, Lancaster, PA; and four stepchildren and their spouses: John A. and Susan D. Loucks, Colorado Springs, CO; Stephanie L. and Robert H. Burcham, Knoxville, TN; Gregory L. and Karen K. Loucks, Newport Beach, CA; and Michael T. and Deborah P. Loucks, Knoxville, TN. She is also survived by a brother-in-law, Harry Mokas, Jr., Dayton, OH, six step-grandchildren, and five step-great grandchildren.

            A private graveside service will be held at Cushing Cemetery, Mattapoisett followed by a meal. Relatives and friends will be invited to a memorial service in Lancaster to be held at Homestead Village at a later date. Memorial gifts in Patricia’s name may be directed to the Best Friends Animal Sanctuary, 5001 Angel Canyon Road, Kanab, UT 84741, (435) 919-3835, bestfriends.org.

            Please visit Patricia’s memorial page at www.TheGroffs.com

Halloween Card Making Workshop

Dannie Engwert is a professional card maker who has distributed her work in Japan, at Harrod’s in England and all over the United States. Dannie is a fiber artist who turned to collage card making to use up scraps of fabric. She has been making cards for the last 20 years. Dannie will share her talents and offer a workshop at the Council on Aging in Marion, 465 Mill Street on Friday, October 13 at 1:00 pm. She will demonstrate several of her techniques. One is iris folding, which is the placement of folded strips of paper within a cutout shape. Collage is another technique she will share which involves different textures and glue to make a design of your choice.

            Instruction and a demonstration will be offered, and patterns and materials will be distributed for you to create your own work of art. Dannie will circulate the room offering assistance.

            All are welcome to attend. Bring a friend. Bring a grandchild.

            Registration for this workshop is required. Call 508-748-3570 to save a space.

Mattapoisett Museum

This autumn, the Mattapoisett Museum at 5 Church Street will have a variety of interesting programming, both on-site and around town, including four walking tours in October and November to explore special and historic sites in town that have intriguing stories to tell. The goal of this walking tour series is to acquaint participants with past industries that have vanished from Mattapoisett’s landscape and contemporary ones that they might not know about. Guided by the stewards of the property, the walks will visit a granite quarry, an active oyster farm, a cranberry bog and the sites of former salt works. This series of tours is funded through a generous grant from the Mass Cultural Council. These tours are free and open to the public.

            On Saturday, October 7 during Museum open hours, a museum volunteer will be offering informal demonstrations of yarn spinning using the Museum’s 18th century walking wheel. The Museum has been working to restore the wheel to working order, and we invite visitors to watch how wool is turned into yarn and maybe try a turn on the wheel yourself.

            The Museum guesses that you have noticed the pink granite of Mattapoisett’s curbs and sidewalks or noted this granite lining the sides of the Cape Cod Canal, but did you know that it was from a quarry right in Mattapoisett on Mattapoisett Neck Road? On Saturday, October 14 from 10 to 11:30 am, those interested in a tour of the quarry will meet at the entrance to the quarry trail on Mattapoisett Neck Road (about 100 yards south of Rte 6) to begin. Street parking will be available. Owned by the Mattapoisett Land Trust, the tour will be given by Land Trust President Mike Huguenin.

            On Saturday, October 21 from 10 to 11:00 am, join Mattapoisett Museum Curator, Connor Gaudet to learn about the saltworks that lined Mattapoisett beaches. An early industry in Mattapoisett, the “Salt Works” produced vast quantities of salt from sea water. Gaudet will describe the process it took to create salt from seawater as the group explores the sites of former saltworks starting at the Munro Preserve at the corner of Water Street and Main.

            Bob Field will share all he knows about oyster farming on a tour of his Copper Beech Oyster Farm from 11:00 am to 12:00 pm on Saturday, October 28. Interested participants should meet at 100 Mattapoisett Neck Road. Field will give the history of how he founded his oyster farm and explain the processes involved. Please wear water-resistant shoes/boots and be prepared to walk about a quarter-mile.

            Restoration Ecologist, Sara Quintal from The Buzzards Bay Coalition will tour participants through “The Bogs” on Acushnet Road on Saturday, November 4 from 10 to 11:30 am. The Bogs is a gateway to more than four miles of trails through the woods, along a scenic freshwater swamp and around 50 acres of cranberry bogs. The Bogs were created in the 1930s and operated until the fall of 2011. Although these bogs are now retired from commercial production, native cranberries continue to grow wild here. Join the Buzzards Bay Coalition to take a walk and enjoy the outdoors. Meet at The Bogs parking lot at 141 Acushnet Road. Because of active construction, this tour will be limited to 20 people and will be filled on a first come first served basis.

            Please dress appropriately for these tours.

MOSAC Aims to Halt Briggs’ Work

            The Marion Open Space Acquisition Commission had a special meeting on Tuesday to object to the work of a local developer and to ask for notice as an abutter to the proposed work taking place at the intersection of Mill and Spring Streets.

            MOSAC Chairman John Rockwell referenced a letter he wrote about Sherman Briggs’ potential plans for a residential development at the site. Noting that Briggs had once proposed but withdrew an application for a residential development, Rockwell compared Briggs’ latest application to his former plans and asserted that his most recent plan lacks stormwater drainage and can have an adverse impact on the bike path.

            MOSAC members agreed at Tuesday’s special Zoom meeting that Rockwell’s letter to the Marion Planning Board represents the unanimous position of the commission and that MOSAC should be properly notified as an abutter of the proposed activities on the property.

            “I raised the issue of stormwater drainage, and it did not meet the standards for the Town of Marion. Since that time, the lot has been filled, and instead of being a basin, it is a mound of water accumulating on site and is flowing onto our property,” Rockwell stated. “We can’t accommodate Sherman’s drainage. … We have enough problems dealing with our own water.”

            Rockwell told the commissioners and highlighted in his letter that he shared with The Wanderer that there is not enough data about the area’s existing conditions, no proposed conditions, and no information submitted to determine if the area meets current runoff-control standards or provisions to control water runoff.

            “I have reviewed the application and find that there is no information submitted with it to conclude that a Special Permit can be issued to comply with the bylaw,” said Rockwell, who contends that, since 2020, the area has been filled in a way to promote runoff onto adjacent properties.

            Rockwell and fellow MOSAC members agreed that their commission should be notified sooner of such a development. “The Open Space Acquisition Commission has had no notice of this application. As such, the Commission has not met or deliberated on this matter,” Rockwell wrote in his letter. He asked that all hearings on the matter be postponed until MOSAC can further deliberate.

            The Briggs property is adjacent to the Marion Shared Use Path, which as planned will run west to the Mattapoisett town line and east to Point Road.

            According to a 2019 article in The Wanderer, a May 2018 Town Meeting approved the land for multifamily cluster zoning to provide the town with units attractive to Marion residents looking to downsize to smaller homes.

            The Marion Open Space Acquisition Commission did not schedule its next public meeting upon adjournment.

Marion Open Space Acquisition Commission

By Jeffrey D. Wagner

From the Files of the Rochester Historical Society

The house pictured here is currently the home of Skip Mull, but it has an interesting history. Its story starts with Calvin Chaddock who was the 3rd Pastor of the North Rochester Church and also Principal of an Academy (an academy was much like today’s high schools and offered education beyond the simple math and reading taught in local schools) that he founded at the corner of Snipatuit Rd. and North Ave. At the same time around 1799, he built our pictured house across the street to serve as a boardinghouse for his students.

            By 1804, he claimed to have “a respectable number of students from different parts of the United States”. During that time, he focused a great deal of his attention on his prize student, Marcus Morton. Morton went on to become Governor of Massachusetts, winning by one vote.

            In 1805, Chaddock closed his academy in Rochester, moving to a new location where he became pastor of a local church, started another academy and focused on another exceptional student. He repeated these steps at least once more after moving to Ohio and then West Virginia.

            The boardinghouse was sold. The new owner rented rooms and operated a store until he sold it to Asa Coombs who opened it as a tavern. Known as Coombs Tavern, it was a popular stagecoach stop.

            Stories about the tavern state that liquor was sold there “openly and freely” even though Rochester was a dry town. It was said that many a farmer spent all his fortune on drink and ended in “beggary.”

            The liquor in question was said to be so watered down that if it wasn’t kept by the fire in cold weather, it would freeze. It’s interesting to note that stories about local watering holes in the 1800’s ended with a warning that many of those who imbibed ended up destitute and in alms houses. I wonder if these warnings were fueled by the burgeoning temperance movement of the times as well as attempts to ban “spirituous liquors.”

By Connie Eshbach