Short-Term Rental

To the Editor;

            As proposed, the draft Short-Term Rental (STR) bylaw is contrary to the Marion Master Plan goals of Village Style residential areas and expansion of affordable housing for families and empty nesters. It ignores the Marion Housing Production Plan goals: (1) promote housing options for those with moderate and fixed incomes, (2) produce housing options to support safe and accessible housing for all ages.

            Zoning is the use of ordinance to partition the Town into sections reserved for different purposes (residence, business, industry). Residence is defined as the act of dwelling in a place for some time, the place where one actually lives; as distinguished from a place of temporary sojourn (a STR). The draft STR bylaw ignores these established concepts.

            Previously I raised important questions with respect to the STR bylaw: (1) what is the justification for proposing by-right, non-residential use in all residential zones, (2) what is the justification for no cap on the number of STRs in Marion, and (3) what is the justification for having no limit on the number of STRs owned by a single entity? These questions remain unanswered.

            As written, the proposed bylaw will result in the disruption of family residential neighborhoods. Who will be your neighbor tomorrow? It will result in the loss of any reasonably affordable housing in Marion. It is not in the best interest of Marion residents.

            Norman Hills, Marion

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Warrant Approved!

            Rochester’s Select Board and the Finance Committee Monday officially recommended all 25 articles on the May 19 Annual Town Meeting Warrant after tweaking four problematic budget proposals.

            In the Select Board’s previous meeting, Town Administrator Cameron Durant had said he wanted to re-vote one part of the town’s FY26 operating budget (Article #4) to remove $100,000 from free cash to help eliminate a $260,000 borrowing debt on an Ambulance and a Fire Truck. This debt reduction would free up money to spend instead on the Rochester Memorial School Special Education account (Article #11), boosting that line item by an equal $100,000. Board Member Adam Murphy halted an immediate recommendation vote on both, saying he wanted more information first.

            On Monday, the board recommended Articles 4 and Eleven after Murphy reported he had been educated on the complex realities of special education budget funding that makes the move a good idea. He had a lengthy meeting with ORR school superintendent Michael Nelson and Finance Director Suzanne Szyndlar, he said, where he learned the intricacies of the state’s Circuit Breaker program, which reimburses the cost of delivering high-cost special education services to public school students but only in the fiscal year after the expense had been incurred. “I feel more educated now,” Murphy said. “I feel better about this expense now.”

            Article 16 proposes establishing a Facilities Management reserve account with $20,000. Here too Murphy and the other board members had requested more information on this plan, which would grant Facilities Manager Andrew Daniels funds for emergency maintenance work. On Monday, Murphy elaborated that there needs to be a better plan for granting Daniels emergency funds. He wanted to know what exactly this $20,000 will be spent on. “We need to create a budget for him,” Murphy said.

            The board members recommended this article after tweaking its language. They agreed to work on a better plan for funding the department in future years and, meanwhile, to add to this year’s article the language that services under $1,000 may be authorized by the town administrator; expenses over that amount must be approved by the Select Board.

            The board then tweaked the budget proposal for the Capital Improvement Fund. It agreed with Murphy’s proposal to decrease that line item to $150,000; the original proposal was for $250,000. The board agreed that the $100,000 saved will now be free to spend on future special education stabilization funding.

            Rochester’s total budget proposal for FY26 will be $27,022,457.

            In other action, the board approved the appointments of retired Massachusetts State Police Sergeant David Mackin and retired Acushnet Police officer Paul Melo as Rochester Police Department reserve officers.

            The board granted three conservation restrictions for Rochester properties. As requested by Buzzards Bay Coalition representative Allen Decker, the board endorsed CRs for 80 acres of Snipatuit Pond Cedar Forest off the northeast side of Neck Road that the Rochester Land Trust will hold and that will be available for passive recreation, 27 acres of the Paul property on New Bedford Road that the town of Marion will hold because the parcel is a drinking water aquifer, and 365 acres of Sippican East off of Cranberry Highway that the town land trust will hold as plans develop to restore the property to normal wetlands. This parcel currently contains cranberry bogs.

            The board approved a new street name, Gates’ Path, for a new subdivision, Freetown Farms, off of Dr. Braley Road. Board Chair Brad Morse added to this motion that the Police, Fire and EMT departments must respond that this is not a duplicate street name in town.

            The next meeting of the Rochester Select Board is scheduled for Monday, May 12 at 6:00 pm at Town Hall, 1 Constitution Way.

Rochester Select Board

By Michael J. DeCicco

Plants with a Purpose Sale

Three student groups from ORRHS (Environmental Club, Transition, and Life Skills Program) are unified together in assembling indoor plants, perennials, and pansy baskets for sale for you. We will also be selling lemonade and homemade snacks. All just in time for Mother’s Day!

            Kitty, from “Buzzards Bay Bee Company,” will also be there with a bee display and items for sale.

            Visit us in front of Old Rochester Regional High School, on Saturday, May 10, from 9:00 am to 12:00 pm. Shop local, upcycle, and repurpose. Cash, checks (made out to ORRHS), or Venmo @ORRUnified will be accepted as payment. All proceeds from the sale benefit our work in gardens on campus.

            For more information about this event contact karenbrowning@oldrochester.org or emmafenton@oldrochester.org.

For Men Only; How Does my Prostate Grow?

            Of our many organs, the prostate gland seems to offer the most annoyance to men as we age. The prostate produces most of the fluid that carries semen and so is critical to reproduction. It is located near the bladder outlet and in young men is about the size of a walnut. As men age, the prostate grows. Unlike heart disease, there is nothing one can do with diet or healthy habits that impacts the prostate.

            The two major problems that impact men’s health are prostate cancer and blockage of urine flow from a growing gland.

            Growth of the prostate, called benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH), is a normal part of aging, and occurs in essentially all men. Because of the location of the gland, it can impede flow of urine out of the bladder. It is a good rule that a 60-year-old man, however healthy, should not expect the urine flow of a 20-year-old.

            What one does about BPH is entirely based on symptoms. The hallmark of BPH is incomplete emptying of the bladder. You may finish urinating and then feel you need to go again. Most older men will get up at night to void. It may cause urgency – the feeling that if you do not get to the bathroom you are going to lose control.

            If these symptoms are mild, no treatment is needed. If they are more severe, medication can help. One class is alpha-blockers, that make it easier to void, that were originally developed to treat high blood pressure. They are generally easy to take, though may be a problem if you tend to have low blood pressure.

            The more definitive treatment is to take a testosterone-blocker. Finasteride in low dose is used to treat male-pattern baldness (Propecia) and in high dose to shrink the prostate. It has been shown to reduce the need for surgery and the likelihood of complete urinary blockage. The downside is reduced sexual drive and erectile dysfunction (ED).

            ED drugs like tadalafil help urinary flow and may be a good option to improve flow while also treating erectile dysfunction. Your insurance may not pay for this, as most still ration these drugs.

            Prostate cancer occurs in the same organ, but otherwise is unrelated. Cancer occurs in small glands and huge ones equally. As men age, prostate cancer occurs more often and at the same time becomes less aggressive. If a 50-year-old has prostate cancer, unless it is surgically cured, he will probably die of this cancer. If an 80-year-old has prostate cancer, he will almost certainly die of something else, with his cancer but not due to his cancer.

            I must also note that African-American men have almost twice the risk of white men.

            While prostate cancer can be detected on a rectal exam, by this time it is usually advanced. Early detection is done with a blood test, the PSA (prostate-specific antigen). To say that PSA testing is controversial is an understatement; arguments for and against have raged in the medical literature for years.

            I can best sum up the thousands of pages written by saying that screening men with regular PSA testing modestly reduces death from prostate cancer but has minimal effects on overall death rates. There is also consensus that PSA testing should stop at advanced age, though exactly when is debated. I would suggest 75.

            If the PSA is elevated, in 2025 the best next step is an MRI of the prostate to detect and quantify any cancer. In low-risk patients, “watchful waiting” is a very viable option. In high-risk men, complete removal of the prostate offers the best chance for cure, with radiation therapy an acceptable alternative. Both treatments have significant side-effects, including bowel and/or urinary incontinence and loss of erection, hence the idea that not all cancers should be treated.

            Prostate disorders are clearly conditions in which dialogue between the patient and doctor are key and second opinions critical. Do not accept the first option offered.

            Edward Hoffer MD is Associate Professor of Medicine, part-time, at Harvard.

What Does The Doctor Say?

By Dr. Edward Hoffer

Emergency Certification Denied

            On April 28, the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission reopened a hearing regarding landscaping and other modification done to property owned by Robert Beauregard, 2 Jowick Street. Abutter notifications over concerns that a planned pouring of a concrete pad might cause drainage issues, brought to light that the property had been heavily modified without permits being sought through the commission.

            On this night, Beauregard was once again represented by Robert Rogers of G.A.F. Engineering. Rogers said that since opening the Notice of Intent hearing at the previous meeting, Beauregard had paid the fine (double filing fees). He also said that photographic evidence that a stream on the property was not perennial stream but intermittent was resolved to the satisfaction of the commission and the agent, Brandon Faneuf.

            There was considerable discussion regarding an exterior light attached to a tree and electrical service near a water source. However, it was suggested that those questions likely belonged to the Building Department, not the commission.

            Fanuef declared that the work now before the commission was in the buffer zone. There was more discussion regarding stones that lined the brook, a cement pipe, the removal of boat stands in the buffer zone and shading caused by an unpermitted bridge.

            The case was continued to the next meeting, a date to be announced.

            An Emergency Certification requested for 47 Cove Street was denied. The commission suggested instead the relocation of propane tanks, confirmation of the mean highwater mark, and the placement of sandbags to help further curtail erosion of the barrier beach sand. Further the applicant was given six months to file for a Chapter 91 Waterways permit for more intensive shoreline repairs.

            A Negative 2 decision was given for a Request for Determination of Applicability by Timothy Fisher, 4 Mattakisett Road, for the removal of a shed and garage for a new shed.

            Another RDA filed by the owners of lots 28, 28A, 29, 29A, Goodspeed Island for the installation of a sewer extension received a negative 2 decision.

            A Notice of Intent filing by Andrea Yelle and Setareh Yelle 0 Angelica Avenue was conditioned for the construction of a single-family home.

            A Notice of Intent filed by Joyce Beal, 0 Park Place for the development of a single-family home was conditioned.

            A Request for an Amended Order of Conditions filed by Richard and Jacqueline Leclair, 2 Holmes Road, for a plan modification to change the footprint of a new home which will result in a reduction in the scope of work was granted.

            A Certificate of Compliance for 19 Shore View Avenue owned by Jane Finnerty was granted.

            The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission will be posted prior to meeting day and time.

Mattapoisett Conservation Commission

By Marilou Newell

Upcoming Events at the Rochester Historical Society

May 21 at 7:00 pm we’ll be having our annual ice cream social, preceded by music with Tom and Sheila Perry. If there’s an old song you’d like to hear and sing along to, let me know the title by May 10 and I’ll see if they can include it in their set list. Send it to me at eshbach2@aol.com or call and leave a message at 508-763-4932.

            Our June speaker will be Connor Gaudet, Curator of the Mattapoisett Historical Museum, and he will be speaking about all aspects of the Wanderer whaling vessel. The meeting will be at our museum at 7:00 pm on June 18. Refreshments will follow.

            July will be a Saturday, daytime event. Date, time and additional info will be available soon, but we will definitely be having a Strawberry/ Blueberry Bake Sale and will be looking for bakers. We need to boost our treasury after a hefty insurance increase, but more later.

Mattapoisett Library Artist Series

The Mattapoisett Free Public Library Artist Series presents an exhibit by Nancy Mitchell entitled “Junk Journals and Paintings in Acrylic. View Mitchell’s work at the Mattapoisett Library between May 4 and May 30.” Mitchell’s exhibit includes junk journals, hand-created from scrap pieces of fabric, lace, paper, beads, vintage book pages colored with gel and more, as well as acrylic paintings. Fairhaven artist Mitchell started painting at the age of 50. Her first painting was from a kit purchased at a local store which was something she had never thought of trying before. Pleased with the results, she decided to take some night art classes from the Greater New Bedford Regional Technical Vocational School. Her teacher was extremely helpful to Mitchell’s quest to learn how to paint. Self-taught, Mitchell also creates junk journals, gaining inspiration by studying the craft online. Mitchell has shown her work and sold paintings and feels it’s a great way to explore one’s creativity while learning at learning at the same time. Mitchell hopes her work will inspire others to create their own art.

Marilyn J. (Parker) Urquhart

Marilyn J. (Parker) Urquhart, 81, of Wareham, formerly of Marion, passed away on May 3, 2025, at St. Luke’s Hospital, New Bedford. She was the wife of Alexander G. Urquhart and the daughter of the late Benjamin and Gladys (Westgate) Parker.

            She was born in New Bedford and lived in Marion for most of her life before moving to Wareham 8 years ago. She graduated from Wareham High School and Bridgewater State University.

            Mrs. Urquhart worked as an Elementary School Teacher at Rochester Memorial School and later at the Hammond School in Wareham.

            She enjoyed photography, reading, cooking and “secret trips” to the casino. She loved gardening and growing hydrangeas. She was especially proud of her sons, Chip and Greg.

            Survivors include her husband, Alexander G. Urquhart; 2 sons, Alexander G. “Chip” Urquhart, Jr. and his wife, Kerri of Marion and Gregory D. Urquhart and his wife Anne of Marion; her twin sister, Marjorie Borsari of Marion; 5 grandchildren, Mathew, Brian, Alexandra, Colin, and Mason Urquhart; 2 great grandchildren, Bryce and Ashton Davis.

            Visiting hours are from 4 to 7 pm on Friday, May 9, 2025 at Chapman Funerals & Cremations – Wareham, 2599 Cranberry Hwy., Wareham. A graveside service will be held at 10:00 am on Saturday, May 10, 2025 at Old Landing Cemetery, Rte. 6 & Ryder’s Ln., Marion.

            In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Dana Farber Cancer Institute, P.O. Box 849168 Boston, MA 02284-9168 or to St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, 501 St. Jude Place Memphis, TN 38105.

            For directions or to share a memory, visit: www.chapmanfuneral.com

Catherine “Kate” O’Toole Brown

Catherine “Kate” O’Toole Brown passed away peacefully on April 16, 2025, at the age of 75, surrounded by her family. Her passing followed complications from open-heart surgery, the result of her lifelong struggle with type 1 diabetes.

            Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Kate was the beloved wife of Timothy “Tim” J. Brown for 54 years and the devoted mother of Elizabeth “Liz” Brown Tapper. She is survived by Tim, Liz, her son-in-law Jim Tapper, and her siblings: brother Chuck, and sisters Beth, Mary-Pat, and Maggie—and their families.

            Kate graduated with honors from Seton Hill College (BA), earned her master’s degree at Bridgewater State University (MA), and later received her Master of Library Science from the University of Illinois (MLS). A lifelong lover of children and books, she brought these passions together in a career as a librarian and educator, nurturing the curiosity and growth of thousands of young people.

            Kate was a gentle soul and a steady friend to many. Her leadership as President of the Mattapoisett Women’s Club brought her both challenge and joy, reflecting her enduring commitment to service, friendship, and community.

            In keeping with Kate’s wishes, family and friends will gather to celebrate her life with a Funeral Mass at St. Anthony’s Roman Catholic Church in Mattapoisett, MA on Saturday, May 17, at 10 am. Interment will be private.

            To honor Kate’s memory, donations may be made to Breakthrough T1D (formerly the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation: JDRF), or to Seton Hill University in Greensburg, PA. As a heartfelt alternative, pick up your favorite book and read a story to whatever circle of children surrounds you—just as Kate would have loved.

The Seaside Gardener

            Did you ever want to hug a tree? Or just sigh as you admired one?

From colossal sequoia to shapely bonsai, in summer’s finery or winter’s bareness, they make the spirit soar just standing there. The classical oak immortalized in John Constable’s paintings of English pastures; towering walls of ancient cypresses of the Mediterranean; pulsating tropical rainforest canopies; the bent birches of Robert Frost’s poem. I’ve had my share of close encounters of a tree kind.

            I well recall one of those encounters on a street corner in nearby Edgartown. Maybe you have seen it? The tree I speak of came all the way from China as a seedling in a pot. Captain Thomas Milton brought it to the Vineyard during the War of 1812. He decided to settle there, buying the land and building the South Water Street house that the tree now shades. This magnificent pagoda tree is the oldest of its kind on the continent. If you go to Edgartown, you will know it immediately. It’s the one that will leave you awestruck.

            As a child, I was fascinated with the legendary figure Johnny Appleseed. I think I took it quite literally that he was singly responsible for planting all the apple trees in North America. I came to marry a Johnny Appleseed of sorts. He’s consumed with the idea of growing fruit trees, having spent his youth raiding orchards throughout Yorkshire, England. As we’ve added more each year to our back yard, it has become apparent we now have our own little orchard. I must have known what was happening when we spent a hefty sum on an espaliered apple tree. “It bears four different kinds of apples,” my husband said, appealing to my innate practicality.

            My father can take some of the blame for my desire to accumulate trees of every variety. His gardening accomplishments are something of folkloric proportions. When he was a boy, he planted a twig that grew into a massive willow tree – a sort of natural candelabra under which the family relaxed for cookouts. Many a peaceful nap was incurred from its hypnotic tendrils moving in the breeze. To us children it was like a giant cathedral of seemingly infinite height and breadth that totally enveloped our summer visits at my grandmother’s. Years later, the tree had to be cut down as it was suffering from some incurable blight. It had grown to 15 feet in diameter! We were sad to see it go and my grandmother’s backyard never looked the same again. In more recent years and owing to that glorious memory, I planted a willow out back. As I look out from where I now sit, I know it was a good decision. And who knows? Maybe I’m creating memories for grandchildren.

            Over the years, my father has planted innumerable trees – blue spruce, Japanese maple, dogwood, crabapple, catalpa, ginkgo, birch, all sorts of fruit-bearing trees, and pines galore. You name it, he’s grown it, experimenting with grafting and pruning techniques as well as developing a time-saving fertilizing device.

            A while back we revisited our former home, where my parents planted their first gardens while rearing their three young children. Usually when you go back, things seem much smaller. This experience was the opposite. The place had the most magnificent trees, all of them planted by my father who’d bought the house on a blank lot, one of many in a subdivision built in the early 1960s. While clearing land for a new home, the one they presently live in, my father and relatives spent months removing trees. Fifty-five years later, he has replaced them in triplicate.

            Nowadays my Dad is a bona fide tree farmer – although he contends it’s just a hobby. He grows all kinds of trees on his eight acres, including each family member’s Christmas tree and special seedlings he orders from his suppliers. My mother used to say he talked to his trees – a way to decompress from his high stress job as construction manager. There is something to be said for tending plants and watching them grow.

            There have been stumbling blocks – from the deer that used his young concolor white fir saplings for antler rubbing posts to the scourge of gypsy moths. Another year it was the pesky beavers that dammed up the nearby pond, thus interrupting his water source for an irrigation system that feeds his fledgling forests.

            Last Friday marked Arbor Day – dedicated to trees and their preservation. In observation of it, you may want to plant a tree for yourself or another tree-worthy person. Meanwhile, I have the perfect spot for a prunus subhirtella! Maybe the old maxim is true – the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.

            “Don’t get me wrong…I love trees! There should be more of them. When I use paper, I use both sides.” — Steve Coogan in the film Coffee and Cigarettes.

By Laura McLean