Heron Cove Finally Gets Go-Ahead

            The public hearing having been closed at its last meeting, the Marion Zoning Board of Appeals was eager on October 13 to vote accept Ken Steen’s application for a comprehensive permit as amended, corrected and encased in Town Counsel Jon Witten’s revised draft decision approving the site plan dated October 6 to build Heron Cove Estates.

            Steen’s 120-unit, affordable-housing development planned off Route 6 near the Wareham town line is a Local Initiative Program (LIP) 670CMR negotiated with and approved by the Marion Select Board. The public hearing was opened on January 30, 2020, according to Witten.

            Steen’s representatives indicated agreement with all requests, and the revisions were acceptable.

            The ZBA was especially eager to vote in part because it was down to three eligible voting members, the bare minimum allowed and even then necessitating unanimity.

            With the vote of approval, Steen is required to start construction three years from October 12, 2022 and required to complete the project five years from the date he files an occupancy permit.

            Steen originally sought a 10-year limit, according to ZBA Chair Cynthia Callow, but member Will Tifft said there was discussion, and five years was the board’s consensus.

            Callow instructed the members that now that the decision is approved, the ZBA has until November 8 to get the decision written and signed and stamped. She hopes that happens sooner because it would allow Steen to pull his permit, triggering the state to put the planned 120 affordable units on Marion’s affordable-housing account.

            “Mr. Steen is eager to start breaking ground in 45 days from the day it’s stamped. If he can’t … he has a year to start,” said Callow.

            Steen confirmed Callow’s procedure, noting that the permit signifies Marion would then be over the state threshold of 10% in affordable housing, authorizing the town to reject future applications seeking permits to build such developments in favor of market-rate projects that would bring greater tax revenue to the town.

            Callow thanked the ZBA members for their due diligence. “I don’t think anyone in the town could question our devotion,” she said.

            Steen also thanked the board.

            Marion Building Commissioner Bob Grillo called Heron Cove Estates a “textbook LIP.”

            “Towns don’t like 40B’s,” he said. “The (Select Board) negotiated in good faith. They both got a little bit of what they wanted and a little bit of what they didn’t want, right? And it started out from there. Laborious as this procedure has been, it’s been pretty straightforward.”

            Callow told the membership that if as expected Steen returns to the ZBA per the agreement with issues that necessitate votes, the full membership would become eligible to vote on those follow-up matters.

            Grillo suggested facing three distinct stages of vetting before, during and after construction, there be an internal document for oversight. Determining ahead of time which departments are going to be involved would help identify and bring them into the loop so that the project has a central nervous system within town offices.

            “It’s nothing that has to be done tomorrow, but bring it back to the next meeting,” said Grillo. “Get a document that is easily manageable, but make sure our I’s are dotted … We want to dictate who’s going to be responsible for what.”

            With the Heron Cove decision rendered, the ZBA also voted to seek authorization to use the “Mullin Rule.” The board will ask the Select Board to sponsor an article in the Warrant for next spring’s Annual Town Meeting. Even with town vote, the attorney general still needs to approve the change.

            The article would read: To see if the Town will vote to accept for the following boards, committees or commissions holding adjudicatory hearings in the Town, the provisions of Massachusetts General Law Chapters 39 and 23D, which provide that a member of a board, committee or commission holding an adjudicatory hearing shall not be disqualified from voting in the matter solely due to the member’s absence from one session of such hearing, provided that certain conditions as established by said statute are met. Board & Committees Affected: Zoning Board of Appeals.

            On Grillo’s recommendation, the ZBA voted to continue to December 22 at 6:30 pm a case opened to hear an application for variances from Martha Collins-Gray and Robert Gray, who wish to add a nonconforming garage to their 114 Front Street residence.

            The next meeting of the Marion ZBA is scheduled for Thursday, November 10, at 6:00 pm at the Marion Police Station, also accessible via Zoom.

Marion Zoning Board of Appeals

By Mick Colageo

Coyotes on Edge of Suburbia

The neighborhood Coyote often visiting our backyards and seen running along country roads in the headlights of our cars has evolved in crossbreeding to be as large today as a German Shepard dog.

            The modern Coyote has become much bigger than the small, 25-pound western canine that we saw in a Walt Disney character cartoon. It was recently estimated to be 60% Coyote, 30% Canadian Brush Wolf and 10% dog and reclassified as a Coydog. Judging from the recent rate of growth, it soon will appear to be too close for comfort.

            At the drop of a hat, the Coyote can move around at 40 miles per hour, adding habitat to 11 square miles in just a short time to adapt its diet to include rabbits, woodchucks, wild turkeys and feral cats. Unfortunately, it often includes pet tabbies and small dogs let outside for a brief opportunity to relieve themselves, making Coyotes very unpopular anywhere. The last Coyote den I visited included a wide variety of bits of fir and feathers, including white-tail evidence of deer fawns.

            Just last week while looking out my back porch picture window on Little Bay in Fairhaven, I was astonished to see a very large Coyote looking back at me with a wild expression, not to be disturbed by his proximity. My illustration looking across at Ashley Island was also helped by my daughter Elizabeth, showing colorful deciduous autumn foliage of salty rust crimson and seaside burnt orange. Nearby is our wooden Osprey nest platform, abandoned last month to migrate south for the winter.

            My nearest neighbors along Indian Way leading down to our beach report hearing howling at night of a family of Coyotes, starting out with a blood-curdling howl followed by a wavering harmony to another den far off in the distance. They seem to be inspired by a full October Moon rising over the horizon. Although their reason to sing seems to be a primitive mindset of orchestration, Coyote attacks on people are historically very rare and preventable by human caution and remedial behavior.

            An angry, offended Coyote attack is often when being bitten by someone trying to rescue pets from attack or being fed by someone. Under no circumstance is the killing of wild species to reduce population somehow justified as an act of retribution.

            The Coyote is today thriving on the edges of suburbia, and people are only entitled to evaluate a specific situation before making a final judgment and acting.

By George B. Emmons

Nasketucket Bird Club October Meeting

Hummingbirds with Dana Duxbury-Fox and Bob Fox on Thursday, October 27 at 7:00 pm at the Mattapoisett Free Public Library and online. Email nbcbirdclub@gmail.com for information and the Zoom link.

            Dana and Bob have developed a new talk focusing on Hummingbirds, that spectacular bird family we love and think we know. They will begin by focusing on what is a hummingbird and their adventures with 10 different, remarkable species they have seen on their journeys in the Americas. Then they will share the results of recent research which has given us deeper insights into the wonders of this family – how they evolved, pollination through nectar gathering (including a comparison with bees and butterflies), their diet of insects and nectar, nectar feeding technique, use of torpor, how iridescence is produced and their courtship. Many spectacular pictures and videos will be included. Come and marvel at these little gems.

From the Files of the Rochester Historical Society

            Creating a town out of unsettled land was the Proprietors’, founders of Rochester, task. Deciding what a town would need most, led them in 1683 to give Joseph Burge land, materials and access to water on the condition that he would build and operate a gristmill. Fourteen years later, they offered land to Anthony Coombs, if he would come from Sandwich and build a blacksmith shop near the gristmill.

            In 1708, another man from Sandwich, Peter Blackmere, approached the proprietors and convinced them to grant him some large parcels of land next to and upstream of the gristmill. He purchased the gristmill and built his house on what is now Hiller Road. The picture shows what is left of his house’s foundation.

            A well-educated and intelligent man, he quickly became a valued citizen of the new town. He was a proprietor. He built the first church in Rochester Center. He was a surveyor and served as both the town clerk and as a selectman.

            Over time he formed a partnership with Coombs and between his mill and Coomb’s smithy and forge, they provided for many of the townspeoples’ needs. They would bring their corn and rye to grind into flour and the smithy and forge mended broken tools and sold items like nails, barrel hoops and horseshoes. Between them, they created an industrial center for early Rochester.

By Connie Eshbach

Rally for Rylie, the ‘Warrior Princess’

On Wednesday, October 26, the Wareham Police Association is holding a blood drive from 9:00 am to 3:00 pm at the Wareham Police Station. The event is in honor of two-year-old “Warrior Princess” Rylie Grace Dion.

            In June, Rylie was admitted to Boston’s Children’s Hospital due to swollen lymph nodes. The following month, she had several masses removed that were sent for testing, though one was too risky to remove due to nerve entanglement.

            Rylie’s mother, Kristi Weigel, works as a nurse, and is the daughter of Rochester Fire Chief Scott Weigel. The family is selling T-shirts to help raise money for Rylie’s treatments, which can be found at bonfire.com/rally-for-rylie/.

            “Rylie loves the color pink,” Kristi told The Wanderer in a written interview. “(Her) favorite things to do are play dolls and dress up as princesses!”

            The youngest of three children, Rylie has been diagnosed with Nontuberculous Mycobacteria (NTM), as well as Chronic Cervicofacial Lymphadenitis. It’s a rare disease and will require a year or more of treatments.

            The Wareham Police Association got involved since Wareham Police Officer Calib LaRue is a friend of the family, and his wife is a nurse at Wareham Pediatrics, where Rylie is also a patient.

            “(She) has given us so much support.” Kristi said gratefully. “We have had so much support from our community. (The) Friends of Jack Foundation has done so much for Rylie.”

            Officer LaRue reached out a few months before and asked if Kristi would be okay with honoring Rylie for the association’s annual blood drive. Kristi was more than happy to approve and support two great causes at the same time.

            “My hope for the fundraiser is to get blood donations for these kids who have no choice but to battle these illnesses like Rylie,” she stated. “Donating blood might seem like such a simple thing to do, but it truly is a priceless gift for so many kids. The blood and platelets help these sick kids make new cells to help them fight. Blood donors are true heroes.”

            Those who might be squeamish around a blood-donation site can still spread the word, as well as supporting the family through their Bonfire link or Rylie’s GoFundMe page that can be found by searching “Rylie Grace,” “Katelyn Weigel” or “Kristi Weigel” on the website.

            “Her mom and dad have not left their side and are grateful for the support they have received from family and friends with Braydon and Chase!” the description reads. “Rylie has amazing strength and will get through this unknown time!”

            The Wareham Police Station is located at 2515 Cranberry Highway. To make an appointment, donors can visit bostonchildrens.org/halfpints and use sponsor code WRHMPD. For more information, contact Officer LaRue at calib_larue@warehampolice.com. A post about the blood drive can also be found at wareham.ma.us.

By Jack MC Staier

Two Negatives Send Projects Forward

            The Rochester Conservation Commission Tuesday night said no twice, but in a very positive way.

            In two public hearings, the commission issued determinations that projects to build an agricultural storage shed at 0 Pierce Street and replace a failing septic system at 213 Walnut Plain Road will not impact nearby wetlands.

            The 96×60-foot agricultural building being planned for Pierce Street will be a metal structure constructed with slab-on grade, said Rick Charon of Charon Associates, representing petitioner Bayside Agricultural, Inc. Charon said the location is near the staging area for a proposed solar facility, so it is mainly sand and stone. The building will not need a water supply or septic system. It will be used to store bog-related equipment such as sand barges. Silt socks will be placed on one side at the limit of the buffer zone.

            A failing septic system and cesspool at 213 Walnut Plain Road is being replaced with a new system that will require a new leaching field, said George Ayoub of GTA Engineering, representing petitioner Jacob Galary of Fairhaven.

            The result will be a new system with 40 percent less of a leaching area, said Ayoub, who was appearing via Zoom. No work will happen within 100 feet of the wetlands buffer zone except minor grading, he said.

            For both projects, the commissioners’ questions were few and the Negative Determination votes unanimous.

            The brief meeting ended with a vote to set the Rochester Conservation Commission’s next meeting for Tuesday, November 1, at 7:00 pm at Old Colony Regional Vocational-Technical High School library, 476 North Avenue, Rochester, accessible remotely via Zoom.

Rochester Conservation Commission

By Michael J. DeCicco

National Honor Society Peer Tutoring

The ORRHS National Honor Society is offering free tutoring services for students in grades K-12 in the Tri-Town. They have a group of dedicated high school seniors who are able to help students in all subject areas. Please reach out to Caitlin Collier at caitlincollier@oldrochester.org to inquire.

Rochester Historical Museum

After our Open House on Saturday, October 22, the Museum will be open on Sunday the October 23 from 1:00-3:00. We hope to be open the following Sundays, but it will be best to check with Sue 508 295 8908 or Connie 508 763 4932.

Hayward Turned Mishap into Breakthrough Career

            Late for soccer sign-ups, Leon Hayward would be ahead of his time in the game of hockey.

            “There wasn’t a lot of hockey in Seattle … I ended up playing … on an accident, really. I didn’t sign up for a soccer team on time and had a friend say, ‘You should try for hockey,'” Hayward recalls.

            In the fall of 1993, legendary New England skills coach Paul Vincent’s 18-year-old son Paul Vincent Jr. was playing major junior for the Seattle Thunderbirds of the Western Hockey League, and the Haywards housed the player as his billet family.

            “That became a lifelong bond for all of us,” said Hayward, who forged a relationship with the Vincents and having transferred as a high school sophomore, went coast to coast for prep education at Tabor Academy.

            In Marion, Hayward became a football tri-captain, a member of the Seawolves’ lacrosse team and kept building on hockey. He was Tabor’s Sophomore Male Athlete of the Year, recipient of the 1997 Rip Perry Trophy (finest team spirit, sportsmanship and outstanding play in football) and won two hockey awards, the 1997 Lucien O. Lavoie Trophy (most improved) and the 1998 Coach’s Award (MVP).

            After his 1998 graduation, Hayward played Division I hockey at Northeastern University, where he was recipient of the Huskies’ Unsung Hero Award. He went on to play five full seasons of pro hockey, including 100 American Hockey League games. He helped lead Trenton to the 2005 ECHL championship and was named Finals MVP.

            But, like many young African Americans skating in the wake of trailblazers like Willie O’Ree, Alton White and Val James, Hayward was not unique as a hockey player. Rather, it is his emergence as an impactful prep and college coach that has his hockey stock climbing.

            “This (honor) is probably more for my coaching career than my playing career, but I just knew Tabor was a place for me, and when I looked at schools I knew that Northeastern was a place for me,” said Hayward, who had not been back on the Marion campus since coaching against Tabor behind the Governor’s Academy hockey bench almost 10 years ago.

            On Saturday, Hayward was inducted into the Tabor Academy Athletic Hall of Fame, alongside girls’ sports coach and builder Joan Roller, wrestler Jim Henry and the 2001-02 championship girls basketball team.

            Along with his wife Jessica and sons Ellison and Harlan, his mother and some Tabor teammates, Hayward’s three coaches, Dr. Anthony Kandel (football), Tim Pratt (hockey) and Ian Patrick (lacrosse), were in attendance.

            “I just felt like the coaches cared about me here at Tabor, not only in hockey but all of the sports I played,” said Hayward, who did not know when he was attending Tabor that he was the Seawolves’ first African-American varsity hockey player.

            “There was less pressure there then if I had known,” he says, noting a growing awareness of his rare place once he got to college. “When we went to the deep south states, it became very important to me that I played well just because of the one black family at a game and (let’s say) they have a kid … I wanted him to have someone to cheer for.”

            Hayward had two black teammates during his freshman year at Northeastern, where he would later earn a master’s degree in Leadership in 2014.

            Having coached at Avon Old Farms and the Taft School, The Governor’s Academy made Hayward the first African-American head hockey coach in New England prep schools. Since then, his recruiting has helped raise the profile of Colorado College to a national power and is now the first assistant coach, helping build a fledgling Division I program at the University of St. Thomas in Saint Paul, Minnesota.

            The NHL Coaches Association BIPOC Coaching program, which aims to identify and develop future coaches and general managers, has its eyes trained on Hayward.

            “I did development camp with the (NHL New Jersey) Devils this year. … It was kind of an internship,” said Hayward. “You never know what the future holds, but I love coaching college hockey.”

            Dating back to the 1970-71 season, Joan V. Roller brought girls athletics into the 20th century and then the 21st at Tabor with 46 years of service, passionately coaching basketball but championing the cause of equal treatment for girls in all sports.

            Her work was twice recognized by Tabor, first with the Joan V. Roller Award (to the player who demonstrates unselfish commitment and outstanding contribution to Tabor’s girls’ varsity basketball program) and in 2011 when the refurbished varsity basketball court in Stone Gymnasium was named for her and husband Richard.

            Marion native Jim Henry (Class of 1975) achieved success in football, wrestling and crew and did so in the wake of three older brothers who had preceded him at Tabor. After his sophomore year, Jim rowed at the 1973 Henley Royal Regatta, in his junior year was a starter in all three sports, and then a captain in all three sports in his senior year.

            A recipient of academic awards in subjects, including Russian History and Spanish language, Henry earned a journalism degree at the University of North Carolina and joined the US Navy, serving three years of active duty.

            The past president of the New York-based International Motor Press Association has run 17 marathons since age 46.

            The 25-0, 2001-02 Tabor girls basketball team didn’t just get over nemesis Philips Andover in double overtime to capture that winter’s NEPSAC championship, that team changed the trajectory of its own program and shifted the regional power structure.

            The Seawolves’ dramatic victory may have felt like the end of a journey, but it created a new one for future Tabor teams, setting the table for a 20-year legacy of seven titles and 16 total finals appearances.

            The Seawolves were comprised of senior captains Sarcia T. Adkins and Sierra Yaun, junior captain Kristina L. Baugh, seniors Bethany Anderson Jackson and Maggie J. Zayko, juniors Naimah D. Abdullah, Whitney J. Ffrench, Mary E. Lewis, Leah M. Mendes, Alina K. Wolhardt and Caitlin Milbury Young, freshmen Tara L. Miller and Courtney Beal Scalice. They were coached by Will Becker and assistant Airami Bogle Bentz, and junior Jaunelle R. Chapman was their manager.

Tabor Academy Athletic Hall of Fame

By Mick Colageo

School Consolidation Study Stages Set

            During Tuesday night’s public meeting of the Mattapoisett Select Board, members heard from Town Administrator Mike Lorenco the stages that have taken or will take place from the UMass Boston Collins Center school-consolidation study.

            Present throughout the evening was Mattapoisett School Committee member Carly Lavin, who has stepped forward as an active team member for the balance of the study.

            Lorenco said that up to September, the Collins team was collecting data. He went on to say that in November, the entire study team that also includes Select Board Chairman Tyler Macallister will be making site visits. During the month of February, the Collins team will begin drafting its report, which is likely to be released in the March-April timeframe.

            In the meantime, a survey intended to engage the residents and receive their input on the concept of school consolidation and related matters will be posted on the town’s website (Mattapoisett.net) on Friday, October 21. This data, once collected, will become part of the Collins report. Macallister suggested that those residents needing assistance to complete the online-only survey should use the services of the library or the Mattapoisett Council on Aging.

            Lorenco said that at least two public meetings are also planned. The date is Wednesday, November 2, at 10:00 am in the Knights of Columbus Hall and again that evening at 6:00 pm in the Old Rochester Regional High School cafeteria. Lorenco is also planning a remote-meeting option as well, possibly for November 9 or 17. He encouraged the public to get involved in the process and that school-choice families will be allowed to participate.

            Earlier in the meeting, the Select Board and Lorenco announced a procedural error had taken place in regards to two appointments to the Finance Committee. In July, it was noted, while processing all appointed positions held by residents for terms nearing expiration, they had failed to have present the town moderator and a member of the School Committee to vote on two expiring appointments on the Finance Committee.

            Lavin inquired how the process works. Lorenco and Macallister, along with member Jordan Collyer, said that all appointments have a three-year limit mandated by the state. However, if an appointment expires, the person remains appointed until such time as the person whose term is expiring is reappointed and sworn in or replaced by a new appointee.

            It was further disclosed that two Finance Committee members required reappointment following the established process with the town moderator and school committee member present to vote. Lavin asked how appointees are selected. It was explained that all members of the Finance Committee have finance backgrounds.

            Lorenco said he would coordinate having all the necessary parties together after November 4 to make the appointments of Colby Rotler and Kevin Geraghty on par with the appointment bylaw.

            It was further noted by Lorenco that there is an open seat on the Capital Planning Committee intended to be filled by a School Committee member. Collyer said anyone interested in a committee appointment should send a letter of interest to the Select Board.

            The November 14 Town Meeting Warrant was opened with Lorenco saying he didn’t anticipate anything out of the ordinary, just a few finance-related matters and possibly eight or nine articles for voters to hear.

            The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Select Board was not scheduled upon adjournment.

Mattapoisett Select Board

By Marilou Newell