Mattapoisett Tree Committee

Mattapoisett’s tree canopy is one of its most precious resources, enhancing the town’s beauty and charm and helping to define its character as much as its seaside location. According to the Arbor Day Foundation, trees “offer cooling shade, block cold winter winds, attract birds and wildlife, purify our air, prevent soil erosion, clean our water…”  In addition, the trees around us serve an increasingly vital purpose of helping to slow climate change by absorbing carbon from the atmosphere, storing it in trees and soil, and releasing oxygen into the atmosphere. 

            On a more personal level, just a few deciduous trees planted on the south and west sides of your home can reduce your energy use by up to 30%, and trees shading air conditioners can reduce electricity use by 10% compared to units in the sun, says the U.S. Department of Energy.

            Recently, the Town Tree Planting Committee has enhanced two of the Town’s key programs to encourage residents to participate in adding to Mattapoisett’s stock of trees: street tree planting and memorial trees.

            Mattapoisett’s street tree planting program has been constrained somewhat by the presence of utilities, sidewalks, and other public features limiting the number of potential planting sites on town land. Recently, however, the Town of Mattapoisett and the Mattapoisett Tree Planting Committee have adopted a new program aimed at expanding opportunities for residents to help increase the Town’s tree cover. The Street Tree Setback Planting Program allows the Tree Warden to plant trees within 20 feet of the road. The new program enables residents to enjoy Town trees, at no cost to the homeowner, within the area of their property, if they so choose.

            For the first three years, the Town will own and maintain the tree(s).  Participating homeowners will sign an agreement with the Town, allowing the Tree Warden to plant on their properties and agreeing to be responsible for the care of the tree(s) after the three-year period is up. 

            Mattapoisett’s memorial tree program, familiar to residents as long-lasting way to honor a loved one’s memory or mark a special occasion, will now include Ned’s Point as a location for planting. The Tree Committee’s guidelines will be modified slightly to ensure that plantings at Ned’s Point will be part of the Ned’s Point Planting Plan recently designed. Residents wishing to contribute a memorial tree will “buy into” the plan by paying for the purchase of a tree whose species and location at Ned’s Point have already been designated as part of the plan for gradually replacing trees at the Point. Because of the nature of the location, memorial trees here will not have plaques. 

            For more information, or to express interest any of the Town’s tree planting programs, please contact our Town Tree Warden Roland Cote at (508) 989-2017 or email the Tree Committee at mattapoisetttreecom@gmail.com. 

Ethel E. Pedersen (Andrews)

Ethel E. Pedersen (Andrews), longtime resident of Mattapoisett, MA, passed away in Warren, RI on September 20, 2019 at the age of 98. She was the beloved wife of the late Theodore Pedersen for almost 76 years.

Ethel was born in New Bedford to the late Ethel Andrews and NB Fire Chief Milton Andrews. She was the mother of three children; the late Theodore C. Pedersen Jr., Barbara Allen (Pedersen), and Jonathan Pedersen. She was “Mom” to Janice and Paul Mandeville. In addition, she is lovingly remembered by her six grandchildren and eleven great-grandchildren.  She was predeceased by her brother, Raymond Andrews, and her sister, Barbara Seefeld (Andrews), with whom she shared her (sometimes adventurous) early years.

A graduate of NBHS class of 1939, she enjoyed her role as co-chair of the reunion committee and organized get-togethers until 2009’s 70th class reunion. Having worked at several local banks, her career ended with her retirement from Fairhaven Savings Bank where she was the Personnel Manager.

She loved her husband and their family. She enjoyed their sailboat in Mattapoisett Harbor, reading novels and the newspaper, and spending winters in Boca Raton, Florida.

A graveside service for family and friends will be held on Wednesday, September 25, 2019 at 9am in the Pine Grove Cemetery, New Bedford.

To light a memorial candle, sign the online guestbook or for cemetery directions please visit www.hathawayfunerals.com

Rochester Historical Society Turns 50

            In 1969 when the Rochester Historical Society was born, the town’s population was

1,965. Gas was 35 cents a gallon around here, and the value of the average house in town was $28,000. As of 2018, the population is 5,698. Gas is about $2.75 a gallon, and the average Rochester home is valued at $375,000.

            Rochester, to say the least, has certainly changed these past 50 years. But one thing that hasn’t changed is the now 50-year-old tradition of preserving as much of the history of Rochester as possible, something Rochester was ready to celebrate on September 14 during a party at the COA.

            After a luncheon and, of course, a big piece of cake, the roomful of Rochesterites – some current, some prior, but always a ‘townie’ at heart – enjoyed a stroll down memory lane, led by a string of guest speakers well versed in the history of Rochester. Some shared stories discovered during past RHS meetings when members hosted “memory nights” and nights of “show and tell,” like the story Connie Eshbach told about the dances behind Dewey Park that went on “until boys from another town came to destroy the dance pavilion” after, she quoted, “a battle of baseball bats.”

            There was the vacant haunted house on Bowen’s Lane that residents were convinced was haunted by ghosts of white that passed behind the windows but ultimately ended up being sheep stranded inside.

            There were stories about how Rochester was void of electricity until the 1940s, RHS fundraisers gone awry, and the quirky gifts students have given Jackie Demers, Rochester’s very first kindergarten teacher, who taught for 45 years at Rochester Memorial School. Demers, originally from New Bedford but now an appointed honorary “townie”, has tons of stories.

            “Where else but Rochester would you have a cow come to school and walk across the hall into the courtyard?” asked Demers. “Only in Rochester, and I was a city girl so I sure wasn’t used to that, but the kids loved it.”

            Demers continued, “God blessed me when he led me to Rochester… It’s been a great time for me and I thank all of you for your many, many kindnesses.”

            The times have certainly changed since the very first members started the RHS, including the Society’s first-ever treasurer, Barbara King Besse, who was present at the party.

            “What started [the Rochester Historical Society] was curiosity,” said Eshbach. “Because they were curious about the houses they lived in and the neighborhoods they lived in. I think that… some people think of history as dry as dust; but, really, it’s for people who are curious about things.” 

            And if one is curious enough to visit the RHS museum located at the East Rochester Church on County Road and rifle through the ton of books, documents, genealogy searches, and other relics, as Eshbach put it, “You get answers to questions you maybe didn’t know you had.”

            Mack Phinney, president of the RHS, had a message for the generation after his: “It’s up to you to pass it on to the younger folks to rediscover and share the history of Rochester.”

By Jean Perry

Kittansett Club Proposes Pro Shop Upgrades

            The Marion Conservation Commission on September 11 approved the Kittansett Club’s request to make some upgrades to its Pro Shop and some of the golf cart paths near the shore.

            On behalf of the Club, Susan Nilson described the proposal that includes the construction of an ADA compliant ramp to the entrance of the Pro Shop and the addition of a porch within the 100-foot buffer zone of the coastal bank and within the flood zone.

            Nilson also briefly described some rerouting of the gravel golf cart paths around that area, and the older paths will be replaced with grass.

            The project, Nilson said, would allow for more ‘greenscape’ near the Pro Shop.

            The commission attended a site visit the prior Saturday and found no issues; however, commission member Shaun Walsh expressed his concern that no erosion control measures were marked on the plan, and he also questioned whether the grass replacement would include sod or seed.

            Walsh included a special condition for erosion control in an area near the shore in his motion for an approved Order of Conditions, but he omitted some of the standard conditions he found irrelevant.

            “Our standard conditions are sort of overkill for this,” Walsh said.

            The special condition to install erosion control near an existing cart barn will be enforced until the grass planting is fully stabilized.

            Nilson stated that the Club had hoped to begin construction this fall, but may have to wait until the spring.

            In other matters, the commission continued the public hearing for its own Notice of Intent to perform invasive species control at Sprague’s Cove until it receives notice from the Natural Heritage and Endangered Species Program, a step the commission had overlooked in the process. According to Chairman Jeff Doubrava, that response will take at least 30 days.

            The commission had planned to begin the work this fall during the time when invasive species control is ideal, but conceded that it will have to wait until the spring to begin.

            The hearing was continued until October 23.

            The NOI public hearing for Kathleen Welch, 82 West Avenue, was continued until September 25 at the request of the applicant. The proposal is to restore approximately 844 square feet of an area already altered within the 100-foot coastal dune buffer zone. The plan is for vegetation management to remove invasive species within and near the dune. Welch also proposes to install a kayak rack, raised planting bed, 4-foot high picket fence, and a 12’x12’ paved patio and walkway in addition to some landscaping with native species plantings.

            The next meeting of the Marion Conservation Commission is scheduled for September 25 at 7:00 pm at the Marion Town House.

Marion Conservation Commission

By Jean Perry

Nasketucket Bird Club

Join the Nasketucket Bird Club on Thursday, September 26at 7:00 pm at the Mattapoisett Free Public Library.

            We will be featuring a program called “The Art of Aves.” Professional Photographer Arthur Rainville will share insights and delights in the world of art that birds inspire. Along the way, he’ll share tips and tricks to making better images of birds with whatever your skill or equipment… even your cell phones. 

            The meetings, open to the public and handicapped accessible, are held at the Mattapoisett Free Public Library, located at the south door entrance on Barstow Street in Mattapoisett.

            Check our website at: massbird.org/Nasketucket/ or email President Justin Barrett at jmbarrett426@gmail.com

Friends of the Mattapoisett Council on Aging

The Friends of the Mattapoisett Council on Aging want to extend their thanks for the wonderful support of all involved in the Plant Sale on September 14. This includes all who helped set up, donate and sell plants and to the many people who purchased the plants and gave them a new home. Special thanks to Susan Pizzolato for letting us hold the sale at the library again, the Mattapoisett Highway Department for their assistance in bringing the plants to the library, and the local businesses that donated. The winner of the hanging basket of gourds and squash was Shiela Niksa. Look for us at the Fall Festival on September 28 and 29 held by the Mattapoisett Knights of Columbus. We will be selling our signature clothing and other merchandise. Also, you can take a chance on the wheelbarrow filled with garden items, valued around $100. Proceeds from all our activities are spent on our seniors. Thank you, from the Friends of Mattapoisett’s COA, for your continued support.

Apple Pie Tasting Contest & Sale

We invite you to bake your favorite Apple Pie and enter the Apple Pie Contest on Saturday, October 19. To enter, bake two pies. One will be submitted for judging, the other will be available for purchase. Pies must be dropped off between 10:30 am and 11:30 am at the Benjamin D. Cushing Community Center, 465 Mill Street, Marion. Judging will take place at Noon.

            Not a baker? Then just stop in and buy a whole pie or just enjoy a slice. Pies will be on sale from 12:00 – 2:00 p.m. Proceeds from sale of pies will go to the FMCOA to sustain programming at the Marion Council on Aging.

Sippican Historical Society

In 1998, the Sippican Historical Society commissioned an architectural survey of Marion’s historic homes and buildings. The survey was funded half by the Sippican Historical Society and half by the Massachusetts Historical Commission. Due to the limits of funding, not all of the historic buildings were surveyed, but over 100 were catalogued and photographed. The results of the survey are in digital form on the Massachusetts Historical Commission’s website and in four binders in the Sippican Historical Society’s office (and at the Marion Town Clerk’s office).

            Marion (Old Rochester) is one of the oldest towns in the United States, and the Sippican Historical Society maintains an extensive collection of documentation on its historic buildings. The Sippican Historical Society will preview one building a week so that the residents of Marion can understand more about its unique historical architecture.

            This installment features 502 Point Road.  This home is a Queen Anne and Shingle Style house built in 1905.  The property was carved from the extensive holdings of Charles D. Ellis.  This house is historically significant as a modest, inland version of the more substantial summer cottages that were being built near Marion’s shores during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.  It was built at about the same time that Point Road was extended to Ruggles Point.

Solar Power Lights up ConCom Agenda

            Solar energy fueled the meeting of the Rochester Conservation Commission on September 17, even if the majority of the agenda items were simply to confirm the wetlands lines of properties slated for future solar energy projects.

            Five of the seven applicants that night were solar developers looking to confirm a collective 26,273 linear feet of wetland lines – over 4.5 miles – an awful lot for one conservation agent to walk and review herself. And with one solar developer with three separate Abbreviated Notice of Resource Area Delineation filings and a desire to have them approved sooner rather than later, it was time to hire a peer-review wetlands scientist to assist.

            The three ANRAD applications filed by Joe Harrison, SunRaise Investments, LLC – all continued from August 20 – were again continued until October 15 to give Conservation Agent Laurell Farinon enough time to traverse all those linear feet before the commission can approve the wetlands lines. Julie Goodwin from Prime Engineering said she understood that it would take some time to review the lines – 2,900 feet at 0 Braley Hill Road, 5,423 feet at 0 Featherbed Lane, and 4,000 feet at 0 Snipatuit Road – and offered up a check for $3,000 for Farinon to hire a consultant to take on some of the work.

            The three applications are all for the same wetlands system. Goodwin pointed out that she herself has not yet walked the wetlands at 0 Snipatuit Road, so she is unsure of the density of those wetlands.

            Being realistic, Farinon said, the job would certainly be completed faster if she had peer-review consultant John Rockwell’s help at 0 Featherbed Lane to “get this buttoned-up” as soon as possible.

            “I know that they want it done quickly… so it’s an opportunity to use John [Rockwell] before he goes away and it helps everybody,” said Farinon.

            The three ANRAD hearings were continued until October 15.

            The ANRAD public hearing for SWEB Development, LLC was re-opened in order to allow Sara Rosenblat of Weston and Sampson to submit an updated wetlands line for approval in the form of a wetland comparison map showing where the changes occurred. The date of the plan she brought forth, however, did not match the date stamped on the plan, which was prior to the date listed on the updated plan.

            The commission asked her to resubmit a plan with consistent dates, “And that’s all we need,” said Chairman Michael Conway.

            The owner of the property, Craig Canning of Rochester Farms, LLC, is planning on leasing his agricultural land as the site for the largest megawatt output solar energy field in Rochester.

            The public hearing as continued until October 1.

            Continued from September 3, the ANRAD filed by Erica Buster and Simpson Solar, LLC for 102 Quaker Lane to confirm 10,100 linear feet of bordering vegetated wetland and 1,600 linear feet of a riverfront area was also continued until October 1.

            Aside from being unable to confirm some of the flags that continue on past the Acushnet town line, the application brought up the matter of issuing a standard for wetlands flagging in Rochester pertaining to flag color and flag quality. The commission needs to consider a standard, Farinon said, “…so there’s no discrepancy.”

            In other business, the commission issued a Negative Determination (no Notice of Intent filing required) for the Request for Determination of Applicability filed by Tim Lynch, 257 Walnut Plain Road, to demolish a collapsed barn and install a 14’x36’ shed within the 100-foot buffer zone of the wetlands.

            Daniel Paradis, 443 Neck Road, received a Positive Determination (work will alter but not impact the resource area) for his RDA to raze a single-family cottage and construct a new single-family house with a new septic system and associated work within the 100-foot buffer zone of wetlands along Snipatuit Pond. The plan, updated since the September 3 meeting, was corrected to redirect work outside of the 25-foot no-touch zone.

            The next meeting of the Rochester Conservation Commission is scheduled for October 1 at 7:00 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

Rochester Conservation Commission

By Jean Perry

All Hands & Hearts Around the World

            There are many hands and hearts in the little town of Mattapoisett, Massachusetts. Hands that wave with a friendly ‘hello’ and thousands of hearts inside these 18 square miles that beat with a love for this town and are full with compassion during times of struggle.

            We all watched earlier this month as Hurricane Dorian slowly churned in the Atlantic and hoped that the storm would no more than graze us as it moved northeast in our direction. We saw the destruction left in its wake as it battered the Bahamas and we were struck by the footage that accompanied the headlines in the storm’s aftermath. We clasped our hands in prayer and hoped with our hearts for a quick recovery.

            But then our attention turned toward another direction. Dorian swept itself out to sea and dissipated. The Bahamas disappeared from the headlines. Our hands became busy with other things and our hearts were again occupied with matters closer to home – but not for ‘all hands and hearts’ in Mattapoisett.

            You’ve probably driven past the nondescript office along Route 6 in Mattapoisett a hundred times, perhaps even during the week after Dorian devastated the Bahamas, and saw the sign “All Hands and Hearts” without realizing its significance. Regardless, situated in that small, inconspicuous plaza is a hub of international relief efforts that is mobilizing hands and hearts from all over the world to send to the Bahamas just as the rest of us have nearly stopped thinking about it.

            The non-profit organization All Hands and Hearts has its headquarters in Mattapoisett and is overseen by Mattapoisett resident and CEO Erik Dyson, Dyson and his team are the first-responders of sorts whenever disaster strikes somewhere on the globe. When a natural disaster devastates an area, Dyson and his team organize the deployment of some 50 to 60 volunteers every day to survey and assess the damage. Their disaster response is the critical first step after the storm for a place like the Abacos Islands, the region hit the hardest on the island chain nation of the Bahamas.

            Last week, the volunteers made their initial assessment of the islands to ascertain the areas that need the most help and how to begin to provide support. As Dyson put it, All Hands and hearts “arrive early and stay late,” sometimes even years after the impact. Disaster response happens in phases, said Dyson. Phase 1 is the “cleaning up, mucking and gutting, removing debris…

            “Which, of course, there’s lots of debris to be dealt with,” said Dyson.

            There’s tarping of roofs, schools, and medical posts, “And, really, just listening to the community on where the short-term goals are,” said Dyson. And it’s often done without clean running water or reliable electricity amidst relative chaos and shock. These volunteers’ hands do the dirty work, the cleanup.

            The initial team figures out where rescue planes can land when airports are badly damaged, and where they can set up a base of operations to welcome more volunteers – dozens that arrive every day from different countries, including the U.S. The team works with local NGOs to understand the areas of highest need.

            “Based upon the needs we hear, then we send an assessment team to do a detailed outline of the scope of work, the budget of the materials needed,” said Dyson. The cleanup phase alone can take months, sometimes three to four and, in the case of the Bahamas post-Dorian, four to five months, even.

            “It’s such an extreme impact level of damage,” said Dyson. “But then we’ll transition to long-term recovery beyond the ‘taking-apart’ phase – the phase of rebuilding.”

            The Abacos Islands will need schools, houses, medical posts, community centers, evacuation centers, all its community infrastructure rebuilt after Dorian. And there are still other devastated areas – Puerto Rico, the Florida panhandle, Mozambique, the Philippines, and Nepal, to name a few – where that rebuilding is still taking place years later.

            All Hands and Hearts will likely spend two years rebuilding in an area affected by a natural disaster. The goal in The Bahamas is to help at least 2,500 people by mobilizing a minimum of 1,000 volunteers. But to succeed, it will also need to raise around $5 million. It takes a lot of money to rebuild, and in the case of the Bahamas, an island nation, it’s already expensive to import building materials even without the added disruption of the supply chain.

            Mattapoisett is where it begins with the help of the local hands and hearts the organization employs at its headquarters, the people that perform the administrative duties, financial matters, human resources, and public outreach. Sometimes, though, it’s the local people who arrive at ground zero to assess, like one seasoned “logistics guy” from New Bedford that has assisted in many assignments, said Dyson. This one, however, was different. “He was struck by just the absolute destruction,” Dyson said.

            Right now, there are no operating gas stations, no baseline infrastructure, nothing.

            “It’s still really slow getting started because it’s – there’s just nothing there,” said Dyson. “It’s not just shut down, it’s gone.”

            In disasters like this, about 80 percent of the funding to rebuild is raised during the first 60 days before interest fades. “It’s already happening,” Dyson lamented. “Initial interest is high… but now, a week later, it’s fallen off the news…This is something that will take five or more years for the community to get back to normal and we’re already in week two and we’re seeing a huge drop off in interest.”

            This goes not just for money, but for volunteers, too. There was a huge interest in volunteering, said Dyson, with around 5,000 signing up, but they will need about 1,000 steady volunteers a year in the Bahamas. “It’s always a challenge,” said Dyson, when that interest starts to wane months into the efforts.

            This is where the rest of the hands and hearts of Mattapoisett come in – the volunteers and people of the Abacos need your hands; they need your hearts.

            Please considering making a donation to All Hands and Hearts, or consider taking a chance on volunteering. No skills are required, the group will teach you everything. You can make a donation or apply to volunteer (it’s a rather quick process) by visiting their website www.allhandsandhearts.org.

            Although water, food, and clothing drives are often a response to an effort such as this, monetary donations or volunteering are the best ways to help. It’s expensive to ship material goods abroad and ineffective compared to the power of an express donation of money, of any amount.

            Dyson urges his neighbors to follow the organizations efforts by visiting the website or signing up for updates. “Also, please think about other places with impacts that aren’t obvious on the front pages, but are affected,” said Dyson. “Those people need our help.”

By Jean Perry