ConCom Addresses Illegal Dumping

Members of Marion’s Conservation Commission issued an Emergency Certification on January 14, Conservation Commission Chair Jeff Doubrava revealed at a January 22 meeting, after illegal dumping was reported by town residents.

            “We noted illegal dumping off of Point Road, almost immediately across from Blackmore Pond Road,” he explained, adding that the parcel is owned by the Town of Marion. “It’s been pretty well cleaned up now, but we did have to issue an emergency order to get the mess cleaned up as quickly as possible.”

            Doubrava added that the dumping was not immediately visible from the road; the mess was reported by a town resident walking through the property.

            It was unclear how long any dumping has been going on. Once the Emergency Certification was ordered, the site was cleaned and the soil tested for any contamination. Conservation Commission member Shaun Walsh made it clear that he wanted more action to be taken on illegal dumping at the site, as well as in general. The biggest culprit at this particular site, he added, is an unlocked town gate that provides easy access for people to drive in and dispose of unwanted material.

            “I’m concerned that there’s a gate on the town property that is wide open at all times,” Walsh said. “This is what happens when someone cleans out a house and dumps it back here. I would encourage the town to think about liability,” Walsh continued, “as well as the expense to the townspeople whenever the lot needs to be cleaned. The cost to the taxpayers is preventable, and so is any environmental contamination. I encourage that the gate be locked, and the keys given to the appropriate town officials.”

            Board members threw out a few ideas; Doubrava said he was willing to draft a letter to be sent to the town administrator requesting that the property be locked continuously.

            “We’ll look at the draft together at the next meeting, and hopefully officially sign it then,” he stated. 

            The next meeting of the Marion Conservation Commission is scheduled for February 12 at 7:00 pm at the Marion Town House.

Marion Conservation Commission

By Andrea Ray

Alice D. Clapp

Alice D. Clapp, 96, of Rochester, died Sunday, February 2, 2020 at St. Luke’s Hospital in New Bedford after a brief illness. She was the wife of the late Raymond W. Clapp.

            Born in Cambridge, the daughter of the late William H. and Mariam (Burns) Davis of Brookline, she was a Rochester resident for 60 years. Mrs. Clapp was an administrative assistant for New England Telephone for over 35 years until her retirement in 1985 and a crusader of human rights for her son, afflicted with autism. Later in life, she enjoyed traveling around the world, playing bridge with her many friends, and enjoyed being a grandmother.

            She is survived by her two sons, William D. Clapp and his wife Lisa of Rochester, and James E. Clapp of Hubbardston, and her grandson, Callum K. Clapp of Rochester. She was predeceased by her sisters, the late Harriet Dytch and Dorothy Gilbert of Marshfield.

            Her funeral arrangements are being handled by Chapman, Cole & Gleason Funeral Home, 2599 Cranberry Hwy. (Rt. 28), Wareham. Visiting hours will be Friday, Feb. 7, 2020 from 4 – 7 pm followed by a funeral service on Saturday, Feb. 8, 2020 at 10 am at the funeral home. Interment will be in Rochester Center Cemetery, Rochester.

            For directions and on-line guestbook visit: www.ccgfuneralhome.com

Mattapoisett Free Public Library

Upcoming Young Adult Programs at the Mattapoisett Free Public Library:

            On Tuesday, February 11 at 5:00 pm, join us at our ‘TechConnect Workshop: Optimal Resume’. Optimal Resume is a free library service that helps you every step of the way through the hiring process from creating your first resume to practicing for interviews. Join us to learn everything you need to know about Optimal Resume. This workshop is recommended for ages 15 and up. Please register by February 4.

            On Friday, February 21 at 1:00 pm, Mark Parisi, the creator of “Off the Mark” and the Marty Pants books, will be coming to the library to teach Character Design! Mark will be sharing all he has learned as a cartoon artist through fun, laughter, and sketching. This class is recommended for ages 9 and up. Please register before February 14. This program is supported in part by a grant from the Mattapoisett Cultural Council, a local agency which is supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency.

            On Saturday, February 22 at 1:00 pm, join us for Bath Bomb Creation! We will teach you how to create this relaxing treat. You will learn a simple recipe that you can recreate at home. Recommend for ages 12 and up. Please register by February 15.

            On Saturday, February 29 at 1:30 pm, Dungeons and Dragons will meet again to continue their quest. New players always welcome, recommended for ages 12 and up! 

            Game Lounge will be open Wednesday, February 5 at 4:00 pm and Tuesday, February 18 at 1:00 pm. Craft Tuesday continues every Tuesday at 4:00 pm with a new craft. Stop by for some fun and a quick craft! From February 1 to 14, celebrate Valentine’s Day with the library by making your own valentines at the Makerspace!

            Please contact Michelle Skaar at mskaar@sailsinc.org or call the library for more information. All programs are free and open to the public. If special accommodations are needed, please contact the library at 508-758-4171 for assistance.   

José R. “Joe” Beatriz

José R. “Joe” Beatriz, 85, of Mattapoisett died January 30, 2020 peacefully at home surrounded by his family.

            He was the husband of Kathy Downey with whom he shared 44 loving years.

Born and raised in Faro, Portugal, son of the late José G. and Alice (Aldeia) Beatriz, he immigrated to New Bedford in 1959 where he lived before moving to Mattapoisett in 1988.

            He was a humble and hardworking man who worked on his family farm from a young age in Portugal and spent most of the last 45 years on the New Bedford waterfront, as a fisherman and wholesale seafood buyer, owner of the F/V Niagara Falls and F/V Lady Jay, and founding partner of Trio Algarvio. He enjoyed his waterfront friendships and being involved with the unloading of fishing vessels.

            Joe truly loved his work and was active in his business until a few days before his death. When he wasn’t working, he loved to spend time growing vegetables in his garden, eating out, and spoiling his family endlessly.

            He will be remembered for his work ethic, strength, generosity, and the love he had for his family. He was proudest of the accomplishments of his children and the women they have become.

            Survivors include his wife; 3 daughters, Elizabeth Beatriz and her partner, Michael Klobucher of Boston; Christine (Beatriz) Balsamo and her husband, Robert of Haverhill; and Colleen Beatriz of Mattapoisett; and a granddaughter, Sofia.

            He was the brother of the late Armand Beatriz.

His funeral will be held on Saturday February 8th at 8:30 am from the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home for Funerals, 50 County Rd., Route 6, Mattapoisett, followed by his Funeral Mass at St. Rita’s Church at 9:30 am. Burial will be in St. Anthony’s Cemetery. Visiting hours will be on Friday, February 7th from 4-7 pm. In lieu of flowers, remembrances may be made to Southcoast Centers for Cancer Care in Fairhaven or the Fishing Partnership in New Bedford. For directions and guestbook, please visit www.saundersdwyer.com.

Garden Club of Buzzards Bay Annual Plant Sale

The Garden Club of Buzzards Bay will hold its annual plant sale on Saturday, May 9, from 9:00 to noon at St. Mary’s Parish Center, 783 Dartmouth Street, South Dartmouth. Members have been propagating plants all winter at the Club’s greenhouse and will offer a wide variety of annuals and perennials at very reasonable prices. Gardeners will be able to buy unusual perennials from member gardens, colorful and varied annuals, an array of popular geraniums and special coleus, striking succulents, heirloom tomatoes, herbs, ground covers, and boxwood cultivars from the Rotch-Jones-Duff House Garden.

            Proceeds from the sale are used to fund community projects, including grants, scholarships, and maintenance of the gardens and greenhouse at the Rotch-Jones-Duff House and Garden Museum in New Bedford. 

            The event is free and open to the public. Cash, checks, and credit cards are accepted. 

Rochester Women’s Club Scholarships

The Rochester Women’s Club is proud to announce this year that we have three scholarships available to graduating Rochester high school seniors who are going on to college. There are two Raymond Hartley scholarships for $1,000 and one “Snookie” nursing scholarship also for $1,000. The Raymond Hartley is open to all students furthering their education. The “Snookie” is only for students who are going into the field of nursing. Seniors should visit their guidance office for the applications and please take note of all deadlines. These scholarships are available to all Rochester graduating seniors from any local high school. If more information is needed call Marsha at 508-322-0998.

“Take Your Child to the Library” Hop

We are celebrating “Take Your Child to the Library” with a Tri-Town library hop. During the entire month of February, children can celebrate their local libraries by stopping in to pick up a library “passport”. Explore your library and the many things it has to offer or visit your library’s website to see the special activities they will be hosting. Then head to the other Tri-Town libraries in Marion, Mattapoisett, and Rochester and get your passport stamped there also. Once you have received all three stamps, hop back to your home library with your passport and receive a special prize. One passport per child. All ages welcome to participate.

            The Tri-town libraries include the Elizabeth Taber Library at 8 Spring St. in Marion (508-748-1252/elizabethtaberlibrary.org) Mattapoisett Free Public Library at 7 Barstow St. in Mattapoisett (508-758-4171/mattapoisettlibrary.org) and the Joseph H. Plumb Memorial Library at 17 Constitution Way in Rochester (508-763-8600/plumblibrary.com).

            All programs are free and open to the public. If special accommodations are needed, please contact your library for assistance.  

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 cataloged 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 feature one building a week so that the residents of Marion can understand more about its unique historical architecture.

            The home at 325 Front Street may date to the early 18th century. Its lean-to profile suggests that it is one of the earlier dwellings in the Old Landing area. The earliest identifiable owner is A.M. Bassett, who owned this house in 1855. By 1879, Mary Penniman lived here. By 1903, William R. Gifford – the owner of Gifford’s Livery Stable across from the depot at Front and Spring Streets – lived here. His widow, Adele, lived here until at least the mid-1920s.

ORR Revisits Regional Agreement

            The Old Rochester Regional School Committee on January 22 held its first official review of the Old Rochester Regional School District agreement for the first time since the agreement was last amended in 1986.

            Two years ago when the School Committee and the three towns realized the document had not been updated in over 20 years, the committee underwent a state audit of the agreement while the Town of Mattapoisett, through a grant it had received, sought an analysis of the ORR district assessments of the three-member towns to better understand the factors that influence the sometimes drastic fluctuations in the towns’ year-to-year assessments.

            Rochester’s representative on the ORR School Committee, Tina Rood, gave a brief overview of the recommended changes resulting from the Department of Education’s review, and the committee’s own subcommittee compared the ORR agreement with those of other regional school districts.

            The recommended changes include establishing annual town assessments based on a 3-5 year average of student enrollment to determine assessment totals to avoid sharp assessment increases that impact each town’s operating budget.

            The other recommendation was to establish an ORR capital stabilization find that would be funded annually through the assessment.

            According to Rood, these options seemed agreeable to the three town representatives during a sit-down with School Committee members last fall.

            “It seemed to make sense to them,” Rood said. “We need a way to fund capital projects here at the district and we thought that a multi-pronged approach is a way that will help our district be able to address those smaller projects that come up before they become bigger projects.”

            That money would be specifically used for capital improvements at ORR. But is this the be-all and end-all? Rood says no.

            “It is not,” said Rood. “It is a start; it is a start to retaining a system… to be able to fund these capital projects,” like auditorium lights, a new track, and a new phone system at the school. Larger projects like roof resurfacing, she said, would still be brought forward through a debt exclusion request.

            “And [the agreement] needs to be current,” said Rood. “The bottom line is, it’s not current at this time and it needs to be.”

            Marion’s representative on the ORR School Committee, Heather Burke, introduced the seven findings and five recommendations of Mattapoisett’s assessment analysis of the fiscal years 2012-2019 undertaken by the Collins Center at UMass Boston.

            The first finding is that annual assessments have only “moderately” increased since FY12, growing 13.18 percent, or 1.88 percent each year. Marion and Mattapoisett’s assessments have seen the most growth, averaging at 2.46 percent and 2.23 percent annually, respectively, while Rochester’s assessment has seen a slower growth of about 0.9 percent annually.

            Marion’s assessments have risen steadily over the last three years while Mattapoisett’s has risen more rapidly since FY2016.

            “We frequently hear about the size of the school budget within the Tri-Town – and it is significant – but the increases over the eight years have been modest,” said Burke.

            The second finding is that Mattapoisett’s assessments actually decreased between 2012-2016, but then increased rapidly after 2016, which was mitigated in part by a Regional School Assessment Stabilization Fund the town had established.

            The third finding shows that even slight changes in the ORR student population will impact the towns’ assessments. Burke further explained, “Variations, not only in one town’s enrollment, but enrollment fluctuations in the other two towns can have large unpredictable impacts on town budgets.” When ORR student enrollment drops on Mattapoisett and Rochester, for example, Burke said, that causes Marion’s assessment to go up, even though the town may be sending the same number of students as last year; the assessment is proportional, said Burke.

            Between 2012-2016, Burke said there was, “an increase of 42 students from Marion to Old Rochester during that time, combined with largely unchanged enrollments from Mattapoisett and Rochester, [which] increased Marion’s assessment by over $290,000. If the other two towns had also sent more students, the increase would not have been such a significant hit to Marion.”

            Then, after 2016, Marion’s enrollment decreased, saving Marion money but causing bigger hits to Mattapoisett and Rochester, continued Burke. “So this makes planning at the municipal budget level very difficult because, even though they might project that they’re sending the same number of students, they don’t necessarily know how many students the other two towns are sending, which is going to affect the dollar amount asked for from the town.”

            The fourth finding is that both Marion and Mattapoisett’s total minimum contribution has been capped at the state maximum of 82.5 percent of the total foundation budget for ORR due to their high property wealth and income levels.

            Transportation cost was at the crux of the fifth finding, with the determination that the ORR district’s above minimum and transportation spending has sharply increased since 2016, up by $1,337,000, or 32.5 percent, over the last three years.

            “I think this is a critical finding because it points to the fiscal pressure that our towns and the school district… have been feeling since 2016,” said Burke. “This pressure is due to slow growth in both chapter 70 and foundation budget funds, requiring our school district to make up for the lower state funds by increasing the assessment funds simply to maintain the status quo operating budget…

            “This is pressure that all schools and districts in Massachusetts have been feeling,” continued Burke. “It’s not unique to us, and it became intense enough that the legislation had to do something…”

            The sixth finding is that Marion is the only member town that experienced total enrollment growth across all districts between 2012-2019.

            “Many might be surprised by that finding because in this area we tend to think about Rochester having increased enrollment, not Marion,” said Burke. “But when you read the text of the report and look at the chart, one thing that really pops out is that Rochester sends so many kids to Old Colony that their enrollment to ORR through FY19 hasn’t really grown.

            “We know that that actually hurts Rochester’s budget because it’s more expensive for them to send a student to Old Colony,” Burke continued, “but it also makes it a little bit more expensive for Marion and Mattapoisett to send their kids to Old Rochester.”

            Finding 7 shows that ORR’s in-district spending in 2018 of $15,565 per student was slightly below the state’s $15,913 in-district average.

             “And we have so many markers of student achievement, yet we spend less than the state average,” Burke said. “That tells me that Tri-Town taxpayers are getting an incredible return on their assessment at ORR, and we need to give ourselves a round of applause.

            “However, it also tells me that other towns in the Commonwealth are investing more in their students than the Tri-Towns are,” Burke continued. “We’ve been able to do a lot with less, but our facilities are aging rapidly, academic standards keep growing, and competition makes it harder for us to fill some of our professional positions.”

            The Collins Center recommends allowing for the 3-5 year enrollment average to control fluctuations in assessments, with the likelihood of choosing a 3-year average.

            The three towns should also consider establishing stabilization funds to smooth out budget fluctuations, which all three towns have now done, and the towns should communicate regularly with the school district on fiscal issues and continue their participation in the collective bargaining process, the report recommends.

            Furthermore, the report recommends developing a detailed capital improvement plan and establishing a stabilization fund for those expenditures.

            “And that’s exactly what we put into the proposed regional agreement,” said Burke.

            The final recommendation for the three towns to consider is a full k-8 regional school district, something Burke said is unlikely to be considered any time soon.

            “[The report] helps explain some of the pressures that we have been feeling over the last five years,” said Burke. “It really quantifies how fiscally responsible the [ORR] school district has been over the last eight fiscal years.”

            Changes to the regional agreement must be approved at each town’s Annual Town Meeting.

            “I don’t think that you’re proposing any dramatic changes that are not reasonable,” Marion Town Administrator Jay McGrail told the School Committee.

            The next meeting of the Old Rochester Regional School Committee is scheduled for March 11 at 6:30 pm in the junior high school media room.

Old Rochester Regional School Committee

By Jean Perry

A South Coast Kayak Sleigh Ride

Two new species of tropical “tuna” fish are now migrating further north to the South Coast of Buzzards Bay, surprising fishermen who catch them while going after striped bass and bluefish. They are the Atlantic bonito and the false albacore found primarily in more temperate waters around Florida and from the West Indies to Brazil.

            Although tuna-like in a number of ways, the bonito is from the tuna and mackerel family; the false albacore is often mistaken for a tuna, but is actually a type of mackerel.

            The Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife reports that everyone wants to jump on global warming to explain it; however, they say it could be due to a changing bait source, such as an increase in sand eels in our local waters. Experts also say there is a lot we still do not know about these species of tuna/mackerel, resulting in a lack of state fishing regulations for conservation of the species.

            In appearance, the bonito has a higher profile, with eight bright blue diagonal lines across its back, as illustrated. The false albacore has smaller wavy lines on its back, but both have the same streamlined torpedo shape for robust swimming at the end of a line when hooked. Subsequently, both are sought by anglers for a 40 mile-per-hour speedy stripping of line when hooked, as thrilling as long ago when a harpooned whale was said to drag a small boat on a Nantucket sleigh ride.

            For this angling challenge, both species have affectionately been dubbed “little tunny” after their larger cousins. When they first appear when our waters warm up in spring, they are more often caught in shallower coastal brackish estuaries. They often come into view while the carnivores surface feeding in schools after baitfish. Their staple diet includes menhaden, peanut bunker, and Atlantic big eye. A characteristic surface gathering can easily be located by an overhead vociferous aerial conflagration of gulls and terns diving down to where they are feeding, more easily to be caught.

            Today, recreational small boat fishing has been revolutionized with the growing kayak culture. There is also a new kayak design of sit-on-top construction as opposed to the sit-in style. This enables a new genre of fly fishing men and women to arm wave the magic wand of a fly rod as the latest challenge to anglers. When the tunny takes off with their line to leap out of the water and then dive to twist and turn, it races away, perhaps like a fishing heritage trip back in time like one of those Nantucket sleigh rides; and it happens right here on the South Coast of Buzzards Bay, with a kayak tied on to a tunny fish.

By George B. Emmons