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You are here: Home / Archives for News

W-H raises $1,000 for family

October 4, 2018 By Nate Rollins, Express Sports Correspondent

Friday night’s football game raised $1,000 to help build a disabled Army vet’s house.


 Whitman-Hanson Regional High athletic director Bob Rodgers saw last Friday night as an opportunity to give back, and the communities answered the call.

In response to a pair of 16-year-old juveniles, neither of whom were from W-H, causing more than $50,000 worth of damage to a home in Hanson being built for disabled Army vet Paul Skarinka, a Whitman native, earlier in the week, Rodgers got the approval to set up donation buckets at the football team’s game vs. Duxbury to help with repairs.

The two buckets were located at both entrances to the stadium and manned by Dawne and Richard Green. The effort raised $1,000.

“It didn’t surprise me at all that we raised so much money in a short time,” Rodgers said. “We are fortunate to live in a generous and caring community.”

Rodgers said he plans to reach out to Skarinka to see if he’d be willing to attend a game in November around Veterans Day.

“We will be having a game which we dedicate to all veterans and inviting them to attend free of charge,” Rodgers said. “With our new scoreboard, we plan to run a video about the Wounded Warrior Project too.”

Filed Under: News Tagged With: 2018-19 Coverage, Bob Rodgers, Hanson Veteran's Home Vandalized, News, Paul Skarinka, Sports, Whitman-Hanson Regional High

New boys’ lacrosse coach excited to ‘get his hands dirty’

October 4, 2018 By Nate Rollins, Express Sports Correspondent

Tyler Sabens is the Panthers’ new boys’ lacrosse head coach.


Newly-hired head coach of the Whitman-Hanson Regional High boys’ lacrosse team, Tyler Sabens, is thrilled to get the opportunity to take the insight he’s gathered over the years and put it to use.

Sabens, whose hiring was announced Sept. 13 via a press release from W-H athletic director Bob Rodgers, takes over for Rob White, who spent five seasons at the helm of the Panthers. White, who Rodgers announced stepped down at the conclusion of last season, led the Panthers to the tournament each of his first three years, but the team combined to win just seven games over the past two springs. W-H went 5-14 in 2017 and 2-16 last season.

“I am extremely excited to join Whitman-Hanson as their new lacrosse coach,” Sabens said in an interview with the Express. “The foundation here, just in terms of the amount of athletes and the way that Whitman-Hanson looks at student-athletes, serves as a great base to build a successful lacrosse program.” Sabens, who is in his first year as a guidance counselor at Whitman Middle School, referenced the W-H girls’ lacrosse team, which has made the tournament four out of the last five seasons, as an example of using that “great base” to its fullest.

“They’re successful and a program that brings players back,” Sabens said.

After graduating from Falmouth High, where he was a two-time lacrosse captain, Sabens went on to play at Manhattan College from 2008-12. Sabens captained the Jaspers his senior season. In addition to expanding his overall knowledge of the game during his time in the Bronx, Sabens said he ascertained the true value of togetherness.

“When you’re playing in college, you’re with each other, you live with each other, you’re surrounded by each other so much that you’re really forced to buy into one another, never mind the game of lacrosse, but one another and being successful together,” Sabens said.

In 2014, Sabens entered the high school coaching ranks when he hooked on with Falmouth’s boys’ lacrosse team. He coordinated the offense and coached the goalies up until this past spring, when Falmouth made it all the way to the Div. 2 South Sectional final. Sabens said he grasped how to build a winning environment and mentality, which are both something he plans to establish at W-H.

“Culture is so important on how athletes and coaches look at process,” he explained. “If we’re not all focused on doing the little things great, and doing the little things like they’re supposed to be done – in the field, off the field, in the classroom, in the community – if we can do that, that will lead to the big things like winning, the program growing overall.”

Sabens was also a coach on Falmouth’s 2016 football team that won the Division 2A Super Bowl, running its tripleoption offense and coaching the running backs and cornerbacks.

The Falmouth native has coached JV hockey, power skating, hockey skill sessions, town basketball and lacrosse clinics.

“I would coach anything, honestly,” Sabens said. “Sports is sports to me.”

Sabens met with the returning players and anyone else interested in joining the team shortly after his hiring.

“I introduced myself to the guys [and] had them fill out a small questionnaire, just so I can find out a little more about them,” he said. “It was really nice to meet all of the guys, or most of the guys.”

Togetherness and positivity were stressed at thatWednesday meeting.

“It is instrumental and pivotal that we approach adversity as it comes along together with an outlook for one another, rather than individuals,” Sabens said. “If we don’t approach what’s about to come as a team and really genuinely together, it’s gonna be a long year and it’s gonna be a tough process to start building up.”

As part of his process of building the program up, Sabens said he’s on a mission to retain current players, acquire new players and bring back former players.

“My overall goal is to put a footprint and really hope that people end up respecting the program after this year and kids want to come play for the program,” Sabens said. “Guys want to come back and play for me next year.”

Sabens said he’s eager to get to work.

“This [is] one of the best opportunities I think a high school lacrosse coach can come across,” Sabens said, “to be able to enter the Patriot League with the stacked lineup and the opposition that we’ll be facing. That itself just raises the level of the game being played and the interest it’s gonna attract. I’m so excited to get my hands dirty in the Patriot League and to really start building this thing.”

Filed Under: News, Sports Tagged With: 2018-19 Coverage, Sports, Tyler Sabens, Whitman-Hanson Regional High, Whitman-Hanson Regional High Boys' Lacrosse

W-H seeks interim student services director

September 27, 2018 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

Meeting in a special session on Wednesday, Sept. 19, the School Committee voted 6-0 to accept the resignation of assistant superintendent for pupil services Kyle Riley and post the position as director of student services on an interim basis to complete the school year.

The position was posted immediately after the meeting because state law requires the position be filled by Oct. 1.

Members Christopher Howard, Robert O’Brien Jr., Christopher Scriven and Alexandria Taylor were unable to attend.

“As you know, that position was formerly a director of student services, it was changed last September by the School Committee and the assistant superintendent position was formed,” said Superintendent of Schools Jeffrey Szymaniak said. “I’d like to go back to the director of student services and I need your approval for that.”

The salary for a director will be lower than that of an assistant superintendent, but the duties are similar.

“The director of student services incorporates special education, homeless transportation, special education transportation and English-language learners as well as home-school students,” Szymaniak said. “When we looked at it as an assistant superintendent it was a little more as a decision-maker in Central Office. As we put together a flow chart of superintendent, one assistant superintendent who has hands in a lot of different things and this as a true director position — much like many of the districts around us.”

Szymaniak also reported that he has advised Hanson Town Administrator Michael McCue about the committee’s Sept. 12 vote to extend the Maquan School turnover date to Oct. 31.

“Does everybody understand we’re not mowing that field anymore?” Committee member Michael Jones asked.

Szymaniak replied that he believes the Maquan Re-Use Committee is discussing such particulars.

“We’re not going to have any obligation to do that,” Szymaniak said. “I think that’s going to be something that, if they ask us to do that, there might be a fee … but our responsibility to that facility is going to turn over Oct. 31.”

He said the town is now discussing how to secure the building and the district is working with town officials to purchase materials to board it up, for which they will seek reimbursement from the town.

Dates for the municipal and public yard sales will be announced at the Wednesday, Oct. 10 School Committee meeting.

Filed Under: More News Right, News

Whitman police arrest shooting suspect

September 27, 2018 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

Express staff

Whitman police arrested Rockland resident Allen Warner, 47, after he tried entering a Dunkin’ Donuts drive-through in the wrong direction Tuesday afternoon while driving a flatbed truck he had allegedly stolen from T&K Construction firm.

Warner was the subject of an intense manhunt Monday night after he allegedy shot his estranged wife Shana, 48, who later died of her wounds at South Shore Hospital. The shooting, in Marshfield, forced residents in a large section of the town to shelter in place as a State Police Helicopter aided officers on the ground searching a wooded area near where the shooting occured.

Whitman, where he was arrested, is about 18 miles away.

Plymouth County DA Timothy Cruz said in a press conference Monday that Shana Warner called police at around 6 p.m. Monday to report that her husband was following her car. She was in the process of divorcing him. Published reports indicate the couple had been divorced twice and that Shana had been in the process of divorcing him for a third time.

Investigators believe he drove to Marshfield with the intention of finding her.

According to published reports, Dunkin’ Donuts employees were not sure what was happening the next afternoon when Warner was seen driving the wrong way in the drive-through. Whitman officer Mark Poirier stopped the truck, got Warner out and placed him under arrest, Cruz said at a follow-up press conference Tuesday afternoon.

“I’m really pleased that this ended peacefully, that nobody else got hurt and I want to thank the community, the press and the collaborative effort of all the law enforcement agencies that worked on this,” said Marshfield Police Chief Philip Tavares.

Whitman Police transported the suspect to Marshfield Police. He was scheduled to be arraigned on a murder charge in Plymouth District Court Wednesday, Sept. 26.

Marshfield was locked down in a four-mile radius of the shooting, as police launched Monday’s manhunt.

At first they thought he [Warner] had fled on foot and were searching the woods, but it turns out he was earlier chasing his wife in a vehicle on route 3A. She called 911 and was found shot in the face off the road.

Residents did not know, until about 10:15 p.m., from TV news that police no longer believed Warner was in the area.

Residents were told it was an active shooter situation, and to lock doors and remain inside, from roughly 5:50 to 10:15 p.m. Some people got robocalls, but non-residents visiting Marshfield, didn’t. those that didn’t get robocalls took to Facebook to express their displeasure.

(Correspondent Abram Neal contributed to this report)

Filed Under: Breaking News, News

South Shore gets Technical

September 27, 2018 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

HANOVER — Don’t call it “the Vo-Tech” anymore.

While the official name, as recorded in its regional agreement, is still South Shore Regional Vocational Technical High School — a rebranding effort is under way to more accurately reflect the more demanding nature of school programs as well as its commitment to community.

“We wanted to get rid of the term ‘Vo-Tech’ … in part, because, unfortunately, there are people in the community who still refer to us as ‘Slow-Tech,” even though that is far, far from the truth of what we do in this building and where our students go to college and high-paying careers,” said Principal Mark Aubrey as he outlined the process during the Wednesday, Sept. 19 School Committee meeting.

“If you call the school, we refer to ourselves as South Shore Technical,” he said. “We are South Shore Regional Vocational Technical High School, we are SSVT, and we are the same school we were in June.”

The same technologies are taught and the same equipment is used, but community members may not be aware of the school’s high standards, Aubrey said, noting the change is important to accurately reflect the kind of education they provide.

“I agree, but bear with me,” joked School Committee member John Manning of Scituate noting that he still refers to the Tobin Bridge as the Mystic River Bridge.

“You have to make the school proud and the students proud of the school,” said School Committee member Robert Molla of Norwell.

School Committee member Robert Mahoney of Rockland supported the move, but noted he had been surprised by it because the website and other social media have not yet been updated to reflect the rebranding.

Aubrey said the IT department has been working on the changes and that Superintendent/Director Dr. Thomas J. Hickey has purchased the website and name South Shore Technical, but stressed it will take more time. In the meantime, the website will come up if one searches for “South Shore Technical.”

A task force of faculty, staff members, students, parents and community members were brought together in recent months to discuss the rebranding idea. The school is also putting together a branding guide that covers school colors — what they are and can be for use by school teams and clubs. All students, starting with the seniors, will be given black polo shirts with the new South Shore Technical High School logo to wear with neat slacks when out on cooperative education work, field trips or to college fairs.

“That’s just another little thing we can do to get ourselves out to the community and let them know that we exist and what we do — and what we do very well every day in this school,” Aubrey said.

New-look Vikings

Even the Viking sports logo will be getting a makeover.

Students will have the opportunity to compete in a contest to design the new logo, personal to South Shore Technical alone, with the aim of having a new one selected by February.

“It kills me to drive through East Bridgewater and see the same Viking head,” he said. “I don’t mind sharing with the Minnesota Vikings, that’s fine, but to be just two towns away and have somebody else with the same Viking …”

Molla recalled that he had brought up the suggestion to give the Viking “a facelift” about two years ago, but noting had come of it.

“I’m glad to see it,” he said. “It’s time to change it. Put a smile on his face or something.”

Recycling effort

SSVT is also moving to a paperless environment and recycling culture in school operations.

School accounting is using the Cloud for an improved workflow for online purchase orders, payroll system and giving employees greater access to pay stub information.

“It’s an exciting time in the business office,” quipped Treasurer James Coughlin. “There’s been a lot of webinars and so forth over the past six weeks. … Right now there’s a big box in our office that produces a lot of heat and a lot of noise as a server and we’re going to take that offline and we’re going to the Cloud.”

Tyler Technologies, a secure national vendor, provides that service.

“That is a theme throughout the building,” Aubrey said of the paperless effort. “We are going to more of a waste-reduction method within the building.”

That includes recycling in all classrooms and shops. Head teacher Matthew Fallano has led the Science Department in training students on correct recycling practices.

“We have staff members in the building that are trying to run their classrooms 99-percent paper-free,” Aubrey said. “They’re using Google Classroom and all the technology that we have supplied to them to be able to run their classrooms without having to do the ‘paperwork shuffle.’ … We are truly hopeful to do a lot of good for the environment and do a lot of good for our students, teaching them proper recycling skills and things like that.”

Welcome

Assistant Principal Sandra Baldner outlined yet another change to the South Shore Technical culture.

Pineapples.

Pineapples are the traditional symbol of welcome, dating back to America’s Colonial days, and were incorporated in welcome-back packaging for faculty. It has since been expanded to use in another new project at the school.

“We are now welcoming staff into each other’s classrooms as part of a pineapple charting initiative,” she said. “It’s an industry trick. You post what’s happening in your classroom on a pineapple poster … and welcome you in to see the good things going on in their classroom.”

The pineapple posters list times of events during which visitors mat observe and ask questions about curriculum initiatives after the lesson.

The school library is now known as the Career and College Center, where students can expand their knowledge of career and college opportunities and interact with professionals in both areas — particularly on First Fridays, when the school will host career socials. The next is at 1:30 p.m., Oct. 5 when the school will hold a health services event.

“The objective of First Fridays is to provide students with the opportunity to practice interpersonal communication with adults, while acquiring the information they need to be successful post-secondary career and/or college,” she said.

Baldner also extended kudos to teachers and students for surviving the oppressive heat during the first week of school. Hickey said the school had a very smooth opening.

Filed Under: More News Left, News

Marijuana prohibition on Hanson ballot

September 27, 2018 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

HANSON — Voters were reminded during the Tuesday, Sept. 25 Board of Selectmen’s meeting, that it will take a “yes” vote on a Nov. 6 local ballot question to prevent retail marijuana sales in town.

There will also be two ballots, requiring separate check-ins, as local questions must be on a different ballot than the one for the state’s midterm election.

But first, the issue will crop up again on the Monday, Oct. 1 special Town Meeting warrant, in two articles — Article 21, which amends the town’s general Bylaws and requires a simple majority vote, and Article 22, which amends the zoning Bylaws and requires a two-thirds vote — aimed at prohibiting retail sales in town.

Town Counsel Katherine Feodoroff, of Mead, Talerman & Costa LLC, attended the meeting to review the meaning of the articles and ballot questions during a half-hour forum on the issue.

“The board wanted to have a question-and-answer session prior to Town Meeting, in case anybody had any questions on this,” said Selectmen Chairman Kenny Mitchell.

Feodoroff said both a zoning Bylaw and general Bylaw were passed at the last Town Meeting to regulate marijuana establishments.

“But there was a feeling that, perhaps, the town wanted to consider prohibiting marijuana retailers,” she said. “As a consequence, we put together an amendment to the Bylaw that was recently passed to prohibit marijuana retailers in the town.”

A complicating issue is that, when the town voted on the state ballot question regarding the legalization of recreational marijuana, the town’s voters came down on the side favoring the question, so this issue must also go on a ballot as well as before Town Meeting.

“To prohibit marijuana in the town of Hanson, you have to vote yes on the legislation,” Feodoroff said. “It’s a little bit counter-intuitive, but you are voting yes on the Bylaw, which serves as a prohibition.”

She assured residents that questions have been clearly written — at the urging of Selectman Jim Hickey — so voters will better understand what their vote will do.

Police Chief Michael Miksch and Fire Chief Jerome Thompson were asked what special training their departments would need to address the use of recreational marijuana.

Thompson said, while inspection requirements may be different, he does not anticipate much change in how patient care is delivered.

“It’s going to depend on what happens around us,” Miksch said. “One way or another I have to start training people on a thing called ARRIVE (Advanced Roadside Interdiction training), to cut down people driving impaired.”

The state just began rolling out training information, but he estimates it could cost about $8,000 to train his officers, and it may have to be done numerous times.

Host community portions of the wholesale/testing facilities regulations would provide a 3 percent levy on their sales to fund police security and training relating to the business.

“I don’t know the cost until I see the situation.” He said, noting that he does not need to place a detail officer at a package store. But, should retail marijuana be allowed in town, there are now only one or two banks in the state willing to work with the businesses.

“That’s a very big concern for host communities, as far as security goes, because basically you’ve got to make sure these places have more security than a bank — because they are a bank,” Miksch said.

“It’s a heavy cash business,” Feodoroff said. The marijuana retailers are not now able to obtain merchant accounts at most banks.

Town Administrator Michael McCue said he anticipates that a pending contract for a cell phone tower at Hanson Middle School property, if approved by Town Meeting, could bring in as much as $50,000 in the first year alone — mitigating the effect of any marijuana tax money lost if the town votes to prohibit retail sales.

Resident Bruce Young asked if a Town Meeting vote on the zoning Bylaw fails to meet the two-thirds requirement, wouldn’t render a ballot question pointless.

“I’m assuming that, unless the Town Meeting votes for both of those articles, it makes the election article vote absolutely moot,” he said.

Feodoroff replied that it is not a yes or no question. State legislation governs what towns can and cannot do, distinguishing zoning Bylaws but not general Bylaw functions. She said the town counsel firm believes a general Bylaw can serve to prohibit any form of marijuana if a town wished to prohibit it.

“We wanted to be very cautious and put in the zoning Bylaw measure because there’s a long list of cases that stand for the proposition that, if it looks like a zoning bylaw but only went through the process of a general bylaw Bylaw passage … [the state] struck those Bylaws down because they looked like zoning bylaws,” she said.

While zoning Bylaws can guarantee prohibition, if it fails, the issue still goes to the election ballot and if both pass, the town can vote on a zoning bylaw again at another special Town Meeting, or the town can rely on the amended general Bylaw. The latter option does carry the risk of litigation.

“None of the Bylaws have been challenged yet,” Feodoroff said. “We’re not in a position to know whether or not the court is going to demand that it be a zoning vs. a general bylaw.”

New resident Wayne Peterson asked, since the town passed the issue on the state ballot, how the prohibition effort is not just an attempt to push an unpopular opinion through with a smaller voter turnout. He noted that, while a midterm election would attract more voters than a local election, it would not be as great a turnout as a presidential election year like 2016.

Feodoroff said the legislation permits it since towns may have voted for recreational marijuana as a general issue, the “I don’t want it in my backyard” mindset led many communities to change their minds.

“The state has already spoken, the voters have already spoken, and passed it overwhelmingly,” he said of the town. “Now you’re going to an election with much smaller turnout to get the reaction that you want.”

School Committee Chairman Bob Hayes, attending the meeting for the Town Meeting preview, compared the ballot initiative to towns in the state that opted to remain dry when the prohibition of alcohol was repealed or zoning bylaws governing adult entertainment businesses.

Personal consumption of marijuana remains permitted by state law. The use of marijuana while driving is still illegal, as is any form of impaired driving.

Filed Under: Featured Story, News

Rock Steady vs Parkinson’s

September 20, 2018 By Stephanie Spyropoulos, Express Correspondent

He fights for others.

Physical therapist Brett Miller of Hanson, owner of 110 Fitness — a wellness center in Rockland — has found both his mission and passion lending his voice and including people who sometimes need a helping hand.

A onetime boxer, who still trains fighters, Miller was seeing patients with Parkinson’s disease during his in-home physical therapy visits.

He had something of an epiphany after watching a “60 Minutes” feature by journalist Leslie Stahl, who highlighted the Rock Steady program and its proven changes and improvements for patients. Stahl’s husband Aaron Latham has PD.

In May 2016, Miller became certified in the Rock Steady non-profit program and, as an affiliate, he opened Rock Steady Boxing South Shore in Marshfield that August. Attendance was overwhelming.

“The program went nuts,” he said.

They quickly outgrew the space and opened the Rockland gym. It’s the largest boxing and wellness center in the world for people with Parkinson’s disease, Miller said. He envisions fighting through the future at 110 Fitness and for people living with Parkinson’s disease and other disabilities.

“Creating a giant circle of compassion and not leaving anyone behind,” is how Miller describes it.

Miller feels his personal outlook of loyalty and encompassing others began with his military background — he was a special operations medic in the Army for eight years.

The gym is an all-inclusive center, however of the 105 people who work out nearly all are living with PD. The mission of 110 Fitness is to leave no person behind so that they may reach their full potential physically, mentally, and spiritually by inspiring them to give their 110 percent effort in order to find the greatest balance in their lives.

The physical therapy-based program is a non-contact, intense boxing fitness program designed to improve function, quality of life, strength, flexibility, and balance for people with Parkinson’s disease. Rock Steady boxing is the only medically and clinically proven exercise program to reduce, reverse, and delay the symptoms of Parkinson’s disease, according to the 110 Fitness website.

Miller announced the newest program this month at 110 Fitness — boxing in the water. In collaboration with the Gold Fish Swim Center (in the adjacent building) boxing in the water will be a program for all levels of PD.

Boxing H20 is the first of its kind. The center also has popular fitness trend classes such as: drumming circles, meditation, pound, reiki, massage, peddling for PD cycling classes, art workshops, bowling events, free weekly guest speakers, care givers and young onset support groups. To see a full list of classes, times and membership information visit their website 110fitness.org.

Meet Fred

Freddy Maitland, 72, (boxing name: Fast Freddy) of Hanson was all smiles as he did core work and visibly perspired during his boxing class last week at 110 Fitness. Diagnosed approximately seven years ago he had depth perception and visual changes around stairs. Wife Kathy Maitland, a nurse for nearly 40 years said her husband made strides in delaying the progression of symptoms but didn’t have the typical signs that neurologists looked for in PD patients.

Fast Freddy has a cornerman who assists him with exercise in his level of boxing.

Corner men are what Miller calls his 40 volunteers who assist with classes. They vary from family members, nurses, to dedicated physical therapy students from local colleges in Boston, remaining with boxers throughout the class for extra assistance.

During class Fred Maitland worked hard as the liveliness in the gym environment triggered a wave of energy. The music was just like any other high paced fitness class with intense movement, rotating boxing bags, colorful gloves and lots of water.

Fred had some setbacks physically in progression of his PD symptoms after a bout of the flu and pneumonia last year. He continues to attend 110 Fitness where he puts on a gait belt for stability and does several exercises sitting down.

He laced up the gloves and punched his way to delay further cognitive decline. Wife Kathy was thrilled at the camaraderie at the gym aside of the physical benefits. He has been attending for two years.

“Fred was sick in the hospital and the friends we have made here had decorated a huge card and everyone signed it,” she added.

Helping vets

Miller’s wellness center is the largest in the world with a boxing program for Parkinson’s patients. He is launching an adaptive boxing program for disabled veterans in October 2018. They will also be working with an adaptive boxing program for youth and young adults a first in the country, he said.

Teaming up with the Friendship Home in Norwell and the State of Massachusetts DDS program  the youth boxing will include over a dozen young people living with  down syndrome, autism, and physical disabilities, Miller is looking forward to continuously adding to his educational programs and variety of opportunities to embrace all. They also host a women’s empowerment boxing class for those affected by domestic violence after teaming up with DOVE of Quincy and South Shore Women’s Center of Plymouth.

The gym also recently received grants through the National Parkinson Foundation and the American Parkinson’s Disease Association, which Miller has used for program development.

During their second anniversary celebration the 110 Fitness scholarship foundation  raised $65,000 to defray membership costs for people who cannot afford to attend the gyms valuable PD programs.

The event drew 400 people with guest speaker American Ninja Warrior Jimmy Choi of Chicago as their keynote speaker. Choi was afflicted by early onset PD and motivates others as he did to manage and rise above his disabilities.

Choi also spent time boxing and visiting the gym during the same weekend.

Miller is proudly involved with the Michael J. Fox Foundation and the Davis Phinney Foundation. This month he rode 30 miles on a tandem bike with a friend who has PD raising  $10,000 for the Fox Foundation.

About Rock Steady

The foundation of Rock Steady Boxing a non-profit group offers training for qualified individuals. Rock Steady Boxing, the first boxing program of its kind in the country, was founded in 2006 by former Marion County (Indiana) Prosecutor Scott C. Newman, who is living with Parkinson’s.

Newman began intense, one-on-one, boxing training just a few years after he was diagnosed with early-onset Parkinson’s at the age of 40. Newman witnessed the dramatic improvement in his physical health, agility and daily functioning through the intense and high energy workouts. Newman’s quality of life improved dramatically in a short time due to his fighting back against Parkinson’s disease.

The Parkinson’s disease foundation estimates there are more than 1 million people in the United States diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, and more than 60,000 people are diagnosed each year, according to their website.

Filed Under: More News Right, News

Selectmen eye school repairs

September 20, 2018 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

WHITMAN — The Board of Selectmen, on Tuesday, Sept. 11, discussed two requests from the district received in recent days, one pertaining to the failure of an air handle at the Conley School and another seeking additional parking at the Duval School [see related story left] to accommodate increased staff.

The Conley repair has been made on an emergency basis and the district at the next special Town Meeting will seek reimbursement. Both requests will be discussed at the next Selectmen’s meeting.

“The question at the next meeting will be if we consider that, emergency spending,” Selectmen Chairman Dr. Carl Kowalski said of the parking lot expansion, estimated at $28,000 plus $5,000 to move some playground equipment. He agreed the Conley repair met the criteria for an emergency.

Town Administrator Frank Lynam said he understood the need for parking but “really had a hard time identifying that as something that constitutes an emergency.”

Kowalski agreed that the board would have to discuss the issue before deciding whether it would support such an expenditure.

The board again tabled a proposed vote on the WHRSD regional agreement because Selectmen Scott Lambiase and Randy LaMattina were absent. It had been tabled for a vote of the full board once before and was tabled most recently pending more information on amendment procedures.

Selectmen received the School Committee’s Aug. 31 certification vote of the fiscal 2019 budget for $50,523,181 — an increase in the operating budget over fiscal 2018 for Whitman of $1,054,205, the amount voted at the May 2018 Town Meeting.

Dr. Melinda Tarsi of Bridgewater State University has advised Lynam that she and her class have drawn up a first draft of potential questions for the Community Assessment survey, which will be circulated to town boards and department heads for review.

“She felt that seeking additional public input at this time would not be helpful,” he said. “They want to wrap it up [to send it out].”

Kowalski asked for the review to be done in time for Tarsi to attend the Sept. 25 meeting. Lynam noted that, while the community information meeting was helpful for the process, Tarsi had only heard from about 25 people with suggested questions since.

streetlights

Assistant Town Administrator Lisa Green said more information regarding the failure rate, lack of choice for companies that handle the nodes involved and network costs for new street lights has been received.

For example, National Grid charges the same amount whether or not lights are dimmed. There is also a 3 percent failure rate on remote-controlled nodes.

One community using the system is still working to get the nodes, that control the lights remotely, to communicate together after six months.

“That, to me, is an issue,” Green said. “I don’t believe we’re a community that’s ready to deal with that type of an impact … I don’t know if it’s the right choice for us at this time.”

The manual control system has only a 1 percent failure rate, but she asked for consensus of the board.

Filed Under: More News Left, News

A rosy retirement blooms

September 20, 2018 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

WHITMAN — When Buds & Blossoms, 531 Washington St., closes its doors for the last time this month, owner Jackie Ferguson says she’ll miss the customers who she has come to know as friends — but it’s time to move on.

“I would like to say thank you to all who supported my flower shop and to all who just came in to visit and to say, ‘Hi,’” she read from a hand-written statement she wrote up to express her gratitude to her loyal customers. “You will be missed, but it’s time to hang up my apron and put my flower scissors away.”

It is time to move on to a retirement filled with family, cooking, hobbies — and flowers. Ferguson will miss working closely with her daughter, Dartha Flaherty, however, with whom she said she had a great working relationship as well as a close mother-daughter bond.

“I’ll still be just around the corner — not going far and I hope to see all of [my friends] in town,” she said, noting she also plans to work around the house and in her garden or getting together with friends. “I don’t know if I’ll have much free time.”

People have come in to ask what she might do with spare time, to which she replies, “I just might enjoy spare time.”

Her plan has been to close the business by Sept. 30, but at the rate she has been selling off, or giving away inventory, that date could be moved up.

“As soon as I put the free sign up, they came,” she laughed. “The girls over there [at the nail shop across the street] came in in droves, which is good. I sold what I could sell and what was left, I just want it to be gone.”

As Ferguson rearranged the remaining vases, she was giving away during the final days of her going-out-of-business sale on Friday, Sept. 14, she took a break to look back on her 24 years at the shop, her career in horticulture and her plans for an active retirement.

She intends to stay home and “putter around my house … cook for my family, have the kids over for dinner.”

As a young woman growing up in Saco, Maine, Ferguson got her start in the business by helping her father plant geraniums in the cemetery boxes that were a large part of his greenhouse business as well as in his garden, as he specialized more in planting than cut flowers. Her garden at home supplied quite a few of the flowers she used when she opened her own shop.

Ferguson’s children all enjoy gardening as well, and all have “lovely gardens” she says.

“I think it’s kind of in our DNA,” she said. While she is fond of sunflowers and carnations, Ferguson said she really does not have a preferred bloom. “I like them all, really.”

Prior to opening Buds & Blossoms, she worked for a flower shop in Abington for 10 years before her husband John suggested she open her own shop.

“We did it together,” she said. “I ran the flower shop and he was still working [as a brick salesman] at the time … but he was very supportive and we had a lot of fun.”

As a florist she says she enjoyed all phases of the business, from weddings and funerals to birthdays and “just because” arrangements. She also enjoyed teaching occasional flower arranging classes at Whitman Public Library.

“I just enjoyed being here,” Ferguson said. “I enjoyed doing crafts before I opened the shop and I just enjoy creating.”

She loves people and didn’t mind if customers came in just to chat rather than to buy.

Ferguson said she had planned to retire next year, but decided the fall was a better time — and she wasn’t looking forward to working around another winter.

Filed Under: Featured Story, News

Whitman man hit with new child porn charges

September 20, 2018 By Stephanie Spyropoulos, Express Correspondent

WHITMAN — A Whitman man is once again facing child pornography charges after a nearly five-month investigation led by federal officials with the Department of Homeland Security and Whitman Police Detective Joseph Bombardier.

Matthew Kulikowski, 37, of 52 Priscilla Road, Whitman was charged in U.S. District Court Sept. 10 on a federal criminal complaint based on the investigation which began April 2018 in relation to his alleged dissemination, possession and  receiving of child pornographic material.

A former guard at Norfolk state prison, Kulikowski was taken into custody last week following the execution of the federal search warrant in which agents seized evidence that he allegedly was knowingly in possession of the obscene images. He was charged with one count of each: receipt of child pornography and possession of the same.

In an obtained affidavit supporting the criminal complaints against Kulikowski, a special agent with Homeland Security documented materials retrieved after a search warrant was served for the premise of Kulikowski’s residence. According to the special agent, Kulikowski’s  tracking data placed him at the Whitman residence where the IP address matched a tablet device that had been flagged by investigators. The device reportedly contained 100 images of young children. The tablet was reportedly found inside a bookshelf of his bedroom.

Kulikowski had been required to wear a GPS tracking device and was on probation at the time of the Sept. 10 arrest for open cases from Plymouth District Court dating back to February of 2015.

Kulikowski’s 2015 charges in Plymouth Superior Court were: four charges of posing a child in a sexual way, one count each of possession of pornographic material, purchasing, disseminating obscene material of a minor, one count of indecent acts on a child under age 14, two counts of enticement of a child under age 16 and breaking and entering in the daytime.

The most recent charges stem from the five-month investigation, which began on  April 6, 2018 when a flagged account through the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) and Canadian Police Centre for Missing and Exploited Children indicated a person using an account lovepreteengirl through an online chat via Kik App had transmitted child pornography.

According to the federal document, the special agent, who viewed the photographs that triggered the Kik report, offered his witness account in his probable cause statements that the materials did depict prepubescent girls under age 14 with visibly exposed genitalia. The Kik interactive app is a Canadian based company in Waterloo Ontario that owns Kik Messenger. Kik Messenger, commonly called Kik, is a freeware instant messaging mobile app from the Canadian company Kik Interactive, available free of charge on iOS and Android operating systems. The application is used to send and receive images, videos and other content and is usually available free for various tablet and mobile devices, according to their website.

The company’s safety information regarding usage and parental information is listed on the Kik’s website.

“Kik’s Safety Advisory Board is currently made up of four experts in the fields of child development, child exploitation and trafficking, criminology, cyber bullying, privacy and security,” Kik website data.

In published reports the Kik Application has been named in numerous incidents of enticement in minors.

Users of the application can often ‘hide’ their name in a false account and are not required to use their real name to set up an account. However IP addresses, and increased law enforcement specializing in cyber protection throughout the US and Canada are increasingly vigilant against the exploitation of children.

On April 6, 2018 Kik reported that user lovepreteengirl_rac sent apparent child pornographic material to another user from an IP address that was linked to Kulikowski.

The September 10 morning search warrant was issued on suspected child pornography tied to the distribution of such material.

Massachusetts State Police and Homeland Security agents along with Detective Joseph Bombardier interviewed and retrieved supporting evidence of the findings on cellular devices and a tablet which was seized at the home.

It was concluded that Kulikowski knowingly possessed child pornography and had proposed to intentionally transport the materials in his possession.

DA Timothy J. Cruz’s Office did not respond to requests for comment.

Filed Under: Breaking News, News

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