The Annual Meeting of the Mariner Youth Soccer Association will be held at 7:00 pm on Thursday,January 24at the Fairhaven Council on Aging, 229 Huttleston Ave, Fairhaven. All members and families are welcome to attend.
The Annual Meeting of the Mariner Youth Soccer Association will be held at 7:00 pm on Thursday,January 24at the Fairhaven Council on Aging, 229 Huttleston Ave, Fairhaven. All members and families are welcome to attend.
The Marion Board of Health is pleased to announce the availability of a limited amount of seasonal flu vaccine. Anyone interested in receiving the flu vaccine may contact Maureen Murphy at 508-748-3530 to schedule an appointment.
On the final afternoon of December 31, the Rochester Council On Aging held its annual New Year’s Eve luncheon and celebration. Director Sharon Lally spooned up heaping piles of Chinese food as the buffet line wound around the central conference room and corridor. By her side helping to serve the partygoers was Program Assistant Edna Holstrom.
Many of the ladies in the crowd wore sparkling paper tiaras announcing Happy New Year or depicting colorful fireworks. The mood was jubilant while in the background providing musical accompaniment for the merrymakers was Rick LeBlanc on the keyboard.
Clearly, the assembled had enjoyed an unspoken number of New Year’s Eve celebrations in their lifetimes, and experience in how to enjoy life was evident as they hugged their neighbor with good wishes for 2019 and commented on how delicious the food tasted.
When considering hopes and plans for the coming year, most were predominantly eager to have good health because as many said, “Without your health, you ain’t got nothing,” while others expressed a desire for more.
“I’m going to start thinking of myself first,” said Betty, one of the revelers, saying it was about time for her to do just that.
Diane thought for a moment then said quietly, “I hope God blesses me.”
Lorraine’s plans included “helping those who are less fortunate then me.”
Donna, who had traveled from New Bedford with her 94-year-old mother Betty (a different Betty), talked about the challenges the two had faced in 2018 and planned on doing all she could to make 2019 better.
And as for Betty, Donna’s mother, what did she want from 2019?
“Please I just want peace on Earth – please!”
Happy New Year!
By Marilou Newell
To the Editor:
The Sippican Woman’s Club of Marion would like to thank you and all the members of the Woman’s Club for contributing to the success of our recent Holiday House tour. Without the effort of so many members, from those who decorated Handy’s Tavern ‘Festival of Trees’ to members who served as hostesses at the homes and at the tea, and to all the students from ORR, Bishop Stang, and Tabor Academy who volunteered, this celebration would not be possible. As you know, the proceeds of this tour enable the Club to award several scholarships to local students attending college.
I would also like to extend a special thank you to the five Marion homeowners who so graciously opened their beautiful houses to tour. Five local florists worked with the homeowners to transform the houses into beautiful holiday showcases.
I have to also thank Sean Cormier, the Marion DPW, and Village Sign who came to our rescue after gale force winds blew down our banner!
Again, thank you to all! Happy Holidays and see you next year!
Mary L. Verni, President
Sippican Woman’s Club
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.
Come celebrate the New Year at Open Table on Friday,January 11in Reynard Hall at the Mattapoisett Congregational Church. The menu is usually a surprise, but always delicious. There is no charge for the meal, although donations are gratefully accepted. Doors open at 4:30 pm and the meal is served at 5:00 pm. This is a community event and everyone is welcome.
Mildred (Brown) DePierre, 93, of Mattapoisett died December 31, 2018 at St. Luke’s Hospital after a brief illness.
She was the wife of the late Michael DePierre.
Born in New Bedford, daughter of the late Wallace and Mary Elizabeth (O’Grady) Brown, she lived in Mattapoisett most of her life.
Mrs. DePierre was a communicant of St. Anthony’s Church in Mattapoisett.
She was a founding member of the Catholic Guild for the Blind and a former member of both the Sacred Heart of Jesus Society and the Children of Mary at St. Joseph’s Parish in Fairhaven.
Survivors include her son, Michael F. DePierre and his wife Nadine; 3 grandsons, James, Brian and Brendan; and 2 great-grandchildren, Lola and Baron.
She was the sister of the late Walter Brown, Rose Gibbs, Victoria Morrill and Clara Monkievich.
Her Funeral Mass will be celebrated on Friday, January 4th at 10 AM in St. Anthony’s Church in Mattapoisett. Burial will be private. Visiting hours are omitted. Arrangements are with the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home for Funerals, 50 County Rd., Route 6, Mattapoisett. In lieu of flowers, remembrances may be made to the American Lung Association 1661 Worcester Rd. #301, Framingham, MA 01701. For directions and guestbook, please visit www.saundersdwyer.com.
Gloria J. (Evans) Snyder, 67, of Mattapoisett, MA passed away on December 31, 2018 at Atria Assisted Living in Fairhaven, MA. She was the wife of William G. Snyder, whom she was married to for 45 years.
Born in Kingston, PA on January 7, 1951, Gloria was the daughter of the late Ernest and Martha (Hickey) Evans. She graduated from Allentown Hospital School of Nursing and was a registered nurse at Massachusetts General Hospital. She also worked and volunteered at many places including Planned Parenthood, Project Place, and the Boston Commission of Public Health. She was an avid gardener, loved spending time with her grandchildren, and taking long walks with her dog.
Gloria will be deeply missed by her two sons Josh Snyder and his wife Lesley of Norwell and Jeff Snyder and his wife Lindsey of Sudbury; her daughter Leah Kabrhel and her husband Craig of Glen Ridge, NJ; her two sisters Pearl Young of Pennsylvania and Brenda Lowe of California; her seven grandchildren Jack, Drew, Ben, Landon, Layla, Calvin and Kodak; and several nieces and nephews. She was the sister of the late Lorraine Hughes.
The Snyder Family would like to extend a heartfelt thank you to the staff at Hospice Services of Massachusetts for all of their exceptional care and comfort.
Visiting hours are Friday, January 4th from 4-8PM at the Saunders-Dwyer Mattapoisett Home for Funerals, 50 County Road, Route 6 in Mattapoisett. A memorial service will also be held on Saturday, January 5th at 1PM at St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church, 124 Front Street in Marion.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Alzheimer’s Association, 309 Waverly Oaks Road, Waltham, MA 02452 or www.alz.org.
For directions and guestbook, please visit www.saundersdwyer.com
The holiday season produces 25 percent more solid waste than the rest of the year which might not have crossed one’s mind during prior years until 2018 when the country suddenly realized the solid waste and recycling crisis it was facing since the Chinese market closed its doors to American recyclables.
Now that Christmas is over and we are heading into another year of unknown certainty when it comes to recycling, it is critical that consumers and residents get a grasp on when to recycle your leftover holiday waste materials and when to throw it in the trash.
Patti Howard, the community outreach coordinator from Covanta Energy at SEMASS, wants residents to know what to do with the different categories of Christmas leftovers to keep the recycling process operating efficiently, and to keep your town’s trash or recycling from being turned away because too many people put too many of the wrong items into the wrong bins.
Let’s start with wrapping paper, which is likely your house’s top post-Christmas morning waste product. The blanket statement, Howard said, is not to recycle your wrapping paper. However, if you are serious about recycling the right way, you can take a closer look at your particular wrapping paper to see if perhaps some, or all of it, is eligible for recycling.
Certainly, if on the blank side of your wrapping paper you see the words “recyclable” anywhere on it, proceed to the recycling bin. Any bits smaller than 2 square inches, however, should go straight into the trash so the tiny papers don’t interfere with recycling processing equipment.
Wrapping paper that contains glitter, sequins, applied decorations that cannot be removed, velvety flocking, or shiny metallic sparkles should go in the trash. Not sure if your wrapping paper is recyclable? Try the “crumple test.”
If you can crumple a piece of wrapping paper into a ball and it retains its shape (and doesn’t contain any of the characteristics mentioned above), it may be recyclable. But if you are still unsure, the safest thing to do is to throw it away.
As Howard pointed out, often people prefer to burn their wrapping paper instead of throwing it in the trash, but she cautions residents to refrain from the practice of burning wrapping paper.
“Sometimes the wrapping paper can be treated with chemicals that shouldn’t be burned,” said Howard. But if throwing wrapping paper into the trash bothers you, Howard has another idea for you. Why not recycle it by reusing it?
And forget about recycling tissue paper. Tissue paper always goes in the trash bin.
Recycling is critical, but there are two equally important parts to the sustainability equation – reducing and reusing.
Some higher quality wrapping paper is harder to tear and crease and, if carefully opened, can be folded and tucked away for use next year. The same goes for your ribbon and bows, which would otherwise get tossed in the trash. Why not consider saving them for reuse, thus reducing your holiday waste in small ways that can really add up?
“Besides,” said Howard. “People could be spending less on what doesn’t matter, like wrapping paper and bows, and more on what does matter.”
Getting back to those ribbons and bows, Howard made it clear that, aside from reusing it, the trash is the only other place it belongs.
“Not in the recycle bin,” said Howard. “Gotta go in the trash.”
During the holidays, we send some 1.5 billion Christmas cards, the equivalent of 300,000 new trees being harvested. Like some wrapping paper, some Christmas cards can be recycled while some cards cannot. If it’s purely paper – no glitter, shiny paper, foil, plastic, metal, or velvet flocking – feel free to recycle it. Or, if possible, tear off any parts that contain non-recyclable materials and recycle the pure paper.
Still, those pretty foil and glittery ones don’t necessarily need to end up in the trash. One idea is to cut them up into smaller pieces and reuse them next year for gift tags, another way to accomplish Howard’s recommendation: spend less on what doesn’t matter.
Whether used to ship gifts to your house or to box up and wrap, cardboard boxes are one thing that can always be recycled. Break boxes down, flatten them, and keep them to a maximum of 2 square feet in size.
Gift bags (sans the tissue paper) might also be recyclable if they are purely paper with no plastic film or other of the decorative aforementioned recycling contaminates. Or, like most people, reuse them for next year.
Also non-recyclable, but by no means non-reusable, are disposable plastic cutlery, straws, and most plates and cups; however, check for a recycling symbol and rinse it off before tossing it into the recycle bin. Wax-coated paper plates are never reusable, even clean ones, and never throw soiled paper plates into the recycling bin – trash or compost only.
During the winter holidays is when Americans purchase 40 percent of all battery sales for the year. Never throw batteries into the trash. They can be stored and then returned to, for example, electronics stores or other venues that advertise accepting old batteries.
Polystyrene (Styrofoam) is not recyclable in your curbside bin in any of the three towns in the Tri-Town. Other items such as bubble wrap and packing peanuts should go in the trash.
Strands of holiday lights should never end up in the recycling bin. According to Howard, some stores welcome your old lights and might even offer a coupon towards a brand-new set of LED lights for next year.
Holiday decorations – even the plastic ones – do not belong in the recycling bin. Neither does your artificial tree or those old toys you want to get rid of to make way for the new ones. Better than throwing them away, why not donate them? It’s indeed true that one’s trash is another’s treasure, especially for those who cannot afford new decorations and toys every year. And with our current solid waste disposal conundrum, anything that doesn’t get thrown in the trash is better for all of us.
The human race has used more resources in the last 50 years than the rest of the human race has used throughout all human history. Perhaps as we enter the new year, we’ll consider a resolution to reduce, reuse, and recycle all we can.
By Jean Perry
The Unitarian Universalist (UU) Men’s Fellowship in partnership with the South Coast Bikeway Alliance (SCBA) is sponsoring a presentation on the impact of rails-to-trails bike paths and an update on upcoming plans for the South Coast Bikeway. The keynote presenter will be rails-to-trails advocate Craig Della Penna, to be followed by a conversation with regional bicycling supporters and experts. The free event will be held on Wednesday, January 9at 7:00 PM at the Fairhaven Unitarian Universalist (UU) Memorial Church Auditorium (102 Green ST, Fairhaven, MA, 02719).
Craig Della Penna, well known to the South Coast, will give a high-energy presentation on the history of the rails-to-trails movement, its tie-in to both the South Coast and Cape Cod, and recent developments that are accelerating rail-to-trails project completion across the state. Craig’s talk will be followed by a short presentation by: Bonne DeSousa (President of the Friends of the Mattapoisett Bike Path, and an active founding member of the South Coast Bikeway Alliance), Bob Espindola (Fairhaven Selectman and President of the South Coast Bikeway Alliance), Galen Mook (Executive Director of Mass Bike), Kevin Hart (Deputy Counsel/Research Analyst for the Massachusetts House Transportation Committee), and R. Bruce Donald (APBP Tri-State Greenways Coordinator East Coast Greenway Alliance).
All who have an interest in pathways for recreation, alternative transportation, promotion of tourism, and economic development on the South Coast are welcome and encouraged to attend this free event. Pre-registration is appreciated. Go to www.southcoastbikeway.com and click on “events calendar”:
For further information contact Dave Chevalier at dchevy5@aol.com or SCBA at thesouthcoastbikeway@gmail.com.
Sippican School Principal Evelyn Rivet announced on December 20 that she would retire at the end of the school year.
“I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for sharing your children with me,” Rivet said in a letter she sent to parents on Friday. “…[I]t has been a special blessing in the knowledge that I truly loved my job. Each day, it was my goal to make a positive impact on the learning experience of each child. I am thankful for knowing each of you and your children and will carry many special memories forward into this next exciting chapter of my life.”
Rivet has been an educator for over 30 years, with 19 of them spent at Sippican School. She entered the Sippican School community in 2000, serving as a reading teacher and in 2009 she was appointed as temporary interim principal until her appointment in 2011 making her permanent principal.
By Jean Perry