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Dark chapter in local history

April 13, 2017 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

HANSON — “It was a dark and stormy night; the rain fell in torrents …” is the famously bad opening phrase of English novelist Edward Bulwer-Lytton’s 1830 melodrama “Paul Clifford.”

The evening of Thursday, April 6 was just that, however  — and the perfect setting for a tale of a true-life 1874 triple murder in Halifax, and the Hanson man hanged for that crime.

Retired Boston Police Chief of Detectives John F. Gallagher spoke to members and guests of the Hanson Historical Society on his new book, “A Monument to Her Grief: the Sturtevant Murders of Halifax, Massachusetts.”  A smoky fire from the historic Schoolhouse No. 4 woodstove and a heavy thunderstorm punctuated Gallagher’s tale of the deaths of brothers Thomas and Simeon Sturtevant and their unmarried cousin and housekeeper Mary Buckley on Feb. 15, 1874.

“This is a perfect night to talk about murder, there’s lightning, it’s gray and gloomy, said Gallagher, who served the Boston Police Department for 30 years.

“It was an interesting career. I loved it — [but] I don’t miss it,” he said.

A Hanover resident, he began researching murders or suspected murders in the area as a retirement project, which eventually led him to the conclusion that there were books to be written on the subject. His first two books were: “Murder on Broadway: A History of Homicide in Hanover” and “Arsenic in Assinippi: The Trial of Jennie May Eaton for the Murder of her Husband Rear Adm. Joseph Eaton.”

Gallagher has also done some post-9/11 security consulting and private investigative work and genealogy since retiring.

“I love local history,” he said, noting a picture in the Arcadia local history book series on Hanover with the notation “three Irishmen shot here by Seth Perry in 1845” captured his interest and launched his writing career.

“All of this [writing] work is so interesting to me because it’s like detective work,” he said. “You have to uncover all the facts, and I do my very best to make sure that I have a very true, factual story.”

He lists his source material at the end of each book.

Besides Internet research, Gallagher used newspapers, libraries, historical societies, genealogy, and original investigative materials for which the Plymouth County Sheriff’s Department granted him access. His research also included the police investigative skills and court processes of the 1870s.

“They opened up all their old records,” he said of the Sheriff’s Dept. “They actually had the booking sheets of [William] Sturtevant when he was arrested.”

His book also includes crime scene photographs.

Nearly everyone in the room was familiar — and fascinated — by the story of the Sturtevant murders. At a Halifax book-signing when the new book was published, 15 descendants of the Sturtevant family attended.

The crime

William Sturtevant, a reform school inmate as a youth and Navy deserter during the Civil War, was married with one child and another on the way at the time of his crime. The family lived at 0 High St., Hanson.

“I was trying to find out who lived at 0 High St. tonight and invite them,” said Historical Society Co-president John Norton, but that information was not available in the town Street List.

At about 7:30 p.m., on the cold Sunday night of Feb. 15, 1874, William walked four and a half miles from his home via Elm Street, through a wooded path to the rear of his grand uncles’ home in Halifax. Along the way, he had removed a loose wooden stake from a hay cart.

“People, in those days, used to walk everywhere,” Gallagher said. “He used to walk to work in South Abington and that’s a four-mile walk.”

The job at a shoe factory was not enough to pay William Sturtevant’s debts and he knew his well-off grand uncles did not trust banks and kept a lot of money in their Halifax house. Newspaper accounts at the time indicated there was friction between William Sturtevant and the uncles, but it is thought that William had sought to borrow money from the old men and was turned down.

Gallagher believes William Sturtevant knew his relatives went to a barn every day at 9 p.m. to feed the cows and he encountered his uncle Thomas, who was on his way to do that — William hit him over the back of the head with the wooden stake. Simeon, who was in bed as he is thought to have had an illness similar to Alzheimer’s, was hit eight or nine times with the club.

“As soon as I saw that, I said this is not a crime about robbery, there’s more to this than meets the eye,” Gallagher said.

William Sturtevant then rifled through a nearby sitting room and stole some money, including uncirculated Civil War scrip from 1863. Mary was killed on his way out of the house.

The house, built in 1715, still stands and has been restored by a Bridgewater State University art professor and his wife, who welcomed Gallagher into their home to look around.

William Sturtevant spent some of that 1863 scrip at a store near his home in Hanson and he had dropped some along the path in the woods, Gallagher said, noting the circumstantial evidence was strong enough for a conviction.

“It’s dark history, but it’s history nonetheless, and I think it shapes our communities,” Gallagher said.  “The more we know about our community and where we came from, I think, the better it is.”

“If your nephew asks you for money, let him have it,” one woman quipped.

The uncles, buried in Thompson Cemetery, Halifax lie beneath headstones reading “Murdered” with their killer buried in an unmarked plot next to them after his execution, to which tickets had to be issued due to the demand to witness the event.

“Now that I’ve told you the whole story, you don’t have to buy the book,” Gallagher joked. He signed books for those who purchased copies.

Filed Under: More News Right, News

Time to ‘Play ball!’ in Hanson

April 13, 2017 By Stephanie Spyropoulos, Express Correspondent

HANSON — Hanson Little League’s annual parade and opening day festivities were held Saturday — and it finally felt like spring had arrived.

With the smell of burgers on the grill at the snack shack, and the crowd overflowing inside and outside the gate and field, many families joined their players on the walk from the Hanson Town Hall to Botieri Fields for ceremonies and first pitches.

A moment of silence was observed, and blue balloons were released, in honor of longtime Hanson baseball volunteer and mom Lori Sawtelle who passed away last month after a long battle with cancer.

Christopher O’Brien received the Botieri Award for his dedication and respect on and off the field as a member of Hanson baseball.

Lily Andrews threw the first pitch for the girls’ softball and former board member Greg Collins threw the first pitch for baseball.

Hanson Little League board member Paul Clark was master of ceremonies at the event.

Abby Godwin, 11, of Hanson sang the national anthem bringing cheers from the crowd as Hanson kicked off the beginning of the season for 2017.

Filed Under: More News Left, News

A life’s lesson in credit

April 13, 2017 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

HANOVER — It’s a program offered at many Massachusetts high schools at the request of colleges. South Shore Tech seniors participated in the school’s eighth annual Credit For Life Fair at the school on Thursday, April 6.

“Colleges are finding that they were having kids come into college and racking up unbelievable amounts of debt before they even left college — and this wasn’t because of college debt, the problem was they were amassing credit card debt,” fair coordinator and Math Department  Head Tina Palmer, told the studetns during the morning breakfast meeting in the cafeteria before the fair.

The students, required to attend school that day in professional attire, were then asked to recite the program’s mantra in unison:

“If I don’t have a plan for my money, someone else will.”

“That means that if you don’t budget every dollar that comes into your household, then — all of a sudden, two days after payday, you’re saying, ‘Oh, dude, I’ve got no money left and it’s another two weeks til payday,’” Palmer said. “You need to budget yourself. … You cannot live when you don’t have enough money to cover your costs.”

Her use of the term “dude” may have drawn some laughter, but by this time, SSVT students know this is serious business.

Students were graded on the project, right down to being scored — on a scale of 0-3 — on their professional attire, or lack thereof. Each student also started with a portfolio complete with budget, calculator and note pad.

The challenge?

Find their monthly net income on the budget and live within it. Each student had to stop at 14 booths — from career counseling and clothing to housing, insurance and life’s luxuries — before a mandatory stop at the Rockland Trust Credit Counseling booth to make sure their budgets balance. Students seeking a “second job” to balance their budgets were required to show a need.

“It’s expensive out there and it’s getting more expensive all the time,” Palmer said. “insurance costs are rising rapidly, housing is not far behind, so what we need you to understand is that not everyone is going to be what we consider successful at this budgeting process because some of you aren’t going to make enough money.”

She stressed that is where they need to have a talk with an adult who can help them figure out how to make enough money or cut back on some expenses.

Students opting to live with roommates were required to go through the booths as a group, because they would have to budget together with some shared costs.

“You’re going to make a lot of decisions today,” Palmer said. “You’re about 25 years old today so you need to decide am I living alone? Do I have one roommate, two roommates? Are you going to buy or lease a car?”

Superintendent-Director Thomas Hickey told the students the fair is the culmination of three programs throughout the year aimed at preparing his graduating class for life’s next chapters. The school hosted a career fair in the fall.

In January, the school observed Alumni Day, during which graduates came back to talk about what they are doing and their goals and tough decisions.

He used a lesson from an old driver’s ed class he took to sum up the goal of the day.

“The instructor said, ‘Don’t focus so much on right where the car is, if you want to be confident you’ve got to keep an eye on where you want the car to go,’” Hickey related. “We have been saying that to you all year.”

The SSVT fair is sponsored by Rockland Trust with 55 volunteers from the MBTA, AAA Southern New England, David B. Richardson Insurance, Housing Solutions for Southeastern Mass., United Way of Greater Plymouth County, AKKA Karate Studios, South Shore Bank, Rockland Federal Credit Union and the South Shore YMCA.

Filed Under: Breaking News, News

TM warrants taking shape: Whitman close on school budget gap, places FD override on ballot

April 13, 2017 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

WHITMAN — With about $56,000 now separating what the town can commit to the school district, and what W-H is seeking within the fiscal 2018 budget, Selectmen have voted to issue the special and annual Town Meeting warrants.

Town Administrator Frank Lynam said $12,064,195 has been voted for schools  by the Finance Committee — a budget increase of $1,444,007. He said Superintendent of Schools Dr. Ruth Gilbert-Whitner told him that, without $12,119,787 — which represents a 9-percent assessment increase — “they’re going to need to seek funding through an override.”

“I’ve been working on these right up until this afternoon,” Lynam said of the warrants on which the Board of Selectmen voted Tuesday, April 11. “This whole budget has been a moving, living item.” There will be 10 articles on the special Town Meeting warrant, which is prepared for publication, and about 65 on the annual warrant.

The Fire Department will be seeking a $310,000 override for increased staffing on this year’s Town Meeting warrant and Town Election. Selectmen also voted Tuesday to place the Fire Department override request on the annual Town Election ballot.

Fire Chief Timothy Grenno expressed confidence after the meeting that residents would see the need for that request.

“I think the taxpayers support the Fire Department and, with the presentation that we’re going to put on to show them the needs and the staffing levels that we currently run at, the demand for service that we’re currently confronted with, I think that they’ll understand it’s not a wish list, that it’s a need assessment for us,” Grenno said.

The Selectmen would have had to vote April 11 to call for a school override on the annual Town Election ballot, and are required to have a specific amount before taking such a vote.

Should the schools decide at a later date — inlcuding the School Committee’s scheduled meeting on Wednesday, April 12 — to seek an override, a special election would be required. Such a move would cost the town $6,000 to hold that election.

“I talked to the chairman of the FinCom [Michael Minchello] and he said that they’re done with Article 2 and, depending on the items that are in the annual Town warrant, that they’re able to give a pretty good-sized percentage for the operating budget for Whitman-Hanson,” Selectman Dan Salvucci said.

Salvucci said that the possible removal of a capital project at Town Meeting, could help avoid a special election to fund the shortfall.

“I recognize that the School Department is making an effort to find a way to make this work,” Lynam said. “The superintendent feels that, if we can come up with that additional $56,000 she will be able to recongifure things in such a way that this year they will not have to lay anyone off.”

“They’re not crying wolf, there’s some real issues,” Lynam said. “But, at the same time, we have issues in some of the other departments, as well.”

Police and Fire chiefs have already withdrawn some requests, he noted. Lynam said he discussed the budget with Gilbert-Whitner Tuesday morning.

“We talked about what we had pegged for an apropriation,” he said of his talk with Gilbert-Whitner.

Lynam said he has asked the schools to work with town officials to come up with a minimally acceptable figure to avoid putting the town in override position for the schools because he thinks next year’s budget will be tougher.

“There’s going to have to be a lot of analysis and education directed toward next year’s budget,” he said. “I think going for an override of $400,000 this year is not going to solve the problem.”

Salvucci said he feels if the schools do not accept the Finance Committee’s recommedation, and Town Meeting supports a school override on the election, the town will be looking at the need for budget cuts.

The Finance Committee was meeting with school officials Tuesday night to discuss some of the articles Lynam is not recommending due to a lack of funding.

Selectmen voted to issue the special Town Meeting warrant and to authorize the annual Town Meeting warrant “with the understanding that some articles will be removed prior to publication,” according to Lynam.

In other business, Selectmen granted a request from the Recreation Commission for an expenditure of $4,500 from the World War II Memorial Field Fund to replace the fence around the basketball and street hockey court behind the police station. The fund, in existence since the field was designated, has been used very conservatively as it holds a small amount of cash — about $18,000 — and when no other funding is available, Lynam explained.

Selectmen also accepted of the gift of a 1910-15 Henry Miller mahogany baby grand piano with ivory keys from Fred Gilmetti on behalf of the Eileen Regan family.

“The piano is showing it’s age although it is quite beautiful,”said Assistant Town Administrator Lisa Green. “I would like to look into foundations and maybe seek a grant to help us restore the piano.”

Green also outlined plans to seek a grant from the Mass DEP Recovery Program to finance recycling programs in order to reduce town waste.

Selectmen scheduled hearing date for O’Toole’s Pub for Tuesday, May 9. The hearing will be the only item on that agenda.

Filed Under: Featured Story, News

Season Preview: Ready for redemption

April 6, 2017 By Nate Rollins, Express Sports Correspondent

Jenna Olem has her sights on the postseason for her softball team this spring.


After a playoff hiatus last season, the Whitman-Hanson Regional High softball team is eager to get back into postseason contention.

The growing pains were tough for head coach Jenna Olem’s club in 2016. One year after posting a 15-5 regular-season record and earning a spot in the Division 1 South Sectional quarterfinals, W-H entered a state of rebuild, with the departure of many core pieces. Eight of the Panthers 12 losses came when they were tied or held a lead heading into the second inning. The fourth-year skipper is confident her club, which returns nine players, has learned from its mistakes.

“Last year we struggled defensively,” Olem said. “We made a lot of errors. We also did a poor job closing out games. This season our experience going through what we went through last year and not being able to finish is the main focus.”

Leading the team this spring will be senior captains Kristin Arthur, Kelly Burke, Emily Cook and Sarah Saccardo. Cook and Saccardo (2016 Patriot League Keenan Division All-Star) have started every game at the varsity level since their freshman season, Arthur is a three-year starter and Burke is W-H’s top home run threat.

On the mound, W-H will be led by 2016 team MVP and Patriot League Keenan Division All-Star, junior Colleen Hughes.

“She pitched for us, played center [field] and second [base],” Olem said. “This year she looks to be this team’s ace after spot starting last year. She is long and athletic and has a natural downward motion on the ball so it’s tough for hitters to make really good contact on her when she can locate.”

Cook, who toed the rubber in the Panthers’ 4-1 first-round win against Bridgewater-Raynham in 2015, will play a significant role on the bump as well.

When she’s not on the mound, Cook will start at shortstop, senior Kelly Burke will man first base duties, sophomore Kayla Crawford will play second and junior Hailey Norris will start at the hot corner with Arthur returning behind the plate.

In the outfield, Saccardo anchors the group in centerfield, classmates Julia Donovan and Julia Pendrak roam left and right, respectively.

Olem said she believes her club has the potential to turn what was a weakness last season into a strength this spring.

“We moved Cook to shortstop and she has such great instincts and confidence over there, and Saccardo to centerfield which plays to her strengths of getting to every ball and has a very strong arm,” Olem explained. “So, with those two and Arthur, who is a very strong catcher behind the plate, we are solid up the middle.”

W-H will be back on the field Thursday, April 6 at 4 p.m. as it plays host to North Quincy.

“I think you’ll see a team ready to redeem themselves from last year’s subpar season,” Olem said. “[Our returning players] all came into the season a better player than they were last year. They are a team that is ready to get back to their winning ways from a few years ago.”

Filed Under: News, Sports Tagged With: 2016-17 Coverage, Jenna Olem, Season Preview, Sports, Whitman-Hanson Regional High, Whitman-Hanson Regional High Softball

Spring renewal: Green Hanson plans events

April 6, 2017 By Larisa Hart, Media Editor

HANSON — Now that spring has “arrived,” Green Hanson is hitting the ground running this month with a quartet of programs, old and new — and a new nominee for chairman, 2012 W-H graduate Naomi Mastico.

Also a recent graduate of UMass, Amherst, Hanson native Mastico has returned home and is taking the handoff of Green Hanson’s reins from Marianne DiMascio, who has decided it’s time to step back a bit after some 10 years with the organization.

Mastico was a Green Hanson volunteer during her high school days, and said she is looking forward to rolling up her sleeves and planning more events.

“I’m really thinking of having an event per season,” Mastico said Friday, March 31, at DiMascio’s business office at 620 County Road. “That’s my big dream, because we’ve been really spring-focused. … We’re from New England and we’re famous for our seasons and I think so much of being green is a connection to that — to the Earth, to the weather, to the cycle of the seasons.”

Among her thoughts are a possible return of past fall harvest pot-luck dinners, outdoor summer film screenings and electronic recycling days, among others.

“We’re kind of revitalizing Green Hanson,” DiMascio said. “We’ve been doing some things all along … and we have four events coming up in April.”

First up for the group was an April 1 spring meeting for the organic Hanson Community Garden, held at the Hanson Public Library at which gardening tips were offered and interested residents could sign up for a plot at the garden, located at the Hanson Food Pantry on High Street.

On Tuesday, May 2 there will also be a demonstration during food pantry hours of how to do square-foot gardening for pantry clients and other interested residents, DiMascio said.

The annual Clean Up Green Up community spring roadside cleaning day is also being planned. The event will take place from 9 to 11:30 a.m., Saturday, April 22 with volunteers meeting at the Hanson Town Hall green at 8:45 a.m. for coffee and doughnuts — provides by Dunkin’ Donuts — and for their cleaning assignments.

“We were originally supposed to have it on [April] 8, and I’m glad we’re not, because it’s still cold,” DiMascio said.

“It’s impossible to dig through snow and find trash,” Mastico agreed.

Green Hanson is urging W-H students in search of community service projects to volunteer. All volunteers are advised to wear long-sleeved shirts and pants come prepared with work gloves and boots. Walker-Clay has donated 75 bright yellow T-Shirts for visibility, by arrangement with Town Administrator Michael McCue, but volunteers are asked to wear their own bright-colored clothing in case there are not enough T-shirts to go around.

“We also invite people to let us know if there are specific areas that they’re thinking of cleaning to send [that information] to us,” Mastico said.

Green Hanson’s Clean Up Green Up partners are: state Rep. Josh Cutler, Mike’s House of Pizza, Hanson Kiwanis, Hanson Middle School Builders Club, Hanson Boy Scouts, Shaw’s Supermarket, Dunkin’ Donuts, WasteZero, the Hanson Highway Department, Noonan Waste Service, Eco-Explorers 4-H Club and the WHRHS National Honor Society.

DiMascio has also organized a bicycle donation drive to benefit the nonprofit Bikes Not Bombs, which trains low-income youths in Boston to repair the bikes for shipment to Third-World nations where the bikes are desperately needed.

Area residents are invited to drop off repairable bikes, parts, tools, accessories and cycling clothing to 620 County Road from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., on Saturday, April 29. As it costs $10 to ship renovated bikes overseas, monetary donations are also being accepted, DiMascio said.

Acceptable bikes include: road, hybrid, mountain, BMX and tandem — basically anything except rusted bikes, kick scooters, motorized bikes, exercise equipment, tricycles or Trail-A-Bikes.

One shipment of repaired bikes sent to Uganda, for example, enables a group of 500 village health workers to reach patients in rural areas. Another project, in Guatemala, creates bicycle-powered machines as an emissions-free technology to improve the productivity and efficiency of rural livelihoods.

“A bike can change someone’s life,” she said. “They can get to a market, they can get to town — mobility. It’s having the bikes go to a good place and multiple purposes.”

Other area Bikes Not Bombs collections will be held: Saturday, May 9 in Sharon or Saturday, May 20 in Hingham. For a complete list of Masssachusetts drives, or to learn more about Bikes Not Bombs, visit bikesnotbombs.org.

Green Hanson is also hosting a trail walk at the Webster-Billings Conservation Area off Old Pine Drive and East Washington Street, Hanson from 1:30 to 3 p.m., Sunday, April 9.

The next meeting of Green Hanson is at 7 p.m., Wednesday, April 12 at 620 County Road. The public is welcome to attend.

For more information, call Mastico at 781-974-8455 or email greenhanson@gmail or facebook.com/greenhasonma/.

Filed Under: More News Left, News

Whitman reviews capital requests

April 6, 2017 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

WHITMAN — The Buildings, Facilities and Capital Expenditures Committee has begun the process of whittling away at the town’s fiscal $757,000 budget gap, in its capacity as a capital advisory committee to review capital projects the panel wants to recommend at Town Meeting Monday, May 1.

No vote was taken at the Thursday, March 30 meeting, at which Town Administrator Frank Lynam said he was seeking out whether any committee members had strong feelings about particular articles.

“From year-to-year, we are allowed to increase our spending by what we can raise in tax and local receipts (excise tax, permit fees and charges),” Lynam said during the meeting. The town also depends on ambulance receipts and local aid from the state minus the state’s MBTA assessment to the town.

There is $31,197,460.78 now available for appropriation with Article 2 budget requests at $30,011,588. Other raise and appropriate articles not considered capital spending come to another $502,000 along with capital requests totaling $1,296,000 for a total of $31,809,791 not including a $145,000 deficit for snow removal costs.

“Not all of that money is going to happen,” Lynam said. “Some of those requests are going to be trimmed, but it’s a working number right now.”

Citizen’s petitions seeking a $1,500 donation to a Brockton organization that counsels victims of violence and sexual abuse, and to pave Paul Street — an unaccepted road — have already been cut. The former was cut only because the town does not have the funds to spare, according to Lynam. Where Paul Street is concerned, he said the town is not legally permitted to use municipal funds to pave or maintain private ways.

Lynam said he is also removing an article seeking $10,000 to secure and maintain tax foreclosure properties “not because I don’t think we need it … but I’m going to have to look for other funds.”

capital projects

On the capital requests side of the warrants, items up for review March 30 included $13,000 toward lease agreements for three 2017 police cruisers, $11,050 for new Tasers and $63,557 for 26 Motorola radios. Lyman said Police Chief Scott Benton has indicated he may forego the radios until next year. The radios, Lynam noted, are a public safety concern when Whitman Police respond to multi-town incidents since Whitman’s older analog radios do not permit communication with East Bridgewater Police dispatch, among other problems. Newer radio systems other towns are using are digital.

A Fire Department request for a new vehicle is a question mark, as the money may be needed to cover all services and reduce the load inside the levy, Lynam said. Four other Whitman Fire capital requests are seeking funding through an ambulance revenue transfer, including $40,000 to participate in a regional grant for safety equipment. Lynam is recommending support of all four articles.

The DPW’s request for $119,675 for a 2017 plow truck, to begin replacing a fleet of five 20-year-old DPW trucks, initially bought with amassed Chapter 90 funds the town would have otherwise lost, will not be recommended by Lynam, despite the need, because of the budget gap.

“They’ve taken a lot of element abuse,” Lynam said. A new pickup truck at $48,500 should also be put off for another year, he recommended, and $166,698 for a new second sidewalk plow is doubtful, as well.

Highway Superintendent Bruce Martin said the older sidewalk plow he wants to replace breaks down after a couple of hours of plowing.

“We towed it at least twice off the side of the road this past winter,” Martin said. “The biggest calls I get after a storm is from parents asking when the sidewalks are going to get plowed.”

One machine is being depended on to plow the 21 miles of sidewalks, which can put the DPW behind three or four days after a big storm.

The article seeking $80,000 from free cash to complete accessibility modifications to Whitman Park is needed, however, to prevent costing the town $1,000-a-day fines from the state’s Architectural Access Board as of Aug. 1, Lynam reminded the committee. The original deadline was June 2016, but has been extended to July 31, 2017.

“As it turned out, what we thought was adequate for the playground wasn’t, we have to do additional work there,” said Lynam, noting the park walkways must also be completed. “I look at free cash as a capital source.”

Other priority articles include  $28,000 to install card access to Town Hall, the Senior Center and DPW administration building.

“We have an issue within the town where we can actually identify who [it is], if somebody goes into these buildings after hours,” said IT Director Joshua MacNeil. “I’m trying to get this into the state IT grant, and if we do, then I can take it off the list.”

Lynam said a card system would remove the need to change locks every time there is a security concern; persons no longer accorded building access can have that access removed via computer.

The school district’s $216,000 in capital requests for Whitman school buildings and $452,578 for the town’s share of capital requests for the regional high school have already been reduced, as Lynam has removed five articles from the list.

“I would be in favor of safety issues,” said committee member and Selectman Dan Salvucci. “Repair the sidewalks, the [sidewalk] cracks at the middle school.”

“They should be up to the most current security requirements,” said Building Inspector Bob Curran.

Fire panel replacements, rooftop units and univents, WMS gym floor, WMS loop driveway, funding for a survey prior to placing traffic lights — which could be done by Old Colony Planning Council — and a high school water heater are being cut or questioned. Lynam said he is also placing a question mark on the roadway repair at the high school because of the cost.

Hanson has already voted to support the high school articles.

Filed Under: Breaking News, News

Hanson delays cable pact vote

April 6, 2017 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

HANSON — Selectmen have delayed voting to approve and sign a new contract agreement with the Whitman-Hanson Community Access Corp., pending the answers to remaining questions from the board and some residents. An incomplete state financial review of WHCA also concerns town officials.

During their Tuesday, April 4 meeting, the board also revisited warrant articles they had placed, but had not yet voted to recommend to voters at the May 1 Town Meeting.

Selectman Bruce Young asked where Whitman stands with its WHCA contract.

“They’re waiting to see what Hanson does, because in the past the contracts were the same,” said WHCA Board Director Arlene Dias of Hanson.

“We haven’t signed it up until now, so I think what this would mean, if we waited until that time, is that we would continue to conduct business as we do,” said Selectman Chairman James McGahan. “I don’t think anything’s in jeopardy by not signing it tonight.”

Town Administrator Michael McCue said he believed most of Selectmen’s questions about the contract had been satisfied in the revised version after a matrix for reporting requirements was inserted. Among the items on the matrix are a copy of the 501(C) 3 nonprofit designation to be filed with the towns each February, financial and annual reports each May, inventory equipment lists and insurance policies in February, and meeting minutes.

Selectmen would also like an in-person quarterly report on WHCA projects.

Dias said the nonprofit status is designed to protect the towns from liability. There are supposed to be four representatives on the board from each town, but there are currently three from Hanson and one from Whitman with another Whitman resident joining at the next meeting.

“One of the items we’ve talked about, too, is possibly getting more programs recorded for more meetings,” McGahan said. “What we’re having is a problem getting volunteers.”

He and former volunteer videographer Richard Edgehille noted board chairmen could be trained to set up stationary video cameras to record their meetings.

“Each chairman from the appointed positions would basically run the camera on a tripod and record the meeting,” McGahan said.

“I’ve done this for probably 15 years,” Edgehille said. “It’s not rocket science.”

Edgehille said the analog console used to record Selectmen’s meetings is a “dinosaur” that WHCA’s contract requires them to update and maintain it.

“This is the most important meeting in town,” he said.

Dias agreed, but noted that Comcast has put a few equipment updates on hold — and WHCA is one of them.

“They had other projects that got bumped, so we got bumped,” she said. “At this point, it doesn’t make sense to put money into equipment that we’re then going to have to change in two years. We will maintain the equipment that’s here.”

Young said WHCA should protest that violation of the agreement by Comcast.

“There isn’t anything you can do,” Dias replied.

McCue said the town would be  responsible for complaints directly to Comcast.

WHCA Executive Director Eric Dresser, who also serves on a state wide professional trade organization, said that group is fighting for high-definition broadcast technology.

“Everybody at home is probably watching what they watch on high-definition, and we are still at a state level — in fact, at a national level — stuck in standard definition,” he said. “Even when we get that digital workflow, traveling over fiber optics, we’re inside of that [standard definition] restriction.”

“Hanson always gets pushed aside, no matter what it is,” Selectman Don Howard said.

Edgehille also asked about the ongoing audit, which Dias said was more of a state review, noting one financial report has already been completed and provided to the town. Young said the contract stipulates that an audit is to be done every three years.

“If you’re going to take a vote on the new contract tonight, just be aware that the [review] … is not cleared up yet,” Edgehille said. “I just want it on the record.”

He also wanted a clarification on the identity of the reporting authority for the board of directors.

“Because they are a 501(C) 3, my understanding is that they are their own entity,” McGahan said. “They are still obligated to report to the people of Hanson and Whitman to maintain our service. There is no repercussions, there’s no outside election of that entity.”

Dresser said WHCA’s nonprofit reporting status is equivalent to churches or civic groups such as Kiwanis, which also have their own boards.

“If they, the corporation, don’t meet the obligations set in this contract, we can dissolve the contract,” McGahan said.

McCue said another recourse for expressing dissatisfaction if there were a contract violation by WHCA would be to withhold the quarterly cable access funds received from Comcast. The money is paid directly to the town, which then pays WHCA — at the moment those funds are paid direct to cable access for convenience, but the town can change that at any time.

Edgehille said he wanted to sit down with the WHCA board to ask his questions, and was assured the meetings are open to the public. The board’s next meeting is Thursday, April 20.

Warrant articles

During discussion of revisited Town Meeting articles, Selectmen voted to approve revisions to wage and personnel articles on the special Town Meeting warrant.

On the annual warrant, they voted 3-1-1, with selectmen Bill Scott abstaining and Young against, to withdraw an article transferring a parcel of the Plymouth County Hospital site to the Conservation Commission’s care and custody.

Conservation Chairman Phil Clemons advocated the transfer of a narrow strip of land, known as parcel 3, as it is largely wetlands with a steep topography. Selectmen expressed concern that it would tie the town’s hands to make such a transfer this early in the planning for future use of the PCH property. The article was said to be more timely at the October special Town Meeting.

The board also voted 5-0 to support an article capping the revolving forestry fund at $15,000 because there is little possibility or obtaining more from available timber. They also voted to place and recommend a zoning by-law regarding standards for solar power installations that might be proposed in town — which combines two previous articles — and to recommend articles regarding town revolving accounts and a marijuana moratorium.

A citizen’s petition brought by Edgehille and 21 others to borrow $500,000 from the state Department of Environmental Protection under the Clean Water Act for the Septic Loan program was also recommended 5-0. The Board of Health has traditionally put forth the article, but has not funded it this year. Edgehille suggested maybe the board did not understand the program.

“I do not plan to run for office again — this is not a platform,” Edgehille said. “I’m here for the people.”

The town borrows from the DEP at 2-percent interest and charges another 2 percent from borrowers to fund the local revolving account. The program has to go back to Town Meeting every time it depletes.

“Not everybody can go to the bank,” Edgehille said. “There’s some single-parent families whose only option is this loan. Think about retired people … how would they pay for a septic loan?”

He stressed that the borrower is the only town resident impacted by the loan as a betterment added to their taxes.

“If their system fails, by Board of Health laws and regulations, they’re out the door,” he said.

The interest rate brings about $40,000 back into the account for a single loan and there are seven people now on a waiting list.

McCue said the money is coming in, but not at a significant rate to replenish the account to past levels.

Filed Under: Featured Story, News

A long-distance visit with 1st Lt. Daniel J. Rogers, USMC

March 30, 2017 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

Whitman native and Marine Corps 1st Lt. Daniel J. Rogers, now serving a deployment in Okinawa, Japan since Feb. 12, gave a brief interview to the Whitman-Hanson Express Friday, March 24 on his experiences in the Corps through the offices of Defense Media Activity (DMA).

A Department of Defense agency, DMA is a direct line of communication for news and information to U.S. forces deployed worldwide, on land, sea and air. It presents news, information and entertainment through media outlets, including radio, TV, Internet, print media and emerging media technologies. DMA broadcasts radio and television to forces in 177 countries and 279 Navy ships at sea with Department-specific news and information programming.

Lt. Rogers spoke via telephone-Skype connection arranged by the DMA at 8 p.m. Okinawa time (7 a.m. locally) after a long day of work.

He is a 2010 graduate of WHRHS and went on to study Finance at Norwich University in Vermont. His two brothers — Mark, a 2013 W-H grad, and Luke, a 2016 graduate — are also serving in the Marine Corps, as did Lt. Rogers’ father and “a few uncles and cousins” have also served their country as Marines.

“I guess it does kind of seem like a trend at this point,” he said.

Q: How long have you been in the Corps?

A: “I have been in for almost three years, now.”

Q: Why did you decide to join?

A: “Growing up, I would see a lot of pictures of my family members that were in the Marine Corps before me, and I always knew it was something that I wanted to do for a multitude of different reasons. When I became closer to graduating high school, I was looking into my options there and my parents encouraged me to apply for an NROTC scholarship to be an officer.

“I applied for an NROTC scholarship and got it, so I went to school for four years and I commissioned as a second lieutenant in May of 2014. … I went to [Officer Candidate School] the summer between my junior and senior year [at Norwich].”

Q: How does your finance major enter into the MOS (military occupational specialty) in which you now work?

A: “It definitely doesn’t directly relate — I’m an infantry officer [platoon leader] right now, but believe it or not there are times when I do use some of the things that I learned at Norwich.”

Q: How so?

A: “Being a platoon commander, you’re definitely in charge, or responsible I should say, for all aspects of your Marines’ lives — whether it be training them to be ready for combat or making sure that they’re set to make responsible decisions in their personal lives. Those are all things I have to worry about, so when the time does come, and it is time for us to do our job, they are ready — full mind, body, training — ready to go. Finance doesn’t really sound like it relates, but being able to talk to my Marines about things like where they stand financially, how they’re doing and some good decisions that they could be making.

“Like anything, if you’re having problems back home, it will affect you at work, so that’s one more thing I can help them with so we can all be ready.”

Q: What are some of the current projects you can speak to?

A: “We’re forward deployed here. Big-picture, it’s to maintain security across the Pacific. We’re a force in readiness out here in case some type of conflict or crisis does arise. We’re also strengthening our relationship with our allies out here, training with them and enhancing our capabilities to work together.

Q: What is Okinawa like and have you had much interaction with its people?

A: “It’s a beautiful island, the beaches are unbelievable when we do get to go. It’s a very small island — it’s only 60-something miles long and 17 miles at its widest point. So the dominating things are the Marine and Air Force bases here.

“It does have a very rich culture, an offshoot of Japanese culture, so there’s a lot to explore if you have the time to do so. Right now, we’re working six days a week, but on the seventh we do get the opportunity to go out in town and kind of explore and have some time to try the local food, meet the local people and see the sights.”

Q: Other places you’ve been able to experience?

A: “This past spring we were in BALTOPS, which stands for Baltic Operations, and we did something similar to this where we went out and trained with a lot of our partner nations in Sweden, Finland and Poland. We also got to get off the ship and explore in Estonia, the Netherlands, Norway and Iceland. I got to see a lot of countries and meet a lot of people that I never would have been able to experience outside of the Marine Corps.”

Q: Are you planning on making military service your career?

A: “It’s too early to tell right now, but I’m definitely enjoying it now.”

Q: Any advice to youth considering military service?

A: “I definitely encourage it and would tell them to keep working hard where they’re at and, once they do make a decision to do whatever they do, give it everything they have. Go in with an open mind and soak in everything that you can, learn as much as you can and do the best that you can.”

Q: Any foreign language you’d recommend studying?

A: “Now that I’ve been through seven countries in Europe and we’re going to be passing around Southeast Asia, too, it seems almost any language will be able to help you out. You never know where you’re going to go. The Marine Corps is ready to go anywhere in the world at a moment’s notice, so any language or experience you can bring to the table, there will definitely be a time and place where we could use it.”

Q: What do you miss most about Whitman?

A: “It’s actually in Hanson — I’d have to say Damien’s pizza on Route 58. You’ve got to love the local watering hole. I still argue  with people that that’s the best pizza in the world, right there.”

Q: How can people best support deployed troops? Care packages you’d like to receive?

A: “Everyone likes different things. I guess it kind of depends on what that person misses from home. We have a lot of access to any resources we might need, so for those who get homesick, if their families send them small momentos … You’ve got to keep them grounded to back home, but also keep their head focused over here, as well.”

Filed Under: More News Right, News

Board weighs override impact

March 30, 2017 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

By Cameron Myette

Express staff

HANSON — The Board of Selectmen discussed the ramifications of an override in the effort to close the $2.1 million school district budget deficit during its Tuesday, March 21 meeting.

Selectmen also voted to close the warrant for the May 1 Town Meeting, opting to place the override and ballot question articles, but not to make recommendations at this time — as was done with all incomplete budget issues.

“We can’t recommend if we don’t know the figure yet,” Town Administrator Michael McCue said.

W-H Business Services Director Christine Suckow said if both towns agreed to 6.25 percent within the levy limit, an override would amount to $1 million split between the two towns, with roughly 60 percent of that ($600,000) being Whitman’s share and about 40 percent ($400,000) Hanson’s based on student population.

Taxpayers in Hanson could expect to pay 34 cents per $1,000 valuation on their property taxes — $98.60 on an average household of $290,000 based on the current W-H assessment — if an override is passed.

“Once both towns decide this, what’s inside the levy and what’s outside the levy, than I can create more accurate numbers,” Suckow said.

Seletman Bruce Young asked why the district accepted the governor’s budget numbers, which provide only a $20 per pupil Chapter 70 aid increase, instead of planning for the $50 that local legislators are again seeking to add. Last year, they were successful in pushing that increase to $55 per pupil — $135,000 for fiscal 2017.

“Almost inevitably, [the governor’s] number doesn’t hold up,” Young said. “It’s part of their anticipated revenue.”

School Committee Chairman Bob Hayes said the district couldn’t budget effectively on a figure it doesn’t have.

“If it does come through, you get another bite at the apple,” he said. “Everything has a drop-dead date. … You would never have this situation if the governor’s budget came out in January.”

Superintendent of Schools Dr. Ruth Gilbert-Whitner said that situation is also a by-product of the district’s dependence on state aid, and that last year’s failed override would have added services to an already level-service budget that was inside the levy limit. This year’s increase is intended to maintain a level-service budget.

“That’s the difference, and I think it’s important to remember that,” she said. “It’s a quite different story than last year. … This year it’s not as positive a scenario due to cost increases.”

In Hanson, some capital projects for schools, public safety, recreation and highway needs are also combined in a single article.

The frame on one of the Highway Department trucks has failed, resulting in a need to obtain a new truck. The old truck lasted 19 years of service on the highway department and the new truck that the department is looking at will have a life of about 20 years.

David Hanlon of the Highway Department said the cost of the new truck would be well worth the investment and the strength covered by this one truck would be the strength of one and a half trucks, if purchased. A price for the vehicle is still being estimated.

Ramp and windows

In other business, Selectmen dicussed a letter from the Hanson Food Pantry board of directors including safety standards concerning the windows and ramp that is attached to the Hanson Food Pantry Building. The Hanson Food Pantry (HFP) Board recently met to discuss some of these matters.

The state found the ramp is not in compliance with Architectural Access Board (AAD) standards, which are more demanding than the federal Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA).

Volunteers working on the pantry renovation had installed the ramp as close as possible to compliance, according to Building Inspector Robert Curran, but it was not quite correct. A post supporting a corner of the roof is in the way of complete access, and Curran has estimated it will cost more than $27,000 to be done as he would recommend.

They met again and came up with a new plan to widen the ramp, support the roof and would cost between $6,000 to $10,000. He is now awaiting bids before it can go before Town Meeting.

“A complaint was received and we had to respond,” he said. Curran has done so in writing.

McCue is looking into obtaining an ADA grant for the ramp work.

Curran said McCue asked him to look at the windows and verified issues raised by a letter from the pantry board, offering to have a contractor look at the 27 windows for an estimate of cost.

“We are truly grateful for the roof repairs that have been done. It has mitigated potential future degradation of the building,” Food Pantry Board member Laura FitzGerald-Kemmett stated in a letter to Selectmen.  “While the majority of the building is completely weather tight, the front building that was formerly occupied by the Plymouth County Extension Services is not. There are several windows that are missing. This has caused heating costs for the HFP (as well the town for the non HFP-occupied portion) to increase as a result of heat being lost out of the broken windows. Additionally, it will likely end up resulting in wildlife occupying the building and in water getting into our building.”

She explained that the pantry board was asking if Selectmen were aware of the window situation and if it would be possible to get new windows installed.

“While placing boards over the windows may be a good short-term solution, we are hoping that replacement windows could be sought as the long-term solution,” FitzGerald-Kemmett wrote.

She told Selectmen volunteers would be welcome to help on the ramp project, under close supervision of a professional contractor.

Filed Under: More News Left, News

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