Whitman-Hanson Express

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Subscribe
  • Rates
    • Advertisement Rates
    • Subscription Rates
    • Classified Order Form
  • Business Directory
  • Contact the Express
  • Archives
You are here: Home / Archives for News

Girls soccer hangs in on tough week

October 6, 2014 By Kathleen Peloquin, Media Editor

Teammates including Taylor Robertson (12) congratulate Eve Montgomery (27) on her goal against Plymouth North Sept. 23. Below, Alexis Fruzetti drives toward the goal. Photos by  Sue Moss

Teammates including Taylor Robertson (12) congratulate Eve Montgomery (27) on her goal against Plymouth North Sept. 23. Below, Alexis Fruzetti drives toward the goal.

 

The girls’ soccer team survived a tough week playing to draws against both Scituate and Weymouth before wrapping up the week with a thrilling 3-1 come from behind win at Plymouth North.

After a scoreless first half, Plymouth North took a 1-0 lead 5 mins in to the second half. Alexis Fruzzetti tied the score when she took a Katie Korzec pass and floated a shot over the keeper. Later Fruzzetti sent freshman Eve Montgomery towards the goal which she placed in the corner and gave Whitman Hanson a 2-1 lead.

With two minutes remaining junior Rachel Kelley took a Fruzzetti pass and fired a low shot into the corner for the final 3-1 score. Elana Wood, Kelsey Gilbert, Jill Shangold and Katherine O’Kane all played strong defense in front of keeper Arianna Comendul who made 9 saves in goal. Taylor Kofton played a strong game in the middle of the field.

The Lady Panthers started off a new week by defeating Quincy 4-1 Monday, Sept. 30.

Casey Corr, Elana Wood, Taylor Robertson and Lauren Bonavita all recorded single tallies. Katie Korzec, Katherine O’kane, Taylor Kofton and Kelsey Gilbert all had strong games. Arianna Comendul recorded 3 saves in the Whitman Hanson net.

 

Filed Under: News

Family of late Whitman official walks to cure Parkinson’s

October 2, 2014 By Stephanie Spyropoulos, Express Correspondent

The ‘Waugh-riors’ fight back

PROGRESSIVE DISEASE: Bruce Waugh, who died of Parkinson’s last year, used physical therapy to improve his quality of life in the 10 years he lived with the disease.  Courtesy photo, David Waugh

PROGRESSIVE DISEASE: Bruce Waugh, who died of Parkinson’s last year, used physical therapy to improve his quality of life in the 10 years he lived with the disease. Courtesy photo, David Waugh

WHITMAN — Her husband always had a poised personality. He was a devoted father, a happy, caring individual, amused by life and family, but she eventually noticed something was ever so slightly altered about his normally laid-back demeanor. His primary care doctor referred him to a neurologist after he also observed fluctuations and a change in physical movement.

 Bruce Waugh lived nearly a decade with Parkinson’s disease after his diagnosis in 2005. He kept active and kept moving — key components to longevity in delaying the progression of Parkinson’s disease.

His wife Priscilla observed the one-year anniversary of her husband’s passing in August. It was a time of celebration and memories with family but also a time of healing. She has missed him greatly this past year, she said.

The “Waugh-riors” will also be moving for Parkinson’s disease and in honor of Bruce next weekend as a group of 21 strong. Moving Day-Boston will be held on Saturday, October 11th, 2014 at Artesani Park, 1255 Soldiers Field Road, Boston.

With 50 teams registered for the event, there will be numerous activities to inspire moving the body (known to extend the lives of those afflicted with Parkinson’s). Physical activity is key to keeping the muscles strong and delaying deterioration, according to the official Parkinson’s disease website.

They had a life full of love, laughter and adventure Priscilla recalled about the first time they drove down Washington Street in Whitman in 1968.

“I remember him saying ‘I’m home,’” she said.

Indeed, they were home. They planted their roots and celebrated 53 years of marriage in Whitman where they raised three children and welcomed grandchildren as the years went by.

He spent 28 years working at Pneumatic Scale of North Quincy and eventually as the recession brought change in 1982 he found permanent employment as the full-time assessor for the town of Whitman.

He held the position from 1982 through his retirement in 2002. Waugh also volunteered over the years on various boards before becoming an elected member of the Board of Assessors.

Priscilla realized that her husband’s physical therapy sessions were keeping him strong. They fought the disease together through sickness and health. Physical therapy sessions included strength exercises for the arms and legs, tossing and catching a ball for eye hand coordination and other various movements for day to day living.

Waugh also had a heart attack, which affected the progression of his Parkinson’s disease.

As the sole care giver of a loved one with Parkinson’s there are many aspects of adjustment.

Daily challenges

Personal care, healthy, proper eating and day-to-day changes that occur with the progression of the disease are challenges a caregiver undertakes. When some days are more challenging Waugh gives this advice to other caregivers.

“You are as strong as you need to be at the moment,” she said. “A new day arrives and it’s fine. You, in some ways, put your life on hold and you do it lovingly. But like myself, I wouldn’t have it any other way,” she said.

One of their sons, David Waugh, who now resides in Florida will be taking part in the Miami “Moving Day,” event Oct. 5. He is the IT manager for the National Parkinson’s Foundation located in Miami. He is also among the travelers who will attend the Keep Moving-Boston event on Oct. 11.

“In the United States, 50,000-60,000 new cases of PD are diagnosed each year, adding to the one million people who currently have PD. The Center for Disease control rated complications from Parkinson’s disease as the 14th leading cause of death in the United States. Worldwide, it is estimated that four to six million people suffer from the condition,” according to the Parkinson’s disease nationwide website.

For more information on the disease, visit Parkinson.org.

Moving Day is the National Parkinson Foundation’s annual fundraising walk/run event. It is a fun and inspiring fundraising event that unites families, friends and communities both large and small in the fight against Parkinson’s disease. This celebration of movement will feature a family friendly walk course, a kids area, a caregivers relaxation tent and a special Movement Pavilion featuring yoga, dance, Tai Chi, Pilates, etc. all proven to help manage the symptoms of PD.

To sponsor Waugh in her efforts to raise money for the foundation visit her direct link   http://www3.parkinson.org/goto/pwaugh  http://www3.parkinson.org/goto/waughrriors

Filed Under: News

Monday’s TM to vote on 42 warrant articles

October 2, 2014 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

A boost in free cash

HANSON — When voters meet in special Town Meeting Monday, there will be more free cash than previously forecast available to fund some of the 42 articles on the published warrant.

Available free cash amounts to $1,446,878 — for this year, anyway.

One of the articles where that free cash spike will help concerns roof replacement costs for the slate roof section at Indian Head Elementary School. The town will now seek a vote at special Town Meeting that $170,000 come from free cash and the remaining $680,000 be funded by a one-year capital exclusion to Propostion 2 1/2.

Town Administrator Ron San Angelo announced during the Tuesday, Sept. 30 Selectmen’s meeting that free cash numbers are “significantly higher as a result of  a lot of hard work from varous department heads.”

Town Moderator Sean Kealy suggested San Angelo produce a flyer outlining the free cash situation for voters at the Special Town Meeting, which convenes at 7:30 p.m., Monday, Oct. 6 at Hanson Middle School Auditorium. San Angelo said he plans to make a presentation about the free cash situation at the start of the meeting.

The town usually enters October’s special Town Meeting with between $600,000 to $800,000 available in the free cash line.

San Angelo said the higher free cash amount is not due to taxes being increased too much, but rather to stepped up efforts to collect back taxes owed to the town.

“One of the main reasons … is the great deal of work done between my office, the treasurer-collector’s office and all the land use and health departments collecting back taxes,” he said. “I wish we had this every year [to work with], but this is sort of a nice, one-year bonus for us. … A lot of it was from one large development a lot of people worked hard on.”

About $398,000 was from back tax collections and another $104,00 was from interest on the back taxes. A rise in the number of inspection permits has also helped as have savings on insurance.

San Angelo also credited Assessor Lee Gamache with her work on a new method of doing supplemental taxes over the past few years. As a new development project, such as condominiums, is constructed the assessed value increases with progress on the project, he explained. The result of that work has been an additional $86,000 in free cash.

“That’s taxable revenue on that improvement,” San Angelo said. “Our assessor has been working hard to collect those supplemental revenues to make sure we get that growth as it occurs.”

When the school roof articles are reached at Town Meeting, an article to repair the slate roof at Indian Head School will be passed over in favor of one to replace it on the recommendation of the Schools Repair Priority Committee. Selectman  Bruce Young, who chairs that committee said the move will be fully explained to voters at the special Town Meeting.

The $170,000 from free cash, if approved, would permit the roof project to begin before any ballot vote on a capital exclusion takes place — most likely on the design phase and formulation of bid documents.

A vote at Town Meeting to send a capital exclusion to the ballot requires a simple majority because it is not a debt exclusion funded by town borrowing, which would need a two-thirds vote. Debt exclusions funded via borrowing by the regional school district, as would have been the case for a new school, also requires a simple majority at  Town Meeting.

Resident Joseph O’Sullivan asked if any funding for the roof prooject from the Massachusetts School Building Authority (MSBA) in involved. Repair Committee members present stressed that MSBA’s accellerated repair funds would be available if the problem was limited to the roof. Any other problems in need of repair disqualifies a school from consideration.

In other business, Selectmen again continued a public hearing on a gravel removal permit sought by the Great Cedar  Cattle Feeders Inc., of Halifax at bogs they own at Richardson Street and Pierce Avenue until an Oct. 21 meeting. The continuance is aimed at providing time for the farm and bog abutters to work out conditions under which the operation would be acceptable to both sides.

Filed Under: News

Boys’ soccer scores big wins against East Bridgewater, Quincy

October 2, 2014 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

Panthers on a tear

Antonio Centeio (11), Kyle Nehiley (19), Nick Haley (22) and Brian Barry (13) celebrate Haley’s goal vs East Bridgewater. Later in the game, Brian McGahan (7), upper right notched a hat trick as teammates including Ben Maines (21) and Centeio join in the congratulations. Below, Jared Pendrak  makes his way to a goal. Photos by Sue Moss

Antonio Centeio (11), Kyle Nehiley (19), Nick Haley (22) and Brian Barry (13) celebrate Haley’s goal vs East Bridgewater. Later in the game, Brian McGahan (7), upper right notched a hat trick as teammates including Ben Maines (21) and Centeio join in the congratulations. Below, Jared Pendrak makes his way to a goal.
Photos by Sue Moss

Jim Barrington is in his last season at the helm of the Whitman-Hanson Panthers Boys Soccer program. After a recent absence from the MIAA Tournament, the Panthers and Barrington look for a return to the state’s biggest stage of competition — a great send-off for their coach. Brian McGahan and company sparked a second half breakout, shutting out the East Bridgewater Vikings 5-0 on Sept. 25 — then followed with another explosive performance on offense to top Quincy 5-3 Monday night. In the first half Whitman-Hanson and East Bridgewater battled it out, with bodies flying and tempers flaring, and went into the locker room at half tied 0-0. McGahan came out of the gate early, scoring in the 44th minute off a Kyle Nehiley assist. Two minutes later the Panthers struck again as Nick Haley blasted a goal from thirty feet out, giving Whitman-Hanson a 2-0 lead. McGahan had the assist on Haley’s goal. “Brian (McGahan) played his heart out tonight and led this team to a well dissevered and hard fought victory” an electric Barrington spoke of McGahan. “His hat trick was the first Whitman-Hanson hat-trick in over ten seasons for the program, showing the magnitude of his performance tonight.” In the 55th minute McGahan netted his second goal of the night. During the 64th minute the Panthers added yet another goal as Jared Pendrak netted his first score of the season, giving the Panthers a 4-0 lead. Pendrak’s goal came on a strong cross from Brian Barry, adding to the strong showing by the junior class.    Minutes later McGahan netted the hat trick off an assist from senior Jack Bannon, who started the game as the goalkeeper. Bannon, along with sophomore goalkeeper Connor Keene split the shutout, proving that the Panthers goalie situation hasn’t dwindled after the graduation of all-star goalkeeper Jason Malloy, who is now serving as an assistant coach for the Panthers. “With this victory, we are inching closer to our goal of making the tournament, and we are a team on a mission, and its hard to stop the momentum we are gaining” added Barrington on his team’s performance thus far this season. Whitman-Hanson defeated the Quincy Presidents Monday, Sept. 29, 5-3 at Veterans Stadium in Quincy, improving to 5-3-2 overall and 4-3-2 in the Keenan Division of the Patriot League. The Panthers first goal was scored by Pendrak off an assist by Antonio Centeio. Quincy tied the game on a goal by Yuri Mascarenhas at the 22nd  minute. The Panthers then went ahead at the 28th minute on a goal by Tom Chmura assisted by Centeio. W-H scored again with five minutes left in the half with a goal by Centeio. The Panthers led 3-1 at the half. At the 6-minute mark, they scored on a goal by Haley assisted by Ben Mains. Nehiley scored the final goal for W-H assisted by Jared Pendrak. Quincy scored on a penalty kick at the 23rd minute by Yuri Mascarenhas. Yuri also scored the final Quincy goal at the 28th minute. W-H tied last week against Plymouth North, 1-1. The Panthers got on the board at the 11th minute on a goal by Haley, assisted by Pendrak. Plymouth North tied the game at the 30th minute on a goal by Nick Greely. Both teams had numerous opportunities but couldn’t break the tie.

Filed Under: News

Obituary: Francis W. O’Brien, 96, WWII Navy veteran

September 25, 2014 By Kathleen Peloquin, Media Editor

Francis W. “Obie” O’Brien 96, of Marshfield, formerly of Marco Island and Bradenton, Fla., died Sunday, Sept. 21 after a period of failing health. He was the beloved husband of 70 years to Mary C. (Walsh) O’Brien.

Born and raised in Boston he was the son of the late Francis J. and Margaret (White) O’Brien and a graduate of South Boston High School.

He was a proud veteran of World War II, having served in the U.S. Navy from 1942-1945.

Obie was a familiar face having worked for Whiting Milk and retiring as a mail carrier from the U.S. Postal Service. He was an avid fan of the Boston Red Sox and the Patriots and had always enjoyed the challenge of a good card game.

In addition to his wife Mary he leaves his loving children Elaine Joyce and her husband Peter of Abington, Francis X. O’Brien and his wife Joanne of Norwell, Robert J. O’Brien and his wife Terri of Rockland and Janet Rice and her husband Donald of Whitman. He also leaves 13 grandchildren and 19 great grandchildren as well as many nieces and nephews. He was the brother of the late Agnes Corcoran, Mary Kennedy, Helen Dooley, Rita Ryan, Margaret Johnston and Ann DeSantis.

His funeral service will be at 10 a.m., Thursday, Sept. 25 in the Blanchard Funeral Chapel, Plymouth Street (Route 58 at the rotary) Whitman.  Burial will follow at 12:30 p.m. in the Mass. National Cemetery, Bourne.  Visiting hours were Wednesday, Sept. 24.

In lieu of flowers donations in his name may be made to the charity of one’s choice.

Filed Under: News

Obituary: Catherine S. Walleston, 66, worked at Whitman schools

September 25, 2014 By Kathleen Peloquin, Media Editor

Catherine S. (Barbara) Walleston, 66, of Whitman died Sunday, Sept. 21, after a lengthy battle with breast cancer. She was the beloved wife of 46 years to John Walleston, Sr.

She was born to Camilla (Friscia) and Anthony Barbara in Gloucester, on Feb. 8, 1948.

Catherine was a graduate of Gloucester High School, Class of 1965.

In addition to raising her family, Mrs. Walleston worked for the Whitman Public School system in the late ’80s and early ’90s. She was also employed by Fabric Place in Randolph from 1997-2006.

Catherine enjoyed cooking, gardening, sewing, crafting and traveling.

In addition to her husband John, she leaves her loving children John Walleston, Jr. of Brockton, Daniel and Lilly (Stewart) Walleston and Anthony and Mary (Stewart) Walleston, all of Whitman, and Erin Walleston of Rockland. She also leaves her grandchildren; Carrissa, Anthony, Patrick, Jack, Dan, Shawn and Nick Walleston, all of Whitman, and Layla Walleston of Rockland. She was sister to Jack Barbara of Pittsfield, and the late Rosalind (Demetri) Hopkins and Anthony Barbara both of Gloucester.  She also leaves her nieces and nephew Denise (Demetri) Alves and Michael Demetri of Gloucester, and Donna Demetri-Friedman of New York City, as well as many nieces, nephews and cousins.

Her funeral service will be held at 12:30 p.m., Saturday, Sept. 27 in the Blanchard Funeral Chapel, Plymouth Street (Route 58 at the rotary) Whitman.  Visiting hours will be held prior to the service from 10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

In lieu of flowers, gifts may be made to Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in memory of Catherine, to support cancer research and patient care at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Box 849168, Boston, MA 02284 or via dana-farber.org/gift.

Filed Under: News

Obituary: Matthew R. Taylor, 28, owned detailing business

September 25, 2014 By Kathleen Peloquin, Media Editor

Matthew Ryan “Matt” Taylor 28, a lifelong resident of Whitman, died unexpectedly Saturday, Sept. 20.

Born in Weymouth and raised in Whitman he was a beloved son of Gary D. and Jacqueline (Lucas) Taylor and had attended Whitman-Hanson Regional High School.

For over more than five years Matt had worked at his Dad’s auto body shop, Pearl Street Auto Body of Braintree and for a short time had owned and operated his own detailing business “MRT Detailing.”

Matt enjoyed fishing and working out, and loved the time spent with family and his daughter Makenzie.

In addition to his parents Gary & Jackie he leaves his daughter Makenzie Taylor of Weymouth, his brother Gary D. Taylor Jr., and his wife Jennifer of Whitman, and his sisters Amy Proulx and her husband Adam of Whitman and Jennifer Comperchio and her husband Jim of Rockland. He also leaves his grandparents George and Joan Taylor of Florida, his longtime girlfriend Meagan Adukonis of Weymouth, six nieces and nephews and several aunts, uncles and cousins as well as many friends.  He was the grandson of the late John and Winifred Lucas.

His funeral service will be held at 11 a.m., Friday, Sept. 26 in the Blanchard Funeral Chapel, Plymouth Street (Route 58 at the rotary) Whitman.  Burial will be at a later date. Visiting hours will be held from 4 to 8 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 25.

Donations in his name may be made to the Makenzie Taylor Benefit Fund, C/O Mutual Bank, 570 Washington Street, Whitman, MA 02382 or Learn2Cope, Box 60, Raynham, MA 02767 (learn2cope.org)

Filed Under: News

Hanson Kiwanis Club plans open house meeting

September 25, 2014 By Kathleen Peloquin, Media Editor

The Kiwanis Club of Hanson is hosting an Open House meeting on Wednesday, Oct. 15, at the Olde Hitching Post with a 6 p.m. social and 6:30 meeting, ($20 buffet meal). The Kiwanis year runs from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30, and the Hanson Club and Foundation recently completed a number of successful programs involving local youth groups and a variety of organizations, support of the N.E. & Bermuda District of Kiwanis and the Kiwanis Pediatric Trauma Institute at Tufts/Boston Floating Hospital for Children, and even support of Kiwanis International’s global effort in conjunction with UNICEF to eradicate Maternal Neonatal Tetanus in the 24 (of the original 59) countries where it still exists.  Kiwanis is raising $110 million for the Eliminate Project.

The coordination of the successful Campaign for the Hanson Food Pantry involved the community and brought individuals and organizations together with a common purpose. While the final summary of the campaign will be provided next week, the goal of $15,000 so the HFP could occupy its new facility was reached and may have even been exceeded.

The club is in the process of chartering an Aktion Club with New England Village, Pembroke.  It is a club for adults with disabilities and has been a popular addition to the Kiwanis family of clubs and programs. Locally, the Hanson Middle School Builders Club and the WHRHS Key Club are Kiwanis-sponsored Service Leadership Programs.

Everyone interested in being of service and making a difference is encouraged to attend. There are many ways members can contribute, even people with busy schedules.  Members of the Whitman Kiwanis Club will be present to answer questions. The important goal is awareness of servant leadership.

For questions and to confirm attendance, please contact Gerry Lozeau, President at 508-454-6665, gerryhb@aol.com.

Filed Under: News

Whitman, Abington receive CDBG funding

September 25, 2014 By Kathleen Peloquin, Media Editor

The Towns of Abington and Whitman have announced they will receive $780,216 to provide housing rehabilitation assistance to 18 housing units (nine in each town) and to support the Saint Vincent DePaul food pantry in each community.

The towns also received CDBG funding in 2012 to support these activities. Pre-grant activities still need to be completed before funding is available to the public. The towns are hopeful the new round of programs will be up and running by mid-October.  The funds will be used to correct code violations at eligible properties.

The Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) recently announced the 54 cities and towns that will receive $27.5 million in federal Community Development Block Grants (CDBG) to support housing rehabilitation, public service projects and local infrastructure. The CDBG program is the Commonwealth’s largest available resource for neighborhood revitalization projects and helps meet the housing and public service needs of low- and moderate-income communities while building and repairing infrastructure vital to the health and safety of all residents. The program is administered by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), and funds are distributed by DHCD to cities and towns in Massachusetts with populations of less than 50,000.

Communities may apply for CDBG funding for activities including: housing rehabilitation projects, infrastructure repair or replacement, construction or rehabilitation of public facilities, neighborhood improvement projects, economic development loans and other business assistance programs, social service upgrades, downtown improvement projects and architectural barrier removal and planning.

Community Opportunities Group, Inc., a consulting firm specializing in community development and planning services, assisted the towns in preparing the application and held several public meetings in during the application process.

Under the previous grant award, the Abington-Whitman program completed 22 projects (11 in each town) at an average cost of $23,000.  The projects ranged from a small emergency hot water heater replacement to full handicapped accessibility retrofits.  The assistance is provided in the form of a deferred payment loan that expires after 15 years if there is no change in ownership with a per unit cap on assistance of $35,000.

For more information, please contact the Abington Office of Community Development, located at the Abington Council on Aging, at 781-982-2145 ext. 6.

Filed Under: News

Whitman student, James Aiguier, honored

September 25, 2014 By Kathleen Peloquin, Media Editor

SSVT salutes Aiguier for SkillsUSA gold medal
By Mike Melanson
Express correspondent

HANOVER — The Massachusetts Association of School Committees and South Shore Vocational Technical School Committee on Wednesday Sept. 17 recognized SSVT alumnus, James Aiguier, who was gold medalist in nurse assisting at the 2014 SkillsUSA National Leadership & Skills Conference.

Aiguier was a Whitman student who now lives in Dartmouth. He attends the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth, where he is majoring in nursing.

“It’s going good. Classes are starting to get hard now, nothing too bad,” he said of his college work.

Patrick Francomano, president elect of the Massachusetts Association of School Committees, said MASC has put into place an award recognizing students who have achieved a national award in subjects such as music, academics or sports.

“We’re giving an award for getting an award, but it’s important,” he said.

Francomano, who is also a King Philip Regional School District school committee member, said Aiguier should reflect on what it took to become nationally recognized in his field.

“You came out as best of the best. That’s a huge achievement,” Francomano said.

Glenn Koocher, MASC executive director, also attended the presentation last Wednesday. Also recognized was Jeanne Boretti, one of Aiguier’s allied health teachers at SSVT.

“He is very well deserving,” she said.

School Committee Chairman Robert Molla of Norwell presented an award on behalf of the School Committee recognizing Aiguier’s national achievement.

New boiler

Superintendent-Director Thomas Hickey said a project to replace the school’s 52-year-old boiler has been accepted into the Massachusetts School Building Authority’s accelerated repair program.

Hickey said the district has been assigned an owner’s project manager, Expertcom, Inc. of Dedham, and a designer, Raymond Design Associates of Hingham.

The boiler could cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to replace, but the MSBA would reimburse the district at a rate of 53-percent, he said.

Hickey said the designer will design a system and with it an estimated cost. The district will send that information to the MSBA by a Feb. 11 deadline, and the MSBA Board of Directors will vote on the project at their March 25 meeting, he said.

Hickey said the district will then have 90 days to secure funding for the project, and will present warrant articles seeking funding to Town Meeting in all eight towns next spring.

All eight towns must approve the project to take effect, he said.

If the measure passes, SSVT will start construction on July 1, and be done by December, he said.

Superintendent goals

The School Committee approve a series of superintendent goals proposed by Hickey for the 2014-2015 school year.

Hickey said he plans to develop a process for providing staff feedback on superintendent performance, make sure all eligible students pass a third party licensure test, and ensure the successful integration of the new positions of lead bus driver and network technology specialist.

Credit and banking

District Treasurer James Coughlin said SSVT will soon be able to start accepting credit card payments for school registrations, in the restaurant and in cosmetology.

Coughlin said the district is working with Rockland Trust to set up a system.

He said the district would need to put policies and procedures in place, and do training.

SSVT should be able to accept credit card payments by Nov. 1, he said.

“It’s just a convenient thing,” he said.

Coughlin said the regional school district could gain an additional $3,000 to $4,000 in interest payments per year if the district invested in local banks in the district’s eight towns.

He said local banks do stuff in their communities and SSVT should support banks such as Abington Bank, Mutual Bank, Scituate Federal, Pilgrim Bank and others.

Coughlin said the district has savings in the Massachusetts Municipal Depository Trust bank in Boston, with low interest rates of .19.

However, interest rates at local banks range from .20 to .35 to .60, he said, which might offer a better option.

Molla said the district went with Mass Municipal at a time when the bank was paying better, but since the economic downturn has been paying lower than anyone.

He said that personal checking accounts pay more, and he supports Coughlin’s efforts.

Back to school

Principal Margaret Dutch said SSVT opened on Sept. 2 for faculty, which included a professional development presentation by school psychologist Christine Darsney on the teenage brain.

The are four new high school staff members. They are Kristin Bateman, an English teacher who comes from the Middleborough school district; Dan Condon, an electrical teacher; Lindsay Cunniff, a culinary teacher from Attleboro; and Patricia Henderson, a librarian from Dighton-Rehoboth.

The SSVT Hall of Fame Breakfast and Induction will take place on Oct. 25, during homecoming weekend. The Hall of Fame Committee was scheduled to meet Thursday Sept. 18 to review the nominations, Dutch said.

Assistant Principal Mark Aubrey said that on July 1 a new state law took effect governing how school districts handle student discipline and absenteeism.

The law sets up a due process system. The school now must arrange a meeting with a parent before suspending a student, Aubrey said.

The state law also requires schools to send a letter home to parents if a student has five unexcused absences, he said.

Aubrey said SSVT has a stricter policy.

Letters go home after three unexcused absences. Students must also appear before an attendance committee of teachers, guidance counselors and administrators to discuss earning back credit, he said.

Director of Guidance and Admissions Michael Janicki said SSVT is offering a new guidance curriculum for all students during shop cycles.

The curriculum offers classes on transitioning to high school, who’s who at SSVT, study and organizational skills, and job and career skills, he said.

Janicki said SSVT is partnering with the Massachusetts Educational Financing Authority to offer the “Your Plan for Your Future,” program, an online tool to help students plan their careers.

Director of Vocational Education Deborah Collins said the school will hold a career and job fair on Oct. 3, in order to help seniors get in touch with employers for their coop program.

Hickey said South Shore Vocational Technical High School will hold an open house on Saturday, Nov. 15 from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Filed Under: News

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 201
  • 202
  • 203
  • 204
  • 205
  • …
  • 207
  • Next Page »

Your Hometown News!

The Whitman-Hanson Express covers the news you care about. Local events. Local business. Local schools. We honestly report about the stories that affect your life. That’s why we are your hometown newspaper!
FacebookEmailsubscribeCall

IN THE NEWS

Goose boats and dog parks?

August 21, 2025 By Tracy F. Seelye, Express Editor

WHITMAN – Now that the town’s Recreation and Open Space Survey is complete, comes the task of … [Read More...]

LIKE US ON FACEBOOK

Whitman-Hanson Express

FEATURED SERVICE DIRECTORY BUSINESS

LATEST NEWS

  • Are you ready for some football? August 21, 2025
  • A walk in the woods – the Clark Bog Trail August 21, 2025
  • Goose boats and dog parks? August 21, 2025
  • Prêt à vendre August 21, 2025
  • Hanson’s Sentnor getting a kick out of Kansas August 14, 2025
  • Hanson takes on housing affordability August 14, 2025
  • There’s no place like home August 14, 2025
  • Hanson, Whitman urged to be mosquito wary August 14, 2025
  • Whitman Middle School nears its topping off August 7, 2025
  • Thanks for the wild ride August 7, 2025

[footer_backtotop]

Whitman-Hanson Express  • 1000 Main Street, PO Box 60, Hanson, MA 02341 • 781-293-0420 • Published by Anderson Newspapers, Inc.

 

Loading Comments...