Herring Decline Mystery Spawns New Studies

            Throughout the coastal waters of New England, the annual migration of river herring has been a seasonal “must see” event. Watching thousands of small fish swim upstream to natal waters, traveling from saltwater oceans to freshwater streams and ponds, is one of nature’s miracles. Yet these marine animals, like most living things on the plant, have been negatively impacted by human activity. But is that the whole story?

            On April 29, Alewives Anonymous, Inc. held its annual meeting. The group was founded in 1984 to promote and educate the Tri-town communities of Marion, Rochester, and Mattapoisett about all things alewives, more commonly called herring. After enjoying a homemade supper of chowder, stuffed quahogs, and apple cobbler, President Arthur Benner gave his report.

            His report listed herring migration survey counts since 1988, the first year an electronic counter was employed. Over the past 31 years, herring counts have declined to a discouraging low, despite intermittent glimmers of hope. For instance, in 1989, 39,938 fish were counted at the confluence of the Mattapoisett River at Snipatuit Pond, with spikes as high as 130,296 between 1998 and 2000. The 2018 count, however, was a meager 5,241.

            With moratoria in place for the past several years, the group is seeking to better understand natural and manmade stress factors in the hope that, with good data and marine science, these tiny fish can be saved.

            Guest speaker Christopher Rillahan, a doctoral student from the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth, has been studying herring migration since 2017 in both the Tri-town area and Cape Cod. Rillahan’s observations and studies were aided by the use of sonar imaging equipment that granted visual clarity to what was going on with herring populations during the migration. But, moreover, Rillahan pinpointed when the fish were most actively moving through the river systems.

            Historically, Rillahan said, herring counts were conducted during a 12-hour daylight sampling when it was believed the fish were most active. What the sonar uncovered was herring activity during sunrise and sunset.

            Displayed on the screen, the audience witnessed the herring swimming in large balls through counting areas in the morning and evening, images that heretofore could not have been seen. Over several migration seasons in both Mattapoisett and on Cape Cod, Rillahan confirmed the herring movement in those two times of the day. But he also found other surprising information. Could something else be impacting herring stocks besides the possibility of counts being off a bit? It had long been established that commercial fishing had been a prime suspect. Maybe there were others.

            What Rillahan found was the presence of predator fish, primarily striped bass and bluefish, patrolling the herring well upriver from the ocean. And then there are the cormorants. The sonar images clearly found the fast-moving birds darting at the herrings’ movement. And last but not least, there was also one massive snapping turtle.

            Rillahan said the southeast is a major area for herring study, and counts take place primarily in April. It is now understood that volunteers counting fish may be missing a large percentage of the migrating fish due to nighttime activity.

            Another area not well understood, Rillahan explained, is what becomes of a herring after it has spawned. He said earlier studies noted herring would spawn at four years of age or older. Today, most spawning fish are only two years of age, causing scientists to scratch their heads. Why has it changed, and where are the mature fish? Are there mature fish?

            “The life of the river herring is far more complex then previously believed,” Rillahan stated. He said his studies of data continue, and he hopes to provide further critical information in the coming months.

            To learn more about river herring, you may visit www.riverherringnetwork.comwww.greateratlantic.fisheries.noaa.gov, or www.plumblibrary.com/services/alewives-ananymous.org.

By Marilou Newell

Forum Informs Voters on Town Meeting, Election

            Courtesy of the League of Women Voters, Mattapoisett residents enjoyed the chance to meet some of their 2019 Annual Election candidates on April 27 – all running uncontested now, after Seth Hiller dropped out of the Board of Selectmen race earlier this month, essentially handing the election to incumbent Jordan Collyer for a sixth term in office. But don’t let that deter you from showing up to the polls on May 13 to cast your ballot! Pending all passes at Town Meeting, there will be two ballot questions: one to fund the Old Rochester Regional athletic field and auditorium upgrades, and one to fund a new fire station.

            During the event held Saturday at the library, town officials made one of their few remaining fire station pitches to voters ahead of the May 13 Annual Town Meeting, hoping the townspeople will approve the $9,275,000 project.

            “From a financial standpoint, this an excellent time for the community to look at advancing this project,” said Town Administrator Michael Gagne, who will attend the final town meeting of his career this month before his retirement this year. Within the next five years, 79.3 percent of current debt exclusion capital projects will have been paid off, dropping from $14.3 million to $2.75 million, he said. “I think you need to do this right now – the market is right to borrow.”

            Last year, Town Meeting voted to appropriate $250,000 towards the engineering and design of the new fire station to replace the outdated and safety non-compliant fire station that was built in the 1950s, and the Town formed a committee to explore options.

            According to Gagne, the owner of the average $444,000 home in Mattapoisett would experience a $13.38 annual tax increase to fund the project.

            “As you can see, it’s extremely reasonable,” Gagne said – with a minimal financial impact.

            “We spent a lot of time drilling down on the project,” said Gagne. “[The design engineers] trimmed about $1.1 million out of what they had estimated.”

            Fire Chief Andrew Murray said having a new fire station would attract new and highly-qualified candidates to the department, although he said that for now he is not looking to increase full-time day staff beyond the current two full-time firefighters. In addition to a contamination area and separate bathrooms for the three female employees is a fitness center, Murray said, “to motivate [staff] to stay healthy and stay fit.”

            “People say, ‘Wow, this is really big’,” said Collyer, an advocate for the project. When the Town first looked at a new station in the mid ‘80s, he said, the building was already insufficient in some ways. The last attempt to upgrade the station was in 2009, Collyer said, “It was certainly grossly deficient, and here we are in 2019 … [and] we’re actually building to catch up for the last 35 years and we’re trying to build ahead as well – We’re actually building a building for 65 years now.”

            The project’s scope has expanding more than the Town thought, Collyer added, but this latest look at a new station has “opened our eyes.” The cost to build was half the cost it is today, and not expected to decrease, ever.

            “I’m a strong advocate for the project for many reasons … the least of which is this has been going on for far too long.

            “We think we’re in a sweet spot at this point,” Collyer continued, “but we also don’t want to be overly ostentatious in our request [as if] we’re asking for too much, but allow ourselves the flexibility. … We feel comfortable, as a committee, that we’ll be able to grow into this space over time without having too much quote-unquote dead space.”

            “The price really is very good,” Gagne said.

            Gagne also gave a Town Meeting briefing, touching on some of the important town issues that will appear on the warrant rather than by reading each article line for line.

            Within the budget, Gagne pointed to employee health insurance as one of the leading financial burdens, with costs rising 8 percent this fiscal year, accounting for $2.3 million out of $25 million budget.

            Also driving the budget, Gagne pointed to an increase in tuition for Old Colony Regional Vocational technical High School, although the Town had prepared for such an increase for years via a regional school stabilization fund.

            “We have the money in that … fund so we don’t take a significant spike in the budget,” Gagne said.

            Solid waste collection and disposal is up some, but because the town is only in its sixth year of a ten-year contract, the town is protected form any major increases until then.

            The debt stabilization fund will allow the town to explore some new growth opportunities, he said, and voters will be asked to continue to transfer another $125,000 this year into the fund.

            Other post employment benefits (OPEB) liabilities continue to climb, but the town has been proactive, having set aside $450,000 every year for nine years, Gagne said.

            “That was an extremely prudent move because that situation has not been any better ,” with increasing insurance costs and more retirees,” said Gagne. “You have a situation where the liability has actually increased.” Three years ago Mattapoisett’s liability was $7 million, and now it’s up to $9.5 million.

            There will be two zoning articles on the warrant, Gagne pointed out – one to increase lot coverage within the industrial zone to stimulate growth, and one to allow medical marijuana marijuana cultivation facilities currently allowed in the industrial zone to provide cannabis for off-site adult-use marijuana companies.

            Gagne said some voters might misunderstand the intent of the bylaw, which is solely to allow cultivation of some adult-use marijuana, not the sale of adult-use marijuana in Mattapoisett.

            “That’s not the case,” Gagne emphasized. “It’s strictly for growing purposes. There will not be retail sales there.

            “We’ve looked at some preliminary host agreements based upon certain percentages,” Gagne continued, pointing out why Mattapoisett might want to consider this new bylaw. “You could be looking at annual revenue … anywhere north of $200,000 a year…. Substantial revenues that could be used for other capital projects further down.”

            The Annual Town Meeting is scheduled for Monday, May 13, at 6:30 pm in the Old Rochester Regional School auditorium.

            The Annual Town Election is on Tuesday, May 21, with polls open 8:00 am -8:00 pm at Old Hammondtown School.

By Jean Perry

Tabor Boy Enters Marion Bermuda Race

SSV Tabor Boy, the 92’ sail training schooner owned by Tabor Academy in Marion, will be making history on June 14 when she will be crossing the starting line on her way to Bermuda as one of the classic yacht entries in the 2019 Marion Bermuda Race! https://marionbermuda.com/

            The Race Committee expects around 100 boats on the line for the race. Just two vessels will be in the Classic Yacht Division, with SSV Tabor Boy providing some competition for the Spirit of Bermuda, which has sailed uncontested in the past. Tabor Boy will join 18 current entries to take advantage of the incentives for navigating by the stars. Marketing Chair of the Marion Bermuda Race, Ray Cullum of Marion, shared that this is twice the number of entries for celestial navigators as in the last race in 2017.

            Another exciting opportunity for Tabor Boy is the chance to compete for the Offshore Youth Challenge Trophy given to encourage youth participation. The crew must be comprised of at least four people aged 16-23, representing 66% of the crew. Tabor Boy is planning to meet this criteria, with many of the crew experiencing the thrill of offshore sailing for the first time. 

            Marion Bermuda is the only offshore race that offers a celestial navigation class, which is perfect for Tabor Boy and her student and alumni crew who will be navigating the vessel. Twelve students will be joined by seven alumni crew members, three licensed mates, and Capt. James Geil at the helm. Geil reports that nine out of ten celestial navigators on his crew are under age 24, providing a real test of the knowledge of his students and alumni from the classes of 2017 through 2020 who took the celestial navigation class he teaches at Tabor. 

            “We are looking forward to a memorable trip in June to Bermuda. The student crew is ready to go and put their navigation skills to the test in a real-life situation.” said Geil. “We look forward to greeting many of our Tabor friends on the island on arrival.”

            Tabor Boy will host an Open Ship for Tabor alumni, parents, and friends in the area, and any prospective students and their families are invited. The reception will be held in Hamilton on June 23 starting at 5:30 pm.

Estate Jewelry Sale/Appraisals

The Rochester Historical Society will be sponsoring an estate jewelry sale/gold appraisal on Saturday, May 4from 9:00 am to 2:00 pm at the Rochester Church/Museum 355 County Road Rochester. Joel Gonsalves, jeweler from the Surry Jewelry Service at What a Find in Fairhaven will be available between 9:00 am – 11:00 am to appraise and purchase your gold jewelry. He will also install watch batteries. 

            The jewelry on sale starts at 25 cents and up. Great finds for crafters. Mark your calendars and support your local organizations while getting some great bargains. 

There will also be a bake sale the same day. 

Mattapoisett Woman’s Club Spring Fundraiser

Are you looking for a different Mother’s Day or thank you gift? Are you trying to show a special person that you are thinking of them? Or do you just want to treat yourself? With warmer weather and longer days; brown turning to green, our thoughts focus on our gardens. Let us help you get started. 

            For $10.00 you may purchase a Pathway to Planting Passport from the Mattapoisett Woman’s Club (MWC). On May 18 & 19, 2019 enjoy savings on your Spring gardening needs. Some local Garden Centers & Nurseries are offering discounts to those holding a Pathway to Planting Passport. 

            Passports are available at the Town Wharf General Store at Shipyard Park, 10 Water Street, Mattapoisett or the Pen & Pendulum at 67 County Road (Route 6), Mattapoisett. 

            All proceeds go to the MWC Scholarship Fund. For over 75 years the Mattapoisett Woman’s Club has been helping young people pursue their educational goals by awarding scholarships to high school seniors from the community. The MWC thanks the community for its continuing support. For more information, contact Sue Mitchell at 508-758-9464

Friends of OR Drama David Boyce Scholarship

The Friends of Old Rochester Drama are pleased to announce the 4th annual David Bartlett Boyce Memorial Scholarship to honor the memory of a great patron of the arts in all of its various and beautiful forms, as well as an ORR alumni. David was a 1967 graduate of Old Rochester High School, who attended the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, and later completed his Bachelor’s Degree and his Masters Degree from Goddard College in Vermont. David was a lifelong supporter of the arts and arts education. This scholarship, in the amount of $1,000.00, is being offered to a graduating senior of Old Rochester High School who is planning to further his/her education at a college or university of his/her choosing, in the area of the Visual Arts, Creative Writing, or the Performing Arts. Applications are available in the Guidance Department and are due on May 10, 2019. Please mail to Lisa Cardoza, 4 Hawthorne Street, Mattapoisett, MA 02739.

Spring Swing Golf Program

Mattapoisett Recreation is thrilled to announce the new Spring Swing Golf program. This 4 session program with The Bay Club will be held on Wednesday and Thursday, May 29 & 30 andJune 5 & 6. This is a great way to get ready for golf season. The cost is $125 and registration is open on our website www.mattrec.net. We also have a few spots left in the Spring Tennis session for 8-12 year olds. Sign up today.

Local Luncheon Ladies Unite to End ‘Period Poverty’

            The ladies who luncheon together every Friday at the Bay Club know how to enjoy themselves. They reserve a long row of tables lined end to end and, on days like May 24, they cram as many seats in as they can while sipping blood orange mimosas and chatting, laughing, and celebrating their fortune of friendship. Sometimes they just have lunch and play a favorite game, LCR (Left Center Right), a dice game involving one-dollar bills that can get pretty exciting when you have over a couple dozen players contributing $5 each to the “center” jackpot.

            Then there are Fridays like this past one when the group’s ambassador of good will, Wendy Russo, invites them all for a special purpose where one small good deed on behalf of the individual suddenly becomes something much bigger when the ladies converge at the table.

            It wasn’t long ago that the purpose of one ladies’ luncheon was to provide baby shower gifts for opioid-addicted newborns born in Southcoast hospitals. A few of those items such as diapers, bottles, and baby booties hadn’t been bought by some of the ladies in quite some time, except for perhaps a new grandchild. This Friday, many of these ladies again found themselves buying products they hadn’t in a while, and they didn’t mind doing it at all. They were products that no woman should ever have to go without, period. Yet, many often do, especially young women still attending school and living in relative poverty.

            It’s a problem, one that Russo had never heard of, and neither had the other luncheon ladies. It’s called “period poverty” and it’s a real thing in this world, even in communities we live in or at least visit.

            According to Brigit Latham from the YWCA of Southeastern Massachusetts, one in five girls misses school while on her monthly cycle. It’s just easier for them to stay home while having their period than be in school. It’s also a major disruption to the girl’s academic achievement and growth, and the broader impacts of period poverty include risks of depression, anxiety, and physical conditions like toxic shock syndrome from using menstrual products for longer than the recommended stretches of time.

            Latham is spearheading a campaign with the Girls Exclusive project at the YWCA called “Justice Flow,” which was started as a result of some of the startling confessions from girls at New Bedford schools. When discussing potential changes at school that might improve the girls’ school experience, one girl told Latham, “I’d love to not have to be charged for pads anymore at the nurse’s station,” Latham said.

            “I’ve had to choose between buying a snack or buying a pad,” 12-year-old Jeana reported. Najah, also 12, told Latham, ”Sometimes it’s easier to just stay home when I have my period.”

            “I didn’t know this was an issue,” said Latham. “Access to menstrual products is an issue – a human rights issue.”

            A pilot program was launched to make menstrual products available for the girls, for free, in designated bathrooms throughout the schools. And it’s working. It even brought some of these girls to the State House in support of a bill that would make menstrual products available at all schools to all girls at no cost.

            “These products are not covered by EBT cards, and many of these parents use EBT,” said Latham. “These are families with a household income below $10,000. There’s just not that extra bit to take care of the cost of these products.”

            “I just couldn’t believe it when I heard about it,” said Russo.

            Russo got a message to the luncheon ladies that for this lunch they were to bring in plain paper bags filled with as many boxes of menstrual products that they could, and they did not disappoint. By the time all the guests arrived and squeezed into their spot at the crowded table, there were thousands of these essential products stacked neatly in paper bags, just as Russo requested.

            “This is so fabulous,” said Latham, clearly overwhelmed by the response. “You’re amazing,” she told the group. “I really can’t believe we collected so many in one seating. I’m just speechless.”

            The pilot program includes a workshop on menstrual health and hygiene that students and staff are required to take, and members of Justice Flow are also working towards a statewide movement to achieve access to menstrual products for all girls in schools, prisons, and homeless shelters.

            Because no girl or women should have to worry about how she’s going to get through another month without supplies, period.

            The YWCA is collecting pads and tampons to distribute to the Greater New Bedford Youth Alliance to ensure that not only do girls have access to sanitary products while at school, but also outside of school hours and weekends. Help them end period poverty by donating menstrual products at the YWCA Standish House, 20 South Sixth Street, New Bedford during drop-off hours Monday through Friday 9:00 am – 4:00 pm. You may also contact Jordan Latham at 508-999-3255 or at jlatham@ywcasema.org.

By Jean Perry

Edith B. (Barrows) Rehbein

Edith B. (Barrows) Rehbein, 89, of Marion, died April 30, 2019 at home. She was the widow of the late Roy H. Rehbein and the daughter of the late Stanley and Sadie Louise (Wrenn) Barrows.

            She was born in Milford and lived in Hopedale for many years. She then lived in Middleboro and Carver before moving to Marion 10 years ago.

            She enjoyed bird watching and feeding the birds in her yard and enjoyed collecting New England themed items especially from the Cape.

            Survivors include 4 sons, Craig Rehbein and Fox Keri both of Marion, Glenn Rehbein of Uxbridge and Christopher Rehbein of Wareham; a daughter, Karen Holmes of Cooper, ME; a sister, Dotti Kirby of Orange Park, FL; a granddaughter, Kara Rehbein of Milford.

            Her graveside service will be held at 12:30 pm on Thursday, May 16, 2019 at the Massachusetts National Cemetery, Bourne. Please arrive at the cemetery at 12:15 pm.

Sherlock Holmes’ Mystery at the Manor

The fifth and sixth grade students from the Rochester Memorial School Drama Club will be performing “Sherlock Holmes’ Mystery at the Manor,” a two-act comedy/mystery adapted from Hound of the Baskervillesby Arthur Conan Doyle.

            Sherlock Holmes and his sidekick, Dr. John Watson, head to Devonshire, England to solve the mystery of a large hound haunting the neighboring moor. This hound has been rumored to kill anyone who carries the Baskerville name. Charles Baskerville has recently died and his nephew, Henry Baskerville, is set to inherit the manor. Can Sherlock Holmes solve the case before Henry suffers the same fate as his uncle?

            To complicate matters, Charles is said to have hidden a large sum of money at his estate, and an odd collection of characters living in the manor hope to find it. Come join us to see how Sherlock Holmes unravels the mystery at the manor!

            The performance will be Friday, May 3,at 7:00 pm. The show is approximately two hours long. There will be a15-minute intermission between the two acts Friday night. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for children ages 6 to 18. Children under 6 are free. Tickets can be purchased at the door or reserved ahead of time by contacting Mrs. Karen Della Cioppa at karendellacioppa@oldrochester.org.