Santa Run was Fun in the Sun

            What do we usually expect from Mother Nature in the month of December in New England? Cold, wet weather. But that was not the case on December 7, when Santa-suited runners of all ages and all capabilities took to the village streets of Mattapoisett. The temps were chilly hovering in the low 30s, but the windless brilliantly clear blue skies and warming sunshine made it feel good to be outside.

            This holiday-themed event is the brainchild of well-known marathon runner Geoff Smith. Smith had held the event for about a decade in New Bedford where as many as a thousand runners participated. But he said that dwindling numbers and rising costs associated with putting on an event that includes street closings made that venue untenable.

            “It’s a difficult transition – but such a beautiful location,” Smith said looking around at the harborside scene. He said that he is confident the annual run will attract more participants over time. He also said that a donation to the American Legion Hall located in the community would be made to help offset building renovations.

            The new location for the Santa Run was at the Mattapoisett Town Wharf. The route began and ended there, with a loop east to Ned’s Point and back through the village streets.

            As for the runners, with holiday songs blasting, the collection of ‘Santas’ was in a jolly mood. Donning Santa suits – included in the fee to join in the fun – men, women, children, and two miniature horses waited for the signal from Smith.

            At 12:30 pm, the shorter children’s run, with little ones as young as five years old, sped off with Smith like a piped-piper leading the way. Overall first place winner was seven-and-a-half-year-old Grayson Eames of Marion with a time of 27:14.

            Speaking to some of the children before the race was like trying to herd cats, but a few shared their thoughts. Ben Ulshoeffer was there to run in the kid’s race and support his dad, Mike. The first-grader from Mattapoisett was happy to be running the race, he said. Later in a follow-up with Mom, she commented that he’d been running “since before he was born.”

            Many of the younger children were participating in a race for the first time, as noted by Ana Pereira, 5, of Marion, and Hannah Blake, 5, of New Bedford. Nine-year-old Leah Blake came in first place in her category. All the children were excited about doing it again next year.

            A number of the adults were participating as teams, such as the teachers that formed ‘Team RMS’, Rochester Memorial School. The group of women said they took physical fitness very seriously.

            “We are health-minded,” they chimed.

            Shaundra Griffin bested the team with a time of 35:18, followed by Susan Audette at 35:20, Julie Cabral at 35:51, and Tracey Forns at 45:31.

            Ali Leary, 17, was running with her aunt, Karen Mayer. Mayer said they have been running the race for about five years and enjoyed being in Mattapoisett this year. Leary’s time was 34:44 and Mayer’s was 36:22.

            A truly inspiring group of friends who support one another as members of a weight loss group were a mix of those who had done the race before, and those who were first-timers: Krystina Weston of New Bedford with a time of 58:22, Cara Rego of New Bedford in at 36:16, Janice Hughes of Westport in at 58:25, and from Swansea was Allison Vulerant and her husband, Brian, with respective times of 33:03 and 58:56.

            Husband and wife team Peg and Gene Schultz, newcomers to the area and living in Fairhaven, were first-time runners. Peg crossed the finish line at 39:34, and Gene at 51:00.

            The Shovel Town Growlers from Easton were represented by runners John Buterbaugh, 25:37, John Poirior, 24:44, and Peter Godek, 24:41.

            Cedar Rock Farms’ tiny horses named Pez and Rolo added to the festive feeling of the day by bringing up the rear of the race with the clopping of their tiny hooves.

By Marilou Newell

ORR Boys Basketball Moves On Without Key Pieces

            Every other year, it looks like Steve Carvalho has somewhat of a challenge ahead of him during the basketball season. Not because he’s running low on talent; that hasn’t been a problem for Old Rochester Regional boys basketball for some time. But Carvalho still has to figure out who will take over the majority of minutes from game to game, again, almost every two years.

            This season, the Bulldogs have to replace Cole McIntyreNoah McIntyreSam Hartley-Matteson, and Matt Brogioli.

            To start, ORR has Nick Johnson back. Now the Bulldogs’ senior captain, Johnson averaged just over 14 points per game last season and was named a South Coast Conference All-Star. Naturally, he’ll become the focal point for ORR’s offense – as well as the top assignment for opposing defenses.

            “There’s going to be a lot on him,” the ORR head coach said. “He’s also got a target on his back.”

            From there, the Bulldogs have a slew of athletic players: Jon BorsariThomas DurocherLuke Burke, and Ryon Thomas. There’s also Jonah DePine and Elijah Miranda among others.

            Having a healthy amount of versatile, switchable athletes is exactly what’s most important to Carvalho, though the Bulldogs are dealing with some injuries at this time. Being able to switch on defense and crash the board allows him to preach his brand of basketball, which has been immensely successful over the years.

            “Everything starts with rebounding for me. It triggers our break. One and done. Offensive rebounds are demoralizing,” the ORR head coach said. “But, defensively, I still think I have some interchangeable parts. We can throw different packages at teams, whether it’s a full-court press or three-quarters.”

            Now, Carvalho may think this group is a good fit for the way he coaches, but that doesn’t mean he believes the Bulldogs will coast. On a yearly basis, the South Coast Conference is a challenge – then there’s the matter of the MIAA state tournament, which is another animal.

            “We got our hands full,” he said. “We’ve got some goals we want to continue to achieve to continue to do what we’re doing. We want to get healthy and we’ll put a competitive team on the court.”

            All that being said, expecting the Bulldogs to be competitive is almost a given at this stage. Year after year, Carvalho seems to add at least one or two more athletic players; this year, he has multiple. Part of it might be luck, but he’s also putting in the work to help local basketball players understand what will be expected of them when they get to high school, setting a foundation for both his program and the individuals as competitors.

            “I think, at the end of the day, I try to promote with the youth leagues and try to get philosophical stuff out there,” Carvalho said. “The No. 1 thing is the mental aspect, especially in today’s game.

            “What do you do when you don’t have the basketball? You have to present that message,” said Carvalho. “I think I’ve been fortunate with players.”

High School Sports Update

By Nick Friar

Faith Alden Paulsen

Faith Alden Paulsen lived her entire life in Mattapoisett and Marion. Large portions of her life were spent at St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church where she sang in the choir for over 30 years and served on the altar guild. Her passions were sailing, tending to her golden retrievers, working in her gardens and those at the church, and traveling to adventurous destinations.

            Faith was a member of the Beverly Yacht Club where she was the first female Commodore. Other memberships included The Kittansett Club, Sippican Tennis Club, Sippican Choral Society and she helped coordinate and sail in the Marion to Bermuda Race.

            She is the daughter of the late Andrew and Gladys Alden and a direct descendent of Pilgrims John and Priscilla Alden. She grew up in Aucoot Cove, Mattapoisett with her four sisters and many cousins.

            Faith died Sunday morning, December 1, from complications of Alzheimer’s disease.

            She was preceded in death by husbands Robert Thompson and Charles Paulsen as well as two older sisters. Two additional sisters, six children and eleven grandchildren plus many cousins, nephews and nieces have enjoyed Faith throughout her lifetime. Faith often gathered with friends and visitors at her home on Sippican Harbor. She loved to entertain and was generous with her time, talents and means.

            A memorial service is planned for 11:00 am Saturday, March 7, 2020 at St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church, 124 Front Street, Marion.

Suggestions for memorial donations include Alzheimer’s Association of MA/NH, 309 Waverley Oaks Rd, Waltham, MA 02452; Community Nurse Home Care, 62 Center Street, Fairhaven, MA 02719; St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church, P.O. Box 545, Marion, MA 02738, or your favorite charity.

            Arrangements by Chapman, Cole & Gleason Funeral Home, Wareham. To leave a message of condolence, please visit: www.ccgfuneralhome.com

St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church

St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church extends an invitation to come to our Family Christmas Pageant on Sunday, December 15 at 10:00am.  Our pageant is intergenerational, calling children, grandma’s, grandpa’s, parents and all St. Gabriel’s family who wish to participate. Please join us as we celebrate the hope, peace, joy and love of this Advent season.  All are welcome!  St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church 124 Front Street Marion, Ma.  508-748-1507

            On Saturday, December 21 at 3:00 pm St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church and First Congregational Church of Marion will offer a special time of worship to offer comfort, healing and hope.  Sometimes called “Blue Christmas” or “Longest Night,” the service is often held close to Christmas when the winter solstice makes the days shorter and darker than any other time in the year.  People who may not be having a very merry Christmas and friends who support them are invited to come and sit with one another in a liturgy that speaks of the love of God for those struggling during this season. Please join us in the Chapel at St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church, 124 Front Street, Marion. All are welcome. 

Herminia B. “Minnie” (Baptiste) Medeiros

Herminia B. “Minnie” (Baptiste) Medeiros, 95 of Dartmouth died December 7, 2019 peacefully at her daughter’s home.

            She was the wife of the late Victor M. Medeiros.

            She was the daughter of the late Joseph and Isabel (Vieira) Baptiste, she lived in New Bedford and Dartmouth most of her life.

            Mrs. Medeiros was formerly employed by Berkshire Hathaway for 45 years until her retirement.

            She enjoyed spending time with family and friends, talking on the phone, gardening and sewing.

            Survivors include her 3 daughters, Betsy Lebeau of Naples, FL, Judith Nunes of New Bedford and Sandra Baptiste and her partner Bruce Mathieson of Mattapoisett; 5 grandchildren, Dianne Bowers, Suzanne Soares, Richard Nunes, Karen Nunes and Lauren Stevens and her husband Matthew; 6 great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews.

            She was the sister of the late Joseph Baptiste, Louis Baptiste, Mary Carvalho and Isabel Serpa.

            Her Memorial Mass will be celebrated on Monday, December 16th at 11 am at St. Anthony’s Church, Mattapoisett. Her family will receive guests at church prior to her Mass from 10:30-11 AM. Arrangements are with the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home for Funerals, 50 County Rd., Route 6, Mattapoisett. For online guestbook, please visit www.saundersdwyer.com.

Tax Rates up as Property Values Stagnate

            Mattapoisett property taxes will increase by 2.1 percent this year, rising from $13.21 in fiscal year 2019 to $13.49 this 2020 fiscal year. Add in the Community Preservation Act tax of an additional 1 percent, and the assessed average value home will see a 2.4-percent overall increase, or an annual tax bill of $6.627.93.

            As other Tri-Town towns have lowered their tax rates as a result of rising property values, Mattapoisett has seen only a minute increase in property value of just 0.38 percent.

            Mattapoisett Principal Assessor Kathleen Costello told the Board of Selectmen on December 9 that the median home value assessment this year increased by just $1,854 to $491,322. 

            “There wasn’t a lot of big changes from last year to this year as far as values go,” said Costello. Next year, though, she said, “I think we’re going to start seeing our values climbing the way they used to be.”

            But the slump, said Costello, is mainly due to a 5.24-percent decrease in the value of personal property with the loss of some small businesses and, the biggest hit: the nearly four-year vacancy of a large industrial building on Industrial Drive

            “We’re starting to see some of the ramifications of that,” said Costello. 

            The town will continue with a single-rate tax, meaning commercial and residential property will be taxed at the same rate per $1,000 in value.

            “We still don’t have the percentages of commercial (to make a split-rate tax viable),” Costello said. “It’s not going to save our residences and [a split-rate tax is] really going to hurt our small businesses.”

            After a static fiscal year 2020, Costello said FY2021 will likely be worse with no new solar farms going online this fiscal year to inject growth into next the fiscal year, “Which is a big slug for us,” said Costello.

            New constructions and additions are trending down, said Costello, and “Everything’s down with the new growth aspect. I’m very concerned about the number for next year.”

            Town Administrator Michael Gagne concurred, stating that he would be adjusting the revenue projections for FY21 down as a result.

            The two selectmen, however, maintained their optimism. While Selectman Paul Silva commented that he does not think the issue is necessarily an economic concern, Selectman Jordan Collyer recalled prior years of significant growth and said, “When everybody else was having bad years, we’ve had good years.” He also looked back at 2005 – a “sucky year,” as he put it, saying, “But we managed that.”

            Gagne commented that there are other towns in the region with similar flat growth.

            On the bright side, there are at least two additional solar farms in the pipeline, however, they have not yet finished the permitting process. Any revenue uptick from those solar farms will not be seen until fiscal year 2022.

            The Mattapoisett Board of Selectmen is holding a meeting after press time on December 11 at 6:30 pm at the Mattapoisett Town Hall.

Mattapoisett Board of Selectmen

By Jean Perry

We Strolled Into the Holidays

            Sunday, December 8, was the day of the annual Marion Holiday Stroll.

            The holiday stroll is a Tri-Town event that sets itself apart from the rest in a category all its own. It surpasses the other town events by its very nature; the holiday stroll is not just a town event, the holiday stroll is a true village event.

            As a community journalist, I have attended the holiday stroll every year for five years and look forward to each one. As children we enjoyed years of delighting in the magic of Christmas; as adults, some of us are lucky if we can harken back to that Christmas magic vicariously through our children. At some point in life, though, we all find ourselves in the midst of a holiday season swirling around us with absolutely no desire to participate, devoid of the holiday spirit and lacking the time to even notice that Christmas is now only two weeks away.

            Life is like that for grown-ups – busy during non-holidays and then double busy when one has to fit in the extra tasks of gift shopping, gift wrapping, tree trimming, light hanging, feast preparing, and party attending. For a community journalist in the Tri-Town, a weekend like this past one has us boomeranging from Rochester to Mattapoisett to Marion and then back to Mattapoisett all in one day, chasing down Santa as he has breakfast then pizza with kids in different towns, all on top of the routine meetings and goings-on that we must attend and report on. By the time Sunday afternoon came and it was time to get back to Marion for the holiday stroll, my gas tank was on ‘E’ and so was my energy.

            The holiday stroll is a pretty easy event to cover, however; there are opportunities for great photos in every direction and after five holiday strolls I know just where to position myself and which direction to point my camera. I was careful to park my car outside of the zone of the stroll so I could quickly slip away when my work was done, and as my teenage son and I closed our car doors and cut across the street, I said to him, “OK, let’s get this over with.”

            Straight to the Town Wharf we walked, politely excusing ourselves through the crowd to the very top of the gangway for unobstructed photos of Santa’s boat as he traversed Sippican Harbor. I ate a Tabor Academy sugar cookie while I waited. I was cold. I looked to the kids sitting and standing on the roof of a nearby shed for a signal that Santa could be spotted and my work could begin.

            “There he is!” “Where?” “Oh yeah! I see him!” “Here he comes, yay!”

            The children smiled and jumped and clapped and with a slight jolt of adrenaline, I squinted my eyes in the direction where the kids were pointing and focused my zoom lens on the horizon, like I do every year. And the second that fuzzy white boat with the red dot came into focus, I was overcome, like I am every year, with the sudden magic of Christmas.

            For a moment I am a kid again, and I feel that expanse of emotion and imagination that I would on Christmas Eve. The anticipation of Santa’s arrival increases as the boat appears to grow in size closing in on the wharf where we all stand waving back at Santa as he waves to us. His “ho-ho-ho” carries across the water and his exclamations of “Merry Christmas!” resonate with the child in me that loved Santa Claus – a familiar and unconditional love-giving omnipresence in my life – and his ‘Merry Christmases’ felt warm and reassuring like a promise that Christmas would indeed be merry and that it was time let some of its joy in.

            I was still that little girl when Santa made eye contact with me from the boat, star-struck like the rest of the kids on dry land. Meanwhile, I am watching most of it unfold through my camera lens that followed Santa’s every step up the gangway and into the arms of an exalting crowd. Now I’m an adult again, busy at work trailing Santa like the paparazzi and pressed to make my way through the people to get ahead of the horse and carriage before it departs up to Front Street carrying Santa and a carriage full of lucky kids.

            As I do every year, I take my place atop the stone wall that lines Island Wharf Road to get a great above-the-crowd perspective of the carriage’s approach with Santa waving at the people as he passes. As he closes in on my position, he looks over at me on my perch and gives me a wave.

            “You’ve been a very busy girl!” Santa says to me. And for another split second, I’m back to being 5-year-old Jeannie again. She feels proud and special to be singled out by Santa. “Ho-ho-ho! Merry Christmas!” The horses take the turn and Santa passes on into Marion Center with an entire village following behind him.

            It’s an extraordinary sight to see the village streets so full of people. Village businesses open their doors and hand out free snacks, hot cocoa, and candy canes… There is popcorn and hot dogs and holiday music… Neighbors in colorful hats and scarves greet one another and shake each other’s mitten hands in front of decorated holiday doorways and it all seems like one big living Christmas card.

            The Marion Holiday Stroll is an essential component to Christmas for many of us, and it certainly feels less like work and more like a Christmas catharsis for this community journalist.

            The spirit of the holidays was alive and well in Marion on Sunday as I walked back to the car. Holding my son’s hand in one hand and 5-year-old Jeannie’s in the other, we strolled on into Christmas.

By Jean Perry

Marion Art Center

Last weekend to see Emmalina Scrooge – There is just one more weekend to see Steph DeFerie’s Emmalina Scrooge at the MAC, directed by Jennifer Palmer. The last three performances are scheduled on December 13, 14, and 15. Friday and Saturday shows will begin at 7:30 pm, while the Sunday matinee will begin at 2:00 pm. The kids are the stars in this heartwarming, contemporary take on Charles Dickens’ classic holiday favorite. The cast features Lily Ambrosi, Genevieve Arone, Jade Beauregard, Jack Boesen, Leah Bonia, Lee Bonia, Lily Bonia, Holden Campbell, Alane Carbone, Edie Dupre, Molly Dupre, Jackson Gillman, Suzie Kokkins, (Elena Murphy on Dec. 7 only), Thomas O’Shaughnessy, Zoe Pateakos, Angela Pedulli, and Christian Pedulli. The crew includes Andrea Cantin, Steve McManus, and Frank Mitchell. Tickets are still available and are $18 for MAC members, $20 for nonmembers, and just $12 for children 12 and under. Purchase tickets online at marionartcenter.org/events/emmalina-scrooge

            Holiday Shopping at the MAC – Don’t miss your chance to find unique gifts and one-of-a-kind artworks at the Marion Art Center. The MAC’s Holiday Shop will be open on Friday, December 13 and Saturday, December 14, from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm each day. All artworks in the current exhibition, Small Works on the Wall, are available for immediate collection (and gift-giving) upon purchase. Shop also for unique jewelry, host gifts, handmade clothing, accessories, and more! The exhibition ends on Wednesday, December 18. The Marion Art Center’s last open day of the year will be Thursday, December 19, from 10:00 am to 6:00 pm. The MAC will reopen to the public on Tuesday, January 7, 2020, at 10:00 am.

Mattapoisett COA

            Dental Care – Cleaning and dental referrals are available to residents 60 and over who do not have dental insurance or with limited financial means on Monday, December 16, by appointment. Register for this event by calling: 774-766-7238. This event is being offered by Holly Petruzzo, a registered dental hygienist.

            Toe Nail Care – Trim, shape, electric file, cleaning, etc. will be performed by Lisa Nuno, certified, licensed Podologist on Monday, December 30, by appointment, and on the last Monday of each month. Mattapoisett COA, 17 Barstow St., Mattapoisett. Register:  508-758-4110

            Widowed Persons (and Significant Others) Support Group – Get support, education, guidance in this session led by Nancy Arnold, Bereavement Counselor from Southcoast VNA. These sessions take place every first Thursday of each month. The next session will be held on Thursday, January 2 from 9:30 to 11:00 am.

Hearing Aid Services – Come to the COA for a free hearing test and consultation; and free hearing aid cleaning and check. This service is provided by Certified Hearing Aid Specialist, Lauren Warburton, every first Monday of each month. Come to the COA on Monday, January 6, by appointment between 2:00 and 3:00 pm.

            Manicures (for Men and Women) – Free manicures will be offered by cosmetology students from Old Colony Vocational High School on Thursday, January 16, 2020, starting at 9:45 am (by appointment). Light refreshments will be provided.

            Medicare and Mass HealthKnow Your Legal Rights – This informational session will be offered by the South Coast Counties Legal Services Attorney. After the short session, one-on-one legal consultations (20 minutes) may be scheduled. This event is scheduled for Tuesday, December 17 at 10:00 am. 

            CPR/AED Training – This training session is for parents, grandparents, babysitters, neighbors, and anyone serving the public (note: this is not for health/emergency response professionals). The instructor for this class will be Beth Oleson, and the cost is $35 for the class, and $10 for the optional certification card. This class will take place on Saturday, February 8, 2020, from 9:00 am to 12:00 pm.

            Pottery and Clay Building – Learn more about clay hand building, ceramic tile painting, slab building, and glazing. Create your own unique piece, which will be kiln-fired and later returned to you as a finished product. This class is led by Barbara Greenspan, artist and registered art therapist. All materials and instruction are included in the fee. The special price for December is $5 per class.  Please note that any products made in December will not be fired in the kiln until after January. This class takes place on Thursday, December 19 from 9:30 to 11:00 am.

            Norman Rockwell Remembered – Experience a selection of beloved Rockwell images from his familiar to his lesser-known, serious social statements. Hear stories behind his inspirations. Art historian Jill Sanford leads this experience of engaging, educational art observation. This free event will take place on Tuesday, January 7, 2020, from 12:30 to 1:30 pm. 

            Still Life Drawing Classes – All skill levels welcome. Master pencil drawing fundamentals, learn easy shading, develop drawing skills in this class, which is taught by professional educator and artist, Bernie Klim. The cost is $5 per session for adults 60 and older; $10 per session for everyone under 60. You will need 2B graphite sticks, charcoal pencils, sketchbook/paper (materials will be available for purchase on-site, prior to class). These classes take place on Tuesdays from 6:00 to 9:00 pm.

            All COA events take place at the Mattapoisett Council on Aging, unless otherwise stated. The COA is located at 17 Barstow St., Mattapoisett. For more information, or to register for any of these events, call 508-758-4110.

Massive Solar Farms in Rochester Pipeline

            One of the largest-scale* solar farms in Massachusetts is coming to Rochester in 2020, resulting in the clearing of 60 acres of forest for the 10-megawatt mega solar farm proposed by SunRaise Investments.

            This solar farm proposal is only one of five solar farm projects the solar developer has slated for Rochester that will encompass hundreds of acres of contiguous lots spanning land along Braley Hill Road from Tabor Lane to Featherbed Lane and all the way across to Snipatuit Road abutting Trailside Estates, said Town Planner Steve Starrett during the Rochester Planning Board meeting on December 10.

            Starrett said he and Planning Board Chairman Arnie Johnson held a technical review meeting with SunRaise Investments for the first project, the 10-megawatt solar farm, with a public informational meeting with the board to follow in early 2020.

            This first SunRaise Investments solar farm will be built on 100 acres, 60 of which will be clear-cut. During a follow-up with Johnson after the meeting, Johnson said the parcels on which SunRaise plans to construct the five solar farms are all wooded.

            “From the air, it’s going to transform the landscape,” said Johnson.

            The solar arrays will not be visible from any public way.

            Johnson said the owner of the land is Lisa Holden, and the properties “are part of the old Rounseville properties.”

            “It’s a big endeavor,” said Johnson. “It’s significant.”

            Rochester has seen a steady stream of solar energy field projects since 2015, but a new influx of solar development interest in Rochester is underway, said Johnson, and there is a reason for it.

            “We were told that National Grid is full,” said Johnson. He explained as best he could that the areas of the state serviced by energy provider National Grid are seeing a drop-off in solar developments because National Grid has reached its capacity, “And the grid can’t take any more power,” he said.

            Rochester and the surrounding areas are serviced by Eversource, which has only reached a fraction of its capacity, said Johnson.

            “A vacuum was created,” Johnson explained. “Solar is coming into Rochester – we’re kind of like the last frontier.”

            So far in Rochester, the solar farms that have been developed have been isolated in different areas of town. These five SunRaise Investments solar farms will be combined and concentrated in one section of town, something Johnson feels uneasy about.

            “My fear is: this is all new technology in this whole area, and despite our efforts to bond and hold bonds for decommissioning and restoration – are we creating a legacy for the next 20 to 25 years? Are we leaving a bad legacy here in town?”

            Although the Planning Board has no choice but to approve a solar farm plan that is in compliance with the town’s solar bylaw, Johnson still worries that the safeguards the bylaw does have in place might not be enough.

            “When it comes time to decommission them, just what do you do to get rid of this stuff?” said Johnson. “Despite our best efforts with decommissioning bonds, what are we leaving behind?”

            Furthermore, the concentration of the five large-scale solar farms in one area is something new to Rochester, so the impact it will have on wildlife habitat is unknown, said Johnson.

            “At what point do you change the habitat?” he asked. “A concentration of hundreds of acres, eventually all together – all connected – what’s that going to do to the habitat?”

            Johnson offered one glimmer of hope, though: when the solar farms are decommissioned after 20 years, the fields can reforest themselves.

            “These sites will recreate themselves when the materials are taken off,” Johnson said. “It’s not like they’re asphalting all these areas.

            “On one hand, [these woods] were all open land at one point,” continued Johnson. “The trees were cut for lumber for sawmills a hundred years ago or so, so it was open farmland at one point. But it still doesn’t make it any easier…”

            Johnson said Rochester should expect these five SunRaise Investments solar projects to come before the board in sets of two at a time throughout 2020.

            “That’ll be our whole year. They’re just gonna be coming in – boom, boom, boom…”

            Also during the meeting, the board continued the public hearing for a Special Permit for a large-scale solar farm proposed by developer Pedro Rodriguez for Solar MA Project Management for land designated as 0 Walnut Plain Road/0 Old Middleboro Road.

            On behalf of Rodriguez, Austin Turner addressed the board about a Conservation Commission matter that has complicated the solar developer’s application with the Planning Board.

            The Conservation Commission has expressed that it would not approve the expansion of the access road into a nearby wetland, although the board maintains that a 16-foot wide road is required for public safety and emergency response access to the site.

            The road is currently 14.5-15 feet in width, said Turner.

            Turner suggested that perhaps the board might consider allowing for a 16-foot road with only a couple areas at 15 feet.

            “I don’t see a really big deal with that,” said Planning Board member Gary Florindo. The road is straight in the selected locations, he said. “You can see a far enough distance to avoid bottlenecking.”

            Planning Board member John DeMaggio wasn’t so sure, however, given that earlier in the evening the board had required another developer to stick to the 16-foot width.

            “We’ll have to take that one to a conference with ConCom,” said Johnson, “because I’m with John.”

            Johnson also wants to consult with the fire and police chiefs as well.

            The board will invite the Conservation Commission to its January 14 meeting.

            The hearing was continued until January 14.

            In other matters, the board touched base again with REpurpose Properties, Inc., developers seeking a Special Permit for an age-restricted over-55 residential development beside Plumb Corner Mall on Rounseville Road.

            John Churchill gave an update on the plans for “The Village at Plumb Corner,” which included the addition of a lighting plan and fill plan specifying 1,700 yards of fill needed.

            The peer-review engineer submitted 14 requests that Churchill addressed, focusing mainly on the removal of some dead and diseased trees on Rounseville Road, the flagging of those trees, marking building, road, and detention basin locations ahead of the board’s site visit.

            Johnson told Churchill to update the list of waiver requests to include a traffic study waiver and to have all locations properly staked out for the site visit, which was scheduled for the morning of Sunday, December 15.

            Before the REpurpose Properties Special Permit hearing was reopened, the board accepted the Approval Not Required application filed by Patricia Bray, Trustees, and REpurpose Properties, Inc., which serves to provide more room for a playground for the daycare at Plumb Corner Mall.

            In other business, in light of a recent fire at an approved two-lot subdivision on Dr. Hickey Lane, the board gave an informal nod for the expansion of the road to 16 feet in width with a turnaround within the approved cul-de-sac that was never built and will allow the developer to erect a street sign. The Fire Department had access issues during the fire, which resulted in these requests.

            The next meeting of the Rochester Planning Board is scheduled for January 14 at 7:00 pm at the Rochester Town Hall.

            *Editor’s Note: The Wanderer went to press on Tuesday night after the Planning Board meeting, leaving minimal time to perform a thorough research on the largest solar farm in Massachusetts. Preliminary research suggests that the largest solar farm to date in Massachusetts is a 7.1-megawatt array plus a 3.3-megawatt energy storage system totaling 9.8 megawatts located in Winchendon, MA.

Rochester Planning Board

By Jean Perry