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You are here: Home / Archives for Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

Diehl to face Brady, Raduc

October 8, 2015 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

Low-turnout  primary decides Nov. 3 ballot, Diehl to face Brady, Raduc

Two area state representatives will face off, along with unenrolled candidate Anna Grace Raduc of Halifax, on Tuesday Nov. 3 as they vie to fill the 2nd Plymouth and Bristol District seat left vacant by the death of state Sen. Thomas P. Kennedy, D-Brockton, in June. this positions Geoffrey Diehl to face Michael Brady and Anna Grace Raduc.

State Rep. Michael D. Brady, D-Brockton, handily defeated businessman Joseph Lynch, also of Brockton, in the Tuesday, Oct. 6 special state primary. Brady took about 90 percent of the Democratic votes.

State Rep. Geoffrey Diehl, R-Whitman, was also on GOP ballots, but faced no opposition. There were no candidates listed on either the Green/Rainbow or United Independent Party ballots in Tuesday’s primary.

“For me, today was just another day on the campaign trail,” said Diehl as he chatted with Whitman selectmen Dan Salvucci and Brian Bezanson who were working a Diehl sign-holding post across the street from the Whitman Town Hall polling place. “My focus is November.”

Voters may also have been looking ahead to November as both Whitman and Hanson saw a turnout of about 3 percent of registered voters cast ballots.

In Whitman, where 384 of the town’s 9,631 voters cast ballots, Democrats backed Brady with 141 votes to Lynch’s 29. Hanson saw 232 of about 7,000 voters turnout to give Brady a 115 to 15 win over Lynch.

The margin was similar throughout the district.

Brady garnered 2,533 votes in Brockton, 94 in Easton, 88 in East Bridgewater, 49 in Halifax, 219 n Hanover and 18 in Plympton. Lynch received 355 Brockton votes, 12 in Easton, 8 in East Bridgewater, 7 in Halifax, 33 in Hanover and 2 in Plympton.

Neither Brady nor Lynch were available for comment on the primary result, but Diehl, who received 96 votes in Hanson and 208 in Whitman expressesed gratitude to voters.

“The response to the campaign has been overwhelming,” Diehl stated. “When I am door-knocking people are thanking me every day for repealing automatic gas tax hikes.”

He also stressed the differences between his tenure as a representative for the 7th Plymouth District he has served since 2010 and Brady — the 9th Plymouth representative for seven and a half years.
“I am the only candidate in this race who has cut people’s taxes,” Diehl said. “My opponent has voted to increase taxes every time.  He doubled tax on alchohol, raised the gas tax, sales tax, utility taxes, supported increasing income taxes, and voted for higher fees.”

Diehl pointed to his accomplishments, including the automatic gas tax repeal and work against legislative pay raises and opposition to taxpayer contributions to balance cost overruns for the Olympics.

While Brady is strong in Brockton where he has served on the school committee and 13 years as a city councilor, Diehl’s best chance is considered by political observers to be centered in the surrounding suburban communities.

Filed Under: Featured Story

Hanson approves Selectmen restrictions

October 8, 2015 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

Town Meeting votes to block paid town workers from seat on board as Hanson approves Selectmen restrictions

HANSON — Hanson approves Selectmen restrictions as new by-law will be added to the books preventing paid Hanson town employees from running for a seat on the Board of Selectmen.

The by-law extends to prohibit office holders from working as paid employees for one year after leaving office, grandfathering in those already elected.

Hanson approves Selectmen restrictions

OWNING IT: Wearing a T-shirt reading ‘I am Article 25,’ Anne Marie Bouzan speaks with fellow Hanson Town employees Nicole Campbell and Theresa Cocio Monday. Photo by Tracy Seelye

Voters at special Town Meeting Monday approved by a vote of 58-48, the measure — warrant Article 25 — proposed by selectmen.

Wearing pink T-shirts emblazoned with “I am Article 25,” hand-written in fabric paint, Building Department Administrative Assistant Anne Marie Bouzan and a handful of other Town Hall employees, made a statement against the proposal from the audience.

Bouzan, also a union steward who ran for Selectman this spring, spoke vigorously against the article.

Proponents countered that the by-law was needed to ensure against potential bias, a tie vote on matters on which town employee/selectman could not vote, and as protection against “human nature.”

After Town Meeting adjourned, Bouzan expressed disappointment at the vote, but suggested she wasn’t through with the fight just yet.

“I’m a little disappointed,” she said. “I’m thinking that I still have time — they’re going to have to go through the state to make the by-law go through — and if we can appeal it somehow at that point I think I will.”

Selectman James McGahan said after the session that he understands it is already hard to fill some elected positions, but said the by-law is necessary to prevent potential conflicts of interest.

“We’re trying to be proactive in avoiding the problems that Hanson’s had in the past,” he said. “Hanson has a rich history of some inappropriate people in the wrong places. … Who’s going to police it? … The problem is human nature.”

He did say that he thought Bouzan would be an excellent selectman.

“Hopefully someday it’ll work out that she can do it,” he said. “I think she will.”

Bouzan had stressed during debate on the article, that she had consulted the State Ethics Commission before running for a seat on the Board of Selectmen.

“I informed her of my duties and my role as a town employee,” Bouzan said of a 45-minute phone conversation with a State Ethics Commission lawyer. “I told her everything about my position.”

The lawyer had, verbally and via email, informed Bouzan that she could serve as selectmen without conflict so long as she not participate in discussions or votes on matters in which she had personal financial interests, although she could participate in collective bargaining negotiations in her role as union steward.

“I could negotiate the town administrator’s contract because he is not my direct supervisor,” she said. “If you take tonight’s articles, I could have voted [as a selectman to place or recommend] on every single article on the warrant as printed.”

She then asked for an answer from the Board of Selectmen to a pointed question: “Why couldn’t someone that’s working for the town run as selectwoman for this town?”

Selectmen Chairman Bruce Young countered by asking if Bouzan had informed the Ethics Commission that she sits across the negotiating table from the town administrator during contract negotiations.

Moderator Sean Kealy then cautioned against getting bogged down in debate over the specific situation that gave rise to the article.

“I prefer to talk about this article on its own without getting into a rehash,” he said.

Resident Laura FitzGerald-Kemmett of 83 Bay State Circle noted that state ethics laws are very clear about conflicts of interest and asked Town Counsel Jason R. Talerman if the article is necessary and whether school district employees are included as “town compensated” positions covered by the by-law.

“Do you think this is redundant or is this something you think you’d recommend the town adopt?” she asked. “Can we get a list of who this impacts?”

Talerman declined to voice an opinion, but noted there are parts of the by-law covered by state laws.

“I’m really going to stay out of it,” he said. “For other relationships in this proposed by-law, that are not covered by the ethics law, but really just follow the practice of many communities, which really hold the office of the Board of Selectmen as something that shouldn’t commingle with any other office in the town.”

McGahan said school district employees were not included in the by-law. While Talerman said he’d have to look more closely at the regional agreement, but tended to agree with McGahan’s interpretation.

“There are a lot of incredibly good town and municipal employees that I trust,” said Joseph O’Sullivan of 625 West Washington St., urging the Town Meeting to vote against the article. “I would love to have their experience … in a variety of different offices in this town.”

John Norton of 31 Indian Path agreed, noting that out of more than 7,000 registered voters in town, it is already hard to attract people to the idea of running for public office.

“Anything that diminishes people wanting to get involved in town government, is a mistake,” Norton said. “There is no reason. We have the strongest state ethics [laws] in the country and a ton of conflict-of-interest laws that I’ve run into even in a non-compensated position. It’s just redundant, it’s silly and it seems to be aimed at a couple of people.”

McGahan agreed there are a lot of good people in town, but warned “all it takes is one person or a couple to do the wrong thing and really throw things in the wrong way.”

Resident Tom Dahlberg of 66 Hillcrest Road agreed with McGahan.

“We don’t need problems in Hanson,” he said. “In the 40 years I’ve lived here we’ve had our share of problems to resolve at Town Meeting. Tonight, we have an opportunity to keep a problem from happening. It isn’t one that might happen. Given the history of the human race, it’s a problem that will happen if we don’t pass this article. It’s just a matter of when.”

Talerman, who said there are varying versions of the proposed article in place across the state, but couldn’t say how many of the 351 communities in Massachusetts have them.

“It’s not uncommon to go beyond the conflict of interest laws and place limits on whether people can hold two elected positions or an elected and appointed [one],” he said.

A proposal to amend the article to allowing a minimum of one seat on the Board of Selectmen to be held by a town employee was declined.

Filed Under: Featured Story

Hanson honors native son killed in Korean War

October 1, 2015 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

Salute to ‘Red’

srgt

FAMILY HONOR: Hanson Veterans’ Services director Bob Arsenault presents a memorial American flag to Army Sgt. James F. ‘Red’ Harrington’s surviving siblings, from left, Jean Croghan, Rose Dunlea, Jack Harrington (front) and Mary Tucker. Photo by Tracy Seelye

HANSON — Korea is called the Forgotten War as it was, and remains, a stalemate paused by a lingering cease-fire that many political and military leaders wanted to put behind them.

But the families and hometowns of the Korean War’s wounded and fallen have never forgotten, even when honors were delayed.

On Saturday, Sept. 26 Hanson saluted Army Sgt. James F. “Red” Harrington, who was killed in Korea on April 8, 1951.

“It was very moving, also it’s been a long time coming,” his sister, Jean Croghan, said after the ceremony dedicating a memorial corner at the Hancock Street ball field where her four brothers used to play baseball. “The whole family feels terrific. We’re pleased with the turnout and support we’ve received.”

Selectmen Chairman Bruce Young said it was a day for which Hanson could be proud.

“It’s a nice hometown, small town event where people get together and get united for an effort to honor somebody who gave his life in defense of freedom for others,” Young said.

Like many who served in Korea, Sgt. Harrington was a veteran of military service, having joined the Army in 1946 and served two years before going on reserve status.

During his junior year at Boston College in 1950, he was recalled to active duty and sent to Korea in January 1951.

“I can’t say he was a diamond in the rough — he was a diamond,” Croghan said, noting he had always been a fine example for his younger siblings, especially his younger brothers. “We still miss him.”

Saturday’s program, held at 10 a.m. on the ball field, began with bagpiper Don Teague playing a selection of service hymns and other selections, including “Scotland the Brave,” before Veterans’ Services Director Bob Arsenault began the ceremony by introducing Croghan and her surviving brother and sisters, Jack Harrington, Rose Dunlea and Mary Tucker.

Members of the Tech. Sgt. Elmer R. Hammond American Legion Post 226 Honor Guard also took part in the ceremony along with Young and fellow Selectmen Bill Scott, James McGahan and Kenny Mitchell.

“I’d like to thank everybody for turning out this morning,” Arsenault said. “It’s a beautiful day — Red’s looking down upon us. You can’t ask for much better weather.”

Arsenault outlined the all-too-brief story of Sgt. Harrington’s service in Korea, where he had volunteered for the mission of forward observer.

“During Korea, when you were a forward observer, it was a very dangerous position,” he said. “You were out in the front lines in the hills and the mountains of Korea and the North Koreans would try to triangulate on your position. A lot of these forward observers, unfortunately, did not make it home.”

Jack Harrington spoke for the family during the emotional program, quipping that he had prepared a 10-page speech about his big brother.

“Red, you’d be proud,” he began, speaking in front of a silhouetted figure of a soldier mourning a fallen comrade. “I feel very privileged and honored to be asked to speak about my brother, James.”

He noted a tragic family lineage of sacrifice for country — his maternal great uncle, Sgt. James F. Healy, was killed in WWI; a cousin, Sgt. James F. Healy was killed in WWII and his brother, James F. Harrington, was killed in Korea. His mother asked her remaining children not to name their sons James F., he said before introducing his oldest son, James F. Harrington, to applause.

“They say the good die young — I’ll live to be 120,” Harrington said. “But James was surely good. He was good looking, good at football, good at basketball, good at baseball, good at fishing, good at studying. He was good to his mother and father, his sisters and his brothers.

“He was a good soldier,” he continued. “He was a gentleman — a man of good breeding and refined manners.”

Harrington said the letters in Red’s nickname stood for regular (conforming, straight), educated (cultivated, disciplined) and dependable.

He quoted a letter the family had received from a Jesuit chemistry professor of Red’s from Boston College: “Jim was a good, humble, enthusiastic boy who was a joy to a teacher. I’m sure that he would have developed into a good chemist. … He was unspoiled by the world and I think of him as a boy loved by God and carried to heaven lest he should be contaminated by the world.”

Arsenault read citations in honor of the dedication from the General Court of the Commonwealth and Gov. Charlie Baker before presenting an American flag in a shadowbox to the Harrington family on behalf of the president, governor and citizens of Hanson. He thanked all those who helped make the ceremony possible, including Highway Surveyor Bob Brown and his crews, selectmen, Sons of the American Legion, Mike Means and Bob Hayes.

The Rev. Kwang H. Lee, vicar of St. Joseph the Worker Church offered the closing prayer, followed by Teague’s playing of “Amazing Grace” and Jack Harrington leading the crowd in singing “God Bless America.”

Sgt. Harrington’s siblings then threw ceremonial first pitches to four children, symbolic of renewed life for the old ball field.

More photos from the event can be viewed on the Whitman-Hanson Express Facebook page.

Filed Under: Featured Story

Trash fees are going up

October 1, 2015 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

WHITMAN — The price tag for trash pickup is going back up to $250 a year per household in fiscal 2016 beginning immediately — it had been reduced to $225 last year.

Selectmen approved the increase by a 4-0 vote Tuesday, Sept. 29 on the recommendation of Town Administrator Frank Lynam, who explained the cost quotes received from other haulers in the wake of DelPrete’s bankruptcy have all been higher than expected.

Selectman Scott Lambiase was absent.

Lynam has said he hopes that amount will be enough to cover services while a new contract with the present hauler is negotiated as service continues, but voiced doubts about that Tuesday night.

“Even at $250, I suspect we’re going to end up with a deficit,” Lynam said. “We will plan and prepare for that at the special Town Meeting within the annual. I just don’t want to go up another $50. We’ll see where this takes us.”

A new contract is expected to be in place by December or January.

“To tell you the truth, I’m not happy,” Selectman Dan Salvucci said.

“Neither am I, but there’s no one out there,” Lynam said. “Right now, there’s only two companies that we’re talking to and one of them hasn’t responded to our proposal.”

He said it is becoming more difficult to find companies that will take solid waste and recycling market has bottomed to the point that the town has to pay a tipping fee for it.

EZ Disposal of Revere, a division of Capitol Waste Services Inc., has been providing waste hauling services to the town since June.

The company has proposed moving to an automated system, such as is used in Abington. The trucks are fitted out with a mechanical device that lifts barrels to empty them into the truck.

Lynam said that, regardless of which firm the town contracts with going forward, the town will be looking at the barrel change associated with automated pickup.

“There is a cost associated with that,” Lynam has said. “It’s in the $320,000 to $350,000 range for the barrels.”

Each household would be provided two 64-gallon tubs, both equipped with lift-bars, which current barrels do not have. One trash barrel and one recycle barrel are included. The new barrels carry serial numbers that will be assigned by household.

Selectmen Brian Bezanson asked if the current pink Breast Cancer Awareness barrels, with a similar lift-bar could still be used.

“It’s under discussion, but they might make nice yard-waste barrels,” Lynam said. “The problem is the carrier is going to have to be able to identify barrels.”

There will also be a charge for the one large item per week that has been picked up free to homeowners, with one contractor proposing a $20 fee, but Lynam hopes to negotiate it to $10.

In other business, both Police Chief Scott Benton and Fire Chief Timothy Grenno gave their monthly department updates, reporting that call volume continues to be increasing this year over 2014 levels.

Benton said call volume is currently 9,163 against 7,351 last year. Current all other services expenditures are also up by $38,874.78, mainly due to a union contract raise and increased training.

“Training is good for everybody,” Benton said. “It’s good for morale — you want to train, you want to learn. I don’t think we ever stop learning. I hope we don’t.”

Expenses are lower by $4,693.44, however, and utility costs are down $691.60 but winter and another expected increase in electricity rates will likely reverse that trend.

EMS demand

Grenno reported costs for his all other services budget are up by about 1 percent, due to vacation coverage. One firefighter is also out on an injury and two others are or will be out on family medical leave.

Call volume is up to 2,074 or 187 more than the January to September period in 2014. The fire station has been empty 234 times, or an average of one time per day for a period of from 10 to 20 minutes — generally one or two times per day — due to the call volume.

“We try to maintain three firefighters at all times back in the station on coverage,” Grenno said, noting that 23 out of 41 times either none or less than two firefighters were available on a call-back basis. “We’re basically at that point that I’ve been talking about for years, that we can handle calls one and two — call three, not so much.”

General medical calls, with no chief complaint, account for the majority of EMS calls, Grenno said, followed by psychological or behavior issues and orthopedic cases. This year, however, fire calls are outpacing medical calls.

Grenno also said his grant and capital lists include the goal of purchasing a new Jaws of Life as the current one needs replacing.

Filed Under: News

A whole-Hog salute to heroes in Whitman

September 24, 2015 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

ROLLING HONOR: Whitman businessman Mark Shadley customized this Harley to salute Medal of Honor recipients. Photo by Tracy Seelye.

ROLLING HONOR: Whitman businessman Mark Shadley customized this Harley to salute Medal of Honor recipients. Photo by Tracy Seelye.

WHITMAN — When someone calls on you to help honor the nation’s Medal of Honor recipients, you answer the call.

So when Mark Shadley of Auto Tec/Shadley Bros in Whitman was approached by Massachusetts Fallen Heroes to create a motorcycle to make that salute, he readily agreed.

The Congressional Medal of Honor Society’s convention met it Boston last week, where the society’s 79 members were asked to sign parts of the custom Harley-Davidson. Whitman sign company owner Gary Heager did the artwork, which included graphics of valor in action from the Massachusetts Fallen Heroes’ website, barbed-wire trim design to salute decorated POWs and copper accents fashioned from brightwork that came from the USS Constitution.

“It was real cool,” Shadley said of the honor. “They loved it. We tried to do it right for them.”

The bike was displayed during the Medal of Honor Convention at the Seaport Trade Center and will be placed on permanent display in a memorial being built next to the Moakley Federal Courthouse.

“It’s also going to be on display at all the veteran runs — they’re going to move it all around,” Shadley said. “This memorial is the first one of these in the country.”

The bike started out as a 2015 FLH-X, valued ad $21,000. Shadley said it’s value is now closer to $50,000.

“We tore it all down,” he said. “I changed the front fender, the rear fender, made the dashboard, the exhaust pipes [which feature a rotating mini-Gatling gun design], I made the lights, made the shifter.”

They took the engine apart to diamond-cut the cylinders.

Direction-signal housings are designed from large-caliber bullet casings and the front features the campaign ribbons of all service areas represented by the Medal of Honor recipients as well as three depictions of the medal itself. It also features the seals of the Medal of Honor Society and the Massachusetts Fallen Heroes.

“We tried to build a bike that was not a clown bike, one that was being respectful of what the Medal of Honor means instead of having a bike with machine guns hanging off it and all kinds of craziness,” Shadley said. “We build a lot of motorcycles, so they called us to do it and we were happy to do it.”

Filed Under: Featured Story

Author visits Indian Head School, Hanson

September 24, 2015 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

Learning ‘Rules’ of writing

A MILE IN OTHER SHOES: Cynthia Lord’s book, ‘Rules,’ was a school-wide reading project this summer. Courtesy image.

A MILE IN OTHER SHOES: Cynthia Lord’s book, ‘Rules,’ was a school-wide reading project this summer. Courtesy image.

HANSON — In a way, summer vacation lasted a few more weeks for Indian Head School students than others in the W-H district.

They just last week enjoyed the finale of a school-wide summer reading project between Indian Head students and the Maquan School second-grade pupils promoted to third grade at Indian Head.

Newbury Silver Award-winning author Cynthia Lord visited the school on Thursday, Sept. 17 to talk about her life and work as a writer. Students read Lord’s book, “Rules,” about autism and acceptance of differences over the summer.

“Because we house the autism program for the district in this building, we thought it would be important to have a book like that,” Principal Diane White said on the last day of school June 25.

Lord began her visit at an assembly of all three grades before meeting with students in each grade level separately. It was Lord’s second school visit in as many days in Massachusetts. The Maine resident and former teacher spent the day at a middle school in Blackstone Wednesday, Sept. 16.

To illustrate the writing process, she led the children in the creation of a story. Grade four was up first, as the students learned that becoming a writer is a little like the old joke about how you get to Carnegie Hall.

“Practice.”

Her slide presentation began at her own beginnings — a one-page story she wrote in the first grade.

“We all start somewhere as writers,” she said. “I did four things between this early story and [“Rules”] that helped me get there.”

Read. Practice. Learn. Dream.

She asked the boys and girls for the titles of the books they just couldn’t put down. There were few duplicates as she called on several among the large number of students raising their hands. Lord also made sure that they knew writing, like many other skills, takes practice and a willingness to learn from your mistakes.

For her fourth point, she noted a comment from her second-grade report card:

“Cynthia would rather stare out the window than get her work done,” it read.

“Sometimes, when I’m staring out the window, I’m goofing off and that’s not a good thing,” she said. “But other times I’m thinking, and thinking is a very important part of writing.”

As autism acceptance was also the theme for the reading project, Lord talked about the inspiration for “Rules.”

The book was published April 1, 2006, but it started when her 12-year-old daughter Julia, now 25, asked her a question: “Mom, how come I don’t ever see families like ours in books?” Lord’s son Gregory, now 23, was diagnosed with autism at age 2.

There were some out there at the time, but Lord felt the stories about autistic characters were sad.

“It’s funny to live with my son, because he’ll say those things that you and I think but don’t say,” she said. “I think I was writing the book my daughter couldn’t find.”

Her audience had evidently read her book very closely, asking thoughtful questions about the story and answering her question in detail.

Some students were touched more closely by the book than as a fan of a good story. One student told Lord that her heroine Katherine’s love of art inspired his passion to draw.

“My brother has autism, so when I read the book it made me feel really good that someone wrote a book about autism,” another boy said.

He also told her that he’s working on his own book series called “Superbacon,” the inspiration for which came to him over breakfast one morning. His friends thought that sounded really cool. Lord agreed.

The boy’s first “Superbacon” story won first prize in a writing contest.

After her grade four presentation, Lord was surrounded by students eager to speak with her. She was equally impressed by them.

“They had very good questions,” she said. “They asked really thoughtful questions.”

She noted there’s more awareness of autism now than when “Rules” was originally published, partly thanks to the character of Dr. Sheldon Cooper on the CBS comedy, “The Big Bang Theory.”

The show’s humor is an effective tool toward helping foster acceptance of autistic people, she said.

Children can also take a leadership role in that acceptance.

“I think, sometimes, we don’t encourage kids to talk about people who are different, because we are so concerned about not hurting somebody’s feelings,” Lord said. “We teach little kids that it’s not OK to talk about differences, but then those differences exist and they choose not to interact with people who are different.”

Filed Under: Featured Story

Whitman OKs hazards plan

September 24, 2015 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

WHITMAN — The Board of Selecmen has adopted a resolution accepting the Old Colony Region Natural Hazard Mitigation Plan, developed for the Brockton-based Old Colony Planning Council’s  (OCPC) 15 member communities.

OCPC Community Planner Eric Arbeene and Council member Fred Gilmetti outlined the plan for the Board of Selectmen at its Tuesday, Sept. 15 meeting, broadcast on Whitman-Hanson Community Access TV.

The plan was financed by a FEMA grant in 2010 with the aim of  updating a plan done in 2006.

“These plans have a five-year life span,” Arbeene said. “We were hoping to get it done by 2011, but due to some logistical issues with FEMA, we didn’t even begin the plan until 2011 when we had funds.”

Because of the logistical problems, Arbeene said the next plan will not be multi-jurisdictional, but instead an individual town plan, which the state prefers. That will happen when the 2015 plan expires in 2020.

“I strongly urge the community, about three years from now, to start updating this plan,” he said because, while FEMA quotes 45 days as the typical time taken up by the process, Arbeene said it typically takes eight months.

FEMA and the Massachusetts Emergency Management  Agency (MEMA) have approved the current plan, Arbeene said. There is, he stressed, no penalty for falling short of accomplishing all the identified tasks, as the agencies are more concerned with ensuring that the town is actively addressing them.

Hazard mitigation plans are designed to avoid problems before they become emergencies to be addressed by emergency management plans, he explained. Improvements to culverts that are prone to overflow before they undermine a roadway is one example of a mitigation project.

The Disaster Mitigation Act of 2000 encourages adoption of the plans and the state and most communities — whether independently or as part of a multi-jurisdiction group such as the OCPC — have mitigation plans in place, according to Arbeene. Adoption of the plan makes a community eligible for competitive grants to improve identified hazards.

A grant period is now open through which the town may apply for a grant for a backup generator at Whitman Middle School, which is also an emergency shelter by adopting the plan.

“You focus your resources on your greatest vulnerabilities,” he said.

The plan identifies “anything that could possibly happen” in the region, even rare occurrences such as earthquakes and tornadoes, as well as a risk assessment.

“We worked with the fire chief, the police chief and folks here in town to identify what are known as critical facilities deemed essential in an emergency,” Arbeene said. It’s an open-ended definition that, in some places includes churches as well as hospitals and DPW facilities.

Flood zones, hurricane tracks, wildfire risks and other potential treats were then mapped and overlayed on a map labeling the critical facilities so an action plan can be formed.

“Mitigation strategies are the heart of the plan to reduce loss and risk,” he said.

Selectman Dan Salvucci said the Whitman Emergency Management Agency is very active and adept at identifying risk areas in need of mitigation. But he welcomed the added benefit of the regional plan.

“I’m glad we’re doing this and we can continue to do this,” he said. “You can’t fix what you don’t know is a problem.”

Filed Under: News

Hanson special Town Meeting is Oct. 5

September 24, 2015 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

HANSON — An article proposed on the special Town Meeting warrant aimed at addressing utility costs at the Hanson Food Pantry has been withdrawn as no longer necessary, according to interim Town Administrator Richard LaCamera.

The special Town Meeting convenes at 7:30 p.m., Monday, Oct. 5 at Hanson Middle School auditorium. A quorum of 100 voters is required.

Because of the Tuesday, Oct. 6 special State Primary, a second day of Town Meeting — if necessary — will be held at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, Oct. 7.

“I wanted to make sure they were aware that the board certainly is in big support of the food pantry and wanted to make sure that the communication between [them and] the town was focused on one or two individuals that would let the town know if there was issues that need to be addressed,” LaCamera said.

He met recently with Food Pantry Board Chairman Paul Nicol and Director Sharon Kennedy. They informed LaCamera that there seemed to be some miscommunication with one of the volunteers about a need for additional funds for utilities, he said.

“They don’t need additional money for the utilities,” LaCamera reported at the Tuesday, Sept. 15 Board of Selectmen’s meeting. The board voted 5-0 to close and sign the amended warrant.

“The lease is very specific. It says that they’re responsible for utilities and the town is responsible for outside of that building.”

Added to the warrant is the proposal from Whitman Amateur Radio Club (WARC) and Hanson Operations Center to use the antenna at the former Plymouth County Hospital property as an emergency repeater antenna.

There were amendments to a few other articles including language changes to one and a funding request change for another.

Two options were available to selectmen regarding the radio tower. One was a license to use, which allows the use with the board reserving the right to rescind it at any time, or a lease. LaCamera said an option for the lease is included in the warrant and selectmen approved that option.

A change to the explanation to an article regarding a water flow study along Main Street, capping the expense at $10,000, was approved.

Selectmen voted at their Tuesday, Sept. 22 meeting to leave a hold on that article as it and Article 11, dealing with a study of Wampatuck Pond would both likely be passed over at the Town Meeting. Selectmen voted 4 to 1, with Selectman Kenny Mitchell opposing, to recommend the Wampatuck study article, however.

Selectman James McGahan said on Sept. 15 that the $25,000 estimate originally quoted for the water flow study “was way too high,” according to engineering firm Environmental Partners.

“At this time, I can’t recommend funding it, but it will be there in front of the people,” McGahan said Sept. 22.

Language in the Wampatuck Pond study article, has also been changed to clarify it as a biological assessment study.

LaCamera reported that free cash has been certified at $1,098,611, “not as much as last year, but that’s still pretty good.”

Selectmen on Sept. 22 also voted to appoint Assonet resident Lisa McKay as regional animal control officer and Whitman resident Joshua Kimball as assistant animal control officer. Both appointments are for the year ending June 30, 2016.

The town of Whitman is the hiring authority for the regional dog officers, but Hanson Selectmen had to vote on the appointment as well. The region also includes Abington.

Owner of The Ultimate Pooch Inc., in Raynham, McKay is an experienced and certified animal control officer and animal inspector, including serving as the dog officer and inspector in Bridgewater as well as animal inspector for Halifax. She is licensed to carry a class A firearm and is certified in defensive tactics.

Kimball is a conservation agent in Whitman and Endangered Species Monitor for the Duxbury Harbormaster Dept.

Both McKay and Kimball will be on-call around the clock.

Veteran’s Agent Bob Arsenault attended the meeting to invite Selectmen to Saturday’s dedication of the Hancock Street Park to the memory of Army Sgt. James F. “Red” Harrington, who was killed in the Korean War. The half-hour ceremony is slated for 10 a.m. Arsenault thanked Highway Surveyor Bob Brown and his crew as well as veterans’ groups and Plymouth County Corrections — which provided an inmate work detail — for their help in preparing the ballfield for the ceremony.

“This is the town coming together to make something happen that has been long overdue,” Arsenault said. “This is what Hanson’s all about.”

Filed Under: News

Apologies follow heated exchange at Hanson board’s meeting

September 18, 2015 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

Raising the roof over school repairs

HANSON — A resident’s question over whether the contractor of the Indian Head School roof project would be penalized for not completing work before the first day of school devolved into a heated exchange with Selectmen Chairman Bruce Young Tuesday, Sept. 15.

The flare-up of tempers came during the usually routine subcommittee reports — at the conclusion of an otherwise smooth session in which the warrant for next month’s special Town Meeting was approved and signed. When the dust-up cleared, the board adjourned before hearing three remaining subcommittee reports.

Selectmen Bill Scott and Kenny Mitchell made efforts to curtail the exchange and Selectman James McGahan defended the work Young has dedicated to the school and other projects.

Resident John Barata, 43 Meadow Lane, later apologized to the board for his part in the argument.

“I think we just got into a discussion about discussions,” Barata said. “There’s no harm, no foul … I just have a weird voice, I guess I sound mean all the time. I apologize.”

Young offered an apology, too.

“I’m only human,” he said. “I can get pushed to the edge, to a point.”

School Committee Chairman Bob Hayes was asked to repeat his report on the roof project given at that board’s Sept. 9 meeting. [See page 9]

“There’s been a few bumps in the road, but they’ve been worked out,” he said. “It seems like it’s gone fairly smooth.”

“It’s the first inter-municipal agreement that I’ve been involved in and it’s worked out quite well,” Young said.

Hayes again explained that the main outstanding work is to the smoke hatch, which required specially manufactured parts, and gutters and downspouts. During work a main roof beam was discovered to have been installed during original construction 50 years ago despite being run over and bent by heavy equipment.

“I know there has been some talk recently about it not being completed in a timely fashion,” Hayes said of the hatch delay. “But there has been some changes to some of what’s going on. It was backed up by letters from the manufacturer saying that these have been ordered but they’re taking more time than they thought because of the changes.”

Barata asked why contracting firm Gale Engineering was not being held liable, as there was a delay in starting the job that affected the completion of work.

“How come they didn’t start immediately after school?” Barata asked. “Why did they wait three to four weeks to get it done? Now we’re into the school year. I personally feel we should be hammering them for $1,000 — or whatever — a day. We had a hard deadline.”

“The job is 98-percent complete,” Young had said earlier in the meeting. “Nobody was put out, there were no safety issues, the fence came down.”

He added the local officials bear some responsibility for the delay because ridge vent colors were not ordered until the third week in July.

Hayes said there was also a delay in the DEP’s inspection of the slate roof, on which glue containing asbestos was used in the past, and that a meeting within the next five weeks would decide any financial penalties. Young explained penalties can only be levied in cases of “willful neglect” on the part of the contractor.

“Starting four weeks late doesn’t classify [as] negligent?” Barata retorted.

Young countered that roofers were “working their tails off” in searing heat and humidity and complained that there has been a lot of armchair quarterbacking on Facebook, to which Barata took exception, sparking the heated exchange.

“This isn’t Facebook, I’m sitting right here asking a question,” Barata said.

“I’m giving him the answer and he doesn’t want to accept it,” Young said, tossing the thick contract book across the table. “It’s in here — read it.”

McGahan moved to diffuse the situation, explaining that Young has been under a lot of pressure from the number of school repair committees he chairs.

“Don’t apologize for me,” Young said. “I’ve got every reason in the world to be angry about this and I’m tired of hearing about it.”

“I’m not apologizing,” McGahan said. “My personal vote would be no, I would not penalize them and you guys know what a hard person I am — and have been — on the schools.”

He asked people to consider how long the roof leaked and why no previous board had been held accountable for that. The current board, he added, has overseen repairs to the roof, the damage caused at Hanson Middle School by a waste pipe clog, installation of new fire alarms “before Whitman,” and contribution to new computers and a hot water heater at the high school.

Resident Kimberley King, 87 Glenwood Place, said she was “absolutely disgusted” by the exchange.

“This isn’t about who’s right or who’s wrong or who’s worked harder,” she said. “These displays continue to divide the town of Hanson.”

King lauded the positive efforts of the Selectmen and School Committee to work together as a very positive step, but that gets lost amid angry displays at meetings.

Filed Under: News

W-H School panel looks to compatable technology

September 18, 2015 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

Gifts policy review

The W-H School Committee will be considering an update in its policy governing the acceptance of gifts — largely to ensure that technology gifts to the district are compatible with current computer systems.

The committee also received an update on Indian Head School roof repairs and the start of the 2015-16 school year during its Wednesday, Sept. 9 meeting.

Concern over the gift policy was spurred by a Duval teacher’s donorschoose.org fund drive through which she raised money for 10 Chromebooks, which were accepted as property of the district by the committee.

“Within the last few years there are a number of websites available on the Internet that allow independent people to apply for grants for schools for Chromebooks for teaching materials,” said Superintendent of Schools Dr. Ruth Gilbert-Whitner. “They can do this because they are good people and they know we have a tight budget and they’re trying to help.”

But she expressed concern that items acquired become assets of the district, which may not be compatible with the existing IT network. Gilbert-Whitner was seeking direction from the committee on how to handle that.

The Policy Subcommittee is being reconvened to review the issue, with a report due back to the full committee by the Wednesday, Oct. 14 meeting. Committee member Robert Trotta urged that principals and curriculum coordinators be represented in that review. Gilbert-Whitner agreed, noting IT director Chad Peters would also be involved.

“The technology department needs to be able to order things that are in line with what we already have,” she said, noting that many of the websites are advertising.

Committee member Dan Cullity agreed that Chromebooks, Kindles and iPads are “all different flavors” and need to be supported differently.

“You’d hate to get computers and have them sitting in an office for two years because they can’t be supported,” said committee member Robert O’Brien Jr. “I’m all for getting [the Duval gift] as long as we can support them, but we need to put something in place.”

Committee Chairman Bob Hayes said he also saw a problem with online solicitations.

“It could be through other organizations that weren’t quite done properly, though not on purpose,” he said.

Committee member Fred Small said, via remote participation, that there should be some consistency in which fundraising operations are used and why some schools participate and others do not.

“Maybe some of these concern are more narrowly confined to technology,” member Kevin Lynam cautioned. “What we have to know is how often it happens that gifts actually cause a problem.”

Gilbert-Whitner declined to characterize it as causing a problem.

“The bottom line is you need to know what you have,” she said. “It’s all been done in good faith.”

Roof update

Hanson Selectmen Bruce Young, James McGahan, Kenny Mitchell and Bill Scott attended the School Committee meeting as a posted session of their board to review progress on the Indian Head roof. That project is 95- to 97-percent complete said Hayes, who is also a member, with Young of the Hanson Roof Repair Building Committee.

The smoke hatch, also called the “dog house” or the “penthouse,” is one of the final aspects of the project to be completed. It had to be specially fabricated and was the subject of one of the repair project’s change orders. The building’s lintels and associated masonry work has been completed.

Facilities Director Ernest Sandland shared an anecdote concerning the smoke hatch’s many names.

“I think we have a lot of names for it,” Sandland said. “[Principal] Elaine White was telling me about a third-grader on the second floor who wanted to know when the club house was going to be finished.”

Young added that for years no one knew what the smoke hatch was for because it was nailed shut, and it was the first such roof feature the contractor had encountered. The hatch was designed to vent the auditorium in case of fire.

“It’s been a project,” Hayes said.  “It’s going on and it’s going good and we’re getting the Indian Head School back in shape.”

Young noted the change orders that cropped up in the repair process were the subject of a great deal of speculation on social media, but stressed all changes were backed up with the necessary paperwork.

“The contract ran under the amount of money that the town had allocated for the entire project,” Young said. Engineering and bid process costs ran about $112,000 to $115,000 and the actual bid came in at $635,000. That left between $85,000 and $100,000 for contingencies such as change orders.

“You have people commenting on things which they have no inkling of what they are talking about, and they make these comments and people chime in so this thing feeds off itself,” Young said. “This is different than private work.”

Municipal projects are governed by the bid documents and required certifications, as well as prevailing wage laws, he noted.

“The town is protected against all those things people were worried about on social media,” he said. “Once you are a public official you have a target on your back, so it’s hard to go in and respond to these things even though you see things that are totally off the wall. That’s one of the hazards of being a town official.”

First day review

In other business, Gilbert-Whitner reported that the first day of school went smoothly, noting the start date was the same as in 2014, but that Labor Day was later this year.

“Back to school is always interesting,” she said. “You never know what’s going to happen. This year it was definitely unprecedented heat.”

Food Services Director Maureen McKenzie made bottled water available, especially in the elementary schools where air-conditioning is limited, to ensure students were properly hydrated. Sandland worked with the towns to provide cooling assets for some of the schools, according to Assistant Superintendent for Human Resources/Safety and Security Patrick Dillon. High School history teacher Kevin Kavka helped identify some areas that needed attention, Dillon said.

“Pretty soon we’ll be talking to you about ‘It’s too cold out,” Gilbert-Whitman said.

Filed Under: News

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