Shellfish Habitat Requirement Creates Confusion

Two continued public hearings before the Marion Conservation Commission on January 23 hinged on the vexing question of the distance the Department of Marine Fisheries recommended between the bottom of a float structure and the substrate of Wings Cove.

David Davignon of N. Douglas Schneider & Associates presented the two similar Notices of Intent, located at 51 and 95 Holly Road, and the respective discussions centered on the question of the location of the float stops on proposed piles.

At the previous hearing, Davignon laid out the proposals in detail, but continued the hearings with the hope that there would be further response from the department or the Army Corps of Engineers on his comments regarding the float stops. Those hopes were dashed when Davignon received no response in the last two weeks.

The first application, 95 Holly Road owned by E. Byron Hensley, is a proposal to build a residential pier facility in Wings Cove consisting of a 4’ wide by 265’ long elevated boardwalk, a 4-foot by 101-foot long pier with a 3’ by 20’ gangway, and 10’ by 20’ float.

Vice Chairman Shaun Walsh said he had looked at the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection’s Guide to Small Docks and Piers, seeking clarification and justification for the recommendation by the Department of Marine Fisheries for a 30-inch separation between the bottom of the float and the substrate of the cove. He noted that the recommendation was for locations within significant shellfish habitat and suggested it may have to do with shading impacts that may change the temperature of the water.

Davignon expressed frustration, saying in his experience the DEP submits the same comment regardless of the project’s location. The low tide in the proposed location is 24 inches, leaving the float suspended 6 inches in the air, which Davignon noted would make it difficult to embark and disembark from small boats and kayaks.

The commission pushed back on the inconvenience with Walsh asking what percentage of the time the owner would actually be performing that task at low tide. Davignon also supported his argument that the requirement was arbitrary by noting that the Waterways licensing division recommends a 24-inch separation, but Walsh suggested this requirement had more to do with navigation.

“From where I sit … I’m personally inclined to write a condition on what we have been asked to recommend,” Walsh said. “Absent a more compelling [argument], I’d be inclined to maintain the 30-inch separation.”

Davignon reported that the applicant intends to move the shellfish from the location of the float, and despite inquiries from the commission about reducing the size of the float, the Hensley Order of Conditions was issued for the float as proposed with a 30-inch separation from the bottom of the float and the substrate, and ¾-inch spacing between decking boards.

The additional condition on 95 Holly Road dealt with the unpermitted cutting of the vegetation in the marsh, and specifically put the applicant on notice that the commission will be inspecting the site in the spring to determine that all cutting had been discontinued.

As for the proposal at 51 Holly Road owned by Paul and Christine Driscoll, which describes a pier facility consisting of a 3’ wide by 145’ long elevated boardwalk, a 4’ by 61’ long pier with a 3’ by 20’ long gangway and a 10’ by 20′ float, Davignon outlined a similar scenario. He agreed readily to the 30-inch separation between the float and the substrate already established by the previous discussion. In addition, Driscoll, who had also done some cutting in the marsh but halted when he apparently learned it was illegal, received permission in the Order of Conditions to hire a professional licensed herbicide contractor to eradicate phragmites at the site.

Also during the meeting, Davignon represented the Michael R. Deland Realty Trust of 1978 on the Notice of Intent application located at 498c Point Road to upgrade a bottom chain anchoring system to float piles. Davignon described this as a simple project, an idea with which the Army Corps of Engineers apparently agreed, determining that it would rely on self-verification by the engineer. The pier was built prior to 1900 and has been maintained since then. Due to the pier’s age, the Army Corps considers the proposal a minor project modification, and the piles to be preferable to the bottom anchors. The separation of the float from the substrate will be 30 inches landward and 44 inches seaward. The Order of Conditions was issued without any special conditions.

A continued public hearing regarding the Notice of Intent application of Carol and Stephen Milligan, also represented by Davignon, proposes to repair and improve an existing pier at 312 Delano Road. The pier is supported with large boulders and deteriorating steel piles. The steel will be replaced with four wooden piles and the decking of the pier will also be replaced.

Commission member Kristen Saint Don-Campbell inquired about the provision for public access. Walsh pointed out that there was nothing on the plan showing accommodation for the public to laterally access the intertidal zone, and as Davignon explained, since the pier is already licensed and the state considers it a minor project modification, there is no concern about public access. Davignon went on to say the pier was built in 1972 and was licensed in 1997, which Walsh surmised might be considered an “amnesty license”. The Order of Conditions was issued with the condition that deck boards are spaced ¾ inch apart.

In other business, the commission issued a Negative determination on the Request for Determination of Applicability for Kitty Degroot to perform tree trimming and removal at 8 Aucoot Ave.

The commission continued a hearing for the Notice of Intent application of Joseph and Caroline Sheehan for the installation of a 12′ by 32′ in ground pool with a 4′ patio on three sides, and a 12′ by 12′ patio on the northerly side, located at 17 Nokomis Road. Davignon, representing the applicants, noted that there is a concrete retaining wall three feet tall running north to south along the bordering vegetated wetlands. The pool will be located in a relatively flat area, meets all the setbacks, and will have an automatic cover so will not require a fence. Walsh questioned that assertion, suggesting that the Board of Health requires a fence around pools. While Davignon agreed that technically there is a requirement for a 6′ high fence, he stated that other pools have recently been permitted with lower or no fence. Walsh suggested that, while the question was not in the purview of the commission, it would impact the plan they reviewed. The hearing was continued so further clarification could be ascertained from the Board of Health.

The commission finalized letters to the owners of 4 and 8 Island Court, Donald Lipsitt and Cyrus Lipsitt respectively, in response to a resident question with respect to construction of an unpermitted wooden walkway and mowing in the saltmarsh adjacent to the properties.

The next meeting of the Marion Conservation Commission is scheduled for February 13 at 7:00 pm at the Marion Town House.

Marion Conservation Commission

By Sarah French Storer

Marion Art Center

The Marion Art Center (MAC) announces new winter classes and workshops for 2019.

Registration is open for MAC adult classes and workshops. Beginning Watercolor Painting with instructor Patricia White will run for 8 weeks on Thursdays from 10:00 am – 12:00 pm starting February 7. Advanced Watercolor Painting with instructor Jay Ryan will also run for 8 weeks on Fridays from 10:00 am – 12:00 pm starting February 8. Tuition is $180 for MAC members and $195 for non-members.

The MAC is offering a new one-day workshop, Expressive Landscape Painting with Acrylics with instructor John Irwin. The workshop is scheduled for Saturday, February 23, 12:00 pm – 2:00 pm in the MAC studio. Students must supply their own acrylic paints: red, yellow, blue, white, and black. The instructor will provide canvases for painting. Cost: $30 for MAC members, $35 for non-members.

Please call the Marion Art Center at 508-748-1266 with questions. Register for classes and workshops by phone, in person, or online at www.marionartcenter.org/classes/art-classes/.

Music at the MAC – The Marion Art Center welcomes The David Mitton Project to the MAC stage on Saturday, February 23at 7:30 pm (doors open at 7:00 pm).

David Mitton, a graduate from the Longy School of Music (2010) is a saxophonist and composer. Since graduating he has produced three albums: Catapult (2013), Microcosm (2015), and Trace (2018) under the name The David Mitton Project. Mitton has been performing regularly with The Flying Dutchmen for nearly 5 years and is in the process of writing a practice guide for scales, in relation to composition and improvisation. Mitton’s musical style is within the jazz idiom, with a focus on hard bop and free jazz, as well as more popular styles such as funk and R&B. Expect to hear interplay between instruments and improvisation over progressions, influenced by such genres. Mitton will perform original material and what he calls “underrated standards,” rearranged to make them his own. The David Mitton Project also includes Jim Robitaille on guitar, John Dalton on drums, and Stefano Battaglia on bass. Jim Robitaille is a seasoned guitarist and composer and a professor of music at UMass Dartmouth and has performed with legendary musicians such as David Liebman and Royal Hartigan. John Dalton, a graduate from UMass Dartmouth, is making his way through the Boston music scene as both a performer and teacher. Stefano Battaglia is a bassist from Italy and a student at the world-renowned Berklee School of Music in Boston.

Tickets are available in person, by phone, or online at www.marionartcenter.org/musicatthemac/. A limited number of cabaret tables (seating for 4) are available. Attendees may bring their own refreshments to enjoy with the music.

The Marion Art Center is open for the season. New Hours for Winter/Spring are:

Tuesday – Wednesday from 10:00 am – 2:00 pm, Thursday from 10:00 am – 6:00 pm, Friday – Saturday from 10:00 am – 2:00 pm, and Sunday – Monday: closed.

Tabor to Perform Heathers: The Musical

Tabor Academy invites the public to their performance of their winter musical, Heathers: The Musical (HSE) on February 14-16at 7:30 pm.

Heathers: The Musical, a satire dealing with the challenges of teen life, became an Off-Broadway hit in 2014. Because the subject matter was so relevant to high schools, the creators of the show, Kevin Murphy and Laurence O’Keefe, worked closely with Pearce High School in Richardson, TX, from 2015 through 2016 to develop a “toned-down” high school edition (HSE) of the show. Tabor’s director, Mark Howland, said, “Tabor students must have been on top of that story for a number of them were calling for us to stage Heathers two years ago. Indeed, the clarion call has gone out as more than fifteen high schools from CA, OR, AZ, TX, WI, IA, TN, GA, VA, and MA are staging Heathers: The Musical this year.”

Howland shared, “While Heathers: The Musical (HSE) delves into such hot-button topics as body shaming, sexual harassment, and suicide, it does so with humor and sensitivity. The creators have claimed in fact that they feel the show is about female empowerment. Rather than avoid these taboo topics, Heathers: The Musical (HSE) tackles them head on but through the lens of satire, showing us that high schoolers need to be kinder to each other, and adults who work with them need to be more clued in. At Tabor, the offices of Community Life, Equity and Inclusion, and Counseling Services have been involved in training and educating the cast and crew from the get-go. Our goal is that the show be a catalyst for the school community to further awareness and empathy.”

The show runs February 14, 15, 16 at 7:30 pm in Tabor’s Fireman Center for the Performing Arts in Hoyt Hall at 245 Front Street, Marion. It is free and open to the public, no tickets or reservations required. Kerry Saltonstall, Director of Communications, shared, “We hope you will join us for Heathers as we utilize Tabor theater to expand awareness and hopefully to effect change in our communities.”

Mattapoisett Police Department

To the Editor:

I would like to thank the Mattapoisett Police Department and responders for the quick and professional response to my emergency calls for my wife Annette. The care in treating and transporting her to the hospital was done with great care, gentleness, and awareness of her condition.

As the retired police chief of Mattapoisett, I can relate to the many hours of training these officers must complete to be able to provide this life-saving service to the town.

First, they must be certified as police officers and then be certified as an EMT and some as Paramedics and continue recertification and in-service training yearly, this also includes civilian responders.

Mattapoisett is very fortunate to have such qualified and dedicated officers to respond to such emergencies.

James F. Moran

Police Chief, Retired, Mattapoisett

 

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

Groundhog Day and a Snowy Owl

The annual observance of Groundhog Day has deep agricultural roots going back to 1887 when Pennsylvania Dutch Germanic farmers gathered to celebrate what had been an old-world religious observance called Candlemas. Candlemas was celebrated by lighting candles as a seasonal recognition of the celestial station of midwinter.

The badger was the original animal conjured up as the animated soothsayer of forecasting weather. If he saw his shadow, it was an omen of a long winter, although this interpretation has frequently been questioned as the other way around.

On this side of the pond, the groundhogfilled the part of the nearest indigenous species to the badger. And at this time of year, it similarly was aroused out of hibernation by a biological alarm clock to refresh itself and look around. Most of the year it was a spirit of light and shadow in a subterranean bedchamber. This is usually a two-entrance burrow, with one just a ground-level peephole for observation position without coming outside. It is usually dug into a hedgerow with a wide view of lush farm pastures and green meadows.

A dairy farm is an ideal habitat for a groundhog like the one near to my home on Sconticut Neck in Fairhaven. I have often seen them out and about early in the morning or late in the day. They frequently pause from feeding to stand up and look around as a familiar sentinel for approaching danger and between feedings. They look like a sentinel and a familiar landmark of a bucolic countryside.

However, the peace and tranquility here was about to change two weeks before Thanksgiving with the early seasonal arrival of a snowy owl.

This unscheduled appearance was not climate-driven, but caused by an artic shortage of the snowy owl’s staple diet, the lemming. Farmland somehow has a similar appearance to their native tundra with barnyard scattered grain attracting lemming-looking rodents of mice and rats. As one of the two largest owls, they will take squirrels, rabbits, ducks, and geese – or even a groundhog. This timing of the snowy owl’s appearance changes the playing field for our friend the groundhog.

The Amish’s culture of subsistence agricultural farming left them today with a unique plain living, disciplined earthly lifestyle. They often connected animals with meteoric seasons like Groundhog Day. The Yankee farmer generation similarly followed the Native Americans whose celestial almanac linked five of the moons with living creatures, and February as the snow moon. Regardless, spring will come on time during the March 20 Vernal Equinox at exactly 5:58 pm Eastern Time when light and shadow will be of equal length all over the world, passing overhead as a planetary movement turning winter to spring as we revel below.

By George B. Emmons

Winter StoryWalk Comes to Peirson Woods

Sippican Lands Trust (SLT) is featuring a Winter StoryWalk at its Peirson Woods property from February 1 to March 1in Marion. This year’s Winter StoryWalk at Peirson Woods features “Owl Moon” written by Jane Yolen and illustrated by John Schoenherr.

StoryWalk is an innovative and delightful way for children — and adults! — to enjoy reading and the outdoors at the same time. Laminated pages from a children’s book are attached to wooden stakes, which are installed along an outdoor path. As you stroll down the trail, you’re directed to the next page in the story.

Peirson Woods is a 30-acre parcel of land with woodlands and wetlands including a vibrant salt marsh. The property is home to numerous species of birds including herons, winter buffleheads, and osprey. Located at the head of Blankenship Cove, this property features a trail leading from Point Road to a viewing platform overlooking the head of the Cove. On a clear winter day, Cape Cod, Martha’s Vineyard, and the northern Elizabeth Islands can be seen.

The parking area for Peirson Woods is located just off of Point Road approximately 1.4 miles south of the intersection of Route 6 (Wareham Road) and Point Road in Marion. Parking is very limited so please be careful when parking your vehicle along Point Road.

The Winter StoryWalk at Peirson Woods will be open from sunrise to sunset starting Friday, February 1 through Friday, March 1, 2019. Adults and kids of all ages are welcome and for further information about the Winter StoryWalk at Peirson Woods visit www.sippicanlandstrust.org or call Sippican Lands Trust at 508-748-3080.

ORRJH Students of the Month

Kevin T. Brogioli, Principal of Old Rochester Regional Junior High School, announces the following Students of the Month for November 2018:

Green Team: Ava McLaughlin & Elizabeth Higgins

Orange Team: Addisyn Petrulli & Noah Sommers

Blue Team: Erin Eilertsen & James Kippenberger

Red team: Jaymison Gunschel & Anthony Marraffa

Spacial Areas: Felicity Kulak & Bruce Maksy

Constance Ann (Whittaker) Miller

Constance Ann (Whittaker) Miller died on Tuesday January 8, 2019. The youngest of three, Connie was raised in Marion, Massachusetts. She was one of the first girls ever to attend Tabor Academy in Marion. From a young age, Connie was a gifted musician and during high school was selected to attend the prestigious Tanglewood Music Summer Institute youth training program under the direction of Leonard Bernstein. Connie went on to attend Radcliffe College and the Boston Conservatory of Music. She then spent her entire professional career, which spanned more than 40 years, as a cellist for the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra. In her later career she also served as Artistic Administrator of the Philharmonic, selecting all of the guest performers.
Connie was deeply engaged in her community, serving for several years as the first female President of the Harvard Club of Western New York and actively competing in sculling at the West Side Rowing Club (including winning a medal at the Empire State Games). Upon her retirement in 1998, Connie returned to her hometown of Marion and enjoyed an active life, which included biking, walks on the beach, and undertaking copious amounts of yard maintenance and gardening on her own.
She loved lobster rolls, fresh fish, peppermint stick ice cream, and watching the birds outside of her sunny kitchen window. Inspired by the beauty of New England nature and childhood memories, she took up watercolor painting at the age of 75. Connie was also a lifelong advocate for animals and leaves behind her deeply loved cat, Emily.
Connie was preceded in death by her mother Constance Whittaker, her sister Elizabeth Bunnell, and her brother Edwin Whittaker. She will be lovingly remembered by her son David, her daughter Katherine, her daughter in-law Sarah, and her grandchildren Allison, Isabela, Sabine, Roman, and Henley.
A memorial service will be held on Saturday, February 16th at 10:30am in the Chapel at St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church, 124 Front Street Marion, MA 02738. A reception will follow at Harriet’s Carriage House, 7 Cottage Street, Marion, MA. Charitable contributions may be made in Connie’s memory to the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra www.bpo.org or the ASPCA www.aspca.org.

Eight Continuances Makes for a Short Meeting

On January 28, as three members of the Mattapoisett Conservation Commission prepared to hear two cases, it was clear from the agenda that it could have been a long meeting. But with eight cases on the agenda being continued until February 11, those two remaining cases were quickly dispatched.

The two cases in question had already been before the commission during the previous meeting. However, because the engineering office handling those two cases advised their clients and abutters that the meeting began at 7:30 pm versus 6:30 pm, it was incumbent upon the commission to hear those cases again.

First up was a Notice of Intent application filed by Michael Smith for property located at 6 Whaler’s Way. Smith, represented again by Robert Field of Field Engineering, proposes the construction of a building addition to renovate an existing porch and deck. Field said that the property was located in a flood plain subject to stormwater flow and therefore the construction would consist of breakaway siding to allow such flow to pass under the structure.

There was some question of whether or not tree trimming and clearing along a property line fell under the jurisdiction of the Conservation Commission when an abutter presented a concern. But commission Chairman Michael King said that since the trees were not part of a wetland system, the commission would not have jurisdiction. He suggested that consultation with the tree warden and developing a line of communication between the neighbors could resolve those questions.

Field said the project would not increase the size of the residential footprint when asked if the addition would increase the home’s size.

Hearing no other comments from the public, the commission conditioned the project allowing it to move forward.

Also coming before the commission once again was another project represented by Field, Edwin Fernandes’ Notice of Intent filing for 0 Brandt Beach Road.

This filing, Field explained, was an attempt on the part of the applicants to demonstrate that the property could secure the necessary permissions for the construction of a single-family home. He said that currently the lot is undeveloped, but did include a sewer stub that could be tied-in to the public sewer system in the future.

When asked how common a practice it was for property owners to invest in speculative permits in order to market undeveloped parcels, King said that it was fairly common but might not appear as such, given that conceptual structural drawings were submitted.

Having reviewed the filing this second time, the commission again granted an Order of Conditions. Field said the next step for the applicants was to go before the Zoning Board of Appeals.

Conservation Agent Liz Lieldhold reported that property located at 0 Mattapoisett Neck Road owned by Vermette Development, LLC would be coming before the commission during the February 11 meeting, and that she and the engineer, SITEC, Inc., had achieved a consensus on wetlands flagging.

Also planned for the February 11 meeting are five Requests for Determination of Applicability for lots located along Split Road Lane in the Preserve at Bay Club, and one Notice of Intent filing for the extension of Split Road Lane.

The Mattapoisett Land Trust’s RDA application for the development of nature trails within the Hammond Quarry was also rescheduled for that time.

The next meeting of the Mattapoisett Conversation Commission is scheduled for February 11 at 6:30 pm in the Town Hall conference room.

Mattapoisett Conservation Commission

By Marilou Newell

Tabor Hosts Neuroscientist for next Science@Work Lecture

Learn more about the causes of depression, the functioning of the teenage brain, and positive steps to prevent the onset of depression at a young age during Tabor Academy’s third Science@Work lecture of the season.

Sage Aronson is a PhD candidate in the department of Neurosciences at the University of California, San Diego, where he studies the neurobiological underpinnings of how the brain processes valence (whether something is good or bad) and how the dysregulation of these systems can lead to depression. In addition to his role as a graduate student, in 2017, he started a company, Neurophotometrics, that manufactures an imaging device to record how signals propagate throughout the brain.

Many parts of the brain are involved in determining whether a particular experience or action is perceived to be good or bad. Our ability to appropriately assign these valence signals is fundamental to our everyday life. But what happens when this delicately balanced circuitry gets thrown out of balance?

In this talk, PhD candidate Sage Aronson will provide an overview of what we know about how the brain assigns and processes valence, how individual symptoms of depression can be caused by the up- or down-regulation of individual components of this circuitry, and positive steps we can take to help prevent the onset of depression at a young age.

The lecture is free and open to the public on February 11at 6:30 pm in the Lyndon South Auditorium in the Stroud Academic Center at 242 Front Street, Marion.