Board Preps for Appointing Town Clerk

Selectman Greenwood “Woody” Hartley asked during the September 3 Rochester Board of Selectmen’s meeting to look ahead toward the spring annual election, when the town clerk position officially changes from an elected position to an appointed one.

            Town Meeting voters in May approved the article proposing an appointed rather than elected town clerk, an idea first presented to the other selectmen in April by Hartley himself upon current Town Clerk Naida Parker’s announcement that she would be retiring from the post after 35 years.

            On September 3, Hartley asked that the matter be added to the next meeting’s agenda in order to prepare for the transition with a “complete plan” to include a proposed budget. Perhaps the selectmen might even have a candidate chosen come the annual April election, Hartley said.

            “[There will be] a quick turnover after election,” said Hartley. “If we start talking about it now, it’ll give us time to put together a thoughtful plan.”

            In other business, Town Administrator Suzanne Szyndlar announced that the Plumb Library received a donation of $17,060 from the George E. & Katherine H. Church Revocable Trust for “general uses and purposes” at the library.

            The next regular meeting of the Rochester Board of Selectmen is scheduled for September 16 at the Rochester Town Hall at 6:00 pm.

Rochester Board of Selectmen

By Jean Perry

Friends of the Mattapoisett Council on Aging

The Friends of the Mattapoisett Council on Aging are holding two events during the month of September. At these events, they will be selling raffle tickets for a wheelbarrow filled with all things related to gardens. Included will be plants, veggies and some interesting surprises. Tickets are 6 for $5.00 and 1 for $1.00. Tickets to win this prize can be purchased at one or both of the following events:

            On Thursday, September 12, starting at noon, the Friends are hosting their Fall Luncheon. Seniors and members of the Friends of the Mattapoisett COA, will dine on hamburgers, hot dogs, and french fries, with ice cream for dessert. You are asked to please bring a canned good or other non-perishable item for the local food pantry and/or school supplies to donate to the Mattapoisett schools. The Guest Speaker is from the Health Department, and will go over recycling. Bring in a sample of an item that you may find questionable. Reserve your meal by calling the COA at 508-758-4110.

            Friends of the Mattapoisett Council on Aging, is excited to sponsor their Third Annual Plant Sale on Saturday, September 14, from 10 am to 1 pm. Join us on the lawn of the Mattapoisett Library for great deals on perennials, houseplants and small trees. Don’t miss out on this year’s new raffle.

What’s Happening at the Elizabeth Taber Library

Thursday, September 12at 6pm – Author Visit with Elizabeth Bear – The Elizabeth Taber Library presents Hugo Award winning author and futurist Elizabeth Bear at the Marion Arts Center.  Elizabeth Bear, author of the Lotus Kingdom Trilogy and Ancestral Night, will talk about her recent work, writing process, and her experiences as a sci-fi and fantasy author. Elizabeth is a frequent contributor to the Center for Science and the Imagination at ASU, and has spoken on futurism at Google, MIT, DARPA’s 100 Year Starship Project, and the White House, among others. Copies of her latest books will be available for purchase and checkout at the library prior to this event.  Please sign up at the library.

            Tuesdays at 5:30-6:30 – Chess Club with Jim Kegle. Drop in on Tuesday evenings for our new chess club! All ages, and experience levels welcome. Get free instruction or just grab a game.  Chess sets provided.

            Tuesday, September 10at 11-12pm and Tuesday, September 17at 6pm – The Come as you Are Book Club. Try our new low stress book club!  No required reading assignments!  Come for refreshments and conversation about whatever you’re reading, no matter what you’re reading.  Get author and title recommendations from fellow readers and 

share your honest opinions about the titles of your choice.

The Sunday Papers

            Something is disappearing in living rooms, dens, and studies across this great land. Maybe it’s already gone in your home. In our home, though, my husband and I are holding on, refusing to accept the reality that the Sunday newspapers of our youth are just about gone.

            As a kid growing up, the Sunday morning ritual of grabbing the funnies first (or later on when tastes matured in equal proportion to chronological aging, settling in to read the Parade Magazine) was part of the fabric of our American lives. Not so much today, and more’s the pity.

            My husband is just old enough to remember a time when reading the newspaper was paired with listening to the radio. Lying on the floor reading the daily newspaper, and then, on Sundays after church, spending hours pouring over the pages of the Sunday edition was a treat, not a chore. Are there people out there, like us, that remember the joy of black newsprint fingers?

            Newspapers, you know, those cheap paper printed communication vehicles that crunch when you turn the pages and require map-folding skills to get the most reading pleasure from their broadsheet sizing, are nearly a thing of the past. (Pause to sigh deeply, for many minutes, as I collect my thoughts and emotions.)

            Newspapers are something that united my family in a common activity that we could all agree on. Newspapers taught us negotiation skills. “I’ll let you have the funnies first if you’ll pass me the sports page.” The room would be absent familial strife and struggle as we each dove headfirst into reading the newspaper sections of our preference. What wonderous adventures could be found in the travel pages. High fashion, haute couture silliness gave rise to my Barbie doll creations while Ma tried her hand at the crossword puzzle and Dad read and re-read the used car classifieds.

            While the grown-ups focused on world news, the kids in the house all wanted the funnies. Blondie, Peanuts, Marmaduke, Beetle Bailey, Hagar, B.C. and Dick Tracey come rebounding to my frontal cortex out of the darkness that is otherwise known as “I can’t remember.” To have lived during a time when entertainment was easily found in a four-panel sequence of fun – well, if you don’t have these memories, you simply will never know what truly being alive is all about. (Another deep sigh.)

            Later on, as the decades advanced there was Non Sequitor, Dilbert, Doonesbury, and the much beloved and grieved Calvin & Hobbes. Sunday, regardless of the weather conditions or realities that had to be faced, was just a bit easier after a leisurely romp through the funnies.

            It’s a quiet pursuit for the most part, reading the newspaper, that is. Oh, there is or was, I should say, the occasional, “You have got to read this!” Or the eager lament, “Will you hurry up, I want to see what Kennedy said yesterday.” 

            On Sundays, back in the day, the paper was huge – I mean literally huge. The Sunday papers of my youth were heavy tomes of importance. Just bringing it in from the driveway or tooting it home from the market required super-human strength. That is, if you were a 6-year old kid.

            Truth is, advertisers needed the newspapers and the newspapers needed the advertiser making it a match made in marketing heaven. The Sunday newspaper was chock-a-block of full-page display advertisements and many, many pages of classified ads driving up page count. Today, instead of reading an ad and being wowed by its message, you are bombarded with digital marketing bits 24/7.

            But, back to the newspapers we love(d). There was something for everyone regardless of your reading level. And how many of you out there remember learning to read by studying the newspaper, or snuggling up with a grandchild to read the funnies aloud and harmoniously together? The Sunday newspapers were a time to bond over a shared activity. 

            My husband doesn’t need any help carrying the Sunday papers to our reading spot in the living room. “Damn, no Parade Magazine again this week!” he is wont to say on many occasions. My standard reply has become, “No loss.” That cultural Sunday supplement is so diminished in size, its meager pages are barely worth the effort of reaching across the coffee table to retrieve it from the pile. Heck, even the ‘pile’ is a little more than a few measly pages.

            If you are reading this sad tale, you love newspapers. Thank you for that. Thank you for taking the time to not only pick up this printed account of life in the Tri-Town area over the past seven days, but also for actually reading it.

            I loathe the day when on a Sunday morning instead of sitting down with the heavenly scent of hot coffee I reach across the table and turn on some version of an iPad. I will always want that crinkly, crunchy section of printed paper that can transport me into the mind of a political mover and shaker, or inspire me to cook up something using scotch bonnets. I want always to look forward to peaceful Sunday mornings, especially during the dark of winter when hours somehow slip pleasantly away while my eyes take a journey across and down printed column inches.

            We have stopped reading the daily papers in lieu of electronically transmitted bytes. But we hold on dearly to our Sunday newspaper fix. When those too become a thing of the past, when I pick-up my phone on a Sunday morning to try and find something worth reading but only find my social media friends have updated their profile pictures, well, then life as we knew it will have come to an unholy end.

            I told my granddaughter as she prepared to return to college a few hours away from home, “I’ll clip out articles I think you might find inspiring for essays and mail them to you.” I meant the real thing, you know, real newspaper being clipped, folded, slipped into an envelope, and send via the United States Postal Service. She looked at me with a gentle smile that said something like, “You poor old thing.” Instead, she simply said, “Okay Gramma,” hugged me, and went on her way into the world where, one day, newspapers, the USPS, and I will all be a memory. I hope it will be fond.

This Mattapoisett Life

By Marilou Newell

Friends of Marion VNA Funds

Community Nurse Home Care has received funds from the Friends of Marion VNA to provide Marion residents health-related services not covered by insurance. These funds may be used for the following Community Nurse services:

• Care Transition Consultations

• Caregiver Guidance & Navigation

• Comfort Care

• Community Health Worker Outreach

• Complimentary Nursing Evaluation Visits 

• Dementia Care & Support

            Requests can be made by residents, their family members, the Marion Council on Aging or medical personnel by email: grants@communitynurse.com; phone: 508-992-6278; or fax: 508-996-0781

Marion Republican Town Committee

The Marion Republican Town Committee will conduct its next monthly meeting on Monday, September 9at 7:00 p.m. at the Marion Music Hall, 164 Front Street, Marion. The public and new members welcome.

OC Football Takes Advantage of Week 1 Bye

            While everyone else in the Massachusetts high school football world plays their first game on Friday, Old Colony football will still be planning. Typically, the Cougars have their bye in the middle of the season, but this year, things somehow shook out where they’re just starting their season one week after everyone else.

            There are pros and cons to the odd scheduling, but Old Colony head coach Brandon Mendez is focused on the positives at this point. Though he’s not getting hung up on his guys being fresher than Holbrook, who the Cougars face in Week 2, Mendez’s focus is on the fact that the Cougars will be able to spend a little extra time on technique.

            “It’s not the worst thing in the world,” Mendez said. “We have a veteran team, so it allows us to get a little bit more in before that first real game.

            “I feel OK because we scrimmaged up quite a bit,” he continued. “We went and scrimmaged a very good Nauset team, Nantucket, and we treated the whole jamboree against Fairhaven like a real game. As far as being game-ready, with a veteran team, I don’t worry as much. It’s going to give us an opportunity to focus on technique a little more. We don’t have to rush through things.”

            Old Colony is returning eight players on the offensive side of the ball and nine on defense, some of which can play both sides of the ball, like Matt Bumpus. Among those returning are Bumpus, Kyle ScholzPhil ProctorRyan RegoNoahVertigoElijah SmithBen Kingsbury,and Blake Dennison.

            With so many players returning from last year’s roster, Old Colony doesn’t need to spend as much time on the scheme or the general concepts. This group already knows how things work in the program. Instead, the Cougars are trying to refine the little things so they can gain an edge against any opponent.

            “We’re certainly more advanced at this point than we were last year,” Mendez said. “It really gives us a chance to focus on technique more and improve the little things a bit more. Where in the past we’ve had to make sure certain coverages are in, the coverages are there. It’s nothing new.

            “I think the thing that stands out more this year is the kids are asking more valuable questions of the coaches about the scheme than we ever have in the past,” Mendez continued. “It just proves that they get it. They know and they’re hungry to get the right answers and want more out of it, which is great for us.”

            Last year, the Cougars’ defensive was lockdown. No team was going to light up the scoreboard against Old Colony – on the road, or at home. The Cougars offense, however, wasn’t able to match the defense’s consistency.

            But now the Cougars have defined Bumpus’ role as the team’s play-caller, and someone who will be on the field at all times, even when Scholz is lining up at quarterback. Between the two, Mendez fully expects Old Colony to improve off of last year.

            “[Scholz] hit the gym hard this offseason. He’s fully committed,” Mendez said. “He’s looked much more comfortable this pre-season than he did last year. Last year, he got a little worked up. He seemed a little tense. We’d try to slow him down. He’s been very composed this preseason, which is where he needs to be.

            “[Bumpus is] the leader. He’s the guy. He’s calling out the plays in the huddle. … He’s the one who brings the composure. His leadership ability this year has really stood out for us. It’s been outstanding.”

High School Sports Update

By Nick Friar

School Superintendent to Retire in June

            The superintendent of the four Tri-Town school districts is retiring after 10 years.

            The official word on Dr. Doug White’s impending retirement set for June 2020 was announced during the joint meeting of the Tri-Town School Committees on August 26, kicking off the conversation on how best to start the search for his replacement.

            White called the upcoming school year one of big transitions as several new faces step into administrative positions and the districts continue the search for a new business administrator once Paul Kitchen leaves his post in the upcoming month.

            School Committee members reviewed materials left over from the prior superintendent search a decade ago, although regulations surrounding the Request for Proposal (RFP) process have changed relative to the selection of a consultant to assist in the search. An RFP is no longer required to solicit quotes from competing consultants, a bonus for committee members eager to accept White’s suggestion that they should start the search process sooner rather than later.

            “The further you wait, the longer you go, the further you push that out,” White said. “And if you have any glitches, you’re going to get closer and closer to the start of another school year.”

            The goal now is to have someone for the position who meets all the qualifications by the end of January 2020.

            Right away the school committees voted to form a small committee consisting of the four chairs from each district school committee to solicit quotes from hiring consultants and form a list of the desired qualifications and experience they wish to see in their next superintendent.

            Old Rochester Regional School Committee member Jim Muse (Mattapoisett) suggested the districts consider starting the search internally for candidates that might qualify for the job, an approach he says would save time and money in the process of replacing White.

            “…It would behoove us to establish the criteria and see if those … people are already on our radar and not from some unknown state who are interested … before we go to a full-fledged outside process,” said Muse. “We don’t have to go across the country to take applicants.” Muse continued, “If we find that we don’t have somebody … we could still leave the process open….”

            Muse also emphasized that the members of the school committees are the ones who will select the final candidate and that the committees aren’t required to hold a public opinion session on the matter.

            ORR School Committee member Heather Burke (Marion) in response suggested, “Even though … we are the body that decides, given the nature of a regional school district, we do need to solicit the input from teachers, towns, general public, parents – things like that just to make it as inclusive a process as possible.”

            The ensuing vote was to allow the four chairs to hold a special meeting on October 9 at 6:30 pm in the junior high school media room and to allow any other committee members to join them in the discussion. From there, they will solicit quotes from hiring consultants and make suggestions for a small search committee to set the criteria for the new superintendent and eventually narrow down the pool of prospective candidates.

            “No matter what we do, we’re going to make an informed decision,” said Muse.

            White affirmed that funding for a hiring consultant had been allocated from each of the four districts’ fiscal 2020 budgets.

            The next regularly scheduled joint meeting of the Tri-Town and Old Rochester Regional School Committees is scheduled for September 26 at 6:30 pm in the media room at ORR Junior High School.

Southcoast Health

To the Editor;

            On Monday, September 26th, Southcoast Health razed the Tobey Homestead and on Wednesday, September 28th, they ‘announced’ the closing of Tobey’s Makepeace Center for Women and Families at the end of the year.  A coincidence of timing? 

            I have to wonder the rationale behind this sudden closure, beyond the cost savings. There must have been a master plan to do so for some time, especially considering the 14 million dollar expansion to St. Luke’s Maternity Center. 

            Yes, Tobey is a small community hospital with less than 500 annual births. But the key word here is ‘community’. Southcoast is slowly, but systematically, dismantling what makes our local hospital so special to the community it serves.

            I will forever be grateful to the Makepeace Family, to the incredible doctors, compassionate maternity nurses, and to the special midwifery program, for making maternity care such an integral part of Tobey and the communities they have served since 1940. It is painful when ‘business’ decisions are made with what appears to be a disregard for how it ultimately affects patients and the medical care they receive locally.

            Nancy McFadden, Marion

                  The views expressed in the “Letters to the Editor” column are not necessarily those of The Wanderer, its staff or advertisers. The Wandererwill gladly accept any and all correspondence relating to timely and pertinent issues in the great Marion, Mattapoisett and Rochester area, provided they include the author’s name, address and phone number for verification. We cannot publish anonymous, unsigned or unconfirmed submissions. The Wandererreserves the right to edit, condense and otherwise alter submissions for purposes of clarity and/or spacing considerations. The Wanderermay choose to not run letters that thank businesses, and The Wandererhas the right to edit letters to omit business names. The Wandereralso reserves the right to deny publication of any submitted correspondence.

Marion Codification Committee

The Marion Codification Committee will bring forward more Bylaw Improvements for Fall Town Meeting. In 2016, the Town of Marion hired General Code, a consultant company who specializes in reviewing municipal bylaws for content and conflict. General Code provided some 280 comments on discrepancies, ambiguities, and misplaced items in the Town of Marion bylaws.  

The Bylaw Codification Committee, a subcommittee of the Planning Board, has since been meeting regularly to resolve the comments. Similar proposed corrections and improvements have been submitted at subsequent Town Meetings. 

            For this Fall Town Meeting, another set of improvements to various sections in the Marion bylaws will be provided. Some are filling blank zoning determinations in the Table of Use Regulations, changing titles, removing duplicate sections, adding clarification language, removing wording redundant to the MA Building Code, defining the volume of a building, among other changes. 

            The Planning Board is holding a public hearing on Monday,October 7at 7:20 pm on the proposed bylaw changes for this Fall Town Meeting. Anyone interested is invited to attend the public hearing or visit the Planning Board Office to view the text of these proposals.