Tabletop Trees Bring Festival to More Homes

            There might not have been a wintery bite to weekend’s breezes or snow on the ground, but it wasn’t needed to make the Festival of Trees 2022 a holiday treat. For a few years now (skipping the obvious winter of pandemic constraints), the Friends of the Marion Council on Aging has held a Festival of Trees and other seasonal goodies at the Cushing Community Center.

            The concept is simple: Christmas trees, this year tabletop sized, are decorated in a themed manner and raffled off. Also available was a variety of vendor tables offering everything from fine jewelry to holiday decorations.

            In previous years, the trees were more full-sized, requiring floor space for the lucky raffle winner. But as COA Director Karen Gregory explained, “People thought a smaller tree would be better suited for seniors or for anyone who may already have a tree in place but could find room for a second smaller tree.”

            For seniors now living in smaller housing units, what could be better than a small tree for the holiday?

            Each of the diminutive tabletop delights was decorated in a unique theme and donated to the Friends’ fundraiser. As noted in the event brochure, “The Friends of Marion COA (FMCOA) was founded in 2012 and is a private nonprofit corporation with 501(c)(3) status and whose primary purpose is to seek donations through memberships, fundraising events, sponsorships and/or corporate gifts to financially assist the various projects that support and enhance the operation of the Marion Council of Aging. All money raised from this Year’s Festival of Trees event will be put to programming at the Council on Aging.”

            If you’re wondering what sorts of programming and facilities-related upgrades the FMCOA has contributed to, look no further than the grand pavilion that now adorns the center’s lawn area. Gregory said there is also a planned “living hedge” along Route 6 that will help to enhance the overall appearance of the grounds, as well as acting as a noise buffer from roadway traffic.

            The FMCOA also supports the center’s lunch program, off-site excursions, lecture series and other forms of entertainment for seniors, Gregory shared.

            Raffle tickets, said Gregory, remain available at the COA until Thursday, December 8, around noon when the lucky winners will be drawn, so there is still time to purchase tickets.

            The Festival of Trees feature: “The Heart Sings at Christmas” by the First Congregational Church; “Blue Christmas” by Barbara Meehan; “Candy Cane Lane” by Dina Quinlan; “Tree of Sweets” by the Sippican After School Program; “Wishing You Were Here” by Mimi’s Boutique; “All Things MAC” by Meg Hartley and Sonja Poley, Marion Art Center volunteers; “Rainbow” by the Sippican After School Program; “Forest Friends” by the Marion COA, “Childhood Memories” by Cindy Visotski and Linda Dessert; “Fun and Games” by the Marion Recreation Department; “Where the Buoys Are” by Lissa Magauran and Ami Milano; and last but not least, “Bling Tree” by the Marion COA.

Friends of the Marion Council on Aging

Marion Council on Aging

By Marilou Newell

EMC Finds 20% Reduction Elusive

            The Marion Energy Management Committee met on Monday and unanimously voted to approve a new mission statement meant to both encompass the traditional actions of the committee as a research-and-development department for the town’s cost cutters and identify with its more-recent focus as a think tank for a coastal community addressing the long-term ramifications of climate change.

            The statement reads: “The Energy Management Committee (EMC) develops and implements initiatives to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from, and energy consumption by, Marion’s municipal, residential, commercial, industrial and institutional sectors.”

            EMC Chairman Christian Ingerslev will bring the mission statement to town officials in an effort to get it posted on the committee’s page at marionma.gov.

            Meantime, the Town of Marion met its deadline to file its Green Communities Report. But EMC member Bill Saltonstall was not pleased to report that the town’s effort to reach the state-prescribed 20% energy reduction over a five-year period has, technically at least, regressed.

            “We lost some ground on our percentage (of energy reduction) … we’re now sitting at 16.1% of the 20(%) we wanted,” said Saltonstall, tracing the problem to a missed opportunity to report the data relating to the Silvershell Beach pumping station’s changeover from oil to natural gas.

            Saltonstall credited SRPEDD’s Danica Belknap for discovering the fact of the missing fuel data at Silvershell Pumping Station.

            “We slipped up, I guess, on making sure the new charges for gas were entered automatically for Mass Energy Insight,” he explained. “I’ve added all the data for the last year manually, but that data we hadn’t considered before.”

            According to Saltonstall, Marion used a lot more diesel and gasoline than the prior year as well. He anticipates the Police Department will request a new vehicle and that EMC member Alanna Nelson should urge the department to request a hybrid model. Nelson agreed, citing potential grant funding. “‘And here’s the grant program that could help you pay for it. I can do that,” she replied.

            Opportunities for other photovoltaics on municipal properties were briefly discussed.

            “I went to the dump and I would sure like to see those panels out there,” said Saltonstall, whose son Will Saltonstall is the contracted architect for the new Department of Public Works operations center at Benson Brook. Bill Saltonstall told the committee he asked Will Saltonstall for the DPW roof plan so he can evaluate its potential for solar, but “they don’t have it yet. … He promised it to me soon.”

The Cushing Community Center’s expansion will include a roof capable of holding solar panels, but solar canopy over the parking lot at Sippican Elementary School is now considered unlikely.

            Calling it a cumbersome construction, Nelson said CVEC’s first impression is that with the price of steel increasing, finding a willing developer is a greater challenge. Alternative building materials were briefly discussed, and EMC member Tom Friedman said that concrete posts could potentially take some of the load normally carried by steel. Saltonstall said steel maintains an advantage because of the cantilever construction. “That’s going to be hard to beat.”

            According to Saltonstall, the initial Green Communities report suggested that Marion could benefit from installing energy-efficient transformers at the DPW and at Sippican Elementary School. Member Jennifer Francis called it “a good project … nicely contained.”

            Having swung for the fences with its proposal that the town commit to a ban on the use of fossil fuels in all new municipal construction, the EMC is augmenting that effort by expanding its discouragement of fossil-fuel burning to all new construction in Marion, including private projects.

            Francis suggested a letter go out to homeowners listing state-sponsored incentive programs to upgrade hot-water heaters and furnaces. “It would be good to have (this kind of information) all clear and in one place to help people make the right kinds of choices, especially if there’s money involved,” she said. “The stretch code are rules, but it’s good to have a carrot out there for people.”

            Saltonstall believes there is potential for $10,000 assistance for a private homeowner to change heating and cooling systems from fossil fuels to electric.

            Nelson told the EMC she attended a Zoom call and learned about Abode Energy Management’s tax incentives for homeowners who heat with wood.

            “I would highly recommend anybody thinking about a strategy … I thought Abode was a great hour and $100 to spend,” said Nelson, explaining that a homeowner needs to conduct a MassSave Energy Audit before gaining any available conversion benefits.

            According to Nelson, Tabor Academy recently hosted a Community Outreach event with different organizations represented, and Nelson told the EMC after speaking with Steve Sanford of Tabor’s Finance Department that the school plans two car-charging stations earmarked toward day students.

            The committee is discontented by the loose ends it faces where it concerns its hopes to influence an increase in electric-vehicle charging stations in Marion.

            At the Town House, there are two spots dedicated for charging, but only one car can be hooked up at a time, it was reported.

            Ingerslev said the Cushing Community Center has a charging cable meant to be available to private citizens, but the parking spot there is typically occupied for the day. Nelson suggested finding out if priority parking at that space is “a matter of habit or a matter of policy.”

            It was not known during the meeting if the charging station near the harbormaster’s headquarters is working. Saltonstall said the harbormaster’s headquarters should be able to take a couple of charging stations, but he also said there is “not enough juice along Island Wharf Road.” Ingerslev said the EMC needs to make sure they install sufficient power when the Marine Center upgrades to a new facility.

            In discussing how Tabor’s facilities are a step ahead and representing “forward thinking,” Nelson noted that Tabor has replaced the old-school freezing formula at Travis Roy Rink and is now using natural gas as a safer, more energy-efficient method.

            When the Planning Board was vetting Tabor Academy’s new Student Center (library) presently under construction, Eileen Marum, a member of both the EMC and he Planning Board, requested five charging stations near the site, at the time citing Governor Charlie Baker’s plans for energy-reduction goals by 2030.

            “They were kind of holding back,” said Marum. “I also wanted them to run the wires for charging stations. It would save them a lot of money to not go back and dig up the streets. They thought that was too expensive. … But if they are moving ahead, that’s great news.”

            Negotiations are underway to establish a lease amount for the Benson Brook capped landfill solar project. According to Nelson, a net-metering issue is likely to limit the exploration of other options, making a straight lease the method through which the town will realize revenue from the project.

            The Marion Energy Management Committee is not scheduled to meet again until 2023.

Marion Energy Management Committee

By Mick Colageo

Mattapoisett Woman’s Club

The members of the Mattapoisett Woman’s Club will enjoy the Club’s Annual Holiday Luncheon this week.  The event will be held on Thursday, December 15, at the Wamsutta Club in New Bedford.  Members will socialize, dine on one of four main courses, enjoy apple crisp with ice cream for dessert and partake in some fine entertainment during the mid-day event that begins at 11:00 am.

            This is a private event for members only.  However, we welcome the public to attend next month’s meeting on January 19 to hear a presentation on local green efforts.  For details, see the In the News section of the Club’s website at www.MattapoisettWomansClub.org.

TTAR Receives Official 501C3 Nonprofit Status

Tri-Town Against Racism (TTAR) is excited to announce they have received official 501c3 nonprofit status. TTAR began in April of 2020 as a grassroots organization formed in response to racist incidents happening in the Tri-Town. The group gained a large following after the murder of George Floyd one month later.

            Ongoing Initiatives: Community Conversations TTAR hosts quarterly panel discussions provided to the community on topics related to creating an inclusive community in the Tri-Town. Recently TTAR hosted their third Community Conversation led by a panel of local librarians highlighting the importance of representation in literature selection. Upcoming Community Conversations are in the works related to law enforcement, education, as well as providing resources to parents and caregivers to support them in talking with their children about racism and the importance of allyship.

            Tri-Town Discriminatory Incident Reporting – To provide important information to decision-makers, and for the sake of transparency TTAR created a mechanism for community members to report discriminatory incidents they have experienced or witnessed in the community. The hope is that this information will help create change and awareness. Community members can access the discriminatory incident report at: bit.ly/ttarreport.

            Diverse and Anti-Racist Books – Getting diverse and anti-racist books into the hands of community members has been one of the cornerstones of TTAR. The organization has Little Free Diverse Libraries (LFDL) in Marion and Mattapoisett, and a third is planned for Rochester. TTAR has donated hundreds of books both to the LFDLs and to each of the ORR school libraries. TTAR is having a holiday book drive to help keep the LFDLs supplied with diverse books. Community members can drop books off at Always in Bloom in Marion or contact TTAR through their Facebook page to arrange a pick up.

            Upcoming Projects – With their nonprofit status finally official, TTAR has many projects underway. Plans for affinity groups are being developed. A new website will be launched, which will include a community resource guide, ways to get involved with TTAR, and supporters will also be able to make donations to help fund this important work. In the meantime, tax deductible donations can be accepted via Venmo@tritownagainstracism or by check made out to TTAR and can be mailed to PO Box 271, Marion, MA 02738.

Production Plan on to Planning, Select Boards

The Marion Affordable Housing Trust Tuesday night reviewed and approved its final draft of the town’s 2020 Housing Production Plan.

            The document’s goal is to update Marion’s 2015 Housing Production Plan. Its intent is to detail a proactive strategy for the town to plan and develop affordable housing, starting with summarizing, “the main housing issues that Marion intends to address and identifies manageable, realistic tools for the job.”

            State law dictates that at least 10% of a town or city’s housing stock must be “affordable” before that community may rebuff a 40B development proposal. Marion is currently approximately 8.04% “affordable” housing, but with its first building permit the recently approved Heron Cove project will put Marion well over the 10% threshold.

            The new document notes that, in Marion, “324 households are cost-burdened, and 203 households are severely cost-burdened, totaling approximately 28% of all households in town.”

            But it also notes the town already includes over 100 subsidized housing units that make them more affordable, including 27 units at Marconi Village/Marion Elderly Apartments and 48 at Little Neck Village.

            Affordable Housing Trust Chairperson Terri Santos led the unanimous vote to approve the draft and noted the new plan must now be reviewed by the Planning Board and finally the Select Board.

            Clearly pleased with what the panel was approving, Affordable Housing Trust, Planning Board and Select Board member Norm Hills said this new plan is a simpler and straightforward one.

            Strategy number one in the new plan is to collaborate on “friendly 40B’s” in partnership with developers to produce affordable housing units. The other strategies are to pursue direct funding or partnerships to help preserve housing for vulnerable communities such as seniors, pursue top-priority zoning amendments and design guidelines such as a 40R Smart Growth Zoning Overlay District, negotiate deed restrictions and conduct leadership training to support these goals.

            The meeting began with reorganizing the Affordable Housing Trust. Santos was approved to remain chair. Toby Ast became the new vice-chair and new member Susan Miller became board clerk.

            The trust set its next meeting for Tuesday, January 10, 2023, at 6:00 pm.

Marion Affordable Housing Trust

By Michael J. DeCicco

‘Que Sera Sera’

            The holidays are upon us. We’ve cooked and eaten the Thanksgiving feast and now we plunge head-first into the gift-giving mania that is shopping. When the grandchildren were little, I’d shop year-round, hiding things away in July with great anticipation of smiles in December.

            However, there are other more delicate matters, family matters that need our consideration as we plan holiday feasts and associated joyful occasions. We may find ourselves having to assume the role of ambassador, where members of different clans are forced to come together in peaceful accord because Miss Sally fell in love with Mister Thomas and they both have children from previous relationships, sets of parents and other extended family now blended into a new psychological dynamic.

            While such co-mingling of families isn’t new, consider any royal family where arranged marriages were the norm to solidify power, today’s modern family, my own included, will oftentimes find half-siblings, quarter aunts and uncles and a whole slew of step-this and step-that sitting down to break bread together and sing Auld Lang Syne.

            Blended families, or as one new in-law describes “bonus family,” can and many times are wonderful, comfortable, so glad we are part of the same family now and bonded. Other times, well, not so much. Yet we set aside personal feelings for the good of the whole and carry on passing the gravy boat.

            For my husband and me, personalities weren’t an issue, but organizing get togethers so that we could celebrate with everyone we care about has proven tricky. How do we invite grandchildren and step-children we share with organic parents if the organic parent insists on seeing them at the same time? Must the heirs of our relationships past and present go house hopping to appease the family tree? Or if a nuclear parent suddenly shifts the time of a holiday meal to the time you’ve been talking about for a month, who should give way for the sake of the victims, oops sorry, Kids?

            It took us a few seasons to outsmart the evil-doers, I mean ex-spouses. We moved all holiday celebrations including Easter to the weekend before. This proved to be the best-of-all solution because now we had an entire weekend to celebrate with the bonus and nuclear family members.

            Holidays need to be thought of as a season to take the pressure off the organizers, primarily women and primarily mothers of grands (both nuclear and bonus), mothers of step-(fill in the blank), as well as chief cooks and bottlewashers. Exhausting. So having an entire weekend became a new kind of holiday celebration minus the pressure of interfering and being called a “*&%#$@-(fill in the blank).”

            We are the proud, step-plus-nuclear grandparents of five granddaughters. When they were little girls, those weekend-long holiday celebrations were a big hit. The kids were the entire focus for about 36 hours, and they loved it almost as much as we did.

            If it was Christmas, they’d arrive just after sundown, when a craft project appropriately themed would be waiting for them. Around the kitchen island, the glitter and glue, colored paper and pencils were employed to make homemade Christmas cards for their parents. Then there would be the cookie baking. I’m still finding glitter and sugar under the appliances.

            In the background, holiday music added to the seasonal ambience. I tear up thinking how quickly those years flew by while, at the same time, am grateful for the memories. No regrets.

            While Christmas was the most highly decorated and anticipated holiday, we also enjoyed pumpkin carving at Halloween and dress-up sessions, hiking the beaches at Thanksgiving, and watching movies late into the night near New Year’s Eve.

            By accepting that blended families need to be gently eased into relationships built on empathy and compassion, lasting connections can be made and sustained. But, it is a massive undertaking.

            Not everyone will seamlessly get on board the Love Train. Accepting that your nuclear parent can have tender feelings for someone else’s child now your step-sibling can be hard for some to swallow. And what happens when there are new break-ups and people you were growing kind relationships with are suddenly out of the picture? Is there such a thing as an ex-bonus family member? Things can get rather tricky. My advice: Remember that others may be struggling, doing the best they can with the task of accepting changes in the family. A heavy dose of fluffy kindness could be the gift they need.

            A new in-law came fully loaded with bonus family plus two. She had been previously married to a man who had been previously married. His children from his previous marriage became her bonus kids. When she divorced him years later, her relationship with his children held strong. She was able to hold onto those family members who were precious to her.

            Today around her dinner table at holidays are her children, the children of her new husband, the children of her previous husband, and her new in-laws. Her children have nuclear siblings, step-siblings and bonus siblings – Brady Bunch squared. They seem to be melding together quite nicely, in no small part because that’s what they all want the most for Christmas.

            Anyway, the holidays can be difficult in as many ways as there are people on the planet, but they can also be fun, warm, loving and kind. The choice is really up to us.

            As the elders (give me strength) of our branch of the familial twig, my husband and I have learned (because we’re old now) to roll with the changes, the new inclusions and to let go of those who have headed in another direction, and even those who have left this mortal coil. People will come and go.

            As Doris Day once sang, “…whatever will be will be, the future’s not ours to see, que sera sera.”

            Wishing you all the very best of the holiday season.

This Mattapoisett Life

By Marilou Newell

Rochester Historical Society

There will be a holiday organ concert at the Rochester Historical Society Museum at 355 County Road on December 11 at 2:00 pm.  The organ will be played by Bruce Gardzina who is in his 50th year of organ playing. Bruce is a big fan of our rare “vocalion” organ whose reeds mimic the action of the human voice. Bruce is able to play beautiful music on our 127-year old organ. The price of admission is an unwrapped gift for a child or teen. We will open at 1:00 for anyone who would like to view the exhibit or shop at our gift shop. Refreshments will be served after the concert.

Mattapoisett Museum Announces Upcoming Events

The Mattapoisett Museum will host various events during the month of December to celebrate the holiday season.

            The Museum is holding a Holiday Market every Saturday and Sunday until December 18 from 12:00 pm – 4:00 pm. Different vendors will attend each day. All vendor fees will go towards the Museum’s fundraising efforts. The event is free.

            Open Mic Night is scheduled for Friday, December 16 from 6:00 – 8:00 pm. All ages, all genres, and all talent levels are welcome. Sign-ups are not required. The event is free.

            Christmas Caroling in the Mattapoisett Village is returning this year. Caroling will be held every Saturday until December 17 from 6:30 to 8:30 pm. Hot cocoa and cookies will be provided to all attending. Sign-ups are not required. All carolers will meet at the Museum and will walk around the village from there. This event is free, but donations are welcome.

            Santa & Mrs. Clause will make a surprise stop at the museum before caroling on December 17 at 6:30 pm as a special treat for our youngest carolers! Free, but donations are appreciated.

MA Preservation Projects Fund Grant Cycle Announced

The Marion Historical Commission would like to share information with the Tri-Town communities about the next round of Massachusetts State Preservation Grants. It is anticipated that funding will be in the range of $1,000,000.

            The Massachusetts Historical Commission has just announced Round 29 of the Massachusetts Preservation Projects Fund grant program (MPPF.)

            The MPPF is a state-funded 50% reimbursable matching grant program established in 1984 to support the preservation of properties, landscapes and sites listed in the State Register of Historic Places. Applicants must be a municipality or nonprofit organization.

            Properties are listed in the State Register of Historic Places if they meet one of three criteria:

            -Listed in the National Register of Historic Places

            -Determined Eligible for National Register listing by the MA Historical Commission

            -Included in the Inventory of Historic Assets of the local community

            Determination of a property’s eligibility can be obtained by accessing the MHC MACRIS online website: mhc-macris.net/ or by contacting the local historical commission in your town. (Please note that grant disbursement is subject to reauthorization of the capital accounts and the availability of sufficient allocated funds.)

            This year, eleven (11) workshops will be held, including a virtual version and one in New Bedford on Friday, December 16 from 10:00 – 12:00 pm (Virtual Only – available by Zoom Invitation) Massachusetts Historical Commission, Massachusetts Archives Building, 220 Morrissey Boulevard, Boston. Friday, January 6 from 10:00 – 12:00 pm, Seamen’s Bethel, 15 Johnny Cake Hill, New Bedford.

            MHC hopes that your schedule allows you to join a member of the MHC’s Grants Division as they explain the program requirements, go over program materials and give you the opportunity to ask questions.  Workshops are free of charge and no registration is required.  Applicants are encouraged to begin compiling application materials before attending a workshop, or as soon as possible, to allow sufficient time to meet the application deadline.

            Limited quantities of the hardcopy versions of the Application and Instructions will be made available at each workshop. Please call the MHC at 617-727-8470 or e-mail Paul Holtz at paul.holtz@sec.state.ma.us if you have any questions or would like to receive hardcopies of the Application and Instructions.

            MPPF Round 29 application submission deadline is March 17, 2023.

            More information and the application materials and video can be found at: www.sec.state.ma.us/mhc/mhcmppf/mppfidx.htm.

Educating and Beautifying

There is a partnership that has grown between two groups whose goals, while not the same, blend the very best in volunteerism for the beautification of their town: Marion Tree Committee and the Marion Garden Group.

            For several years now, the MGG has striven to place oases of flowers in previously neglected locations such as the traffic island at the intersection of Spring Street and Route 105 and the south side of Route 6 at the intersection of Front Street, where a grand welcome sign now greets passersby. And there are others that have sprung up along motorways, punctuating the seaside community with resplendence in the form of flowers and greenery.

            Not only has the MGG planned floral portraits, the group has also planned numerous fundraisers to pay for these lavish improvements. No small task and one that requires a willingness to work diligently towards a common goal, adding floral motifs to previously forgotten locations, taking them from tired, even dilapidated scenes to living renaissance pictures.

            Founded in 1956 to further its members’ knowledge in all things gardening, the MGG now cares for window boxes and planters throughout the town, as well as welcoming and hosting guest speakers on topics of gardening interest.

            Coming together with the MGG on November 26 was the Marion Tree Committee. Also a volunteer group established by the Town of Marion decades ago to assist in the management and care of municipal shade trees, on this day they were all working shoulder to shoulder on a special project.

            MTC Chairperson and longtime member Margie Baldwin explained the importance of shade trees planted in the right location and the correct type of trees for municipal easements. Standing in Bicentennial Park, Baldwin said that decades ago, American Elms had been planted but over time succumbed to Dutch elm disease, ultimately thinning the shade canopy to a shocking degree. She said that trees planted in the 1950s are also in trouble after years of severe pruning by electric utilities.

            The Tree Committee, along with the guidance and assistance of Tree Warden Lee Gunschel and Highway and Parks Supervisor Jody Dickerson, has planted 25 trees this year alone, stated Baldwin. Now the committee prepares to place permanent identification plates on the trees the town has planted, an impressive 24 different varieties.

            MGG Chairperson Suzy Taylor said that the group had assisted landscapers in the selection of planting and placement of floral specimens in front of the Town House and Elizabeth Taber Library. She said the group worked on window boxes located at the Marion Art Center and village center spaces.

            MGG and MTC member Sylvia Strand noted that the MGG purchased the tree tags for trees planted by the town in an effort to not only heighten the community’s awareness of tree species but also to work with educators in bringing a greater awareness of the importance of trees.

Baldwin said that the Town of Marion has been recognized as a Tree City for over 20 years. To be recognized by the Arbor Day Foundation (established in 1872) as a Tree City, a town must have tree bylaws and ordinances, have a tree board, spend municipal funds on trees and offer community-based programs that celebrate Arbor Day.

            Baldwin also noted that when selecting locations for tree planting, the town will oftentimes need the cooperation of private property owners, as overhead utility wires, watering of newly planted trees and roadways must factor in the consideration given to a planting spot.

            A small sampling of the types of trees Marion has planted include (common names) Princeton Elms, Sycamore, Cherry Tree, Red Chestnut, Ash, Redbud and Willow Oak.

            The MGG and MTC members fanned out across Spring Street to Sippican School, where a number of trees have been planted giving the school building a more harmonious appearance with nature. And here’s a fun fact about the tree tags: They are designed with a spring action so that as the tree’s trunk thickens, the identification plate will not breach the bark.

            To learn more about the Arbor Day Foundation, visit arborday.org and to learn more about the Marion Garden Group, visit mariongardengroup.org.

Marion Garden Group and Marion Tree Committee

By Marilou Newell