MFD Offers Safety Tips

As part of National Fire Prevention Week, Chief Brian Jackvony and the Marion Fire Department would like to provide cooking safety tips and are also encouraging everyone to create a home escape plan in the event of a fire.

            National Fire Prevention Week, organized by the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) begins this year on Sunday, October 4, and ends on Saturday, October 10. The annual campaign seeks to educate and provide the public with valuable safety recommendations and steps they can take to prevent possible fires and react properly in the event of a fire.

            The theme of the 2020 National Fire Prevention Week is “Serve Up Fire Safety in the Kitchen!” in an effort to remind people of simple but important steps to take in the kitchen to prevent fires and injuries.

            According to the NFPA, cooking is the leading cause of home fires and home fire injuries in the United States. Unattended cooking is the main cause of kitchen fires and almost two-thirds of home cooking fires start with the ignition of food or other cooking materials.

            The NFPA estimates that from 2014-18, U.S. fire departments responded to approximately 172,900 home cooking fires per year. These incidents caused a yearly average of 550 civilian deaths, 4,820 civilian fire injuries, and approximately $1 billion in property damage.

            The Marion Fire Department wishes to share the following safety tips provided by the NFPA:

Cooking:

            -Stand by your pan when cooking. Do not leave food, grease or oils cooking on the stove unattended.

            -If you are simmering, baking, roasting, or boiling food, check it regularly, and use a timer to remind yourself that you’re cooking.

            -Remain in the home while using the stove or oven. If you have to leave, turn the appliance off.

            -Keep pot handles turned inward to prevent accidental spills of hot contents.

            -Keep flammable objects such as potholders, towels, paper, or plastic bags away from heating elements.

            -Create a three-foot “child-free zone” around the stove. Keep children and pets away from the stove while cooking to prevent burns and scalds.

            -Avoid wearing loose-hanging clothing that can catch fire. If your clothing catches fire, stop, drop, and roll to put out flames.

            -Never discharge a portable fire extinguisher into a grease fire. Put a lid on a grease fire to smother it, then turn off the heat. Baking soda will also work.

            -For fires inside an oven or microwave, keep the door closed, turn off the appliance, and call the fire department.

            -In the event of a fire, leave the building immediately and call 911. All fires and burns, regardless of size, should be reported to the fire department.

Home fire escape planning and practice:

            -Create a home escape plan, and make a map. Share that plan with all members of your household. Designate a minimum of two ways to get out of each room, if possible.

            -Teach children how they can escape, should they need to get out of the home on their own.

            -Designate an outside meeting place a safe distance away from the home where everyone in your household should meet in the event of a fire.

Drive-Through Flu Clinic Set for October 8

            With a light agenda, the Marion Board of Health moved quickly through its October 4 meeting.

Board members heard from Chairperson Dr. Edward Hoffer that work would be beginning soon for emergency sheltering planning once the Police Department set a schedule to begin training.

            Both Board of Health Agent David Flaherty and Public Health Nurse Lori Desmarais stated that a trial run for the upcoming drive-through flu clinic went well with town employees. The public drive-through flu clinic is scheduled for Thursday, October 8, from 1:00 pm to 4:00 pm and will be held at the Community Center.

            Desmarais also commented that meetings with the school nurses had gone well and that they were prepared with everything in place to handle suspect COVID-19 cases. Hoffer asked about the process if a child shows symptoms of illness. Desmarais said the child is removed from the school with the parents instructed to seek private treatment and as-necessary COVID-19 testing.

            Regarding Tabor Academy, Desmarais said that testing had gone well and, overall, Marion does not currently have any active COVID-19 cases.

            The recent closing of Cumberland Farms was briefly discussed with Desmarais stating that she had worked with the company and staff for contact tracing. Retesting of employees came back negative, she said. She also confirmed that she had not received any food-service complaints.

            Flaherty said that on September 24 oral rabies vaccine baiting had taken place via the distribution of fish pellets. He said that domesticated animals, the family cats, and dogs, might get a little stomach upset if they ingested the pellets, but that the medication would not harm them.

            On the matter of the new requirement for denitrification systems for new septic systems, Flaherty confirmed that applicants were being advised of the new regulations and most were already aware of the system changes.

            Calling them “our problem children,” Flaherty said of 464 Front Street, a property previously condemned and slated for demolition, “We can’t do anything until December, but I’ve made regular visits.” He said in spite of the Board of Health involvement and legal action, not much clean-up had taken place. “I baited heavily over there because of the critters,” he said. Hoffer said he would reach out to the property owner’s attorney.

            Regarding 26 Pitcher Street, Flaherty said that clean-up had begun, but that 33 Pitcher Street notifications had yet to yield responses from property owners.

The next meeting of the Marion Board of Health was not yet scheduled.

Marion Board of Health

By Marilou Newell

Marion Art Center Exhibit – A Narrative of Beauty

            The Marion Art Center has once again brought together works of art that could also be called works of wonder. The current exhibit, which opened on October 2 and runs through November 7, features maritime paintings, primarily watercolors, by Mike Mazer and bronze sculptures by Erik Durant. From light and air, pigments and water, earth’s metals and fire, these artists have executed narratives of the human condition albeit in very contrasting ways.

            Reflecting on his long career in medicine and these past decades as a painter, Mazer quietly and gently leads the listener through what can only be described as a triumph of the spirit. From his early years in a tough neighborhood, medical school, and military service, Mazer has achieved what others can only dream of – total accomplishment.

            After an extraordinary medical career that found Mazer holding the position of chief of Cardiology and chief of Nephrology at Cardinal Cushing and Goddard Memorial Hospitals, he later became an associate professor at Boston University and an instructor in medicine at Harvard Medical School. “I still read medical journals,” he recently confessed. “I had to squeeze in painting for the 30 years I was practicing medicine,” Mazer said. In 1997 he became a fulltime professional artist.

            The list of museums and permanent installations featuring Mazer’s works is nothing short of impressive. From the American Society of Marine Artists to the 2019 Coos Art Museum exhibit in Oregon to the International Society of Marine Painters, Mazer’s paintings have been juried earning him 110 major awards. Most notably, Mazer pointed to his appointment to the Board of Directors of the American Artists Professional League as the first signature member elected in many decades. Only 13 of the 600 members of the AAPL have achieved signature membership. The USCG has many Mazers in their permanent collection, as does Massachusetts Maritime Academy. Experts agree that Mazer is one of US’s most esteemed realistic watercolorists.

            Maritime themes are a favorite for Mazer but are not exclusive; he has done portraits, landscapes, and buildings, many commissioned pieces throughout his career. “It’s the feeling that I paint,” Mazer replied when asked what draws him to a subject matter. “It’s instinctive – I sketch first in pencil, then I paint. … When I’m taking care of a patient, I’ve got to know precisely what I need to do – 100 percent, no guessing. As a realistic painter, that precision carries through.”

            One could say that being a watercolorist is as unforgiving an effort as mending a sick body. You either get it right or you don’t. Mazer gets it right. There are 30 opportunities now gracing the MAC gallery walls for you to experience the precision and awesome beauty of a Mazer watercolor.

            Topping 10 pedestals positioned throughout the two gallery spaces are bronze sculptures done by Durant, known for both his commissioned and studio works. He is also a professor of Fine Art at Bristol Community College.

            Durant’s commissioned pieces may be found in New Bedford home to the Fisherman’s Tribute, The Squid, and the Tom Lopes memorial statue. Soon to be unveiled at Marion’s Bicentennial Park will be the recently completed Elizabeth Taber statue.

            When the Wanderer caught up with Durant he was juggling the rigors of moving house, teaching and chasing after a toddler, breathless but willing to share his artistic insights.

            “I’ve had a long-standing interest in narrative. When I did the fisherman’s tribute I could relate to the human story as a father,” he shared. “I bring myself to this process, I observe the world … art is the expression of the human condition.

            “There are universal concepts, family for instance, whether it’s a good family or not. … So much art in the past 30 years hasn’t been narrative. It’s enjoying a renaissance, it’s a cycle, but right now it’s on a high note.”

            This quest for the narrative is why one will see mythological figures and themes in Durant’s studio work. There is also the exploration of bondage both put upon the human form by society as seen in his Prometheus statue or emoting from the body itself as in Pandora.

            Sculpting in bronze is a painstaking process of first sketching from life, then, for Durant, making what he calls “clay gestures” again from life. He said that by using life models he can capture the body’s movements, surfaces, expressive elements not available from merely a photograph.

            The Durant sculptures are strong, grounded pieces depicting the human form while glorious in its raw physicality; it’s also fragile in its spiritual struggles. You’ll find Pandora, who isn’t gaily receiving gifts from gods but instead with her arms and legs, seemingly keeping her from doing the very thing she’s been told not to do – open the jar. Yet at the bottom of all the evils the jar holds, there remains hope. That could be a metaphor for all we collectively have been dealing with in 2020, with hope ever-present in our thoughts.

            The Mazur and Durant exhibition is sure to quench your thirst for art in unexpected and glorious ways, and gives one hope that better days are coming because art thrives.

            The Marion Art Center gallery is open Thursday through Saturday from 10:00 am to 2:00 pm and by appointment on Tuesday and Wednesday. Visit marionartcenter.org.

By Marilou Newell

Falmouth Academy Community Series

The Falmouth Academy Community Series kicks off its 2020-21 season virtually on October 8, at 7:00 pm by welcoming back former faculty member Clare Beams, author of the novel The Illness Lesson, named a New York Times Editors’ Choice selection and the collection of short stories, We Show What We Have Learned that won the Bard Fiction Prize and was a Kirkus Best Debut in 2016. Beams will read from her debut novel and then have a conversation with Falmouth Academy English teacher, Monica Hough about her career and writing process. The event is pre-recorded and will air locally via various community television stations including FCTV, ORCTV, CC Community Media Ctr, Mashpee TV, Sandwich Community Television. It will also be available on FA’s Facebook page and YouTube Channel.

            Since the start of the pandemic, Falmouth Academy has become rather adept at pivoting current live programming to virtual without sacrificing quality and the Community Series, sponsored in part by the Woods Hole Foundation, will bring online six virtual events this year for the benefit of the wider community. The early success of the pilot series of Postcards to Seniors last spring, which was produced in collaboration with Falmouth Academy and FCTV, laid a foundation for adapting the annual Spring Art Showcase and Concert, the Auction Under the Stars, and even the current hybrid model that brings both onsite and remote learning to grades 7 through 12. The series’ virtual format will open with an original score written by Falmouth Academy senior James Goldbach of Plymouth accompanied by drone footage shot by sophomore Marcus Greco. 

            The upcoming Community Series lineup includes a presentation by Amherst College professor of history and environmental science, Dr. Ted Melillo, who will be interviewed by Science Department Chair and Geologist Liz Klein in November. They will discuss Melillo’s second book, The Butterfly Effect: Insects and the Making of the Modern World, which explores the interesting and surprising ways insects shape and sustain our modern way of life.  In December, Falmouth Academy Music Director George Scharr will team up with Steinway Artist and Smithsonian Scholar Robert Wyatt–both delightful showmen– for musical musings of the season with Scharr on Cape Cod and Wyatt in Vermont. Wyatt, one of the foremost experts on George Gershwin, will discuss his discovery of several unpublished piano preludes of Gershwin that eventually led to his co-editing The George Gershwin Reader, published in 2004 by Oxford University Press. 

            Information about the Falmouth Academy Community Series can be found on the school website, falmouthacademy.org/community, and on its Facebook page. Inaugurated in 2001 with an interview with Atlantic correspondent Robert Kaplan, other speakers have included NPR’s Bill Littlefield, host of Only A Game; former CBS Moscow Bureau chief, Dr. Beth Knobel; and Robert H. Pelletreau, former Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs. The lectures, which celebrate community, are partially funded by the Woods Hole Foundation.

Rochester Senior Center

The Rochester Senior Center and Friends of the Rochester Senior Center would like to thank the generous people who donated items and volunteered at the Craft Supply Sale, with special thanks to Cecelia Hall.  The Craft Supply Sale was a great success because of all of you and your efforts.  

            The Greater Boston Food Bank’s monthly food pick-up is Wednesday, October 14 from 12:00 to 4:00 pm. Please contact the Rochester Senior Center to sign-up for this free program. Just a reminder, food items should be picked up by the person registered for the program unless other arrangements have been made in advance. Due to COVID 19, pick-up is curbside. Food insecurity is on the rise in eastern Massachusetts. This program is in place to help. Food items often include fresh fruit and vegetables, cereals, canned soups and stews, canned vegetables, pancake mix, and oatmeal. 

            The COA Board meeting will be held on Wednesday at 9:00 am at the Senior Center and via zoom. It will be followed by the Friends of the Rochester Senior Center meeting at 10:00 am, also at the Senior Center and via zoom.

            Early voting for the November 3 Presidential Election for residents of Rochester will be held on the following dates and times; October 17 and 18 (Saturday and Sunday) from 10:00 am to 12:00 pm, October 19 through 22 (Monday through Thursday) from 8:30 am to 12:00 pm, October 24 and 25 (Saturday and Sunday) from 10:00 am to 12:00 pm, October 26 through 29 (Monday through Thursday) from 8:30 am to 12:00 pm. Early voting does not require advanced sign-up. You may be asked to show an identification that contains your name and address. 

SLT Reservation System for Osprey Marsh

Sippican Lands Trust will change its reservation system for visits to the Osprey Marsh Accessible Boardwalk in Marion starting Sunday, October 11 with reservations only required on Sundays of any given week. Monday through Saturday will be open for visitors to walk the Osprey Marsh Accessible Boardwalk, and those days of the week will not require a reservation to visit the boardwalk.

            Sippican Lands Trust introduced its popular reservation system on June 4 to keep visitors safe during Covid-19 including those visitors using wheelchairs, strollers, or walkers. To make an appointment to visit the Osprey Marsh Accessible Boardwalk for an hour appointment on Sundays of any given week please visit sippicanlandstrust.setmore.com. Please wear a mask and practice social distancing when exploring the Osprey Marsh Accessible Boardwalk during any visit.

            SLT’s 1,800’ Osprey Marsh Universally Accessible Boardwalk is located on Point Road in Marion. This project builds on the generous donation by members of the Smoyer/Howland family of the 20-acre Osprey Marsh property of forest and marshland on Planting Island Cove. The project has been designed to minimize environmental impact and to maximize accessibility for infants in strollers, older adults, and persons with mobility impairments, including those in wheelchairs. The universally accessible boardwalk proceeds from the Osprey Marsh parking area through maritime forest, wetlands, and fragile salt marsh habitat to a viewing platform overlooking Planting Island Cove.

            Numerous SLT donors, members, and friends have stepped up to support this project including a $38,000 grant from the Town of Marion’s Community Preservation Commission for project design and permitting. This 1,800’ universally accessible boardwalk was designed by Peter Jensen and built by local contractors, W.S. Bradford and Sherman Briggs.

            Sippican Lands Trust continues to seek donations from the public to support the long-term maintenance of this boardwalk. More information about the project and how to support it can be found at sippicanlandstrust.org/2017/10/osprey-marsh-boardwalk-project/.

Town’s Think-Tank Wading Through Infrastructural Issues

            Marion officials hear the clock ticking as they try to rewrite a backstory of inherited water/sewer problems that collectively sound like the fumbles, lateral passes and other desperate improvisations typical of the final play of a football game – maneuvers that go in many directions, but rarely to the end zone.

            The town’s Water and Sewer Commissioners held their first quarterly meeting on September 24 at the Music Hall. The commissioners are also the Board of Selectmen: Chairperson Randy Parker, Vice Chairman John Waterman, and Clerk Norm Hills.

            Waterman explained his reasoning for initiating the meeting: “It was my feeling that as sewer and water commissioners we were not really getting regular updates on what was happening,” he said. “Also, I think it’s good for the public to hear how those projects are going so we’re going to give this a try for a year.”

            Approving bills and passing judgment on meter readings still left the selectmen lacking a platform to focus on major infrastructural projects, such as the wastewater treatment plant and planned upgrades to key stretches of water-main piping. So the commissioners, along with Town Administrator Jay McGrail, Department of Public Works Director David Willett, DPW engineer Meghan Davis, T.J. Walker from the Marion Board of Assessors, Rochester Water Commission member and longtime associate Fred Underhill, and interested citizens including local builder Sherman Briggs batted around a number of topics.

            McGrail acknowledged the former Water Committee including Underhill and the recently retired David Pierce.

            In an update, Davis reported that the new water main on Mill Street has been installed and is in the process of chlorination and yielding samples. Davis said the water main will come online in four sections beginning in November and should be completed in the spring of 2021. Paving will occur in patches over the work. McGrail said the project came in under budget.

            Davis reported on progress with a new, 12-inch water main designed by engineering firm Tata & Howard for Delano and Point roads. The existing water main (6 and 8 inches) will be abandoned in place, and the Conservation Commission has issued an Order of Conditions for the project.

            Waterman said the timing of the projects will be key for the town’s financial activities. McGrail said the Capital Improvement Planning Committee (CIPC) schedule will come out in a month, and the town can more effectively decide on how to move forward with the projects.

            Davis addressed planned upgrades to a combined pump station at the Mary’s Pond well field, in which a new building will replace an existing one that will be demolished.

            Waterman asked Davis what happens if a well goes down and how much reserve capacity would the town have, especially in peak summer months. Davis said she and Willett are evaluating different scenarios. They are also identifying hydrants needing maintenance and prioritizing work according to need. Work is expected to commence in the spring. Davis is also working with the Mattapoisett River Valley Water District Commission, taking over Willett’s treasurer role that will see her review monthly invoicing and prepare a year-end budget.

            When the floor was opened for public comment, Briggs asked Davis if she knows why it took so long to get satisfactory tests on the sections of water-main pipe that were installed on Mill Street. Davis said means and methods are left up to the contractor so a number of factors could be in play.

            Briggs then delved into a number of matters related to water production, along with his own take on a history of mismanagement. “These … mistakes that were made is why we’re all here today, and I’m concerned about we don’t keep making the same mistake,” he said, referencing miles of pipe from Benson Brook out to Mattapoisett only to fall 8 feet short of a connection.

            Briggs asked if Marion’s lone remaining well has the potential to be worth a rebuild. Davis confirmed that the well is running but not performing up to its capability. “The well field … it needs to be rehabbed again for it to reach its maximum capacity,” she said.

            Willett added to that conversation, referencing a Tata & Howard report that shows the well to be permitted for 280,000 gallons per day. Meantime, Marion is producing close to 900,000 gallons per day from other sources, an amount Willett estimates will almost double at the completion of planned facility upgrades. “We have plenty of producing power and we can also borrow from MRV if we need to,” he said. “It’s certainly something I can ask Tata & Howard about.”

            Underhill discussed Rochester’s ongoing withdrawal from a water association with the City of New Bedford, which uses at least half of its 20,000,000 gallon, per-day limit. He said Rochester is “upset” that New Bedford will see its permit renewed “pretty much intact.” Rochester has also negotiated a 5,000 gallon-per-day increase in its association with Wareham to accommodate the large development planned for the intersection of routes 28 and 58.

            Recognizing the potential end of his representation in meetings with Marion, Underhill said, “I think we’ve worked very well together and kind of stemmed some of the misunderstandings that have gone on in the past between the two towns.” Marion’s commissioners returned his sentiments, and Underhill exited the meeting.

            In his Water and Sewer Update, McGrail said residents are unhappy with recent rate increases.

            “I think it’s important for us to explain to the public where those increases came from,” he said, referencing Marion’s two enterprise funds. “If we have a negative amount in the enterprise funds (at the end of the year), we need to subsidize it through the tax rate.”

            Marion, says McGrail, has struggled the past few years to maintain a balanced budget and that the increases made during that time have been just enough to balance the water/sewer budget. Of the 2,500 homes in Marion, 1,700 receive sewer bills.

            That does not, however, address $10,000,000 in debt taken on by homeowners over a one-year period that McGrail said came with an enforcement order to line the lagoon. “That’s absolutely staggering,” he said. “We went over $8,000,000 in sewer debt and over $2,000,000 in water debt in one year. We haven’t fully funded that yet; the projects are both underway and are moving forward.

            “The water project’s close to completion by the end of this calendar year, and it looks like the sewer project will be to completion. But people really need to understand – you talk about, you just do the math – I mean you’re spreading $10,000,000 over 2,500 people. … That impact is tough, that’s a really tough thing to manage.”

            Upgrading the wastewater treatment plant and getting the town’s water production operating up to its potential add to the expense, but they would be necessary for the town to accommodate the large developments proposed by area builders that would ultimately add the ratepayers that would ultimately contribute to the water/sewer’s financial solvency.

            McGrail says Marion’s water enterprise fund (savings account) is healthier than its sewer counterpart. “What happened over the last few years is the town got in a position where we were taking some of our retained earnings and utilizing them to subsidize the rates, to lower the impact on the ratepayers. And, by doing that, we eliminated on the sewer side all of our retained earnings. So now we have no cushion, we have no way of being able to deal with a capital project other than putting it on the ratepayers and raising rates.

            “So, on the sewer side … if I have a $300,000 capital project, I need to raise rates to be able to fund that because I’m not going to borrow $300,000 for that. That’s not a great strategy, the better strategy would be to build up enough retained earnings that you can fund smaller capital projects with retained earnings and not have to raise rates consistently to do those smaller projects.”

            The water side, McGrail says, has some retained earnings. “But you look at the debt in the water operation, our fixed costs are the debt and the supplies and the services,” he said. McGrail said Marion needs to look at other measures to avoid paying 50 percent of incoming revenue to debt service. Staffing counts for 14 percent of the operating cost. McGrail blames debt for rising rates.

            “For a small town, it’s got significant infrastructure issues. It’s a really hard situation for us to be in,” said McGrail. “I wish there was a magic bullet, and what we’re looking at, trying to figure out a way to bring in more ratepayers, is really the only solution that I can come up with. Otherwise, we just have to bond more projects, and it just gets worse. … And if we don’t, if we just stick our heads in the sand, then what are we doing there?”

            Waterman agreed that projects like the Heron Cove residential development can add more users but also noted that the sewer system “with only 1,700 ratepayers” becomes more costly to accommodate more users.

            Walker doesn’t think increasing the number of ratepayers will make the required dent. “If you put in a thousand condominiums and charge them the highest rate, it’s not going to bail us out so I think we really have to quickly move because other folks around us are moving and, if we wait for all these studies, I think we’re in a pickle,” he said. “We have some residents that their water and sewer bill is more than their real-estate taxes, and it’s growing incrementally.

            “For those folks, they’re not really interested in hearing we’re going to sort of turn down the spigot or we’re going to adjust some rates, they want to know when relief is coming. And, I think if you boil down to it, we’re going to have to look into bringing in some outside water. It’s cheaper, it’s more effective, and I don’t understand why we’re not having that discussion.”

            Walker said Wareham has millions of gallons of water that Marion could access at lower rates, but Willett insists Marion has enough water, and what is failing is the means of getting it to the customers. “That infrastructure is so old and so antiquated, that’s what these capital costs are going for,” he said.

            Waterman said the town needs to make the infrastructural upgrades regardless because they have been neglected. “Once (facilities at) east and west are up and Mary’s Pond are up, we have the existing capacity to meet that need,” he said. “Regardless of whether we get the water out of Wareham or the wells, we’re still going to have to spend that money to upgrades the mains because we didn’t keep up on it.”

            According to Waterman, the water main on Route 6 in the Heron Cove area is undersized as well as the aforementioned locations. Perhaps more importantly in the long term, he said that the town’s newest water mains date back to 1970, are asbestos-lined and have a life expectancy of 50-70 years so the town needs to replace water mains all over town, not in just a few urgent locations.

            Waterman says Marion has been relying the past few years on two wells – two to three others are down – and the town is studying a potential emergency hookup into Wareham that would cost $700,000 to $1,000,000. Norm Hills cautioned that such an enormous investment would result in Wareham wanting water from Marion as well. Waterman said Underhill advised him to clear any such arrangement with Rochester because that is Marion’s water source.

            McGrail said that, without the Mill Street project, Marion’s water-rate increase would have remained in single digits. Meantime, by spring 2021 the town will have repaired 15 hydrants inside of a year.

            In his update on town sewer, Willett said the wastewater treatment plant is on schedule and off-budget only by $59,000 in change orders so far. The INI project mainly in the village area is also on schedule. Willett reported a $225,000 grant for Creek Road lift station. Other area projects are increasing in budget costs.

            Parker said he and McGrail have discussed issuing a pamphlet explaining the big water/sewer picture to the townspeople.

            The commissioners agreed with McGrail to maintain the agenda structure, but the schedule for the next quarterly meeting was not set.

Marion Water and Sewer Commissioners

By Mick Colageo

Robert A. Simmons

Robert A. Simmons, 84, of Mattapoisett passed away on Monday, October 5, 2020 after a period of declining health.  He was the husband of Marlene A. (Newberg) Simmons, with whom he shared 65 years of marriage.

            Born in Pawtucket, RI, he was the son of the late William and Beatrice (Adams) Simmons.

            Bob was a graduate of Pawtucket East High School, class of 1954, where he was a member of the New England Champion Swim Team.  He went on to serve as a Staff Sergeant in the U.S. Air Force during the Korean War. After his discharge from the service he attended the University of Rhode Island, graduating in 1963.  He then began his teaching career in Dartmouth where he was as a physical education teacher and track and cross country coach for 34 years. During the summer months he worked as assistant camp director at YMCA Camp Massasoit.

            He was a member of the Mattapoisett Congregational Church, SAR, the Pythagorean Lodge AF & AM, the MBBA of Cape Cod, Board of Directors of Sippican Rod & Gun Club, and Boy Scout Troop 53 in Mattapoisett.

            Bob enjoyed the company of his black labs over the years starting with Kizzy, then Molly, Daisy, and lastly Misty.

            He is survived by his wife, Marlene; his son, Robert Simmons, Jr. and his wife Debbie of New Hampshire; two daughters, Robin Mayo of Mattapoisett and Laurie Simmons of Davis, CA; five grandchildren, Lindsay Tentindo and her husband Dr. Greg Tentindo of Missouri, Kate Simmons of New Hampshire; Erin Mayo and her finace Keith Pedro of Fairhaven; Sarah White and her husband Mike of New Hampshire; and Nicholas Mayo and his partner Jennifer of Mattapoisett; five great-grandchildren, Avery Rose of Fairhaven, Sloane and Reagan of Missouri, Adriana of Mattapoisett, and Natalie of New Hampshire.

            He was predeceased by his brother, William Simmons of Cumberland, RI.

            Bob’s family would like to thank the staff at The Oaks Skilled Nursing Facility for their kindness and special care.

            Services will be held privately. In lieu of flowers, donations in Bob’s name may be made to the National MS Society, 101A First Ave., Waltham, MA 02451 or the Mattapoisett Congregational Church, P.O. Box 284, Mattapoisett, MA 02739. For online guestbook, visit www.saundersdwyer.com.

Competition Heating Up for Top Subs

            Substitute teachers will earn more money in Old Rochester Regional district schools after the Joint School Committee / Superintendents Union No. 55 approved a pay raise during its September 24 Zoom meeting.

            “This is just making sure that we’re comparable (with surrounding school districts),” said Assistant Superintendent of Finance and Operations Howie Barber, stressing that the committee’s approval does not lock ORR into a particular rate schedule in every case. “These increases are only for the fiscal year 20-21.”

            Citing the uncertainties that accompany the COVID-19 pandemic, Barber noted that FY22 could see ORR under more normal circumstances go back to its former rates. ORR’s last rate increase for substitute teachers took place on September 28, 2018. Barber cited Fairhaven as a comparable district in direct competition. Fairhaven posted in August $165 and $115 for various positions. ORR plans to use rates according to different positions.

            After inquiring with Benefits/Human Resources Coordinator Susana Cunningham, Barber reported that 26 substitute teachers committed to coming back to ORR, while 39 for various reasons cannot and approximately 28 remain questionable for the 2020-21 academic year.

            “We would hate to lose out on those in a competitive market,” said Superintendent of Schools Mike Nelson. “We have a pretty good sense to this point where we stand with our staffing… pretty close right now… but we don’t know what tomorrow brings.”

            Nelson says that ORR has been aggressive and will need intensify that effort. “We don’t want to wait too long before we get more aggressive in increasing our pool,” he said, citing the potential for school becoming fully reopened.

            Region-side committee member Heather Burke asked why the per-diem is so substantial for certified substitute teachers. Barber responded by pointing to the 45 days of service that premium or certified substitutes complete and ORR’s dependence on their ability to teach Honors or Advanced Placement courses. Barber noted that the hybrid plan is saving ORR money overall and that the district is trying to be mindful not to overspend. “But top subs (are) one of those areas,” he said.

            Union-side Chairperson Shannon Finning asked Nelson if he can “include how much (substitute teachers) are being used so we can understand the budget implications?” Nelson said he would do so and that Finning’s request makes sense.

            Nelson had hoped by Friday, September 25, to advertise ORR’s new rates. Finning suggested reaching out to Bridgewater State University, UMass Dartmouth, and area colleges. Region-side member Frances Kearns suggested statewide or area teachers associations and the National Society of Black Engineers. “It’s a great opportunity to reach out to that group as well,” she said.

            Both sides voted unanimously to approved the increase in the rate schedule for substitute teachers for the 2020-21 academic year.

            Early numbers are in: As the ORR School District opened to students on September 16 on a hybrid basis, families retained the option of choosing a remote-only return to school for 2020-21. Remote-only students accounted for: Center School 17, Old Hammondtown 7, Sippican 60, Rochester Memorial 65, ORRJH 44, and ORRHS 77. Nelson reported an increase in homeschooling with some district schools up 30 percent.

            Devoll reported that, since September 16 (opening day), five high school students have opted from hybrid to remote, while 12 have opted to go from full remote to hybrid. The changes are immediate. Devoll said some schools around the state have a three-week waiting period. “We want families to be able to make a decision immediately,” he said.

            Policy was a hot topic in the September 24 meeting, and while Nelson told the committee, “We’re in a great place from a (personal protective equipment) standpoint… The students have been remarkable as far as compliance… I know that was a big concern for many people when school opened,” the policy around face coverings bears continued attention.

            In reviewing the facemask policy, region-side committee member Tina Rood cited the section in which “expressive language” is prohibited and asked if the facemask policy is the same as the existing dress code. Nelson said he is working on an addendum for the next meeting’s consideration.

            Region-side member Margaret McSweeny asked for an explanation on the removal of face shields from the policy. Nelson said school nurses have been clear on the subject: “A face shield or physical barrier is not an appropriate substitution for a mask unless there is an exemption in place,” said Nelson, noting that Grade 3 and down is not a zero-tolerance policy.

            McSweeny pointed out the broad language in the facemask policy lacking definition of approved masks. “I know it’s a slippery slope and we want to enforce,” she said. Nelson said, “We wanted to make it more of a living document because things change with the (Center for Disease Control).” Nelson said that a living document would allow ORR to adjust to the most recent guidance.

            “I think it has enough teeth in it,” he said.

            The phrase “expressive language” in the definition of what would make a mask inappropriate drew several questions. Nelson said he interpreted it as offensive language.

            “’Expressive’ says to me to step on free speech,” said Rood. “We’re not saying there is a limit to free speech, but there is a decorum when we’re in a school building.” McSweeny agreed with Rood. “If someone wears a face covering that says ‘black lives matter,’ that’s expressive and we don’t want them not to be able to say that,” she said.

            ORR High School Principal Mike Devoll referenced the ORR Student Handbook and said that obscene, profane language or pictures promoting drug use or illegal activity should not be worn to school. Region-side member Jim Muse said the school has an option to rule against any speech, saying the mask is “for safety… not a billboard.”

            Citing the bias against gator-style masks, region-side member Michelle Smith said that some of them have appropriate linings.

            “We’re trying to make it as easy as possible for the adults,” said Devoll, estimating anywhere from 300 to 400 students in the school building. “I don’t want to be in the business of debating with the kids… ‘Here’s a mask that we know works and let’s do that.’”

            Both sides approved the policy change with the language amended in accordance with the ORR Student Handbook as read by Devoll.

            Both sides of the Joint School Committee approved ORR’s commitment to policies on Educational Opportunities for military children (those that move based on the opportunity to serve) and Educational Opportunities for children in foster care.

            Nelson thanked Joint School Committee members no longer serving on the Policy Subcommittee.

            ORR also made an addendum to its remote-learning policy to address trauma.

            Nelson said the intent of the addendum is to take the existing policies and take into account how COVID-19 may change things. “I feel that we’re not in the planning stages but are taking action,” he said, noting that students are meeting counselors via Zoom and individually. “I feel like we’re trying to meet each family where they’re at.”

            In her report, Assistant Superintendent of Teaching and Learning Jannell Pearson-Campbell referenced 10 days focused on social-emotional learning with a shift for this week onto an emphasis on remote learning.

            In his report, Director of Student Services Craig Davidson said, “Our staff is doing an amazing job at meeting students and families where they’re at.”

            Calling September 16 “a monumental day,” Nelson said, “seeing our students back in our schools was extremely rewarding for ourselves.”

            He reported design work on a dashboard for the four school committees in deciding what model works best for their school, and plans at the Joint School Committee’s next meeting to share local and state data and that from universities.

            Nelson says HVAC and air-quality systems have been assessed with new vendors. currently meeting standards. cleaning protocols are in place, meals for all students regardless of what learning model they are in. “I have to say the students have been truly resilient in embracing how school is different this year,” he said.

            In reading Barber’s report, Rood questioned ORR’s custodial wage of $12.25 per hour being below Massachusetts minimum wage ($12.75). Barber explained that not being a private business, ORR is not subject to the state minimum-wage requirements but answers to federal standards.

            Principals Rose Bowman (Mattapoisett), Marla Sirois (Sippican), and Derek Medeiros (Rochester Memorial) all gave positive reports on the reopening of elementary schools in the district.

            Bowman reported that September 24 was the first full day for the incoming Kindergartners in Mattapoisett. “They just came out of the car and walked in like they’d always been there… What we do for them at that point lives in their heart forever,” she said, crediting Mattapoisett Police for its support and suggestions for pickup/dropoff time. “Now it’s so smooth parents are like, ‘Let’s not go back to the old way.’ When people come together, we’re so much stronger than we were before.”

            Sirois told how families decorated bulletin boards and “made it great for kids” at Sippican, and Medeiros said Rochester Memorial students “brought a sense of calm to our building (and) reminded us why we came together this summer to really plan.”

            Junior High Principal Silas Coellner and Devoll also reported on reopening.

            “A lot of angst and all of a sudden we’re into it. There’s all these smiles and it’s working,” said Coellner, noting that cooperation and collaboration “has been mind-boggling.”

            “It’s been OK,” joked Devoll, who was elated to have students back at the high school. “I could shout it from the top of the school, it’s been awesome. I thank the kids at every lunch,” he said. “We will never forget the class of 2020; these kids know they’re fortunate. In order for this to work, it has to feel like school… First step let’s prove to the community we can do this. When we keep doing it, we can look at the whole school experience.”

            Finning received five votes to four for April Rios and will remain the union-side chairperson. Rios was voted vice-chairperson.

            ORR’s Anti-Racism Subcommittee will meet on Monday, October 5, at 5:00 pm.

            The next meeting of the Joint School Committee is scheduled for Thursday, November 19, at 6:30 pm via Zoom.

ORR Joint School Committee / Superintendents Union No. 55

By Mick Colageo

Sippican Historical Society

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. In 1998, the Sippican Historical Society commissioned an architectural survey of Marion’s historic homes and buildings. Over 100 were cataloged and photographed. SHS will feature one building a week so that the residents of Marion can understand more about its unique historical architecture.

            This week we feature 21 Main Street, which is reputedly the oldest building in Wharf Village, with interior structural elements that point to a 1690s construction date. This historic house is important not only because it is Marion’s oldest surviving home, but it is also typical of the town center’s most widely represented historic residential architectural style – the Cape Cod cottage. These compact houses were ideally suited for the harsh New England climate and could easily be enlarged to meet the changing needs of families. Actually a three-quarters Cape, this venerable dwelling is said to have been built for a member of the Ryder family, and was owned by members of the Wing family during the second half of the nineteenth century. By the early 1900s, it was owned by Marion’s Universalist Church.